Book Chapters

Kutch: A Land “Without a Counterpart on the Globe”—A Perception from History

Submitted by super admin (not verified) on Tue, 02/03/2026 - 12:47

Kutch, in western India, is a unique region described by Burnes and Dossal as “a land Without a Counterpart on the Globe” and is referenced in ancient texts and cartographic records. Continuously inhabited since the Palaeolithic period, including a large number of Harappan civilisation settlements, it holds significant archaeological, historical, and maritime importance.

Hydrogen Supply Chain Effectiveness: Conceptualizing Uncertainties Through Genetic Simulations

Submitted by super admin (not verified) on Tue, 01/27/2026 - 12:15

The shift from carbonaceous sources to cleaner alternatives necessitates reorienting and optimizing energy supply chains. Despite technological advancements, energy security remains susceptible to disruptions caused by geopolitical tensions, resource constraints, and market fluctuations. This chapter explores how genetic simulations, leveraging metaheuristic optimization techniques, facilitate a trade-off between the resilience and cost-effectiveness of green hydrogen supply chains.

An Old Monk: Reminiscences of Raja Ramanna in NIAS, 1996–2004

Submitted by super admin (not verified) on Tue, 12/16/2025 - 12:49

In this intensely personal chapter of the commemorative volume on the late Raja Ramanna, I reflect on the remarkable individual that Dr Ramanna was and as I saw him during our years together in NIAS, from 1996 till his passing in 2004.  I particularly celebrate his multifaceted personality, especially his relationships with the young faculty of the institute, his deep love for all living beings, and his inimitable sense of humour through which he saw the world.

Anthropogenic histories, affective geographies: The macaques of urban India

Submitted by super admin (not verified) on Tue, 09/23/2025 - 11:12

Multispecies ethnographies have begun to understand the sentient lives of nonhuman beings within increasingly human-dominated, ecological contexts of the Anthropocene, especially in India, where the close physical and emotional proximity of humans and macaques over centuries have led to intense interspecies behavioural exchanges and to slow, but irreversible, processes of synurbisation, wherein individual macaques have begun to adapt to urban ecologies.