10/08/2023
ProGEO , Charnwood Forest Geopark , UK
https://www.progeo2023.com/
Teaching Paleontology & Optical Mineralogy Portal will help student to develop easy access to the ma
10/08/2023
ProGEO , Charnwood Forest Geopark , UK
https://www.progeo2023.com/
18/08/2019
A Novel Approach to Evaluate, Highlight, and Conserve the Geologically Significant Geoheritage Sites from the Peshawar Basin, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan: Insights into Their Geoscientific, Educational, and Social Importance The Peshawar Basin, Pakistan, is a renowned example of a middle Paleozoic lithological succession filled with 0.8-Ma-age mega lake sedimentation, and also the site of two tectonic major thrusts named...
For information of the concerns.
Regards
M.Y
Mr. Muhammad Yaseen, Lecturer of Geology, Published a Paper Mr. Muhammad Yaseen, Lecturer, Department of Geology has published the first publication in the Geoheritge Springer Journal with ( Impact...
18/10/2018
Celebrating international Geoethics day at Department of Geology AWKUM
IAPG PAKISTAN
Coordinator
M.Yaseen
Dear All,
For information of all the concerns.
23/06/2018
SPREADING GEOETHICS THROUGH THE LANGUAGES OF THE WORLD
The Cape Town Statement on Geoethics is now available in 35 languages: Afrikaans, Albanian, Arabic, Armenian, Belarusian, Bengali, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, French, Georgian, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Nepali, Norwegian, Persian, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sepedi, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swahili, Tamil, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu.
The IAPG pubblication that collects all the translations is for free download from the IAPG website:
http://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/5195a5_f80fe698039e4f6d9bc8c5e4a5f05898.pdf
Flip book: http://fliphtml5.com/gqru/ttwl
and can be cited as follows:
Peppoloni S. (ed.) (2018). Spreading geoethics through the languages of the world. Translations of the Cape Town Statement on Geoethics. International Association for Promoting Geoethics (IAPG), http://www.geoethics.org/ctsg
Translations have been possible thanks to a great job done by IAPG officers, members, and followers:
Sonja Van Eck (South Africa), Marku Sokol (Albania), Mamoon Allan (Jordan), Khachatur Meliksetian (Republic of Armenia), Mary Misakyan (Republic of Armenia), Yuriy Kostyuchenko (Ukraine), Jahangir Alam (Bangladesh), Wang Meng (China), Liangliang Wang (China), Magdalena Brus (Finland), Felix Riede (Denmark), Sandra Junier (Netherlands), David Crookal (France), Isabelle Richaud (France), Morgane Le Boucher (France), Team of ExpoGeorgia (Georgia), Florian Ortner (Austria), Gerassimos Papadopoulos (Greece), Partha Sarathi Datta (India), Jasveer Singh (India), Karoli Tatarvari (Hungary), Silvia Peppoloni (Italy), Kazuki Koketsu (Japan), Kyung S*k Woo (South Korea), Shree Prasad Vista (Nepal), Bjørn Kalsnes (Norway), Sedigheh Seifilaleh (Iran), Manuel Abrunhosa (Portugal), Cristina Toma (Romania), Mahlogonolo Brillent Kobola (Suth Africa), Danka Blagojevic (Serbia), Marko Komac (Slovenia), Eli Ivonne Rovere (Argentina), Michael Msabi (Tanzania), Hema Achyuthan (India), Aybige Akinci (Turkey), Muhammad Yaseen (Pakistan).
Currently, 19 geoscience organizations endorse or support the Cape Town Statement on Geoethics: http://www.geoethics.org/ctsg
IAPG - International Association for Promoting Geoethics:
http://www.geoethics.org
23/06/2018
Please, look at those guys! They are 2 pillars of the IAPG.
Left: Jan Boon (IAPG-Canada co-chair, former Director General of the Geological Society of Canada).
Right: Nic Bilham (IAPG continental Coordinator for Europe, Director at the Geological Society of London).
A pause during one of the five sessions on different issue of geoethics organized by IAPG at the in Vancouver: http://www.geoethics.org/rfg2018
29/03/2018
Muhammad Yaseen Completed UNESCO Prestigious Fellowship in Field of Geology Muhammad Yaseen, Lecturer Department of Geology, Abdul Wali Khan University Mardan successfully completed UNESCO prestigious fellowship ...
18/03/2018
A hole in Earth’s magnetic field has been growing for 1000 years THERE’s a growing gap in the Earth’s defences.