173,301 research outputs found

    Jon C. Greaves as a teenager

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    Digitized black and white photograph of Jon C. Greaves as a teenager, ca. 1972.Digitized black and white photograph of Jon C. Greaves as a teenager, ca. 1972

    David Greer Neubecker and Jon C. Greaves with friends in New York City

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    Digitized color photograph of (left to right) David Greer Neubecker, Dan Zanella, Steven Honn, and Jon Greaves on the bridge in New York City, June 27, 1994. David and Jon were with Dan and Steven, who were from New Jersey, to attend the Gay Games and the 25th anniversary of the Stonewall riot.Digitized color photograph of (left to right) David Greer Neubecker and Jon C. Greaves with friends in New York City, 1994-07-2

    No. 66, Halbert Greaves, interview by Winnifred Margetts

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    Transcript (70 pages) of interview by Winnifred Margetts with Halbert S. Greaves, professor emeritus of the University of Utah Communications Department on June 27, 1985. This interview is no. 66 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape no. 306 and 307Greaves (b. 1907) discusses his early life and education, heading the Speech Department at the University of Utah, and his colleague C. Lowell Lees, 1940s-1960s. Interviewer: Winnifred Margett

    Aerial postcard of Montpelier, Idaho, 1908

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    Aerial real picture postcard of Montpeiler, Idaho. Written from Anna to her brother William Greaves

    Trace elements in marine biogenic carbonates: analysis and application to past ocean chemistry

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    Trace elements in marine biogenic carbonates may be used as proxies for past oceanchemistry provided that there is an established relationship between the trace elementproxy and a parameter of interest, this relationship is preserved within biogeniccarbonate, and the trace element can be determined sufficiently accurately. Successfulapplication of any trace element proxy requires both development of the analyticalmethodology to ensure accurate data with the necessary sensitivity, and anunderstanding of the relationship between proxy and seawater chemistry.Herein I develop methods for the determination of Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Cd/Ca inplanktonic foraminiferal calcite, using inductively coupled plasma optical emissionspectrophotometry and isotope dilution thermal ionisation mass spectrometry, andpropose a potential reference material for Mg/Ca in foraminiferal calcite. The developedtechniques are applied to an investigation of the Mg/Ca temperature proxy overChatham Rise in the Southwest Pacific Ocean and a calibration study of the partitioncoefficient, DCd, for cadmium incorporation into planktonic foraminifera.Comparisons of planktonic foraminiferal Mg/Ca, shell weight and oxygenisotope records from sites north and south of the Subtropical Front on Chatham Rise,demonstrate the effects of hydrography, foraminiferal habitat and dissolution as controlson Mg/Ca. Determinations of Cd/Ca in seven species of planktonic foraminiferaconfirm that the dominant controls on Cd/Ca are foraminiferal habitat and hydrography,with only a minor influence of post depositional dissolution. The major uncertainty indetermination of DCd from core top samples comes from uncertainty in estimation of thedepth distribution and seasons of calcification of planktonic foraminifera

    Plan of farms... Parish of Great Marlow, Clarence River, N.S.W. [cartographic material] /

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    "For sale by auction at the Land Sales Rooms, 423 George St. by T.W. Bowden on Monday & Tuesday the 17th & 18th of June 1861.; Map 437 from Ferguson Collection.; Sales plan for farms near Clarence River, N.S.W.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-f437

    The national question

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    Full title: "The National Question: socialism and nationalism: national sovereignty and the defence of the nation state" by C. Desmond Greaves. Originally published 1976. August 2013 edition, commemorating the centenary of the birth of C. Desmond Greaves and 75th anniversary of Connolly Association, with introduction by RMT General Secretary Bob Crow. ISBN 9781904260127

    Demographic and reproductive impacts of hybridization unrelated to hybrid viability in a native plant

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    Contains all raw data used in Greaves, Kron, and Husband (American Journal of Botany) to assess the incidence and impact of hybridization on native Malus coronaria in Ontario, Canada

    BiMnPO5

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    Neutron diffraction datasets and GSAS instrument parameter file for BiMnPO5 at ambient temperature and 2K

    He Pōkēkē Uenuku I Tū Ai: A Quantitative Exploration of Māori Identity, Political Attitudes, and Behaviour

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    To be Māori is to be political. Our history is filled with political struggles and victories. These struggles, originating from experiences of colonisation and assimilation, have greatly influenced what it is to be Māori today. This thesis explores the relationship between Māori ethnic identity, and political attitudes and outcomes. In this thesis, I present five studies (across four published papers and one full manuscript) which validate the Multidimensional Model of Māori Identity and Cultural Engagement (MMM-ICE2). I focus particular attention on the scale’s Socio- Political Consciousness dimension, and illustrate the links between identity and politics for Māori. The MMM-ICE2 is a seven-dimension scaled designed with Māori, by Māori, and for Māori to measure Māori ethnic identity (Houkamau & Sibley, 2010, 2015a). In the first two studies, I focus on using psychometric techniques to further validate the MMM-ICE2 as a measurement tool. Firstly, I use random intercept exploratory factor analysis to show that the scale is not vulnerable to acquiescent responding (yea-saying; Greaves, Houkamau, & Sibley, 2017). The second study uses multigroup confirmatory factor analysis to illustrate that the MMM-ICE2 shows reasonable measurement equivalence across diverse Māori groups (Greaves, Manuela et al., 2017). In the third study of the thesis, I demonstrate that Māori, broadly defined, are more likely to vote for the political left – the Labour, Green, and New Zealand First parties – over the centre-right National Party (Greaves, Robertson et al., 2017). The results lay the groundwork for two further studies, which demonstrate the construct validity of the Socio-Political Consciousness dimension of the scale by predicting a range of political attitudes and behaviours. Study Four shows that, above and beyond the effects of demographics, Māori enrolled to vote on the Māori electoral roll were higher on the Socio-Political Consciousness and Group Membership Evaluation dimensions (Greaves, Osborne, Houkamau, & Sibley, 2017). Additionally, in Study Five, I demonstrate that higher Socio-Political Consciousness for Māori is related to higher levels of support for Māori rights protests, the left-wing Green Party, and the Māori-issue focussed, Māori and Mana political parties (Greaves, Sengupta et al., 2017). Yet, lower levels of Socio-Political Consciousness were related to higher support for the right-wing National Party. Taken together, these studies show that the MMM-ICE2 scale and the Socio-Political Consciousness dimension can predict important, realworld political outcomes and attitudes for Māori. Finally, I discuss the contributions that the papers in this thesis have made to the literature, and the inevitable limitations of the research. I then provide future research directions for the study of quantitative Māori identity and for Māori political participation more generally. I finish with reflections on the process of writing this thesis and on being an emerging Māori quantitative researcher
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