26,242 research outputs found

    GIS dataset of Italian railway development, 1839-1913 (by Carlo Ciccarelli and Peter Groote)

    No full text
    The development of railways in Italy (1839-1913). The geodatabase has been built by Carlo Ciccarelli (University of Rome Tor Vergata) and Peter Groote (University of Groningen). GIS dataset available from ArcGIS online; please click the link. Different formats available for download. https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=d4fe94faf2e54518b3f421f19a137d4c Use the legend key to see when railway lines were constructed, or to differentiate between standard gauge and narrow gauge or between primary and secondary railways. For more information, see our articles on the construction of the geodatabase: Carlo Ciccarelli & Peter Groote (2017), Railway Endowment in Italy’s Provinces, 1839-1913, Rivista di Storia Economica (ISSN 0393-3415), Fascicolo 1, april 2017; (https://www.rivisteweb.it/doi/10.1410/86763) Carlo Ciccarelli & Peter Groote (2017), The spread of railroads in Italian provinces: a GIS approach, Scienze Regionali - Italian Journal of Regional Science The layers 'lines conecting capitals' and 'junctions' are of no use in the map viewer of ArcGIS online. We advise to keep these switched off. They are added because they are necessary for the use of the network analyst in ArcGIS desktop. Consequently, they are also included in the downloadable versions of the geodatabase. If you are interested in using the underlying geodatabase in ArcGIS desktop 10.X, then download the map package that is available here, the file geodatabase here, or the shapefile (lacks topological characteristics!) here. If you find the data of use, please let us know at [email protected] and [email protected]. If you use the data in an article, please quote our articles in Rivista di Storia Economica and Rivista di Scienze Regionali

    GIS dataset of Italian railway development, 1839-1913 (by Carlo Ciccarelli and Peter Groote)

    No full text
    The development of railways in Italy (1839-1913). The geodatabase has been built by Carlo Ciccarelli (University of Rome Tor Vergata) and Peter Groote (University of Groningen). GIS dataset available from ArcGIS online; please click the link. Different formats available for download. https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=d4fe94faf2e54518b3f421f19a137d4c Use the legend key to see when railway lines were constructed, or to differentiate between standard gauge and narrow gauge or between primary and secondary railways. For more information, see our articles on the construction of the geodatabase: Carlo Ciccarelli & Peter Groote (2017), Railway Endowment in Italy’s Provinces, 1839-1913, Rivista di Storia Economica (ISSN 0393-3415), Fascicolo 1, april 2017; (https://www.rivisteweb.it/doi/10.1410/86763) Carlo Ciccarelli & Peter Groote (2017), The spread of railroads in Italian provinces: a GIS approach, Scienze Regionali - Italian Journal of Regional Science The layers 'lines conecting capitals' and 'junctions' are of no use in the map viewer of ArcGIS online. We advise to keep these switched off. They are added because they are necessary for the use of the network analyst in ArcGIS desktop. Consequently, they are also included in the downloadable versions of the geodatabase. If you are interested in using the underlying geodatabase in ArcGIS desktop 10.X, then download the map package that is available here, the file geodatabase here, or the shapefile (lacks topological characteristics!) here. If you find the data of use, please let us know at [email protected] and [email protected]. If you use the data in an article, please quote our articles in Rivista di Storia Economica and Rivista di Scienze Regionali

    GIS dataset of Italian railway development, 1839-1913 (by Carlo Ciccarelli and Peter Groote)

    No full text
    The development of railways in Italy (1839-1913). The geodatabase has been built by Carlo Ciccarelli (University of Rome Tor Vergata) and Peter Groote (University of Groningen). GIS dataset available from ArcGIS online; please click the link. Different formats available for download. https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=d4fe94faf2e54518b3f421f19a137d4c Use the legend key to see when railway lines were constructed, or to differentiate between standard gauge and narrow gauge or between primary and secondary railways. For more information, see our articles on the construction of the geodatabase: Carlo Ciccarelli & Peter Groote (2017), Railway Endowment in Italy’s Provinces, 1839-1913, Rivista di Storia Economica (ISSN 0393-3415), Fascicolo 1, april 2017; (https://www.rivisteweb.it/doi/10.1410/86763) Carlo Ciccarelli & Peter Groote (2017), The spread of railroads in Italian provinces: a GIS approach, Scienze Regionali - Italian Journal of Regional Science The layers 'lines conecting capitals' and 'junctions' are of no use in the map viewer of ArcGIS online. We advise to keep these switched off. They are added because they are necessary for the use of the network analyst in ArcGIS desktop. Consequently, they are also included in the downloadable versions of the geodatabase. If you are interested in using the underlying geodatabase in ArcGIS desktop 10.X, then download the map package that is available here, the file geodatabase here, or the shapefile (lacks topological characteristics!) here. If you find the data of use, please let us know at [email protected] and [email protected]. If you use the data in an article, please quote our articles in Rivista di Storia Economica and Rivista di Scienze Regionali

    University of the North. The geography of the academic elite in Groningen, 1870-1940

    No full text
    De vervlechting tussen Groningen en zijn omgeving speelt eveneens een rol in de bijdrage van Peter Groote, die over de afkomst van studenten en wetenschappers van de Groninger universiteit gaat. De RuG was tussen 1877-1940 een ‘gewone’ regionale universiteit, zo luidt zijn conclusie

    Lepidiota flavipennis Lea Groote Eylandt 1926

    No full text
    Lepidiota flavipennis Lea, 1926 Lepidiota flavipennis Lea, 1926: 58. Holotype (by original designation) female (Figs. 23–25): flavipennis (handwritten) Lea, TYPE (typeset) Groote Eyl. [Groote Eylandt, 13.68°S, 136.72°E] (handwritten) | Groote Eylandt N. Territory N.B. Tindale (typeset on green) | I.15472 Lepidiota flavipennis Lea Groote Eylandt (handwritten) TYPE (handwritten in red, at right angle) | SAMA Database No. 25-034463 (typeset) | my holotype label; in SAM. Paratypes: 1: Groote Eylandt, N. Territory, N.B. Tindale (typeset on green label) | Cotype (typeset) | 20694 Lepidiota flavipennis Lea Groote Eylandt (handwritten) Cotype (handwritten in red, at right angle) | my paratype label; 1 male: Groote Eylandt, N. Territory, N.B. Tindale (typeset on green label) | Cotype (typeset) | my paratype label | aedeagus on card; both in SAM. Lea (1926) described this species from three specimens, and he unequivocally designated a “Type” with the SAM registration number I.15472 (vide Article 73.1.1). It is presumably the female specimen considered as the holotype by Britton (1978) and is the one listed as the holotype by Houston & Weir (1992). The remaining two specimens in SAM were correctly considered as paratypes by Britton (1978) and Houston & Weir (1992).Published as part of Allsopp, Peter G., 2020, Clarification of the status of the types of Australian Melolonthini (Coleoptera Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae) described before 1950, pp. 451-486 in Zootaxa 4885 (4) on page 463, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4885.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/429684

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

    No full text
    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    University of the North. The geography of the academic elite in Groningen, 1870-1940

    No full text
    De vervlechting tussen Groningen en zijn omgeving speelt eveneens een rol in de bijdrage van Peter Groote, die over de afkomst van studenten en wetenschappers van de Groninger universiteit gaat. De RuG was tussen 1877-1940 een ‘gewone’ regionale universiteit, zo luidt zijn conclusie

    Shades of red : Peter Worsley’s rock art research on Groote Eylandt

    Full text link
    The term ‘Golden Age’ was first used in the context of Groote Eylandt by the anthropologist Peter Worsley, whose doctoral dissertation and subsequent publication ‘Early Asian contacts with Australia’ (Worsley 1955a) presents his study of the history and kinship system of Groote Eylandt. Worsley referred to the Golden Age as a remembered period of contact between Groote Eylandters and Makassan outsiders, a past that we argue has historically influenced both the production and the perception of Groote Eylandt rock art. A little-known fact about Worsley’s time on Groote Eylandt is the effort he made to document, characterise and synthesise the rock art made by Anindilyakwa-speaking people. In this paper we draw attention to Worsley’s work and, in doing so, bring to light one of the largely unknown histories of Australian rock art research
    corecore