Provided the source is cited, personal, educational and non-commercial use (as defined by fair use in US copyright law) is permitted. Please note this discrepancy when using the eKangyur viewer in this translation. The reproduction, redistribution and/or exploitation of any materials and/or content (data, text, images, marks or logos) for personal or commercial gain is not permitted. Down accounts for about 4050 of the total yield in 24-year-olds. Organization and the website by sharing the website on Social Networks and with.
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100, although it is almost certainly intended to come right at the end of the Degé Kangyur texts as volume 102 indeed its final fifth chapter is often carried over and wrapped in the same volume as the Kangyur dkar chags (catalog). Tibetan Plateau breeds yield relatively little, between 0.5 and 2.0 kg per animal per year other breeds yield between 2 and 4 kg the very furry male Jiulong yak, bred for its fiber, may yield as much as 25 kg per year (Wiener et al., 2003, p. Free knowledge & Free Books for Everyone All the Books listed below are Completely Free Please help support our small grassroots organization so we can keep providing Free Hard to Find Books to the World Help support the P.H.E. This discrepancy is partly due to the fact that the two volumes of the gzungs ’dus section are an added supplement not mentioned in the original catalog, and also hinges on the fact that the compilers of the Tōhoku catalog placed another text-which forms a whole, very large volume-the Vimalaprabhānāmakālacakratantraṭīkā ( dus ’khor ’grel bshad dri med ’od, Toh 845), before the volume 100 of the Degé Kangyur, numbering it as vol. However, several other Kangyur databases-including the eKangyur that supplies the digital input version displayed by the 84000 Reading Room-list this work as being located in volume 101. And during the last decade, Tibetan Buddhism, and its foremost representative, the Dalai Lama, has offered a compelling. This text, Toh 851, and all those contained in this same volume ( gzungs ’dus, e), are listed as being located in volume 100 of the Degé Kangyur by the Buddhist Digital Resource Center (BDRC).