Wheaton College (MA) Digital Repository
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    3441 research outputs found

    MreB spiral structure and the spire of Parish Church of Chesterfield.

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    10 pages; illustrations

    Wheaton Magazine

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    Winter 2020 issue of the Wheaton MagazineWheaton College (MA)Between the lines: We are all caretakers, pg.2@DHANNO: Sustainable action, pg.3Around the Dimple: High marks, pg.4Around the Dimple: Making space at the top, pg.5Around the Dimple: A minute with... Melanie Gardiner '21, pg.6Around the Dimple: A notable journey in Ecuador, pg.7Around the Dimple: Senior assists with research helping athletes, pg.8Around the Dimple: Professors explore final frontier, pg.9Around the Dimple: Pioneering professorship, pg.10Around the Dimple: Welcome, new tenure-track faculty, pg.11Conversation: A sound understanding of music, pg.12Publications, Honors and Creative Works, pg.13Lyons pride: Center court, pg.14Lyons pride: Alumni golf tournament, pg.15Lyons pride: Bravo!, pg.15Campus scene: Quad party, pg.16Campus scene: Fresh Check Day, pg.17Campus scene: Fall Fest, pg.17Campus scene: Driving innovation, pg.18Campus scene: Building on green initiatives, pg.22Campus scene: Return of the mummy, pg.28Alumni association network: Protecting the right to vote, pg.32Alumni association network: A foundation to build on, pg.33Alumni association network: New destinations, pg.34Alumni association network: Tell us your Wheaton story, pg.35Class Notes, pg.36Class Notes: Setting the standard, pg.38Class Notes: Making smarter choices, pg.38Class Notes: On the beat, pg.39Class Notes: Alumni recognition comes in many forms, pg.40Class Notes: Wheaton in the Himalayas, pg.41Class Notes (removed), pg.42In Memoriam, pg.62Perspective, pg.6

    Course Catalog 2020-2021

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    464 pages.Courses offered at Wheaton College (Norton, Massachusetts) from 2020-2021

    Connections between chloroplasts and solar cells.

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    A Systematic Review of the Incubation Period of SARS-CoV-2: The Effects of Age, Biological Sex, and Location on Incubation Period

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    A systematic review of the incubation period of COVID-19 was compiled and analyzed from 21 quantitative studies. We investigated the incubation period of COVID-19 with regard to age, biological sex, location, and severity of the disease. Based on the data extracted, we report an overall mean and median incubation period for SARS-CoV-2 of 5.894 days and 5.598 days, respectively. The incubation period did not statistically vary for biological sex or age, but some studies suggest a longer incubation period in the young and elderly. Cases of COVID-19 in Wuhan and Hubei Province of China may have a shorter incubation period for COVID-19 but the shorter incubation period may be due to an increase in viral load. In studying coronavirus strains such as SARS and MERS, researchers have discovered an inverse relationship between incubation period length and virus severity. Taking into consideration that SARS-CoV-2 is part of the beta-coronavirus family, as well as the study mentioned above, we suggest that people who experience more severe disease due to SARS-CoV-2 may have a shorter incubation period

    The Distribution of Tensile and Compressive Forces in Articular Cartilage and the Truss Bridge.

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    4 pages; illustrations

    Fast Facts

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    Fast Fact

    Similarities between lysosomes and recycling centers.

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    7 pages; illustration

    Internship Brochure

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    Internship Brochur

    The last days of the emir: bukharan and russian monarchies in the inter-revolutionary period

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    110 leaves : illustrations.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 107 - 110).Between the 1905 and 1917 Revolutions, Tsar Nicholas II observed an increasingly weakened position on both the domestic and international stage, especially in Russia’s status as a colonial power in the south. Thus Nicholas II and Emirs Abdul Ahad Khan and Mohammed Alim Khan, rulers of the Bukharan Emirate (a protectorate of Russia) utilized concurrent methods of self strengthening and mutually beneficial monarchical relations to prevent the destabilizing of their respective autocratic governments. Meanwhile, reform movements in Bukhara were fuelled not only by the corruption of the Emir, but ideological rifts over the status of Russian Empire within Bukharan borders. Utilizing texts from Western travel authors, photographs from Russia’s ethnographic surveys and casual court documentation, and the works of Bukharan reformers, this thesis argues that during the inter-Revolutionary period, Nicholas II’s colonialist ideas were influenced by the decay of the Bukharan court and its ability to prop up his own weakening rule

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