[r/IndiaSpeaks Sunday Debate] Is recycling waste public responsibility as well? How can people take individual responsibilities, if yes?
India produces 277 million tonnes of municipal solid waste every year, according to a 2016 estimate. That's more than 80% of the 334 million tonnes of waste generated across South Asia and about 13% of the global waste generated every year. src The average Indian person produces anywhere between 170 to 650 grams of solid waste everyday. src A staggering 80% of 1 lakh metric ton daily garbage remains exposed and untreated, which is very hazardous and toxic to humans and nature. So it clearly seems that Indians should take responsibility at an individual level to curb/recycle the waste produced in huge quantities on a daily basis as most of the garbage is sitting untreated. Most of the recycling of waste/waste management today is done by the informal industry which is not efficient and also very lackluster. Waste-to-composite and treatment plants can only do 50%, as the bio-degradable composite in Indian waste is about just as much. How can Indians take a collective as well as an Individual responsibility to reduce and/or recycle the waste produced, for a cleaner and greener tomorrow, debate down below! ——————————————————————— Rules: If you like a comment of a certain user considering he has made valid arguments and placed good facts etc, you could award the user by commenting !delta Instructions
All the Fresh DnB for your New Year celebrations! Check out the reviews and support the artists! [+weekly updated Spotify playlist] | New Music Monday! (Week 52)
Recommended if you like: Andromedik, Murdock, Subsonic Welcome to the last releases thread of this year! It has been a year of ups and downs. Well, mostly downs. But there was one major up for me: becoming a part of the weekly releases crew and writing these release reviews. I am still utterly overwhelmed by all the supportive comments and messages the team and I have received for these threads. I would write these even if I didn't have an audience, but seeing that people actually read and sometimes even enjoy wasting their time reading it makes it all so much more worth it for me. Big ups to every single one of you! Fittingly, the first release I'm covering talks a lot about what happened this year. There has been a sharp increase in DnB tracks with lyrics that are obviously inspired about the various shitty things that happened this year, from Millbrook - Echoes to Andromedik - Break Away. However, there's not many tracks that are as direct about their feelings towards 2020 as this one is. I'm of course talking about Used's newest single Where I Belong. Even though Used is in many ways still a newcomer, including that he has only been around as a producer since around 2016 and that he has only released a handful of songs, he is also in many ways more established than some other producers that have been around for longer. The belgian prodigy's first big hit, Mistakes, has recently hit 2 million streams on Spotify and has over the years become a straight-up anthem that the whole of Belgium can sing along to. Used isn't just any old, or in this case young I guess, producer though. He not only writes and sings his own vocals, he also plays multiple instruments, including the violin and the piano. Oh yeah, by the way, he's also mainly a Jump Up producer. I'm sure I've lost a few of you already, but I assure you that Used is certainly one of the more interesting ones out there and definitely worth your time. Not only is he quite the multi-talent musically, he is also the producer with the highest hit-to-release ratio I've seen in the last few years. Since Mistakes, every single track he released is an instant anthem that a majority of people at a rave could sing along to. After the trilogy of personal tracks about one of his own breakups that were Mistakes, Come Back Home and Better On My Own, Used strayed off the beaten path and decided to change the subject for this next single while still remaining personal. This time the topic is something we can all relate to: a longing for a return to normal. A longing for a rave, just any rave. While his biggest hits so far were very personal, they still had a certain distance to the artist himself. This is not the case for his newest single Where I Belong. In it, he speaks his heart out about how much the lockdown and the cancellation of all the shows and festivals have affected him. "No therapist can do, what the live show's done." - Biggest mood of the year. Right below that on the "big mood top 10" you can find the previous line: "I can't even remember a single thing that happened between March and December". As mentioned earlier, I've heard quite a few lockdown inspired tunes lately, but none have felt quite as deeply personal as this one. These relatable af lyrics are of course performed by himself, alternating between rapped and sung verses. The shortest description for the instrumental I could come up with is Andromedik meets Fox Stevenson. A fun Jump Up inspired Liquicity type beat, with violins and pianos, all played and produced by himself. In the second drop the jumpy beat is stripped back a lot and the violins take centre stage, further driving home the melancholy of it all. I like songs that make me feel things and this is one of them. Big recommendation for my fellow vocal dnb fans out there.
2. Various Artists - Various single releases [All kinds of labels]
Recommended if you like: Drums, Basses Due to Christmas, we sadly don't have much time for more deep dives (except for the Hidden Gem section below). Luckily, not a whole lot of people released something this week anyway. Loads of yearly compilations once again, but mostly just repackaging of older tunes. But there are still quite a few tracks and EPs I want to quickly mention at least, just to give you a quick overview over the neat stuff that did get released. On the Dancefloor side of things we've got Protostar's remix of the Darren Styles classic Us Against The World, as part of the Monstercat Christmas remix saga. If you ever wondered how Happy Hardcore DnB would sound like, this is for you. If you like something more laid back and maybe more asian (who knows), I've got just the thing for you. Japanese Electro Rock Band The Game Shop, who from time to time do dabble in DnB, released a remix EP of one of their earliest hits Everything Is OK. My favorite remix of the bunch by far is the one by Osaka-based producer Mountain. I will never get enough of his Miami Vice funk type of drum and bass. From the chill side of dancefloor we take it down another notch to Liquid. One of the most underrated czech producer duos out there, Ripple, released a really neat free download Words that is sure to calm you down if the festivities stressed you out. Watch out for that album they've got coming up! If you need even more c h i l l, there's also the lovely Emotions single by my fellow german countryman and multi-genre producer PLTX. Big up the Dresden gang. Let's take it down even further. To the Deep side of things. My favorite release on that side is probably Rift's Can't Stop EP on Differential Recordings. Especially Never Last and the Phobetor Rift & Petroll VIP did it for me. Great stuff as always from Rift and Differential. Need For Mirrors also released a very interesting track this week: Patience, a collab with vocalist Fusion. In true Need For Mirrors fashion it's one of those tracks that you cannot really compare to anything else. Definitely one of the more uplifting NFM tunes though. This week was also great for Deep DnB compilations. First off we've got the The Frontliners Vol. 1 compilation on Propaganda011, which I only found because it features a DnB track by a Bass House producer I fell in love with the last few months: Kage. I'm very glad I did find this though, my favorites were the tunes by Mew Zu, Point 4, Sub Mortal and, of course, Kage. Next up we got V Recordings's yearly compilation Planet V Vol. 4. Not a whole lot of new tracks, but the few new ones Bryan Gee blessed us with are well worth your time. L-Side and Command Strange, Makoto and Paul T & Edward Oberon, Alibi, Beat Merchants, all these are featured and deliver the good stuff, as expected. Lastly (in the deep section), I want to mention the Christmas present that is the SANTA FIGHTS SOME MONSTERS LP on my newcomer label SIN.FULL Maze. And the incredible LP name isn't even the best part of it! 16 free tracks with some of the freshest productions around, by some of the most unknown names around too. I can't even recommend specific tunes, it's all so interesting. Just listen to it all If you only care about streaming (guilty as charged), I was assured that this one will also come to Spotify, probably next month. Which is good, because I need all of these in my playlists, like now. Hey, nice, we have arrived at the Neuro section! A clear highlight this week was the release of the album that puts the funk back in Neurofunk: Mean Teeth's Bring Back The Funk LP. If you have closely followed their excellent album preview EPs over the years since the Estonian and Lithuanian duo started this project, you won't find that many new tracks on this finished album, but it's still very much worth your time. Great remasters of their biggest tunes to date and collaborations with NickBee and Volatily Cycle for those who are up-to-date, for everyone else a whole 20 amazing tracks of the funkiest of the funk Neurofunk awaits you. For those who like their dnb even harder, there was also Hallucinator's new Rejects LP on PRSPCT. One last thing and then I swear to God I'll shut up about this forever. Until next week that is. This week also saw the releases of DJ Hazard's When The Dreams Are Over EP and the long awaited Bou and Mefjus collaboration Wormhole. Not for me personally, but I can't not mention them at least.
Recommended if you like: Amoss, Notequal, Synergy You better Watchout, you better not cry, better not pout, I'm telling you why: Hidden Gem Of The Week™ is coming to town! Rolls right off the tongue, doesn't it? I've got one last present for you guys. This week's pick is Particular Shades - Fault Input / String on Watchout Music. Lots of new names in there. Let's start with the label and work our way to the artist. Watchout Music is a very very new label. They were founded earlier this year and this is just their second overall release so far. They are a Slovakia-based label focused on showing off the vast amount of talent that can be found in Eastern Europe, more specifically Slovakia and the Czech Republic. If you were active in that specific scene (no judgement if you weren't) in the last 3 years you might remember there being another project with very similar ambitions: dnb.zone. In fact, dnb.zone and Watchout are working very closely together to not just showcase releases by Slovakian producers, but now also release the best ones themselves. Watchout is also collaborating with the czech label SIN.FULL MAZE that I've mentioned earlier and covered for the Notequal EP a few weeks back. If you recognize any of these names, you know that can only mean one thing: Very high quality music. Watchout for this label in the future. Not convinced yet? Alright alright, let's talk about their newest release then. It comes from the newly established Slovakian producer duo Particular Shades. Previously known in the local scene as the DJs Abbre and Deepthonic, they have now joined forces, expanding their repertoire from "just" DJing to also producing their own tracks. As they are still very new and only have one single other release, it's hard to judge their production too much. But if that one release and this new double single is anything to go by, this certainly won't be the last time we will have heard of them. This newest release by them is a double single that combines the best of the techy and deep worlds of drum and bass. The first track, Fault Input, is a collaboration with fellow Slovakian trio Notequal. It's a great blend of rolling and shuffling drums, seriously hard-hitting snares and basses that go crazy all over. But my favorite part has got to be the way they worked a old timey computer tutorial sample into the mix. I love documentary or computer generated voice samples. Techy, deep goodness. If this is the faulty input, I don't even want the correct input. Continuing with the IT-based naming schemes, String is the second half of the double single. This one takes us a bit further away from the techyness, but doubles down on the deep part of it all. A loudly growling bass so deep I can barely hear it in my headphones, a string of equally aggressive but slightly less deep bellows and roars and lots and lots of different sections keep you on your toes as you listen to it. Can only recommend following both Watchout and Particular Shades in the future! Other Hidden Gems of this week: - Various Artists - VA AW20 [Sub:Edit Records] - DEZPOT - CORRIDORS OF DEATH PART 13 - Anizo - ANEP01 (what an EP name lol) - MYLK - Chocolate Parfait (KONKAI Remix) - Ci-Energy - Qualia (sadly missed this one on release, definitely worth a belated shout-out imo)
War hasn’t been too active in terms of releasing originals in 2020. If you look back at his discography, he never really puts out a lot of solo stuff. War shines in collabs and as a fantastic engineer, having done a lot on the technical side together with Hydro, like their album „Lateral Thinking“ for Utopia Music in 2019. But every now and then, War graces us with some new solo work. After having released the VIPs for Heat and Come Cross in June, the end of the year brings Rebirth/Crofters on Doc Scott’s 31 Recordings. Music on 31 is usually not everyone’s favourite, but if an artist lands there you can usually expect it to be something special. Rebirth has a rather unusual sounding, noticeably clipped kickdrum. To me, this sound carries the track as it stands out so much from the clean samples often used in a lot of tracks. The bassline in this tune has a fair bit of midrange, which is also something special for War’s music, because he has mastered the game of sub basses and used a lot of deeper basslines over the last couple of years. The top layer of percussion is built by some clanky percussion, and some space filled with a quite monotone pad. At no point does the tune slow down, there are only eight bars without percussion. Crofters is a bit more subtle, but by no means less efficient on the dancefloor. Strong metallic sounding percussion and a deeper bassline and get this tune going, while it has a lot more atmosphere than Rebirth. Two different, heavily processed vocal samples dance around a bunch of constantly evolving pads, adding for a sometimes sparse, sometimes dense sounding atmosphere. The occasional dub alarm adds sparkle on top. This one isn't my favourite War release, since a lot of the past output felt a lot deeper and these two tracks feel more like DJ tools to me, but they also got their place and are good in their that role.
Crypticz – Between Dust & Time LP (Western Lore)
Crypticz is an artist very little people pay attention to, despite him being immensely good at doing what he does: subtle, special and super strong tracks, not so much aimed at the dancefloor, but rewarding the patient and mindful listener. The first entry on his discogs page dates back to 2013, and on his way through music he put out releases with 31 Recordings, Different Music and Cosmic Bridge, to name a few. His contribution for Om Unit’s Cosmology: Dark Matter compilation, a track named Chrysalis featuring Any Kisnorbo on the vocals, was one of my favourite tunes I discovered in 2019, and I listened to it countless times. Between Dust & Time is not a drum and bass album. It’s barely even a jungle album in the sense of what most people expect when hearing the word jungle. This body of work to me feels more like an ambient or dub album that loosely fits into a jungle context, but takes the term "jungle" to a very abstract meaning. There won’t be any significant DJ tools in this one, its purpose is away from the dancefloor. If you value music beyond its meaning in a set, this album is for you. Broadcast Feeling, the opening tune, sets the general sound for the following 48 minutes very well. The track opens with an intricate soundscape of pads, ambient drums, field recordings, and a bass hinting at what will come later on. This soundscape takes its time to develop, and at around four minutes, a sudden short amen burst darkens the mood and foreshadows what’s next to come. At 04:36, the main section of this piece starts, if one can even call it that, as the long intro is just as much of a highlight as the part with drums and a deep 808 sub bass. Ocean Blue features Amy Kisnorbo, who also did the vocals for Crypticz‘ 2019 track „Chrysalis“. Her ethereal voice is not so much a foreground lead element, but gets treated like an instrument that is part of the atmosphere built by the pads in this track. The beautiful soundscape might as well stand on its own as an ambient work, but it gets underlaid by a drum break that I don’t know the name of. Lakutala (Version) sits at around 160 bpm, but feels slower due to the drum pattern being half as quick as in the average jungle tune. The drums feel quite lo-fi, and this effect gets reinforced by some noise getting layered underneath. The Guided starts with a sample recorded in a forest, and some tribal percussion with spring reverb on it, an effect commonly used in dub music. After about one minute a vocal joins the percussions and ambient forest noises, with a sub bass already announcing itself, only for the percussion to get filtered out again at around 01:40, the vocal sample ending, and the track leading into a snareless halftime soundscape, carried by a delay effect messing with the vocal sample and occasional pads. The sub bass carries the rhythm most noticeably in this one. Later on a sparsely used middle eastern string instrument delivers extra ear candy. Journey Through The Rings Of Saturn doesn’t contain any driving percussion. No kicks and snares in this one. Hats and some tribal drums are the only impact sounds, the shining star of this track are its pads. They start out ever so quiet and become louder and more expressive, developing and forming a soundscape over the four minutes of the tune. The bass seems far away in this tune, until it turns into a reverbed and filtered reese in the second half. The tune closes with some quiet bells. Nightshifter’s Groove features the usual long intro we’ve come to expect after the previous tunes on the album, most of them having the intro take half of the track. But this time it isn’t just forming a soundscape, but leads into a rhythm driven by a lowpassed kick with lots of space for the tribal drums to keep on coming with more layers and details, and even adding an oldschool break on top. The drum layers are the shining star of this track. Lakutala (the non-version of it) is exactly a minute longer, and features a „full-time“ jungle pattern instead of the stripped back halftime pattern of its version. The atmosphere remains the same, and with the 808 bass underneath, this one might even work as a tune on the dancefloor – a rare exception for this album. Despite having a more traditional jungle arrangement, it still manages to stand out by paying close attention to making the drum programming and effects as unique as possible and having separate spaces for the pads to breathe on their own, without fighting with the drums. Pads also deserve appreciation on their own. Memories Fade As I Drift Away, the closing track, once again doesn’t use any major drums, only some heavily reverbed hats and foley samples along with some pads and a field recording of someone walking next to a road, gently bringing this absolute journey of an album to an end.
[Ed. Note: Readers of the Editorial Team (and discerning Formula1 users elsewhere) have probably noticed that TheStateOfIt has pulled a Mika on us and retreated into a sabbatical as he deals with life. Thankfully for us, however, he has proven faster than Mika – no mean feat – and has returned to provide us with an extraordinary trip through the Fittipaldi family's history. We hope you enjoy it as much as we did]
Featured Focus: Fittipaldi Family
words by TheStateOfIt Coming into the Sakhir Grand Prix, the news ticker on Formula 1’s website is running at supersonic speeds, combing over the tidal wave of news erupting this past week. Updates on Romain Grosjean’s recovery and the critical analysis of safety features, from the holiness of halos to the hazards of Armco; shock over Lewis Hamilton being the latest victim of a global pandemic; glee over George Russell delivering a solid enough PowerPoint presentation to earn the step up; welcoming Jack Aitken into the big league; the oddity of Sergio Perez announcing that he has yet to announce anything; the impending storm clouds over Alex Albon’s future; Nikita Mazepin’s arrival and related insights into his behaviour; and the continuation of a family legacy in Mick Schumacher’s promotion into Formula 1. Among all that, one piece of major news that already seems to have flown right by us is the announcement of a fresh face into the paddock. It is not a surprise that Grosjean will require some time to recuperate from injuries suffered in Sunday’s race, and since Haas’ 2021 drivers cannot step away from their F2 commitments, they have named their reserve driver, Pietro Fittipaldi, as Grosjean’s deputy for this race. Pietro, however, represents more than just a fresh face. As his surname indicates, he is a continuation of a familial legacy pivotal to Brazilian motorsport. Without the Fittipaldis, we would probably never have seen other Brazilians in Formula 1. Furthermore, Pietro is the first third-generation driver in Formula 1, marking the Fittipaldis as the most enduring family in Formula 1, with four drivers, one team, and 50 years in the sport. So, as we step into Sakhir, we should look back at the five Fittipaldis and the legacy they have left so far and will now continue building, not just for their family, but to Formula 1 and motorsport overall. If you are cognizant of F1 history, you probably just did a double take. Five F1 Fittipaldis? But there are only four drivers — Emerson, Wilson, Christian and now Pietro — and the team was founded and run by two of them. How could there be five Fittipaldis? Forgetting the fun factoid of fledgling Footwork feature Max Papis finding footholds in the Fittipaldi family by becoming an in-law, there have indeed been five Fittipaldis in Formula 1. And the first one, the one you all do not know about, might just be the most important one of them all.
Wilson “Barão” Fittipaldi Sr.
Nicknamed “Barão”, or Baron in Portuguese, Wilson Sr. might be the most important Fittipaldi of them all. Without him, not only would Emerson and Wilson Jr. not well, exist at all, but the entirety of Brazilian motorsport would have a different shape without him. Just because he never stepped into a Formula 1 car does not mean he was not crucial to the sport. Born in 1920 to Italian immigrants in Brazil, Wilson did indeed participate in a few races here and there, but that was mostly on the local level, as Brazil’s motorsport scene was taking its first baby steps. But it was off the track — the commentary booth, to be precise — where Wilson Sr. found his calling card. Following the construction of the Interlagos circuit nearby, Wilson was approached, almost by chance, to call races at the circuit in 1940. As motorsport started to take off in the post-war era, Wilson was able to land himself a job with Rádio Excelsior, and soon Sao Paulo’s major radio network, Rádio Panamericana, as they sought to cover motorsports to appeal to young listeners. Fittipaldi’s voice soon became a national treasure akin to that of Murray Walker, especially after covering Chico Landi’s victory in the 1948 Bari Grand Prix, Brazil’s first Grand Prix win on European soil. Wilson was not just a normal radio journalist commentating over races, though. He became a significant figurehead in Brazilian motorsport through organizing some significant motorsport institutions in the nation. He established the Mil Milhas (1,000 Mile) race at Interlagos in 1956 as Brazil’s primary endurance racing event, a tradition that not only carries on to this day, but has been included in international sportscars and Le Mans series events. Wilson also established the Confederação Brasileira de Automobilismo, Brazil’s primary motorsport association that helped to cement the nation’s place in FISA, getting a Brazilian foothold into international motorsports and establishing a platform for Brazilian drivers to hone their talents on the motorsport stage. The drivers he probably helped the least, though, were his sons, Emerson and Wilson Jr. Odd, right? Well, Wilson Sr. apparently was hesitant to pour in the funding required for his children to compete, which could have put a hamper on their careers before they even left São Paulo. Mercifully, his sons started their own business in the automotive industry, from repairs to bodykits, that helped ease the burden on Barão’s wallet. But once the Fittipaldi family reached the biggest stage, Barão was there every step of the way. Wilson Sr. was selected as commentator when television coverage on Formula 1 started with Emerson’s debut in Lotus in 1970. And when Emerson took his first World Driver’s Championship two years later, Wilson Sr. had the unique privilege of commentating over his son’s triumph. He could even be found on the pitwall of his son’s team, Copersucar Fittipaldi, as they made their (rather disastrous) venture into Formula 1. Later in life, he would mentor his grandson Christian and great-grandson Pietro as they moved up the motorsport ladder, before his passing in 2013. Aged 92 at the time of his passing, he was one of the giants onto whose shoulders his sons, along with the large poll of Brazilian talent that followed in F1 and in other categories, would stand. He may be a relative unknown in contemporary Formula 1, but for any Brazilian out there, from the aspiring karter shooting his shot, to the casual everyday fan, you have the Baron to thank for that.
[Ed. Note: As a Brazilian, it was truly amazing to see Wilson Sr.’s contributions researched and explained so beautifully, and it just further underscores TheStateOfIt’s knowledge and research ability, which have been so valuable to the Formula1 Editorial Team from the start]
Emerson Fittipaldi
This guy needs no introduction. Take any Brazilian that has entered Formula 1 (or IndyCar, for that matter) and ask them what was their inspiration, nine times out of ten, it was Emmo. His father and elder brother, Wilson Sr. and Wilson Jr., were definitely Emerson’s biggest inspirations in Formula 1. From a young age, Emerson was already helping out his older brother engineer his karts, before taking the wheel himself and promptly dominating. He was also adept at motorbikes and hydrofoil boats, but to him, single-seaters were where his talents lay. Since his father showed no inclination to establish a base for Fittipaldi to race, he and Wilson just started their own garage, putting their engineering expertise to work to fund their racing careers. Once Formula Vee reached Brazil, this expertise was crucial to their grander schemes, as the Fittipaldis workshopped on their cars, sold it to others, and then Emerson beat them with his own car, taking the title at 21 years of age. However, big as Brazil is, everyone knew Europe was where it was. And after an extra season dabbling in GT cars, Emmo dropped everything and made the long haul to Britain with absolutely nothing known about him. He did not have a contract with any team, so he only meant to race for three months to test the waters. It was a shock to the British racing fraternity, then, when the complete unknown from South America, bought a Formula Ford and started winning races immediately. Racing school owner Jim Russell took notice and instantly brought Fittipaldi into his Formula 3 stable. Despite only joining halfway through the championship, Fittipaldi romped and secured the British F3 crown with five wins in the last six races. Not to downplay Fittipaldi’s feat, it bears mention that Alan Rollinson, who was dominating the championship until Fittipaldi’s arrival, mysteriously stopped participating when Emmo entered. Who knows what would have happened if Rollinson rolled on. By now, Emerson Fittipaldi had caught the eye of two team owners in Formula 1. One was Frank Williams, who by then was just getting started out in team management and striking a deal with De Tomaso, but still was not very competitive in the overall scheme of things. The other was Colin Chapman, Lotus chairman. Initially signed up for a Formula 2 deal in 1970, his meteoric rise to the top was further aided by Chapman, who let Fittipaldi start a few races for Lotus’ Formula 1 squad in their third car, which was used for other up-and-coming talents to hone their skills. Fittipaldi had basically did the real life, any% speedrun to make it to Formula 1 at 23 years of age. Might not seem like much nowadays, but back then, Fittipaldi was the 18th youngest driver to start a Formula 1 race and in the best team in the circus thanks to championship leader Jochen Rindt. Come Monza, however, Fittipaldi seemed to be in deep trouble in Lotus, especially since he launched right off the back of Ignazio Giunti in practice, which he remembers making Colin Chapman a bit mad. However, this incident was rendered moot later, as team and championship leader Rindt fatally crashed braking for the Parabolica. Distraught, Chapman withdrew Lotus from this and the next Grand Prix, and as second driver John Miles quit the team following Rindt’s accident, Fittipaldi suddenly found himself as the number one driver for Lotus as they returned for the penultimate race of the season at Watkins Glen. With Jackie Ickx looking racey, Fittipaldi’s job was to hold him off to give Rindt a chance of posthumously winning the title. In just his fourth start, and his first as team leader, Emerson did more than just keep Ickx at bay: he won the race. Granted, he only did so as the three ahead of him - Ickx, Jackie Stewart, and Pedro Rodriguez - all suffered from mechanical gremlins and fuel issues, but that takes nothing away from Fittipaldi’s feat. He became the third youngest winner in F1 history in just his fourth start, and his position as Lotus number one was well and truly cemented. The rest is well written in lore. Fittipaldi stuck through 1971 with Lotus as they developed their Lotus 72 chassis, even taking part in the oddity that was the Lotus-Pratt & Whitney jet turbine engined project. This led to a dominant 1972 championship campaign, culminating in the previously mentioned victory in Italy with his father commentating over his victory. He was only 25 at this point, becoming the youngest World Driver’s Championship at the time, a record he held for three full decades before the arrival of Fernando Alonso. Things, arguably, should have also gone his way the following year, but an intra-team rivalry with new teammate Ronnie Peterson and unreliability not only awarded Jackie Stewart the title, but prompted Fittipaldi to leave the team and make the switch to McLaren, where he would win his second world title before even reaching 28 years old. He had the world at his feet. Then he fell off the map. By choice. As Stephen Mangan summed it up in the movie Rush, Fitti-fucking-paldi had left McLaren for Coper-fucking-sucar. He had moved to Wilson’s team to not just boost the team’s image following its struggles in its inaugural season, but to help his brother in managing the outfit and to keep national spirit up for the squad. However, instead of leading the team to stardom, what followed was years of mediocrity and unreliability, with the occasional feel-good podium thrown in, the most notable being a second place finish in front of his home crowd at Jacarepaguá. At just 33, he retired from Formula 1 to manage the team full-time, but that was of little use as the outfit folded in 1982. You would think that would be that for this Fittipaldi, but that was just the end of the first half of his career. In 1984, aged 38, he was tempted to head to the USA to join IndyCar. Far from the youthful spirit of his F1 glory days, Fittipaldi proved that he was still extremely fast, adapting to oval racing incredibly quickly and finding a career renaissance in his 40’s, winning the CART championship at 43 years of age and winning two Indy 500’s, in 1989 and 1993. This second victory, at 46, should have been sweet, but Fittipaldi generated controversy by drinking orange juice instead of the traditional milk to promote Brazil’s citrus industry. The fans at Indy either have something against oranges or did not like the break in tradition for an industry-boosting tactic, and booed the living hell out of Emerson. He had planned to retire at the end of 1996, but a massive shunt in Michigan that year curtailed his racing career a bit early, and any chance of another full-time return to racing, if there ever was going to be at 50-plus years-old, was put to bed in 1997 when he was lucky in escaping from a microflight plane crash with just an injured back. Emerson was definitely the stalwart of the Fittipaldi family, and the one with the greatest legacy in carrying the Fittipaldi family’s name. His meteoric rise to superstardom was a rare sight to behold in Formula 1, but to leave all the success he had had to assist the family team was equally brave and gutsy. And then, when it was not enough and most drivers his age would be contemplating retirement, he went on to start a whole new career, earn fans (and haters) in a completely different region, and raced until his body could not take it any more. His two careers left an entire nation inspired to follow in his footsteps and created a hotbed of talent, from Piquet to Senna to Barrichello to Massa, that gave Brazil a constant presence on the grid until 2017, more than 4 decades after Emerson’s debut. I would end it there, and talk about how Emerson seems to be enjoying life in retirement, even taking part in the recent zenith of simracing events happening in this lockdown period, buuuuut there are also bad news. Recently, it was reported that Emmo is in deep financial debt, getting in 145 legal cases worth 8 and a half million euros from creditors, accusing him of hiding assets in the United States. It is not the first time Emerson has been in financial trouble as of late, as in 2016 some of his assets, including championship-winning cars, were seized from his museum by the Brazilian government, though Emerson highlighted the targeting of Brazilian media and his problems being symptomatic of a larger, nation-wide economic and corruption issue. Who knows, though, where Emerson goes from here.
Wilson Fittipaldi Junior
Wilson Jr. may be the older of the 1970’s Fittipaldis, but as the one with a delayed start in Formula 1 and with a far less successful career that his brother, Wilson will always be viewed as the Brent Gretzky of the Fittipaldi family. Actually, labelling him the Brent of the family is a bit harsh. He was very much the spark plug behind the Fittipaldi’s engineering ventures, funding most of the brothers’ racing aspirations, and had already made the trip over to Europe in 1966, before Emerson ever stepped foot in a Formula Vee car, but he could not cut any mustard and returned to Brazil. He even tried his hand at hydrofoil racing in his early days, but a nasty incident left Fittipaldi thinking that motorsport was much safer. Once Emerson made it big by winning a Grand Prix, though, Wilson thought that was the perfect opportunity to tail his brother into the European racing scene. In fact, he followed in his brother’s direct footsteps, heading right into Jim Russell’s Formula 3 seat in 1970. Though his rise was nowhere as meteoric or as impressive as his brother’s, Wilson was still able to steadily climb the ranks, and finishing 6th in European F2 in 1971 was enough to get Wilson a seat at Brabham for 1972. However, he joined Brabham at precisely the wrong time, where the outfit was going through its blunder years, as Ron Tauranac experimented with lobster-claw designs and ownership was being passed around like a hot potato, eventually ending up in the hands of Bernie Ecclestone. While all this was happening, Wilson was paired with Carlos Reutemann and two-time champion Graham Hill, and was instantly outclassed. With Hill, it was not much a surprise, but compared to fellow rookie Reutemann, Wilson was not matching him on pace at all. While Reutemann stunned the racing world by placing the woeful ‘lobster-claw’ Brabham BT34 on pole on his debut, Wilson was not setting any worlds alight with consistent but sub-par performances. As Hill left the team and Wilson was promoted to second driver in 1973, things did not look much better for him, scoring just three points while Reutemann was out there snagging podiums, and soon Wilson was out of a team. Not that it mattered, because Wilson was busy setting up his own. He already had the seeds planted for the outfit in November 1973, after his last race for Brabham. He did not want to waste the talent he had in manufacturing Formula Vee cars and GT bodykits go to waste, so hiring his friend Richard Divila to design the cars, he took the whole of 1974 off to establish the outfit. And he did not just take the whole year to establish his new team, but he took the whole of Brazil to start this team. I should probably remind you that Brazil, at this time, was governed by an authoritarian, militaristic government, one of many military juntas supported by the United States to install right-wing leaders sympathetic their fight against potential Soviet threats. This government was one that took pride in the ‘Brazilian Economic Miracle’ of the 1970’s, which saw Brazil’s economic standing rise to unprecedented levels in the decade (before the cost of the “miracle” led to the economic debacle of the 80’s), though this came through authoritarian rule that suppressed dissidents and drove inequality in the nation. Why did I just go on the brief geopolitical tangent to talk about a Formula 1 team being established? Well, sport was heavily intertwined with this economic miracle, wherein international dominance in certain sports were a symbol of Brazil rising in their relevance and power in the world. While this was most reflected through Brazil’s dominance in the FIFA World Cup in 1970, motorsport had a big role in it too, primarily sparked by Emerson’s two championships in 1972 and 1974. And when Wilson announced his intention to run a Formula 1 team, based in Brazil, with Brazilian engineers and drivers, the money came rolling in, as Brazil’s leaders had their sights set on champagne, trophies, and prize money. Brazil’s biggest ethanol and sugar manufacturer, Copersucar, wasted no time in becoming the title-sponsor for the team. Embraer, the state-owned airplane manufacturer, loaned their technology and engineers to design the car as well. The car was presented to the nation’s president at the end of 1974, with Wilson intending to drive the car himself in 1975. However, this meant that Copersucar-Fittipaldi was no longer a Fittipaldi family project. It was now Brazil’s national Formula 1 team. And boy, did they let their nation down. Especially in their first year, with Wilson at the wheel. With the FD01 featuring some unique design features, like a March 711-esque raised front wing and a sleek engine cover, their oddities unfortunately rooted them to the back of the grid, with Wilson failing to qualify twice, managing a best finish of 10th. Both Wilson and Copersucar-Fittipaldi were last out of the drivers and teams that attempted pretty much a full season. No points and no hope, Emerson’s turn to the team looked like, and may have very well been, a family move to support Wilson, but at the time there was no question that it carried undertones of saving national pride as well. Despite the occasional podium, Fittipaldi was never anything more than a lower-midfield team, however, and media and public support quickly vanished, the team switch to the UK never truly solving their problems. Once Copersucar stopped sponsoring them, and with Brazil now in significant debt thanks to the economic “miracle”, the team became impossible to sustain and it duly left Formula 1 by the end of 1983. If Wilson was left to his own devices to establish a family-run team without expectations, it might have lasted longer. But with the weight of an entire nation-state, there was just no way Wilson could keep it afloat. He would be an ever-present figure, supporting his son Christian’s motorsport career in the 90’s and making appearances now and then in Stock Car Brasil, even joining Christian for a Mil Milhas, the race set up by Wilson Sr., triumph in 1994.
Christian Fittipaldi
With Christian, we move into the third generation of the Fittipaldi family, the second with actual Formula 1 driving experience. Although he did not set up his own national motorsports organization and become the voice of a nation like “Barão”; although he does not have any World Championships to his name like uncle Emerson; and although he certainly did not start an F1 team that gathered support from the whole nation like Wilson Jr., that does not mean Christian lacked any talent. Far from it, his career is sadly rather undervalued. Christian was mentored by his father right from the start, as he took to go-karting and then single-seaters. And, like his uncle, Christian’s rise was meteoric. In 1989, he won the Brazilian Formula 3 title in his first step beyond Formula Ford, winning the continental title in 1990 and, while pulling double duty in Britain, managing to finish fourth in the UK F3 championship as well. Then, at 20 years old, Christian would stun the racing world by winning the F3000 championship on his first go in 1991. Granted, he was driving for Pacific Racing, one of the best F3000 teams out there, but he still had to put up a tough fight against Alessandro Zanardi, barely holding off Zanardi to the championship by four seconds in the final round at Nogaro. However, unlike his uncle, he did not get signed up by any recent constructor’s champions. Far from it. He ended up with Minardi for the 1992 season, which did not look all that bad at the start. Granted, they were backmarkers, but they had just come off their best season in recent history, with two fourth places from Pierluigi Martini to show for it. However, the new Lamborghini engine caused all sort of trouble and Fittipaldi failed to qualify multiple times, being saddled with reliability issues, and even fracturing his fifth vertebrae after an accident qualifying in the French Grand Prix, which would be the first of many injury woes for him. Despite all those troubles, though, he impressed by dragging that Minardi in places it had no right to be in, culminating in Minardi’s only point of the season at the Japanese Grand Prix. Still a sprightly 21 years old at this point, it made him the fifth youngest driver at the time to score a point in Formula 1. Next season was supposed to be Christian’s breakout year. As he moved to lead driver ahead of Fabrizio Barbazza, the Minardi M193 was miles better than the previous year’s chassis, even if it was still not exactly the strongest car on the grid. For the first half of the season, Fittipaldi looked strong, scoring a miraculous 4th place in the chaotic South African Grand Prix, and following that up with a fifth on the streets of Monte Carlo. The brilliantly-haired Barbazza was not faring too bad either, and Minardi were at last looking like a decent midfield outfit. Then Pierluigi Martini returned to the team. For those that do not know, Martini is essentially Minardi’s hero. He started on the front row with them, he led a lap for them, and drove for them for almost his whole career apart from 1992, the year Fittipaldi joined. But with Martini back, he started to challenge Fittipaldi pace wise, and the wily veteran was actually keeping up with the young Brazilian pace-wise, even qualifying in 7th at Hungary where Christian could only make 14th on the grid. This came to a head at the end of the Italian Grand Prix. Martini was in 7th, with Fittipaldi barely trailing behind in 8th place coming to the finish line. It would be the first time since the wet European Grand Prix where both Minardis would place in the top 10, and in front of the home crowd some more. They were practically nose to tail heading to the line. Then came the most (in)famous moment of Christian’s career: The Backflip. You have all seen it and gone “oOoOhH what a wAcKy accident”. I know I did when I first saw this. Stuck the landing, 9’s across the board, with an 8.5 from the Bulgarian judge, did not lose a place, and across the line. A highlight reel moment, but in reality, this was the end of Christian’s Minardi career. He was mad and insisted Martini slowed down and swerved to protect his position in front of his home crowd, endangering Christian in the process. He even claims to have seen the telemetry that indicates Martini let go of the gas. Martini insists he slowed because he was missing fifth gear, and the botched gear shift was to blame. Either way, tempers flared in the garage, forcing team principal Giancarlo Minardi to step in. Christian never talked to Martini again, and was dropped from Minardi after the following race in Portugal, in part due to needing sponsorship money, and in part because of the incident. We all laugh at that wAcKy incident now, but it left Christian out of a drive. For 1994, Christian managed to find a seat with Footwork Arrows, but being stuck in lower-midfield teams for three years, he felt he needed a change of scene. Despite more impressive results for Footwork, outpacing teammate Gianni Morbidelli, nearly scoring a podium in Germany and a sixth in Canada ruled out due to an underweight car, Fittipaldi was not going anywhere. Even though there were rumours of a high-profile move to McLaren (granted, this rumour was based on one blog and severely lacks verification), Christian up and left to race where his uncle was having his career resurgence: the big old U.S. of A. While things started out promising for Christian, getting second place in his first (and only) Indy 500 and finding himself with multiple top ten finished in 1996, a massive shunt in the second race of the season at Surfer’s Paradise sidelined him for quite a few races in 1997, and this marked the beginning of four straight seasons for Christian where he would be hampered by injuries and concussions caused by multiple wrecks all the way to 2000. Though he would win a few races and launch quite the campaign in 2002, those injuries definitely put a hamper in the prime of Christian’s career. From there, though Christian went on to try everything in motorsport, and I mean EVERYTHING. He dipped his toes into NASCAR, though the less we speak about that, the better. He shot his shot in the World Cup of Nations, A1 Grand Prix, but could not match Nelson Piquet Jr.’s earlier results to give Brazil a shot at the title. He went back home and experimented in Stock Car Brazil for a couple seasons, without success as well. But he found his true calling card in Daytona Prototypes. In the American endurance racing circuit, Christian became a powerhouse, ending up as a three-time Daytona 24 hours winner, a victor in the 12 Hours of Sebring, and taking home two sportscar championships in 2014 and 2015, aged 44. He finally hung up his racing suit for good last year, but is still involved in the sportscar scene in the United States, showing up as the Grand Marshal in this year’s 24 hours of Daytona. However, the mark he made on Formula 1 was more than just a fancy backflip. He took two underperforming teams in Minardi and Footwork, and actually got them into positions where they had no right to be. In fact, a paper by Bell et al. (2016) that created an all-time list of driver’s rankings based on performance relative to teammates, consistency in terms of reliability and team’s performance, redeemed Christian’s stint in Formula 1 by ranking him rather well. Like, really well. In fact, they ranked Christian as the 11th best driver ever in Formula 1. Better than Lewis Hamilton. Granted, this was based off up to 2016 results, leaving out a few rather successful years of Hamilton’s career, plus Christian has a W I D E confidence interval due to his short stint in F1, and other people, like u/whatthefat, have argued against Bell et al.’s model, but let us not completely dismiss. Maybe there is an alternate universe where Christian does not backflip, stays on good terms with Minardi, finds a solid drive in Formula 1, and does not get injured every darn season. In that alternative scenario, he might even have won a few races, maybe a championship. And maybe he would have had the results to lay a claim as the 11th best driver ever in Formula 1 without the need for long explanations. Instead, all we have for this Fittipaldi is a radical backflip to remember him by.
Pietro Fittipaldi
And this leads us to Pietro. As he takes the track this weekend in Sakhir, he becomes the fourth Fittipaldi to drive in Formula 1, earning the family the record for most representatives on the Formula 1 grid, and the first with three generations to enter races in Formula 1. Unlike Mercedes, who have negotiated with other teams instead of digging right into their reserves, Haas directly promoted their reserve driver into their seat opened up due to Grosjean’s tremendous accident last week. However, even with Grosjean’s absence, Pietro is quite lucky to end up in this seat in the first place. His career also has an odd start, one you do not expect. He started out his childhood in karting, yes, but Pietro’s first car racing series was not Formula Ford. Or Formula BMW. Or Formula 4. Or any other, normal, entry-level series you’d expect in open wheels. Instead, Pietro Fittipaldi got his start in NASCAR. Specifically, the Whelen All-American series where, at age 15, he won his track’s championship. He only made the move to ‘normal’ single-seater entry-level championships two years later, where he would then win in British Formula Renault’s Protyre championship in its final season, dominating the field. The next few seasons saw Pietro make a slow and steady climb up the junior ranks of single-seater racing, mixing a disappointing campaign in the F3 European Championship in 2015 with a title in the much lesser-known MRF Challenge over the 2015-16 off-season. From there, he moved on to Formula V8 3.5, previously known as Formula Renault, for the 2016 season. And this is where things get interesting. You see, Formula V8 3.5 was in its death throes at that point after Renault withdrew their backing from the 2016 season. For 2017, the series was still given a lot of weight in the new Super Licence points system, with the champion receiving 35 points. However, the entry list that year was severely depleted, with only eight full-time entries, one of them being Pietro. There was still a fair bit of competition for him to ward off, namely Rene Binder, Roy Nissany, and Alfonso Celis Jr., but Pietro took the title and the 35 points that came with it. This was just in time, as the FIA were going to slash the Super Licence points for the series down to 20 for the champions. The series then folded, but Pietro still had 35 points. The following year saw Pietro attempt to step up and take on two major series at once, pulling part-time double duty in both the World Endurance Championship and IndyCar. However, those plans were done for after Pietro broke both his legs during qualifying for the 6 Hours of Spa, scuppering his chances of making it to the Indy 500. He did manage to scrape a single top ten finish on his return, but most of his season was gone. By this point, Pietro was named as the reserve driver for Haas, but the major issue was that he still only had 35 points, just below the 40 required to actually make an F1 start. His efforts in DTM in 2019 were not great, with Pietro finding the transition to touring cars difficult, and thus Haas was left scrambling, with the 35 points from his Formula V8 3.5 title soon to expire in 2020. However, there was one series left for Pietro to push for points: the Asian Formula Three championship. It was no guarantee, though. Previous entrants into Asian F3 for the sake of Super Licence points have had their plans scuppered due to the short nature of the series, most notable of which being Dan Ticktum. All Pietro needed was fifth in the championship, but his season started weakly, with mechanical issues in Sepang leaving him with zero points in the championship. By Abu Dhabi, Pietro was only sixth in the standings, and given the form of his surrounding competitors, he would need to pick up his pace fast, otherwise nothing short of a miracle was required. Enter Covid-19. As the news out of the bizarre pneumonia in Wuhan started trickling out, and with the Chinese New Year signalling a potential spread of the disease across the region, many people put themselves on high alert. Crucially for this story, Asian Formula Three drivers Devlin DeFrancesco and Sebastian Fernandez, who both withdrew from the championship, citing concerns over the spread of Covid-19 in the region. As DeFrancesco and Fernandez were ahead of Pietro in the championship standings, he had an easier task of surpassing them to score those Super Licence points, which he promptly did, earning 6 points to bring his total to 41, just enough to qualify for a Super Licence. And not only has he qualified, but now he is taking to the track. Representing not just Brazil for the first time in a while, but bringing back the Fittipaldi family into the sport it has come to shape. Whether it be through establishing the sport in the nation, winning multiple championships, inspiring legions of future drivers, broadcasting to millions, attracting the government to invest in your team, or by simply doing a backflip, the Fittipaldi name is embedded in both Brazil and Formula 1’s history, and the family has shaped and transformed Formula 1 in a multitude of ways. Who knows what Pietro will do? Will he defy expectations and place the Haas on the cusp of points? Will he fade away during the race? Will he retire? Will he start? Who knows? But from history, we have seen the Fittipaldi name has been one to follow for decades. So we will follow Pietro. He has got a big name to carry, but whatever he does, he is the one pushing the Fittipaldi family legacy in Formula 1 forward.
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Essentials of Economics, 10th Edition: Bradley Schiller & Karen Gebhardt
Essentials of Medical Geology: Revised Edition, 2013th Edition: Olle Selinus
Brock Biology of Microorganisms, 16th Edition: Michael T. Madigan & Kelly S. Bender & Daniel H. Buckley & W. Matthew Sattley & David A. Stahl
Brock Biology of Microorganisms, 15th Edition: Michael Madigan & Kelly Bender & Daniel Buckley & W. Sattley & David Stahl
Introduction to Computer and Network Security: Navigating Shades of Gray, 1st Edition: Richard R. Brooks
Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 14th Edition: Janice L. Hinkle & Kerry H. Cheever
Brunner & Suddarth's Canadian Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 4th Edition: Mohamed El Hussein & Joseph Osuji
Handbook of Applied Therapeutics, 9th Edition: Burgunda Sweet
Business Analytics, 3rd Edition: James Evans
Business Analytics: Data Analytics and Decision Making, 7th Edition: S. Christian Albright & Wayne L. Winston
Business and Professional Communication, 1st Edition: Kory Floyd
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Planning for IT Professionals, 1st Edition: Susan Snedaker
Business Law, 6th Edition: Robert W. Emerson
Business: A Changing World, 10th Edition: O. C. Ferrell & Geoffrey Hirt & Linda Ferrell
Agricultural Internet of Things and Decision Support for Precision Smart Farming, 1st Edition: Annamaria Castrignano & Gabriele Buttafuoco & Raj Khosla
Calculus: AP Edition, 11th Edition: Howard Anton & Irl C. Bivens
Calculus: Early Transcendentals, 9th Edition: James Stewart & Daniel K. Clegg & Saleem Watson
California Wills and Trusts: Cases, Statutes, Problems, and Materials: Peter T. Wendel & Robert G. Popovich
Cardiovascular Physiology Concepts, 2nd Edition: Richard E. Klabunde
Foundations of Solid State Physics: Dimensionality and Symmetry, 1st Edition: Siegmar Roth & David Carroll
Sexuality Now: Embracing Diversity, 6th Edition: Janell L. Carroll
Private Security Today, 1st Edition: Frank Schmalleger & Larry Siegel & Carter Smith
Case Studies of Minority Student Placement in Special Education: Beth Harry & Janette Klingner & Elizabeth Cramer
Case Studies in Abnormal Psychology, 11th Edition: Thomas F. Oltmanns & Michele T. Martin
Cases in Public Relations Management: The Rise of Social Media and Activism, 3rd Edition: Patricia Swann
Peace Education Evaluation: Learning from Experience and Exploring Prospects: Celina Del Felice & Aaron Karako & Andria Wisler
Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England: William Cronon
The Theory and Craft of Digital Preservation: Trevor Owens
Optical Modulation: Advanced Techniques and Applications in Transmission Systems and Networks, 1st Edition: Le Nguyen Binh
Laser Beam Shaping Applications, 2nd Edition: Fred M. Dickey & Todd E. Lizotte
Characterization Techniques and Tabulations for Organic Nonlinear Optical Materials, 1st Edition: Mark G. Kuzyk & Carl Dirk
Human Resources and Change Management for Safety Professionals, 1st Edition: Thomas D. Schneid & Shelby L. Schneid
Security Management: A Critical Thinking Approach, 1st Edition: Michael Land & Truett Ricks & Bobby Ricks
Nutritional and Health Aspects of Food in Western Europe: Susanne Braun & Christina Zübert & Dimitrios Argyropoulos
Medical Cultures of the Early Modern Spanish Empire, 1st Edition: John Slater & Maríaluz López-Terrada & José Pardo-Tomás
Introduction To Environmental Impact Assessment, 4th Edition: John Glasson & Riki Therivel
Twenty-First Century Marianne Moore: Essays from a Critical Renaissance, 1st Edition: Elizabeth Gregory & Stacy Carson Hubbard
Metal Oxide Glass Nanocomposites: Sanjib Bhattacharya
Lagrangian Mechanics: An Advanced Analytical Approach: Anh Le Van & Rabah Bouzidi
Exterior Algebras: Elementary Tribute to Grassmann's Ideas: Vincent Pavan
Elements of Probability and Statistics: An Introduction to Probability with de Finetti's Approach and to Bayesian Statistics, 1st Edition: Francesca Biagini & Massimo Campanino
Essentials of Health Economics, 2nd Edition: Diane M. Dewar
Research Methods in International Business: Lorraine Eden & Bo Bernhard Nielsen
Introduction to Porous Materials: Pascal Van Der Voort & Karen Leus & Els De Canck
Boundary Conditions in Electromagnetics: Ismo V. Lindell & Ari Sihvola
Anthropology-Based Computing: Putting the Human in Human-Computer Interaction: John N.A. Brown
Handbook of Basal Ganglia Structure and Function, 2nd Edition: Heinz Steiner & Kuei Y. Tseng
Modeling the Psychopathological Dimensions of Schizophrenia: From Molecules to Behavior, 1st Edition: Mikhail Pletnikov & John Waddington
Irving Fisher, 1st Edition: Robert W. Dimand
Gray's Anatomy for Students, 4th Edition: Richard Drake & A. Wayne Vogl & Adam W. M. Mitchell
Growing and Managing Foreign Purchasing, 1st Edition: Thomas A. Cook
Excellence in Managing Worldwide Customer Relationships: Thomas A. Cook
Geomagnetically Induced Currents from the Sun to the Power Grid: Jennifer L. Gannon & Andrei Swidinsky & Zhonghua Xu
Solar Neutrinos: The First Thirty Years: John N. Bahcall & Raymond Davis & Peter Parker & Alexei Smirnov & Roger Ulrich
FORCE: Drawing Human Anatomy: Mike Mattesi
Optical WDM Networks: From Static to Elastic Networks, 1st Edition: Devi Chadha
CFA Program Curriculum 2020, Level 1, Volume 1, Ethics and Professional Standards & Quantitative Methods: CFA Institute
CFA Program Curriculum 2020, Level 1, Volume 2, Economics: CFA Institute
CFA Program Curriculum 2020, Level 1, Volume 3, Financial Reporting And Analysis: CFA Institute
CFA Program Curriculum 2020, Level 1, Volume 4, Corporate Finance and Equity: CFA Institute
CFA Program Curriculum 2020, Level 1, Volume 5, Fixed Income and Derivatives: CFA Institute
CFA Program Curriculum 2020, Level 1, Volume 6, Alternative Investments and Portfolio Management: CFA Institute
Occupational Health and Safety Management: A Practical Approach, 3rd Edition: Charles D. Reese
Heat Transfer Principles and Applications, 1st Edition: Charles H. Forsberg
Review of Surgery for ABSITE and Boards, 2nd Edition: Christian DeVirgilio & Areg Grigorian
Abnormal Psychology and Life: A Dimensional Approach, 3rd Edition: Chris Kearney & Timothy J. Trull
Remington and Klein's Infectious Diseases of the Fetus and Newborn Infant, 8th Edition: Christopher B. Wilson & Victor Nizet & Yvonne Maldonado & Jack S. Remington
Neurosurgical Emergencies, 3rd Edition: Christopher M. Loftus
Macroeconomics, 15th Canadian Edition: Christopher T.S. Ragan
Cengage Advantage Books: Classroom Teaching Skills, 10th Edition: James M. Cooper
Design Education Today: Technical Contexts, Programs and Best Practices, 1st Edition: Dirk Schaefer & Graham Coates & Claudia Eckert
Disaster Recovery, Crisis Response, and Business Continuity: A Management Desk Reference, 1st Edition: Jamie Watters & Janet Watters
Disaster Response and Recovery: Strategies and Tactics for Resilience, 2nd Edition: David A. McEntire
Discovering the American Past: A Look at the Evidence, Volume II: Since 1865, 8th Edition: William Bruce Wheeler & Lorri Glover
Don't Make Me Think, Revisited: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability: Steve Krug
Dosage Calculations: A Ratio-Proportion Approach, 4th Edition: Gloria D. Pickar & Amy Pickar-Abernethy
Your College Experience, 13th Edition: John Gardner & Bessy Barefoot
The Tarot Companion: Liz Dean
The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life: Mark Manson
The Social Worker and Psychotropic Medication: Toward Effective Collaboration with Clients, Families, and Providers, 4th Edition: Kia J. Bentley & Joseph Walsh
The Sense of Hearing, 3rd Edition: Christopher J. Plack
The Science of Nutrition, 5th Edition: Janice J. Thompson & Melinda Manore & Linda Vaughan
The School Counselor’s Guide to Multi-Tiered Systems of Support, 1st Edition: Emily Goodman-Scott
The Routledge Handbook of Metametaphysics, 1st Edition: Ricki Bliss & J.T.M. Miller
The Real World, 7th Edition: Kerry Ferris & Jill Stein
The Process of Social Research, 2nd Edition: Jeffrey C. Dixon & Royce A. Singleton & Bruce C. Straits
The Practice of Statistics, 6th Edition: Daren Starnes
The Modern Guide to Witchcraft: Your Complete Guide to Witches, Covens, and Spells: Skye Alexander
The Little Big Book of White Spells: Ileana Abrev
The Intentional Relationship Occupational Therapy and Use of Self, 2nd Edition: Renee R Taylor
The Foreign Policy of the European Union, 2nd Edition: Stephan Keukeleire & Tom Delreux
The First Interview, 4th Edition: James Morrison
The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report: Final Report Of The National Commission On The Causes Of The Financial And Economic Crisis In The United States: U.S. Government Printing Office
The Essentials of Persuasive Public Speaking, 1st Edition: Sims Wyeth
The Essentials of Business Research, 2nd Edition: Lawrence S. Silver & Robert E. Stevens & Courtney R. Kernek
The Essence of Multivariate Thinking: Basic Themes and Methods, 2nd Edition: Lisa L. Harlow
The Engaged Sociologist: Connecting the Classroom to the Community, 6th Edition: Jonathan M. White & Michelle K. White
The Disaster Recovery Handbook: A Step-by-Step Plan to Ensure Business Continuity and Protect Vital Operations, Facilities, and Assets, 2nd Edition: Michael Wallace & Lawrence Webber
The DIRTY, LAZY, KETO Cookbook: Bend the Rules to Lose the Weight!: Stephanie Laska & William Laska
The Design of Everyday Things: Revised and Expanded Edition: Don Norman
The Copywriter's Toolkit: The Complete Guide to Strategic Advertising Copy, 1st Edition: Margo Berman
The Context of Business: Understanding the Canadian Business Environment: Natalie Guriel & Len Karakowsky
The Coding Manual for Qualitative Researchers, 3rd Edition: Johnny Saldana
The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles, and Their Secret World War: Stephen Kinzer
The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist's Notebook: What Traumatized Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love, and Healing: Bruce D Perry & Maia Szalavitz
The Bible: A Historical and Literary Introduction, 2nd Edition: Bart D. Ehrman
The Art of Democracy: A Concise History of Popular Culture in the United States, 2nd Edition: Jim Cullen
The Art and Craft of Fiction: A Writer's Guide, 2nd Edition: Michael Kardos
Technical Communication: Process and Product, 9th Edition: Sharon Gerson & Steven Gerson
Szycher's Practical Handbook of Entrepreneurship and Innovation: Michael Szycher
Essentials of Maternity, Newborn, and Women's Health Nursing, 4th Edition: Susan Ricci
Mechanical Ventilation in Emergency Medicine, 1st Edition: Susan R. Wilcox & Ani Aydin & Evie G. Marcolini
Supervision of Police Personnel, 9th Edition: Nathan F Iannone & Marvin D Iannone & Jeff Bernstein
Current Developments in Biotechnology and Bioengineering: Resource Recovery from Wastes: Sunita Varjani & Ashok Pandey & Edgard Gnansounou
Surgical Technology for the Surgical Technologist: A Positive Care Approach, 5th Edition: Association of Surgical Technologists
Study Guide for Gould's Pathophysiology for the Health Professions, 6th Edition: Karin C. VanMeter & Robert J. Hubert
Study Guide for Fundamentals of Nursing, 10th Edition: Geralyn Ochs
Stretch: Unlock the Power of Less -and Achieve More Than You Ever Imagined: Scott Sonenshein
ISO 20000 A Complete Guide: 2020 Edition: Gerardus Blokdyk
Llewellyn's 2021 Witches' Companion: A Guide to Contemporary Living: Lupa & Susan Pesznecker & Deborah Lipp & Kerri Connor
Sandra Smith's Review for NCLEX-RN®, 13th Edition: Marianne P. Barba & Sandra F. Smith
Elementary Statistics Using Excel, 5th Edition: Mario F. Triola
Elementary Statistics Using Excel, 6th Edition: Mario Triola
Dutton's Orthopaedic: Examination, Evaluation and Intervention, 4th Edition: Mark Dutton
Marketing: The Core, 5th Canadian Edition: Roger Kerin & Steven Hartley & William Rudelius
Mega eTextbooks release thread (part-33)! Find your textbooks here between $5-$25 :)
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Torts: Cases and Materials, 4th Edition: Aaron D. Twerski & James A. Henderson & W. Bradley Wendel
Global Occupational Safety and Health Management Handbook, 1st Edition: Thomas P. Fuller
Parametric Modeling with SOLIDWORKS 2020: Randy Shih & Paul Schilling
Tort Law: Responsibilities and Redress, 4th Edition: John C. P. Goldberg & Anthony J. Sebok & Benjamin C. Zipursky
Evidence-Based Diagnosis: An Introduction to Clinical Epidemiology, 2nd Edition: Thomas B. Newman & Michael A. Kohn
Thesis and Dissertation Writing in a Second Language: A Handbook for Students and their Supervisors, 2nd Edition: Brian Paltridge & Sue Starfield
Therapeutic Modalities in Rehabilitation, 5th Edition: William Prentice
Information Privacy Law, 6th Edition: Daniel J. Solove & Paul M. Schwartz
Theory and Treatment Planning in Counseling and Psychotherapy, 2nd Edition: Diane R. Gehart
Introduction to Probability, 2nd Edition: Joseph K. Blitzstein & Jessica Hwang
Leadership Growth Through Crisis: An Investigation of Leader Development During Tumultuous Circumstances, 1st Edition, 2020 Edition: Bruce E. Winston
Unequivocal Justice, 1st Edition: Christopher Freiman
Louise Brigham and the Early History of Sustainable Furniture Design: Antoinette LaFarge
AP Human Geography: with 2 Practice Tests, 9th Edition: Meredith Marsh & Peter S. Alagona
Applied Sport Mechanics, 4th Edition: Brendan Burkett
Applied Theories in Occupational Therapy: A Practical Approach, 2nd Edition: Marilyn B. Cole & Roseanna Tufano
Introducing SEO: Your quick-start guide to effective SEO practices: Aravind Shenoy & Anirudh Prabhu
Essentials of Internal Medicine, 4th Edition: Ardhendu Sinha Ray & Abhisekh Sinha Ray
Aspen Treatise for Federal Jurisdiction, 7th Edition: Erwin Chemerinsky
The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, 1st Edition, 2016 Edition: Timothy J. Petersen & Susan E. Sprich & Sabine Wilhelm
Conflicting Philosophies and International Trade Law: Worldviews and the WTO, 1st Edition, 2018 Edition: Michael Burkard
Consciousness in the Physical World: Perspectives on Russellian Monism, 1st Edition: Torin Alter & Yujin Nagasawa
Ethical Issues in Behavioral Neuroscience: Grace Lee & Judy Illes & Frauke Ohl
Pediatric Epidemiology: Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Volume 21: W. Kiess & C. G. Bornehag & C. Gennings
Assessing Students with Special Needs, 8th Edition: Effie Kritikos & James McLoughlin & Rena Lewis
Statistics for Business and Economics, 8th Edition: Paul Newbold & William Carlson & Betty Thorne
Policy Analysis: Concepts and Practice, 6th Edition: David L. Weimer & Aidan R. Vining
Intermediate Accounting IFRS, 4th Edition: Donald E. Kieso & Jerry J. Weygandt & Terry D. Warfield
Designing for People: An Introduction to Human Factors Engineering, 3rd Edition: John D Lee & Christopher D. Wickens & Yili Liu & Linda Ng Boyle
Statistics for Business and Economics: Global Edition, 8th Edition: Paul Newbold & William Carlson & Betty Thorne
Cybercrime and Digital Forensics: An Introduction, 2nd Edition: Thomas J. Holt & Adam M. Bossler & Kathryn C. Seigfried-Spellar
Canadian Essentials of Nursing Research, 4th Edition: Kevin Woo
Starting out with Visual C#, 5th Edition: Tony Gaddis
Statistics for People Who (Think They) Hate Statistics, 7th Edition: Neil J. Salkind & Bruce B. Frey
Mammographic Imaging, 4th Edition: Shelly Lille & Wendy Marshall
Interpersonal Communication: Relating to Others, 9th Edition: Steven A. Beebe & Susan J. Beebe & Mark V. Redmond
Moral Development and Reality: Beyond the Theories of Kohlberg, Hoffman, and Haidt, 4th Edition: John C. Gibbs
The Practice of Public Relations, 14th Edition: Fraser P. Seitel
Clinical Interviewing, 6th Edition: John Sommers-Flanagan & Rita Sommers-Flanagan
Counseling the Culturally Diverse: Theory and Practice, 7th Edition: Derald Wing Sue & David Sue
Orientation to the Counseling Profession: Advocacy, Ethics, and Essential Professional Foundations, 3rd Edition: Bradley Erford
Chemistry, 4th Edition: Allan Blackman & Steven E. Bottle & Siegbert Schmid & Mauro Mocerino & Uta Wille
Study Guide for Lewis' Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems, 11th Edition: Mariann M. Harding & Collin Bowman-Woodall & Jeffrey Kwong
Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools, 2nd Edition: Alfred Aho & Monica Lam & Ravi Sethi & Jeffrey Ullman
Clinical Companion to Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems, 11th Edition: Debra Hagler & Mariann M. Harding & Jeffrey Kwong
Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient: Cecile A Ferrando
Cytology: Diagnostic Principles and Clinical Correlates, 5th Edition: Edmund S. Cibas & Barbara S. Ducatman
Essentials of General, Organic, and Biochemistry, 3rd Edition: Denise Guinn
The Early Slavs: Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus, 1st Edition: Pavel Dolukhanov
Business Ethics: Case Studies and Selected Readings, 9th Edition: Marianne M. Jennings
Life: The Science of Biology, 12th Edition: David M. Hillis & H. Craig Heller & Sally D. Hacker & David W. Hall & Marta J. Laskowski & David E. Sadava
Statistics for People Who (Think They) Hate Statistics, 7th Edition: Neil J. Salkind & Bruce B. Frey
The Complete Poems of George Whalley: George Whalley
Multinational Management: A Strategic Approach, 7th Edition: John B. Cullen & K. Praveen Parboteeah
Cultures of the West: A History, Volume 2: Since 1350, 3rd Edition: Clifford R. Backman
Social Problems, 7th Edition: John J. Macionis
Strategic Management, 5th Edition: Frank Rothaermel
Games of Strategy, 5th Edition: Avinash K. Dixit & Susan Skeath & David McAdams
Organization Development and Change, 11th Edition: Thomas G. Cummings & Christopher G. Worley
Envision in Depth: Reading, Writing, and Researching Arguments, 4th Edition: Christine L. Alfano & Alyssa J. O'Brien
Principles of Macroeconomics, 13th Edition: Karl E. Case & Ray C. Fair & Sharon E. Oster
Labor Economics: Principles in Practice, 2nd Edition: Kenneth McLaughlin
College Mathematics for Business, Economics, Life Sciences, and Social Sciences, 14th Edition: Raymond Barnett & Michael Ziegler & Karl Byleen & Christopher Stocker
South-Western Federal Taxation 2021: Corporations, Partnerships, Estates and Trusts, 44th Edition: William A. Raabe & James C. Young & Annette Nellen
Pathways to Pregnancy and Parturition, 3rd Edition: P.L. Senger
Dyce, Sack, and Wensing's Textbook of Veterinary Anatomy, 5th Edition: Baljit Singh
Domestic Animal Behavior for Veterinarians and Animal Scientists, 5th Edition: Katherine A. Houpt
Histology: A Text and Atlas, 6th Edition: Michael H. Ross & Wojciech Pawlina
Cunningham's Textbook of Veterinary Physiology, 5th Edition: Bradley G. Klein
Statistics: A Tool for Social Researchers in Canada, 4th Canadian Edition: Riva Lieflander & Joseph Healey & Steven Prus
Rules for Writers with 2020 APA Update, 9th Edition: Diana Hacker & Nancy Sommers
The Future of 24-Hour News: New Directions, New Challenges, 1st Edition: Stephen Cushion & Richard Sambrook
Nutrition Through the Life Cycle, 7th Edition: Judith E. Brown
Porth's Essentials of Pathophysiology, 5th Edition: Tommie L. Norris
The Parapsychology Revolution: A Concise Anthology of Paranormal and Psychical Research: Robert M. Schoch & Logan Yonavjak
The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone: Olivia Laing
Mastering 'Metrics: The Path from Cause to Effect: Joshua D. Angrist & Jörn-Steffen Pischke
Design of Fluid Thermal Systems, 4th Edition: William S. Janna
Introduction to Criminology: Why Do They Do It?, 2nd Edition: Pamela J. Schram & Stephen G. Tibbetts
Essentials of Health Policy and Law, 4th Edition: Sara E. Wilensky & Joel B. Teitelbaum
Health Economics and Financing, 5th Edition: Thomas E. Getzen
Medicine in Translation: Journeys with My Patients, 1st Edition: Danielle Ofri
Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology: Scott O. Lilienfeld & Steven Jay Lynn & Jeffrey M. Lohr
Forensic Science: An Introduction to Scientific and Investigative Techniques, 5th Edition: Suzanne Bell
Mass Shootings: Media, Myths, and Realities, 1st Edition: Jaclyn Schildkraut & H. Jaymi Elsass
McGraw-Hill's 500 College Precalculus Questions: Ace Your College Exams: Sandra McCune & William Clark
Essentials of Torts, 3rd Edition: William P. Statsky
Autism Spectrum Disorders: From Theory to Practice, 3rd Edition: Laura Hall
Campbell Biology, 3rd Canadian Edition: Urry & Wasserman
Research Design in Clinical Psychology, 5th Edition: Alan E. Kazdin
Business in Action, 9th Edition: Courtland L. Bovee & John V. Thill
Studying Engineering: A Road Map to a Rewarding Career, 4th Edition: Raymond B. Landis
Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Unleashed, 1st Edition: Ray Rankins & Paul Bertucci & Chris Gallelli & Alex Silverstein
Principles of International Law, 3rd Edition: Sean Murphy
Augmentative & Alternative Communication: Supporting Children and Adults with Complex Communication Needs, 5th Edition: David R. Beukelman & Janice C. Light
Essentials of Sociology, 4th Edition: George Ritzer
Basic Clinical Lab Competencies for Respiratory Care: An Integrated Approach, 5th Edition: Gary C. White
Peace and Conflict Studies, 4th Edition: David P. Barash & Charles P. Webel
Leadership Roles and Management Functions in Nursing: Theory and Application, 10th Edition: Bessie L. Marquis & Carol Huston
Discovering AutoCAD 2020, 1st Edition: Mark Dix
The Compact Reader: Short Essays by Method and Theme, 11th Edition: Jane E. Aaron & Ellen Kuhl Repetto
NSCA’s Guide to Sport and Exercise Nutrition, 1st Edition: Bill Campbell & Marie Spano
Motor Learning and Performance: From Principles to Application, 5th Edition: Richard Schmidt & Tim Lee
Learning: A Behavioral, Cognitive, and Evolutionary Synthesis, 1st Edition: Jerome Frieman & Stephen Reilly
Chemistry: An Atoms First Approach, 3rd Edition: Steven S. Zumdahl & Susan A. Zumdahl & Donald J. DeCoste
The Practice of Creative Writing: A Guide for Students, 3rd Edition: Heather Sellers
The Tracks We Leave: Ethics and Management Dilemmas in Healthcare, 3rd Edition: Frankie Perry
Art Matters: A Contemporary Approach to Art Appreciation: Pamela Gordon
Diagnostic Radiology: Recent Advances and Applied Physics in Imaging, 2nd Edition: Arun Kumar Gupta & Veena Chowdhury & Niranjan Khandelwal
Decolonizing Indigenous Education: An Amazigh/Berber Ethnographic Journey: Si Belkacem Taieb
Assessment in Special Education: A Practical Approach, 5th Edition: Roger A. Pierangelo & George A. Giuliani
Applied Geochemistry: Advances in Mineral Exploration Techniques, 1st Edition: Athanas S. Macheyeki & Dalaly Peter Kafumu & Xiaohui Li & Feng Yuan
Mechanobiology: From Molecular Sensing to Disease, 1st Edition: Glen L. Niebur
Critical Medical Anthropology, 2nd Edition: Merrill Singer & Hans Baer
Basics of Social Research: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches, 3rd Edition: W. Lawrence Neuman
Fatty Alcohols: Anthropogenic and Natural Occurrence in the Environment, 2nd Edition: Scott E Belanger & Stephen M Mudge & Paul C DeLeo
Clinical Hematology Atlas, 5th Edition: Bernadette F. Rodak & Jacqueline H. Carr
Simultaneous Mass Transfer and Chemical Reactions in Engineering Science: Solution Methods and Chemical Engineering Applications, 1st Edition: Bertram K. C. Chan
Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Technology, 8th Edition: Eugene Silberstein & John Tomczyk & Bill Whitman & Bill Johnson
Practical Procedures in Anaesthesia and Critical Care: Guy Jackson & Christopher J. Whiten & Neil Soni
Orbital Mechanics for Engineering Students, 4th Edition: Howard D. Curtis
The Oxford Handbook of Levinas: Michael L. Morgan
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 6th Edition: Alison Snape & Despo Papachristodoulou & William H. Elliott & Daphne C. Elliott
Bioethics: Principles, Issues, and Cases, 4th Edition: Lewis Vaughn
Biology: How Life Works, 3rd Edition: James Morris & Daniel Hartl & Andrew Knoll & Robert Lue
Biology Laboratory Manual, 12th Edition: Darrell Vodopich & Randy Moore
Mathematical Modeling of Pharmacokinetic Data, 1st Edition: Steven Strauss & David W.A. Bourne
Essentials of Economics, 10th Edition: Bradley Schiller & Karen Gebhardt
Essentials of Medical Geology: Revised Edition, 2013th Edition: Olle Selinus
Brock Biology of Microorganisms, 16th Edition: Michael T. Madigan & Kelly S. Bender & Daniel H. Buckley & W. Matthew Sattley & David A. Stahl
Brock Biology of Microorganisms, 15th Edition: Michael Madigan & Kelly Bender & Daniel Buckley & W. Sattley & David Stahl
Introduction to Computer and Network Security: Navigating Shades of Gray, 1st Edition: Richard R. Brooks
Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 14th Edition: Janice L. Hinkle & Kerry H. Cheever
Brunner & Suddarth's Canadian Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 4th Edition: Mohamed El Hussein & Joseph Osuji
Handbook of Applied Therapeutics, 9th Edition: Burgunda Sweet
Business Analytics, 3rd Edition: James Evans
Business Analytics: Data Analytics and Decision Making, 7th Edition: S. Christian Albright & Wayne L. Winston
Business and Professional Communication, 1st Edition: Kory Floyd
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Planning for IT Professionals, 1st Edition: Susan Snedaker
Business Law, 6th Edition: Robert W. Emerson
Business: A Changing World, 10th Edition: O. C. Ferrell & Geoffrey Hirt & Linda Ferrell
Agricultural Internet of Things and Decision Support for Precision Smart Farming, 1st Edition: Annamaria Castrignano & Gabriele Buttafuoco & Raj Khosla
Calculus: AP Edition, 11th Edition: Howard Anton & Irl C. Bivens
Calculus: Early Transcendentals, 9th Edition: James Stewart & Daniel K. Clegg & Saleem Watson
California Wills and Trusts: Cases, Statutes, Problems, and Materials: Peter T. Wendel & Robert G. Popovich
Cardiovascular Physiology Concepts, 2nd Edition: Richard E. Klabunde
Foundations of Solid State Physics: Dimensionality and Symmetry, 1st Edition: Siegmar Roth & David Carroll
Sexuality Now: Embracing Diversity, 6th Edition: Janell L. Carroll
Private Security Today, 1st Edition: Frank Schmalleger & Larry Siegel & Carter Smith
Case Studies of Minority Student Placement in Special Education: Beth Harry & Janette Klingner & Elizabeth Cramer
Case Studies in Abnormal Psychology, 11th Edition: Thomas F. Oltmanns & Michele T. Martin
Cases in Public Relations Management: The Rise of Social Media and Activism, 3rd Edition: Patricia Swann
Peace Education Evaluation: Learning from Experience and Exploring Prospects: Celina Del Felice & Aaron Karako & Andria Wisler
Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England: William Cronon
The Theory and Craft of Digital Preservation: Trevor Owens
Optical Modulation: Advanced Techniques and Applications in Transmission Systems and Networks, 1st Edition: Le Nguyen Binh
Laser Beam Shaping Applications, 2nd Edition: Fred M. Dickey & Todd E. Lizotte
Characterization Techniques and Tabulations for Organic Nonlinear Optical Materials, 1st Edition: Mark G. Kuzyk & Carl Dirk
Human Resources and Change Management for Safety Professionals, 1st Edition: Thomas D. Schneid & Shelby L. Schneid
Security Management: A Critical Thinking Approach, 1st Edition: Michael Land & Truett Ricks & Bobby Ricks
Nutritional and Health Aspects of Food in Western Europe: Susanne Braun & Christina Zübert & Dimitrios Argyropoulos
Medical Cultures of the Early Modern Spanish Empire, 1st Edition: John Slater & Maríaluz López-Terrada & José Pardo-Tomás
Introduction To Environmental Impact Assessment, 4th Edition: John Glasson & Riki Therivel
Twenty-First Century Marianne Moore: Essays from a Critical Renaissance, 1st Edition: Elizabeth Gregory & Stacy Carson Hubbard
Metal Oxide Glass Nanocomposites: Sanjib Bhattacharya
Lagrangian Mechanics: An Advanced Analytical Approach: Anh Le Van & Rabah Bouzidi
Exterior Algebras: Elementary Tribute to Grassmann's Ideas: Vincent Pavan
Elements of Probability and Statistics: An Introduction to Probability with de Finetti's Approach and to Bayesian Statistics, 1st Edition: Francesca Biagini & Massimo Campanino
Essentials of Health Economics, 2nd Edition: Diane M. Dewar
Research Methods in International Business: Lorraine Eden & Bo Bernhard Nielsen
Introduction to Porous Materials: Pascal Van Der Voort & Karen Leus & Els De Canck
Boundary Conditions in Electromagnetics: Ismo V. Lindell & Ari Sihvola
Anthropology-Based Computing: Putting the Human in Human-Computer Interaction: John N.A. Brown
Handbook of Basal Ganglia Structure and Function, 2nd Edition: Heinz Steiner & Kuei Y. Tseng
Modeling the Psychopathological Dimensions of Schizophrenia: From Molecules to Behavior, 1st Edition: Mikhail Pletnikov & John Waddington
Irving Fisher, 1st Edition: Robert W. Dimand
Gray's Anatomy for Students, 4th Edition: Richard Drake & A. Wayne Vogl & Adam W. M. Mitchell
Growing and Managing Foreign Purchasing, 1st Edition: Thomas A. Cook
Excellence in Managing Worldwide Customer Relationships: Thomas A. Cook
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Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management & Transboundary Movement) Amendment Rules, 2019: In a recent press release as on 6 th of March 2019, it has been made clear that the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, has amended the Hazardous Waste (Management & Transboundary Movement) Rules, 2016 (vide notification G.S.R. G.S.R. XX (E), dated 01 March 2019) . Hazardous waste management in Russia and the EU 2019 Фото: ... Hazardous Waste Handling proposes construction of 7 industrial engineering complexes with a capacity of 50,000 tons each. Of these complexes, ... Rospotrebnadzor follows the Sanitary Rules 2.1.7.1386-03, ... The Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Rules, 2016 encourage the reduction of hazardous waste generation and encourage its recycling and reusing. They also specify strict guidelines related to the import and export or even storage and transportation of hazardous wastes in order to ensure optimum waste management with regard to transportation, storage and ... Hazardous Waste (E-waste) Management Rules 2019. Schedule-3 (Rule14(1) noted) (Threshold limits for use of certain hazardous substances) Sl. Substances Name Standards. 1. Short Chain Chloro Paraffins, Alkanes, C10-13 ≤ 25% 2. Antimony trioxide ≤ 1% 3. Beryllium metal/ Beryllium oxide (Beryllia) ≤ 0.1% 4. hazardous waste management regulations, provided that you comply with the basic requirements described on page 8. If you are a VSQG and you generate no more than 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of acute hazardous waste—or 100 kg (220 lbs) of acute hazardous waste spill residues—in a calendar month, you may manage the acute hazardous June, 2019. Preface Naonal Producvity Council (NPC) presents the Tool Kit is pleased to present to you the 'Toolkit for implementaon of Hazardous Waste Management rules, 2016'. This toolkit has been craed specially for reference forby all the the stakeholders involved in the generaon, collecon, storage, ... E-Waste Collection targets for the financial year 2020-2021 under the EPR Provision of the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2016 in wakeof Covid -19 Pandemic. Office Memorandum-[2019] Prohibition of import of solid plastic waste as per Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Amendment Rules, 2019 (222kb) Part 3: Hazardous Waste Regulations. 11 Miss. Admin. Code Pt. 3, Ch. 1.Hazardous Waste Management Regulations; 11 Miss. Admin. Code Pt. 3 Ch. 2..Final Regulations Governing Brownfields Voluntary Cleanup and Redevelopment in Mississippi Hazardous & Other Wastes (Management & Transboundary) Amendment rules 2019; Hazardous & Other Wastes (Management & Transboundary) Rules 2016; Dangerous Goods (Classification, Packaging and Labelling) Rules, 2013; Registration of Recyclers/Reprocessors of Hazardous Waste; Procedure for Import of Hazasrdous Waste (Part-B of Schedule-III) Some of the salient features of the Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management& Transboundary Movement) Amendment Rules, 2019 are as follows: Solid plastic waste has been prohibited from import into the country including in Special Economic Zones (SEZ) and by Export Oriented Units (EOU).
This is a video lecture on HOSPITAL WASTE MANAGEMENT.The content of this video is based on the PARK TEXTBOOK OF COMMUNITY MEDICINE. Hazardous Waste (Handling & Management Rules) This course will cover the basics of hazardous waste identification, labeling, employee training, emergency preparedness, accumulation times, manifesting off... Is video me hamne aapko bataya hai ki biomedical waste ko kaise management karte hai apne laboratory me.मेरा नाम Dinesh kumar है। Qualification- 1:BMLT in pe... US EPA has created new management standards to streamline regulatory compliance for health-care facilities and pharmaceutical manufacturers. On January 22, 2... We have made this channel for the welfare of students to grip the knowldge with easy approach. We have made videos on demand of students speaking in both eng... About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features Press Copyright Contact us Creators ... Description bio medical waste management rules 2018 Friends, we have discussed Bio-medical waste management Rules-2018 in this video. It also contains basic and advanced contents on this topic. Denver Department of Public Health & Environment (DDPHE) RCRA training video.