Update: 2019-05-19 07:26 PM -0400

TIL

Geography

geog-indx

Edited by U Kyaw Tun (UKT) (M.S., I.P.C., USA), and staff of Tun Institute of Learning (TIL). Not for sale. No copyright. Free for everyone. Prepared for students and staff of TIL  Research Station, Yangon, MYANMAR 
 - http://www.tuninst.net , www.romabama.blogspot.com

index.htm | |Top
earth-indx.htm

Contents of this page

• GEOG-CHILD: Geography tour of the world for children - geog-child.htm - update 2019May
• ELE-GEOG: An Elementary Geography of India, Burma, - ele-geog.htm - update 2019May
  and Ceylon, by H. F. Blanford, 1890
• PHY-GEOG: Physical Geography of Myanmarpré - phy-geog.htm - update 2019May 
• HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY - hist-geog.htm
  Prehistory to Protohistory of Myanmar: A Perspective of Historical Geography of Myanmarpré, by Win Naing Tun, Myanmar Environment Institute -
  - WNTun-Myan-Proto-Geog<Ô> / Bkp<Ô> (link chk 190504) 
• MONSOON,
  
  - DetPlanningGr-<Ô> / Bkp<Ô> (link chk 190510)
• SKY-ISLAND - sky-island.htm (link chk 180821)
• MALARIA: Malaria and other diseases as sentinels - malaria.htm (link chk 180821)
  of Myanmarpré

 

The following to be moved to Paleoanthropology
• FOSSIL: Primate Fossils found in Myanmarpré
  - fossil.htm (link chk 180821)
• HOMO-ERECTUS: - homoerectus.htm
  - DEtler-HomoErectusAsia<Ô> / Bkp<Ô> (link chk 190503)

 

 

Highroads of Geography, in The Royal School Series:
a school book primarily for British children: two chapters on Burma.
See TIL HD-nonPDF and SD-nonPDF
--- RoyalSchSeries-Geography<Ô> / bkp<Ô> (link chk 170312)
See also: https://archive.org/details/highroadsofgeogr11218gut 180821

See downloaded pdf files in TIL HD-PDF and SD-PDF libraries
• KNAB: Place Names Database © Institute of the Estonian Language, 2004S
 EstonianLangInst-GeographNameMyan<Ô> / Bkp<Ô> (link chk 180202)

-----moved from Bk-cndl-index.htm

- UKT 180816 : Based on
- DEtler-HErectusAsia<Ô> / Bkp<Ô> (link chk 180816)

See also:
Geology of Myanmarpré - myan-geol.htm - update 2018Feb
Fossils -- fossil.htm - update 2018Mar

From H. erectus in East Asia, by D. Etler:
¶. (p037) "In order to better understand the nature of Homo erectus, the significance of its evolutionary history in East Asia, and the role it played in human evolution, it is first necessary to come to grips with what is meant by the term itself, as H. erectus has come to mean different things to different people. [UKT ¶]
¶. For some, H. erectus represents the first truly pandemic human species and the direct progenitor of archaic and modern H. sapiens. [UKT ¶

 

UKT notes
 

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UKT notes

 

 

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