Sunday, October 11, 2009
Monday, October 27, 2008
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
ABAQUS Tutorials
There are few important forums like Abaqus users, FEA online where you can get maximum help and your queries can be answered.
http://www.nabble.com/Abaqus-Users-f14343.html
http://www.eng-tips.com/threadminder.cfm?pid=799&page=76
http://www.simulia.com/academics/tutorial_pdfs/Tutorials/
http://abaqusguru.blogspot.com/
http://abaqusguru.blogspot.com/2008/11/tutorials.html
Follow above links you will find good tutorials.
Hope you will find good tutorials from the above links, still if you have any queries you can leave comment on this blog.
Friday, May 23, 2008
Harappa and Indus civilization
Harappa and
Although agriculture seems to have come late to
For the overwhelming majority of human history, this early culture was truly a lost civilization. The mounds which stood where great cities once thrived excited interest in observers, but no one in their wildest dreams could have imagined that beneath those large mounds lay cities that had been lost to human memory.
In the 1920's, excavations began on one of these mounds in Harappa in
Like the civilizations in
The Harappans were an agricultural people whose economy was almost entirely dominated by horticulture. Massive granaries were built at each city, and there most certainly was an elaborate bureaucracy to distribute this wealth of food. The
Their cities were carefully planned and laid out; they are, in fact, the first people to plan the building of their cities. Whenever they rebuilt their cities, they laid them out precisely in the same way the destroyed city had been built. The pathways within the city are laid out in a perpendicular criss-cross fashion; most of the city consisted of residences.
Life in the Harappan cities was apparently quite good. Although living quarters were cramped, which is typical of ancient cities, the residents nevertheless had drains, sewers, and even latrines. There is no question that they had an active trade with cultures to the west. Several Harappan seals have been found in excavations of Sumerian cities, as well as pictures of animals that in no way could have existed in
We know nothing of the religion of the Harappans. Unlike in Mesopotamia or
We know that the Harappans were eventually supplanted by waves of migrations of Indo-Europeans. These new peoples, however, did not seem to adopt the religious practices of the Harappans, so it is not possible to reconstruct Harappan religion through the religion of the Vedic peoples, that is, the Indo-Europeans who constructed the rudimentary Indian religion represented by the Vedas.
Right at the heart of the mystery, like a person speaking behind sound-proof glass, are the numerous writings on the artifacts that have been unearthed. Harappan writing was a pictographic script, or at least seems to be; as of yet, however, no one has figured out how to decipher it or even what language it might be rendering. The logical candidate is that the Harappans spoke a Dravidian language, but that conclusion, which may not be true, has not helped anybody decipher the script. Like the rest of Harappan civilization, the writing was lost to human memory after the disappearance of the Harappans.
And finally they disappeared. And they disappeared without a trace. Some believe that they were overrun by the war-like Aryans, the Indo-Europeans who, like a storm, rushed in from Euro-Asia and overran
Monday, May 19, 2008
Welcome 2 my blog
Welcome to my blog, I am Gouse, I want to dedicate this blog for those who want to explore new things it can be about technical, historical, about a personality, about a place, about a language etc.