10,345 research outputs found

    SLCC Board of Trustees 2017-10-11: Agenda

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    Agenda for the October 11, 2017 Salt Lake Community College Board of Trustees meeting. Meeting to be conducted by Clint Ensign, Chair. No action items listed. Other items include: CIO / CISO Report, Moment of Mission - Wai, India Study Abroad, Open & Public Meetings Act Training from Chris Lacombe, and Faculty Reports from Adam Dastrup and Craig Ferrin

    SLCC Board of Trustees 2018-01-17: Agenda

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    Agenda for the January 17, 2018 Salt Lake Community College Board of Trustees meeting. Meeting to be conducted by Clint Ensign, Chair. No action items listed. Other items included adoption of resolution to allow electronic meetings, update on athletic events, review of 2017 activities and accomplishments, and faculty senate and faculty association reports from Adam Dastrup and Craig Ferrin

    Adam Oughton

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    Series 1621 | Third District Court: Salt Lake County | Probate Case Files | 699 for Adam OughtonCase files for Third District Court (Salt Lake County) probate division primarily involve the probate of estates for deceased persons and guardianship for minors and persons who were deemed legally incompetent.Guardianshi

    Adam Hunter

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    Series 1621 | Third District Court: Salt Lake County | Probate Case Files | 694 for Adam HunterCase files for Third District Court (Salt Lake County) probate division primarily involve the probate of estates for deceased persons and guardianship for minors and persons who were deemed legally incompetent.Estat

    Collaboration between land trusts and ecotourism around Lake Superior

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    Plan B Paper. 2013. Master of Science-Agricultural Education--University of Wisconsin-River Falls. Agricultural Education Department. iv + 32 leaves. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 30-32).Land trusts throughout the United States have grown in number over the past 10 to 15 years, and consequently so have the number of protected acres via conservation easements. This increase is largely due to the fact that land is becoming more sacred as our population continues to grow. By the same token, ecotourism is becoming a more recognized way of travel for tourists of all kinds. Its popularity (fueled by departments of tourism and the travel industry in general) is based upon the need for tourists to become more self-aware of how their travels impact the environment (i.e. the land). When viewed side-by-side, it seems that land trusts and ecotourism share the same mission or at least have many common parameters. My project focused on this topic specifically in the Lake Superior region. I began in Bayfield, Wisconsin, and went counter-clockwise around the lake to determine which land trusts exist and how each trust has worked to protect the lake. I also determined whether these trusts were involved with the tourism industry, and whether they shared resources to meet the common goal of protecting the lake. The results of my research varied. In the case of Wisconsin, the state has established a formal green certification program called 'Travel Green Wisconsin,' in which businesses and natural areas meet certain environmental protection requirements. The state of Wisconsin, however, hasn't worked with land trusts to fulfill this mission. The state of Michigan has one notable land trust on Lake Superior (The Superior Watershed Partnership and Land Trust), in Marquette, however, its mission is almost exclusively to protect the lake (not conserve land). Also, in the case of Canada, ecotourism is primarily confined to governmental land (not private land). In Ontario, partnerships that consist of city government, provincial government, non-governmental agencies, and tribal nations all contribute to protecting the shoreline of Lake Superior. And lastly, in Minnesota only one land trust exists for the entire state (the Minnesota Land Trust), which has protected many acres along the north shore of Lake Superior between Duluth and Grand Portage

    Repeated Lake-Stream Divergence in Stickleback Life History within a Central European Lake Basin

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    Life history divergence between populations inhabiting ecologically distinct habitats might be a potent source of reproductive isolation, but has received little attention in the context of speciation. We here test for life history divergence between threespine stickleback inhabiting Lake Constance (Central Europe) and multiple tributary streams. Otolith analysis shows that lake fish generally reproduce at two years of age, while their conspecifics in all streams have shifted to a primarily annual life cycle. This divergence is paralleled by a striking and consistent reduction in body size and fecundity in stream fish relative to lake fish. Stomach content analysis suggests that life history divergence might reflect a genetic or plastic response to pelagic versus benthic foraging modes in the lake and the streams. Microsatellite and mitochondrial markers further reveal that life history shifts in the different streams have occurred independently following the colonization by Lake Constance stickleback, and indicate the presence of strong barriers to gene flow across at least some of the lake-stream habitat transitions. Given that body size is known to strongly influence stickleback mating behavior, these barriers might well be related to life history divergence

    Howard T. Anderson, Jack Thomas, and Adam S. Bennion.

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    Black-and-white photograph of three people associated with the Salt Lake Oratorio Society in the mid-20th century. Left to right: Howard T. Anderson, Jack Thomas, and Adam S. Bennion

    Howard T. Anderson, Jack Thomas, and Adam S. Bennion

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    Black-and-white photograph of three people associated with the Salt Lake Oratorio Society in the mid-20th century. Left to right: Howard T. Anderson, Jack Thomas, and Adam S. Bennion

    Salt Lake Oratorio Society after "Messiah" performance, 1938

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    Black-and-white photograph of performers with the Salt Lake Oratorio Society after a performance of Handel\u27s "Messiah" in the Tabernacle on Temple Square, Salt Lake City, in 1938. Left to right: Howard Anderson, (unidentified), Sylvia Margolin, Annette R. Dinwoodey, (unidentified), Adam S. Bennion, Squire Coop, Jack Thomas, (unidentified)

    Bedrock Geologic Map of the Central Wilder Lake Intrusion, Lake County, Minnesota

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    This study was done in an attempt more accurately define lithologic boundaries in the central area of the wilder lake intrusion. Data from a 2012 PRC capstone project, Adam Leu’s masters thesis, and previous mapping projects were used to map the western and eastern margins of the intrusion, leaving the middle section mostly inferred. The upper map shows the entirety of the wilder lake intrusion at a 1 to 24,000 scale and the lower map shows the area of interest at a 1 to10,000 scale. John Smith and Adam Leu spent five days camping on the edge of South WIlder Lake, traversing through areas with little to no lithologic data. Since the pagami creek burn had cleared out most of the the vegetation, the primary obsticals were dead fall and marshes. 160 outrops were mapped, but since the main goal was to better define lithologic boundaries, many outcrops that didn’t relate to a change in rock type were not put on the map.Smith, John; Leu, Adam. (2013). Bedrock Geologic Map of the Central Wilder Lake Intrusion, Lake County, Minnesota. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/257387
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