136,525 research outputs found
Note from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham, 1929-02-27
Note signed by James N. Cunningham promising to pay John T. Cunningham a sum of $400
Letter from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham, 1944-04-12
Written letter from James N. Cunningham in Evanston, Illinois to John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee. James is returning a check to his nephew because the date was written incorrectly and it cannot be cashed. James requests that John write a new check to Mary N. Cunningham, and send it back. James ends the letter to John detailing his failing health
Letter from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham, 1944-04-05
Written letter from James N. Cunningham in Evanston, Illinois to John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee. James is informing his nephew of a number of stock shares he has sold as well as an update on his health
Letter from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham, 1944-03-13
Written letter from James N. Cunningham in Evanston, Illinois to John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee. James expresses his gratitude for his nephew's generosity as well as an update regarding his health
Letter from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham, 1944-03-24
Written letter, eight pages long, from James N. Cunningham in Evanston, Illinois to John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee. James informs John on all aspects of the stocks they share, and his health
Monitoring the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation at 26.5°N: RAPID-WATCH
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) at 26.5°N carries a northward heat flux of 1.3 PW. Northward of 26.5°N over the Gulf Stream and its extension much of this heat is transferred to the atmosphere and subsequently is responsible for maintaining UK climate about 5°C warmer than the zonal average at this latitude. However, previous sparse observations did not resolve the temporal variability of the AMOC and so it is unknown whether it is slowing in response to global warming as suggested by recent model results. In 2004 NERC, NSF and NOAA funded a system of observations in the Atlantic at 26.5°N to observe on a daily basis the strength and structure of the AMOC. Two papers ([Cunningham, et al., 2007] & [Kanzow, et al., 2007]) demonstrated that not only does the system of observations achieve a mass balance for the AMOC, it reveals dramatic and unexpected richness of variability. In the first year the AMOC mean strength and variability is 18.7±5.6 Sv. From estimates of the degrees-of-freedom the year-long mean AMOC is defined with a resolution of around 1.5 Sv so abrupt changes would be readily identified and long-term changes will be measured relative to the 2004- 005 average. The NERC contribution to the first four years of continuous AMOC observations was funded under the directed programme RAPID Climate Change. Following an international review of the system NERC will continue funding to 2014 under the programme RAPID-WATCH. The NSF and NOAA have also continued funding and commitments so that the system can continue operating at the same level of activity as during the period 2004-2008. The objectives of RAPID-WATCH are: To deliver a decade-long time series of calibrated and quality-controlled measurements of the Atlantic MOC from the RAPID-WATCH arrays and; To exploit the data from the RAPID-WATCH arrays and elsewhere to determine and interpret recent changes in the Atlantic MOC, assess the risk of rapid climate change, and investigate the potential for predictions of the MOC and its impacts on climate
Letter from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham,1938-03-18
Letter from James N. Cunningham in Evanston, Illinois to his nephew, John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee. In the letter James details his persistent health struggles and how his inability to work coupled with the economic depression have impacted his finances. He requests that John make a trip from Clarksville to Chicago so that they can meet in person to discuss these issues
Letter from James N. Cunningham to John T. Cunningham, 1938-03-27
Written letter from James N. Cunningham in Evanston, Illinois to John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee. James is thanking John for sending him money and interest for a stock to save James from financial distress. James is looking forward to future financial agreements with John as well as John's visit to Evanston
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