Citations:Aqal

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of Aqal

Town

[edit]
Map including Aqal (DMA, 1981)
  • 1992, R. Grimmett, H. Taylor, “Recent bird observations from Xinjiang Autonomous Region, China, 16 June to 5 July 1988”, in Forktail[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, page 146:
    Barred Warbler Sylvia nisoria 5+ males holding territory in a popular grove in Aqal town. Described as rare in China (Cheng 1987).
  • 1996, Field Trip Guide: Stratigraphy, Paleontology, Sedimentology, Petroleum and Coal Geology[2], volume 1, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 1112-10:
    Separated by the line from Aksu, through Aqal to Markit, a suite of varicoloured mudstone, silty mudstone and sandy conglomerate interbeds with intercalations of andesite, basalt and dacite outcrops in the east, and in the west there is a set of granular carbonate and grey-back sandy mudstone interbeds with the []
  • 2008, National Geographic Atlas of China[3], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 28:
    Aqal
  • 2009, Sebastian Turner, Structural Evolution of the Northwest Tarim Basin, China[4], Imperial College London, →OCLC, archived from the original on March 2, 2021, page 64:
    At Aqal, the Middle Ordovician Qilang and Yingan formations are c. 320 m thick, but are completely absent in the Mystery Canyon, 100 km to the west.
  • [2021, Yanling Hu, Bin Liu, Liqiao Nong, “Study on the Application of Educational APP in Elementary schools in Southern Xinjiang of China”, in 2021 International Conference on Computer Engineering and Application (ICCEA)[5], →DOI, →OCLC, →DOI:
    This study taNes the example of central primary school in Aqiale town for Chinese teaching practice based on educational APP, discussed how to apply educational APP in southern []]

Other

[edit]
  • 1992, Biostratigraphy and Geological Evolution of Tarim[6], Science Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 218:
    In this region, the principal elements of the Syringothyris Fauna have never been discovered from the horizon in the upper part of the Aqal River Formation containing the brachiopod Gigantoproductus, Striatifera, etc. and the fusulinids Eoastaffella amabilis, etc.