Search Results - India Ocean

Refine Results
  1. 1

    Pb isotopic domains from the Indian Ocean sector of Antarctica: implications for past Antarctica–India connections by Flowerdew, M., Tyrrell, S., Boger, S., Fitzsimons, Ian, Harley, S., Mikhalsky, E., Vaughan, A.

    Published 2013
    “…Identical compositions from the Dharwar Craton of India support a correlation with these Antarctic terranes. …”
    Get full text
  2. 2

    Age and geochemistry of magmatism on the oceanic Wallaby Plateau and implications for the opening of the Indian Ocean by Olierook, Hugo, Merle, Renaud, Jourdan, Fred, Sircombe, K., Fraser, G., Timms, Nicholas Eric, Nelson, G., Dadd, K., Kellerson, L., Borissova, I.

    Published 2015
    “…Eruption was made possible at 124 Ma via the opening of the Indian Ocean during the breakup of Greater India and Australia along the Wallaby-Zenith Fracture Zone. …”
    Get full text
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9

    'Securing' the Indian Ocean? Competing Regional Security Constructions by Rumley, Dennis, Doyle, Timothy, Chaturvedi, Sanjay

    Published 2015
    “…It is argued that there are three competing regional constructions for security (currently in circulation) in the Indian Ocean Region, emanating largely from Australia, the United States and India - an Indian Ocean-wide concept, an East Indian Ocean construct and an Indo-Pacific concept. …”
    Get full text
  10. 10

    ‘Securing’ the Indian Ocean? Competing regional security constructions by Rumley, Dennis, Doyle, Timothy, Chaturvedi, S.

    Published 2012
    “…It is argued that there are three competing regional constructions for security (currently in circulation) in the Indian Ocean Region, emanating largely from Australia, the United States and India – an Indian Ocean-wide concept, an East Indian Ocean construct and an Indo-Pacific concept. …”
    Get full text
  11. 11

    A Rising Tide: The Growing Nuclearisation of the Indian Ocean by Hughes, Lindsay

    Published 2021
    “…It establishes a nexus between Realism, the desire of states to maximise their power, the role of nuclear weapons in that quest, Seapower, and the importance of the Indian Ocean to the US, China, Pakistan and India. It demonstrates that the Indian Ocean is becoming nuclearised because of the confluence of its growing strategic importance and that nexus."…”
    Get full text
  12. 12

    The Rise of the Indo-Pacific: ‘Pacifying’ the Indian Ocean Region by Doyle, Timothy, Rumley, Dennis

    Published 2012
    “…The second is a scaled-down version of the first into the East Indian Ocean. The third and largest in area is an Indo-Pacific concept which emphasises the preeminence of regional naval power and ensures that India potentially plays a central policing role not only within the Indian Ocean Region.…”
    Get full text
  13. 13

    The Iberian crusaderism and the end of Pax Islamica in the Indian Ocean by Kopanski, Ataullah Bogdan

    Published 2009
    “…The Protestant English and Dutch 'Honourable and Grandest' Companies ofEast India trading spices, emerged as the most powerful enterprises from the oceanic war ofattrition against the equally acquisitive Portuguese, French and Spanish seafaring 'papists '. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
  20. 20

    Eastern Indian Ocean microcontinent formation driven by plate motion changes by Whittaker, J., Williams, S., Halpin, J., Wild, T., Stilwell, J., Jourdan, Fred, Daczko, N.

    Published 2016
    “…Calving from India occurred at 101–104 Ma, coinciding with the onset of a dramatic change in Indian plate motion. …”
    Get full text