81 research outputs found
Antediluvian phytology : illustrated by a collection of the fossil remains of plants, peculiar to the coal formations of Great Britain ...
by Edmund Tyrell ArtisHandschriftliches Exlibris: "Reçu de Cand. Verdan Z. H. Ls. Rollier 6 mars 1928 à Z." 004038624_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BIB"Geolog. Institut der Eidg. techn. Hochschule Bibliothek" 004070067_0002 Exemplar der ETH-BIBExlibrisstempel und frühere Signatur: "Geologisches Institut Eidg. Techn. Hochschule Sonneggstrasse 5 Zürich 6 Bibliothek", "Geol I 340" 004038624_0002 Exemplar der ETH-BI
Fourth Amendment Protection for Juvenile Probationers in California, Slim or None: In re Tyrell J.
The Supreme Court of California recently held in In re Tyrell J. that juvenile probationers are subject to random, suspicionless searches. This Comment analyses in detail the reasoning the court used to distinguish the level of suspicion required for juvenile probationers from that used for the population at large and offers some criticism of that logic. Moreover, Ms. Stiglich explores the rationales for probation and parole in general, and examines legal precedent for searches without probable cause of adult probationers and parolees and the relevance of consent to this analysis. To this end, the author discusses the Bravo, Martinez, and Gallegos cases as background for understanding the court\u27s reasoning in, and the author\u27s criticism of Tyrell
Fourth Amendment Protection for Juvenile Probationers in California, Slim or None: In re Tyrell J.
The Supreme Court of California recently held in In re Tyrell J. that juvenile probationers are subject to random, suspicionless searches. This Comment analyses in detail the reasoning the court used to distinguish the level of suspicion required for juvenile probationers from that used for the population at large and offers some criticism of that logic. Moreover, Ms. Stiglich explores the rationales for probation and parole in general, and examines legal precedent for searches without probable cause of adult probationers and parolees and the relevance of consent to this analysis. To this end, the author discusses the Bravo, Martinez, and Gallegos cases as background for understanding the court\u27s reasoning in, and the author\u27s criticism of Tyrell
Fourth Amendment Protection for Juvenile Probationers in California, Slim or None: In re Tyrell J.
The Supreme Court of California recently held in In re Tyrell J. that juvenile probationers are subject to random, suspicionless searches. This Comment analyses in detail the reasoning the court used to distinguish the level of suspicion required for juvenile probationers from that used for the population at large and offers some criticism of that logic. Moreover, Ms. Stiglich explores the rationales for probation and parole in general, and examines legal precedent for searches without probable cause of adult probationers and parolees and the relevance of consent to this analysis. To this end, the author discusses the Bravo, Martinez, and Gallegos cases as background for understanding the court\u27s reasoning in, and the author\u27s criticism of Tyrell
Kitty Tyrell
Concerning a man\u27s desire to marry Kitty Tyrellhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/kgbsides_uk/1521/thumbnail.jp
Calculating the Relationship Between Extreme Weather Conditions and Climate Modes Across the North Atlantic Ocean
Anthropogenic climate change affects all sectors of the planet’s biogeochemical systems and the disruptions to these global systems, especially concerning the atmosphere and hydrosphere, become more apparent with each passing year. An observed weakening, or slowing, in the circulatory strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) has been present since the mid-1900s due to increased average ocean temperatures. AMOC weakening solely produces the emergence of the phenomena known as North Atlantic Warming Hole (NAWH).
The relationship between ocean circulation and atmospheric processes requires intense examination now that major circulatory systems are being affected by modern anthropogenic climate change. This paper examines the intensification and shifting frequencies of climate extremes across the North Atlantic Ocean. This is achieved by identifying distinct pressure patterns using the SOM algorithm, defining CTP appropriate extreme weather conditions, and correlating the occurrence of pressure pattern dependent climate extremes to a climate mode, North Atlantic Ocean (NAO), to contextualize the proposed systemic behavioral trends. Weak positive correlations were found between the NAO and extreme cold and precipitation conditions. The NAO is seen to be in its positive phase when there is higher probability of extreme conditions describing regional air temperatures to be below the 10th percentile for at least five days and precipitation is above the 90th percentile for at least five days. Extremely high air temperature conditions are not correlated strongly with the NAO index and there is no increased probability for any one specific heat related indices to occur. This work provides insight into future climate risks under continued AMOC weakening
Factors Associated with Non-Participation and Non-Adherence in Directly Observed Mass Drug Administration for Malaria in The Gambia
Dierickx, S.; Gryseels, C.; Mwesigwa, J.; O'Neill, S.; Bannister-Tyrell, M.; Ronse, M.; Jaiteh, F.; Gerrets, R.P.M.; D'Alesandro, U.; Peeters Grietens, K. General rights It is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulations If you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: https://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible
An Unfinished Past: Assassination and the 1974 Land Rent Control Act in Northern Thailand
This article examines the struggle for land tenancy reform and the assassination of Farmers' Federation of Thailand (FFT) leaders in northern Thailand during the period of democratic politics between 14 October 1973 and 6 October 1976 as unresolved, ambiguous, and linked events in the recent Thai past. During the 1973-1976 period, farmers became new political and legal subjects as they fought to pass and then implement the 1974 Land Rent Control Act. Drawing on provincial archival records, the author contextualizes how and why tenancy became a contentious issue between farmers and landlords beginning in the 1950s and then examines the anxious and violent backlash with which their organizing in the 1970s was met by state, para-state, right-wing, and landholding elites. The author interrogates the conditions and effects of the assassinations by writing about the life and death of one of the leaders of the FFT, Intha Sribunruang. The denials by a range of state officials of the political nature of Intha and other FFT leaders' murders underscore both the importance of the FFT's work and the necessity to critically evaluate the assassinations. The author concludes by arguing that the lack of resolution surrounding the struggle for tenancy reform and the assassinations of FFT leaders continues to resonate in present-day politics. An Appendix to the article offers the first English-language list of the FFT leaders known to have been killed or victimized by violence between 1974 and 1979
The informational needs of postpartum mothers as expressed to basic collegiate students of nursing
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at [email protected]. Thank you.2999-01-0
The ethology of the Malayan false vampire bat (Megaderma spasma), with special emphasis on auditory cues used in foraging
My laboratory studies have revealed the use of two distinct foraging strategies by the echolocating Malayan false vampire bat, Megaderma spasma. When gleaning, bats retrieve prey located upon surfaces. Because both the prey and the surface reflect sound, bats may have difficulty distinguishing echo distortions caused by relatively small prey from sound reflected off of the larger substratum. In contrast, flycatching bats capture flying prey mid-air, where background clutter is minimal. Because these foraging environments impose different restrictions on the use of sensory cues by hunting bats, a primary focus of my work was to determine what cues are used by foraging M. spasma, and their role in generating adaptive behavioral responses.Because the behavior of this bat is poorly known, I developed an ethogram to use as a basis for subsequent behavioral investigations. Behavior described includes potential communicative vocalizations, and patterns of agonistic and non-agonistic, non-vocal social behavior. Non-social (individual) behavior described includes maintenance behavior, ingestive and eliminative behavior, and resting postures. Behavior patterns were placed into tentative functional groupings and compared to the behavior of other bat species.The use of acoustic cues in prey capture by M. spasma depends upon the foraging strategy employed. Passive listening to prey-generated sounds is critical for the capture of prey by gleaning M. spasma. Passive auditory cues were used both to detect prey and to determine its angular (elevation and azimuth) coordinates. In the absence of such cues, echolocation was not used to locate prey itself. However, gleaning bats always emitted echolocation pulses, which may serve to determine the distance to the substratum surface. In contrast to surface gleaning, in the absence of prey-generated sounds flycatching bats use echolocation to locate prey and to assess prey physical features. However, when such sounds are available, bats use them to make qualitative assessments about prey. These results suggest that bats use different acoustic cues to optimize the detection, localization, and identification of prey under constraints imposed by different foraging situations. Periodic abundance of different prey types which results from seasonal climatic changes may be important in shaping the foraging behavior of M. spasma.Made available in DSpace on 2011-05-07T14:18:57Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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