اعلیٰ تعلیم حاصل کرنے کے بعد فکر معاش اور غم روزگار فطری بات ہے۔ لیکن پروفیسر عبدالحق نے جس طرح تن دہی اور جس مساعدت کے ساتھ اپنا علمی سفر طے کیا اس طرح سےا نہیں ملازمت میں بھی ہولیات فراہم ہوگئیں۔ ایک توان کی علمی لیاقت اور ادبی صلاحیتیں دوسری شریف اساتذہ کی سر پرستی اور پھر پروفیسر خواجہ احمد فاروتی جیسے جو ہر شناس کی تیز نگاہ جو ہر قابل کو پہچان گئی۔ ابھی پروفیسر عبد الحق پی۔ ایچ۔ ڈی کے وایوا سے فارغ ہی ہوئے تھے کہ پروفیسر محمد حسن نے پروفیسر خواجہ احمد فاروقی کے ایما پر پروفیسر محمود الہی صدر شعبہ اردو گورکھپور یو نیورسٹی کو خط لکھا جس میں پروفیسر عبدالحق کو دہلی طلب کرنے کے لیے لکھا تھا۔ یہاں شعبہ اردو دہلی یونیورسٹی دہلی میں تین مہینے کے لیے ایک عارضی جگہ خالی تھی۔ ڈاکٹر شرافت حسین مرزا جو ریسرچ اسٹنٹ کے طور پر کام کر رہے تھے وہ تین ماہ کی رخصت پر اپنے وطن جانے والے تھے۔ خواجہ احمد فاروقی کی یہ خوبی تھی کہ وہ کسی اسامی کو خالی رہتا نہیں دیکھ سکتے تھے۔ اس سال 1965 ء میں صدیق الرحمان قدوائی لیکچرار شعبہ اردو اپنے ریسرچ کے کام سے تین ماہ کی رخصت پر چلے گئے ۔ ان کی جگہ گورکھپور سے ڈاکٹر فضل الحق کو لیکچرر مقرر کر دیا گیا۔ پروفیسر عبدالحق کو بھی تین ماہ کے لیے دہلی طلب کیا گیا تھا لیکن جب وہ 17 دسمبر 1965ء کو دہلی تشریف لائے تو معلوم ہوا کہ ڈاکٹر شرافت حسین مرزا نے چھٹی کی درخواست واپس لے لی ہے تو پروفیسر عبد الحق واپس جون پور جانے کے لیے تیار ہو گئے لیکن خواجہ احمد فاروقی نے از راہ شفقت انہیں روک لیا اور تقریبا ًچھ ماہ کے بعد فاروقی صاحب(Post-Doctoral Fellowship) کی کوششوں سے...
Swat valley with reference to its history is a famous region. Many civilizations originated in this land and that’s where they ended. Buddhism had a golden age in swat. Hinduism had also been in this land for some time. Artifacts from Greece and the Kushan period are also found here. The artifacts and traces of all these civilizations still exist in swat today. Similar artifacts have been discovered by the efforts of experts however, the gravity of the earth chest is much greater. Swat archeology is threatened by human population and some religious misunderstanding. Protecting Non-Muslim places of worship and respecting their emotions is a part of Islamic teachings. This paper describes the sharī‛ah rules of archeology and also different types of archeological sites like buildings, worship places and mentioning the orders related to idols etc.
PRECIS (Providing REgional Climate for Impact Studies) model developed by the Hadley Centre is applied to simulate high resolution climate change scenarios. For the present climate, PRECIS is driven by the outputs of reanalyses ERA-40 data and HadAM3P global climate model (GCM). For the simulation of future climate (SRES B2), the PRECIS is nested with HadAM3P-B2 global forcing. In the present day simulations, climatic means and interannual variability are examined and biases are identified focusing on the most important parameters (precipitation and temperature) for hydrological modelling. In this study, both the meteorological station observations and results of the PRECIS RCM are used as input in the HBV hydrological model in order to investigate the effect of PRECIS simulated precipitation and temperature on the HBV predicted discharge in three river basins of UIB region. For this, three HBV model experiments are designed: HBV-Met, HBV-ERA and HBV-PRECIS where HBV is driven by meteorological station data and by the outputs from PRECIS nested with ERA-40 and HadAM3P data respectively. The robustness and uncertainties ranges of these models are tested. The future water resources are quantified using the two approaches of transferring the climate change signals i.e. delta change approach and direct use of PRECIS data. The future discharge is simulated for three stages of glacier coverage: 100 % glaciers, 50 % glaciers and 0 % glaciers. The PRECIS is able to reproduce the spatial patterns of the observed CRU mean temperature and precipitation. However, there are notable quantitative biases over some regions especially over the Hindukush-Karakorum-Himalaya (HKH) region, mainly due to the similar biases in the driving forcing. PRECIS simulations under future SRES B2 scenario indicate an increase in precipitation and temperature towards the end of 21 st century. The calibration and validation results of the HBV model experiments show that the performance of HBV-Met is better than the HBV-ERA and HBV-PRECIS. However, using input data series from sources different from the data used in the model calibration shows that HBV-ERA and HBV-PRECIS are more robust compared to HBV-Met. The Gilgit and Astore river basins, for which discharges are depending on the preceding winter precipitation, have higher uncertainties compared to the Hunza river basin for which the discharge is driven by the energy inputs. The smaller uncertainties in the Hunza river ibasin as compared to Gilgit and Astore river basins may be because of the stable behavior of the input temperature series compared to the precipitation series. The robustness and uncertainty ranges of the HBV models suggest that regional climate models may be used as input in hydrological models for climate scenarios studies. In a changed climate, the discharge will generally increase in both HBV-PRECIS and HBV-Met in the 100 % glacier coverage stage up to 65% and 44%, respectively. At the 50 % glacier coverage stage, the discharge is expected to reduce up to 24% as predicted by HBV-PRECIS and up to 30% as predicted by HBV-Met model. For the 0 % glacier coverage under climate change, a drastic decrease in water resources is forecasted by HBV-Met is up to 96 % and by HBV-PRECIS is up to 93%. At 100 % glacier coverage, the magnitude of flood peaks is likely to increase in the future which is an indication of higher risk of flood problems under climate change. There are huge outliers in annual maximum discharge simulated with HBV-Met. This shows that the prediction of hydrological conditions through the delta change approach is not ideal in the UIB region. HBV-PRECIS provides results on hydrological changes that are more consistent with climate change. This shows that the climate change signals in HBV-PRECIS are transmitted more realistically than in HBV-Met. Therefore, the direct use of RCM outputs in a hydrological model may be an alternative in areas where the quality of observed data is poor. The modeled changes in future discharge and changes in peak flows under climate change are not conclusive because more research is needed to evaluate the uncertainties in this approach. Moreover, this technique needs to be tested with other RCMs and hydrological models preferably to river basins in other parts of the world as well.