Homepage Helden GmbH
Poststrabe 20
20354 Hamburg
Sheikh Forid Ahmed Shanto
Wirelessgate Mohakhali, Dhaka
Phone: +49 40 000 99 521
Fax: +49 40 000 88 897
Email: info@gamil.com
Entry in the commercial register.
Registration Court: LML District Court
Registration number: HRB125727
VAT identification number according to Section 27 a of the Sales Tax Law:
DE287145542
Professional liability insurance, also known as errors and omissions (E&O) insurance, covers your legal expenses if you are sued due to a failure in the performance of your professional duties, such as negligence or breach of contract.
Geography is both a natural science and a social science; it forms an interdisciplinary bridge. To be sure, individual geographers tend to emphasize different aspects of the spatial world. Some geographers focus on physical geography by devoting their study to such patterns as climate, vegetation, soils, and landforms, while others focus on patterns resulting from human activities and characteristics. Among the later, economic, social, and political geographers investigate such problems as agricultural land use, settlement patterns, boundary disputes, the trade areas of cities, cultural diffusion, the incidence of pollution and the perception of the environment The position of geography as a science, however, needs further qualification. Some of the most important concepts that are basic in geography are those of the environment and society. The two concepts are equally significant since the central issue in geography generally concerns man in the environment and man in society. In particular, geography has a good understanding of the significance and factors of location, the complexity of the man-environment, interaction, the problems of the environmental quality, and a good experience in dealing with environmental systems and processes. Geographers, however, realize that the problem of the environment must be looked at not only in physical, chemical, and biological terms, but very importantly too, in relation to human perceptions, needs, desires, and locations. These general characteristic give geography a comparative advantage in environmental studies over other subjects.
Geography is both a natural science and a social science; it forms an interdisciplinary bridge. To be sure, individual geographers tend to emphasize different aspects of the spatial world. Some geographers focus on physical geography by devoting their study to such patterns as climate, vegetation, soils, and landforms, while others focus on patterns resulting from human activities and characteristics. Among the later, economic, social, and political geographers investigate such problems as agricultural land use, settlement patterns, boundary disputes, the trade areas of cities, cultural diffusion, the incidence of pollution and the perception of the environment The position of geography as a science, however, needs further qualification. Some of the most important concepts that are basic in geography are those of the environment and society. The two concepts are equally significant since the central issue in geography generally concerns man in the environment and man in society. In particular, geography has a good understanding of the significance and factors of location, the complexity of the man-environment, interaction, the problems of the environmental quality, and a good experience in dealing with environmental systems and processes. Geographers, however, realize that the problem of the environment must be looked at not only in physical, chemical, and biological terms, but very importantly too, in relation to human perceptions, needs, desires, and locations. These general characteristic give geography a comparative advantage in environmental studies over other subjects.