11,128 research outputs found
Erickson, Peter Malcolm, NX33357
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/384056Surname: ERICKSON. Given Name(s) or Initials: PETER MALCOLM. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX33357. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 37035.228487
Item: [2016.0049.16349] "Erickson, Peter Malcolm, NX33357
Monitoring an Iron-Enhanced Sand Filter for Phosphorus Capture from Agricultural Tile Drainage
Erickson, Andrew J.; Gulliver, John S.; Weiss, Peter T.. (2017). Monitoring an Iron-Enhanced Sand Filter for Phosphorus Capture from Agricultural Tile Drainage. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/188974
The Peter Martyr reader
Accession Number: ATLA0001328116; Language(s): English; Issued by ATLA: 20080715; Publication Type: Review; Related Books/Electronic Resources: By: Vermigli, Pietro Martire, 1499-1562 Peter Martyr reader viii, 260 p. Publisher: Kirksville, Mo.: Truman State University Press, 1999. ATLA0001327874Source type: Electronic(1)http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=reh&AN=ATLA0001328116&loginpage=Login.asp&site=ehost-liv
DS_10.1177_0363546519844479 – Supplemental material for Performance and Return to Sport After Open Reduction and Internal Fixation of the Olecranon in Professional Baseball Players
Supplemental material, DS_10.1177_0363546519844479 for Performance and Return to Sport After Open Reduction and Internal Fixation of the Olecranon in Professional Baseball Players by Brandon J. Erickson, Peter N. Chalmers, John D’Angelo, Kevin Ma, Christopher S. Ahmad and Anthony A. Romeo in The American Journal of Sports Medicine</p
Proceedings of the 36th Biochemical Engineering Symposium
This work contains the Proceedings of the 36th Biochemical Engineering Symposium, which was held at Kansas State University on Saturday, April 21, 2007. The original schedule for the meeting is shown with all of the submitted presentations. Unfortunately, because of an auto accident, the students from Colorado State University were not able to arrive and make their presentations. The actual program included 13 oral presentations and 9 posters. Some of the CSU manuscripts are included in the proceedings.
Contents
"Tangential Flow Filtration of Aedes Aegypti Densonucleosis Virus" - David L. Grzenia and S. Ranil Wickramasinghe, CSU
"Kinetics and Mechanisms of Protease Assisted Aqueous Extraction of Soybean Oil" - Kerry A. Campbell, Ramon Morales-Chabrand, Tracey M. Pepper, and Charles E. Glatz, ISU
"Destabilization of Emulsion Formed During Aqueous Extraction of Soybean Oil" - Ramon Morales-Chabrand, Hyun-Jung Kim, Cheng Zhang, Charles E. Glatz, and Stephanie Jung, ISU
"Development of Highly Active Enzyme Preparations for Use in Organic Solvents Based on Fumed Silica" - Juan C. Cruz, Kerstin Wurges, Peter Czermak, Peter Pfromm, and Mary Rezac, KSU
"Cloning Expression, and Purification of a Glycoside Hydrolase Family 44 Cellulase from Clostridium Acetobutylicum in Escherichia Coli" - Taran C. Shilling, Clark F. Ford, and Peter J. Reilly, ISU
"Attachment of Annexin V and Horseradish Peroxidase to Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes" - Luis F. F. Neves, Naveen R. Palwai, David E. Martyn, Yongqiang Tan, Daniel E. Resasco, and Roger G. Harrison, OU
"Metal/polymer Composite Membranes for Low Trans Fatty Acid Hydrogenation of Soybean Oil" - D. Singh, M. E. Rezac and P.H. Pfromm, KSU
"Evaluation of the Convective Flow Decellularization for the Preparation of Biological Scaffolds" - Carolina Villegas Montoya and Peter S. McFetridge, OU
"Development of a Human Umbilical Veinderived Peridental Grafting Matrix" - Selda Goktas, Nicolas Pierre, and Peter S. McFetridge, OU
"Flow in Renal Artery Aneurysms and Hypertension" - Linden Heflin, Edgar O'Rear, Dimitrios Papavassiliou, and Carrie Stree, OU
"Fiber Optic Oxygen-Based Biosensors for Measurement of Toluene in Groundwater" - Zhong Zhong, David S. Dandy, Sean B. Pieper, Kevin L. Lear, Thomas K. Wood, and Kenneth F. Reardon, CSU
"Monte Carlo Simulation of Photoelectrochemical Disinfection of Bacteria" - A. Argoti and L.T. Fan, KSU
"Sulfate Reducing Microbial Diversity in the Sediments of Lake Coeur D'Alene" - Isha Chhatwal, Rajesh K. Sani, Brent Peyton, Timothy Ginn and Nicolas Spycher, SDSMT
"Evaluation of Tetrachloroethene (PCE) Degradation in Contaminated Ground Water" - J .H. Ibbini, L.C. Davis, and L.E. Erickson, KSU
"Development of a Genetically Engineered Biosealant" - Terran J. Elliott and Sookie Bang, SDSMT
"Use of Statistical Design for the Optimization of Protein Expression in Baculovirus Expression Vector System" - Alexander Brix, Bernd Eichenmueller, and Peter Czermak, Univ. of Applied Science Giessen-Friedberg, Giessen, Germany
"Modeling Pore Size Distribution of Ultrafiltration Membranes" - A. Mukherjee and S.R. Wickramasinghe, CSU
"A Laboratory Study of Biodegradation of Tetrachloroethene in Groundwater" - S. Santharam, L.C. Davis, and L.E. Erickson, KSU
"Emergency Preparation and Green Engineering" - Clinton Whiteley, Terrie Boguski, Larry Erickson, and Ryan Green, KSU</p
Influences of host community characteristics on Borrelia burgdorferi infection prevalence in Blacklegged ticks
Lyme disease is a major vector-borne bacterial disease in the USA. The disease is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, and transmitted among hosts and humans, primarily by blacklegged ticks (Ixodes scapularis). The ~25 B. burgdorferi genotypes, based on genotypic variation of their outer surface protein C (ospC), can be phenotypically separated as strains that primarily cause human diseases – human invasive strains (HIS) – or those that rarely do – and are non-randomly associated with host species. The goal of this study was to examine the extent to which phenotypic outcomes of B. burgdorferi could be explained by the host communities fed upon by blacklegged ticks. In 2006 and 2009, we determined the host community composition based on abundance estimates of the vertebrate hosts, and collected host-seeking nymphal ticks in 2007 and 2010 to determine the ospC genotypes within infected ticks. We regressed instances of B. burgdorferi phenotypes on site-specific characteristics of host communities by constructing Bayesian hierarchical models that properly handled missing data. The models provided quantitative support for the relevance of host composition on Lyme disease risk pertaining to B. burgdorferi prevalence (i.e., overall nymphal infection prevalence, or NIPAll) and HIS prevalence among the infected ticks (NIPHIS). In 2006, we found positive associations of the relative abundances of mice, of chipmunks, and of shrews with NIPAll. We also found positive associations of NIPHIS with shrews, and with host community diversity (H’), but negative associations with mice, and with chipmunks. In 2009, the relative abundance of mice showed a positive association with NIPAll, whereas the relative abundance of shrews and of H’ showed a negative association. With NIPHIS, only H’ showed a positive association, whereas the relative abundances of mice, of chipmunks, and of shrews, had negative associations. Our study highlights the variability between two years in the effects of host composition on B. burgdorferi genotypes. More importantly, our results highlight how disease risk inference, based on the role of host community, changes when we examine risk overall or at the phenotypic level. Long-term studies will be necessary to detect any consistent effects of host community composition on genotypic variation in the Lyme disease spirochetes
Zechariah 9-14 as the substructure of 1 Peter’s eschatological program
The principal aim of this study is to discern what has shaped the author of 1 Peter to regard Christian suffering as a necessary (1.6) and to-be-expected (4.12) component of faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ. Most research regarding suffering in 1 Peter has limited the scope of inquiry to two particular aspects—its cause and nature, and the strategies that the author of 1 Peter employs in order to enable his addressees to respond in faithfulness. There remains, however, the need for a comprehensive explanation for the source that has generated 1 Peter’s theology of Christian suffering. If Jesus truly is the Christ, God’s chosen redemptive agent who has come to restore God’s people, then how can it be that Christian suffering is a necessary part of discipleship after his coming, death and resurrection? What led the author of 1 Peter to such a startling conclusion, which seems to runs against the grain of the eschatological hopes and expectations of Jewish restoration ideology?
This thesis analyzes the appropriation of shepherd and fiery trials imagery,
and argues that the author of 1 Peter is dependent upon Zechariah 9-14 for his
theology of Christian suffering. Said in another way, the eschatological program of
Zechariah 9-14, read through the lens of the Gospel, functions as the substructure
for 1 Peter’s eschatology and thus its theology of Christian suffering.
In support of this hypothesis, this study highlights the fact that Zechariah 9-
14 was available and appropriated in early Christianity, in particular in the Passion
Narrative tradition; that the shepherd imagery of 1 Pet 2.25 is best understood
within the milieu of the Passion Narrative tradition, and that it alludes to the
eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14; that the fiery trials imagery found in 1
Peter 1.6-7 and 1 Pet 4.12 is distinct from that which we find in Greco-Roman and OT
wisdom sources, and that it shares exclusive parallels with some unique features of
the eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14; that Zechariah 9-14 offers a more
satisfying explanation for the modification of Isa 11.2 in 1 Pet 4.14, the transition
from 4.12-19 to 5.1-4, why Peter has oriented his letter with the term διασπορά,
and why he has described his addresses as οἶκος τοῦ θεοῦ; and finally that 1 Peter
contains an implicit foundational narrative that shares distinct parallels with the
eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14.
We can conclude that 1 Peter offers a unique vista into the way in which at
least one early Christian witness came to understand and to communicate the fact
that Christian suffering was a necessary feature of faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ
Author and Authority. John Gielgud's Prospero in Peter Greenway's "Prospero's Books"
In 1991, film director Peter Greenaway turned William Shakespeare’s "The Tempest" into an experimental and visually daring film called "Prospero’s Books", starring John Gielgud as Prospero. Shot on 35mm film and edited making extensive use of electronic image processing, "Prospero’s Books" is a technologically advanced phantasmagoria that reveals the multiple aspects of Shakespeare's meta-masque. In the film, Gielgud voices all the characters, thus turning "The Tempest" into a creative act that unravels inside Prospero’s own mind. This way, "Prospero’s Books" questions the roles of the author, the actor and the director, taking "The Tempest" as a pre-text to a meta-linguistic meditation
Corolla size and temporal displacement of flowering times among sympatric diploid and tetraploid highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum)
Polyploidy (whole-genome duplication) is common in vascular plants, but the modes of establishment and persistence, as well as the ecological consequences, of polyploidy remain vague. Highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) is an ecologically and economically important understory shrub with an unclear species definition, coexisting in sympatric populations of diploid and tetraploid cytotypes. This study analyzes differences in bloom time between sympatric diploid and tetraploid V. corymbosum in natural populations, testing the potential for these cytotypes to interbreed and contributing to the formation and continuity of ploidy-level diversification within this species. Ploidal level was confirmed through DNA flow cytometry of sympatric plants from two populations in New Jersey, USA. Flower bloom date and corolla size were recorded over a three-year period. Diploid corollas were 32% smaller than tetraploid corollas, making them easily identifiable in the field. Ploidy accounted for 55-69% of the variation in bloom date, with diploids flowering about one week before tetraploids, and the remaining variation distributed among plants, among branches, and within branches. Notwithstanding these differences, there was modest overlap in flowering time between cytotypes, suggesting that cross-pollination is possible. This contributes evidence to the most current species definition of V. corymbosum as a single (mixed ploidy) species.Poster's Graduate Student Thesis Publication.Peer reviewed
Total Daily Maximum Daily Load Demonstration Study
The P8 watershed water quality model was used to model performance of stormwater best management practices (BMPs) in the Lake Como watershed. Lake Como has a draft TMDL that will require 60% retention of the phosphorus that is currently discharging into the lake. The model indicates that current stormwater BMPs are retaining 32% of phosphorus discharge, if properly maintained. This will fall to 21% if sufficient maintenance is not performed. The ponds in the Lake Como watershed do not have as much of a decrease in performance if maintenance is not performed, but also do not remove as high a percent of the incoming phosphorus. To achieve the draft TMDL goals, approximately 20.5 acre-ft of infiltration practices or enhanced sand filters will need to be strategically placed in the watershed.US Environmental Protection Section 319 Program; Minnesota Pollution Control AgencyWeiss, Peter T.; Gulliver, John S.; Erickson, Andrew J.. (2011). Total Daily Maximum Daily Load Demonstration Study. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/115603
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