199,235 research outputs found

    Data for: A systems-based assessment of Palestine's current and future infrastructure requirements

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    Excel spreadsheets providing the detailed workings for the scenarios and strategies presented in the manuscript Ives,M.C., A. Hickford, et al. (2018). “A systems-based assessment of Palestine’s current and future infrastructure requirements”.In: Journal of Environmental Managemen

    Letter from Eli Ives to Alden Partridge, 14 July 1823

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    Eli Ives writes from New Haven, Connecticut, to Alden Partridge in Norwich, Vermont, and introduces his son, Charles L. Ives, who is to enter the American Literary, Scientific, and Military Academy in Norwich; mentions Doctor Smith (the father of fellow student James M. Smith?).Transcription by Raymond Bouchard. Transcriptions may be subject to error

    Edward D. 'Sandy' Ives (interview)

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    This interview is included in the Indiana University Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection at the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory. In this interview, Edward D. 'Sandy' Ives, born on September 4, 1925, discusses singing folksongs as a supplemental income to teaching, which led him to write a book. A colleague influenced him to bring his writings to the American Folklore Society (AFS), where he met Richard Dorson who then brought him to Indiana University. Ives recalls the courses he took, his professors , and his classmates and social life. He talks about fields that are related to folklore including anthropology and literature, as well as those that pushed the boundaries of folklore. He speaks about Dorson's personality and their relationship. He also discusses what Dorson and Stith Thompson brought to the Indiana University folklore program. This collection is part of the Indiana University Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection which is available at the Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory. It consists of: 28 pages, 1 tape (1 7/8 ips, 56 minutes) and index. This collection is closed until 2015 except to authorized project personnel. The IU Folklore Institute, 1987 Collection deals with the beginning, the building, and the growth of the Indiana University (IU) Folklore Institute into an internationally recognized program. The interviewees are mostly students and/or faculty of the folklore program from the 1940s to the 1980s. They discuss those who most influenced and impacted the institute, namely Stith Thompson and Richard M. Dorson. They share their memories and experiences of the time they spent, or continue to spend, in the IU Folklore Institute

    Implementation of the M@IVES Website in Postgraduate Education

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    M@IVES research addresses the trajectory of Brazilian graduate students and their attitude to the development of educational technology through a pretestposttest quasi-experimental process with experimental and control groups. It has included the design methodology of research since the establishment of the problem posed by the institutions of graduate work in guidance to course work. It analyzes data gathered in the field of research and in light of Brazilian reality. It enhances the development of a new teaching methodology, supported by educational technology - M@ IVES - for research specialization courses Education Area offered in the city of São Luís. It demonstrates, by building Site M@IVES and study developed, the limits and educational opportunities offered by the new methodology presented

    Earl E. Ives

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    The Oklahoma A&M College World War I Veterans collection captures the memories and experiences of the men and women of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College who served in World War I. In 1919, a project headed by Maude Cass, the editor of the 1919 Redskin; Professor Maroney of the Department of History; Margaret Walters, Librarian; and J.W. Cantwell, the College President, was undertaken to survey these veterans. The surveys were returned along with photographs, letters, and newspaper clippings documenting these veterans’ experiences during World War I

    Herbert D. Ives

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    The Oklahoma A&M College World War I Veterans collection captures the memories and experiences of the men and women of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College who served in World War I. In 1919, a project headed by Maude Cass, the editor of the 1919 Redskin; Professor Maroney of the Department of History; Margaret Walters, Librarian; and J.W. Cantwell, the College President, was undertaken to survey these veterans. The surveys were returned along with photographs, letters, and newspaper clippings documenting these veterans’ experiences during World War I

    Jack D. Ives and the geoecology of mountain areas

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    7 páginas, 1 fotografía[EN]A short description of the work of Jack D. Ives is presented, as a tribute to this protagonist in the development of geoecological studies in mountain areas. His research in arctic and mountain environments (particularly the Rocky Mountains and the Himalayas) has provided a new global perspective, in which human activities and the organisation of human societies are the major factors explaining the complexity of mountain environments.[ES] Se hace una breve presentación de la obra de Jack D. Ives, uno de los grandes protagonistas del desarrollo de los estudios de Geoecología en las áreas de montaña. Con sus trabajos en ambientes fríos y de montaña (Montañas Rocosas e Himalaya, especialmente), Jack D. Ives ha proporcionado una nueva perspectiva global en la que la forma en que se organizan los grupos humanos y sus actividades son factores decisivos para explicar la complejidad de los ambientes de montaña.Peer reviewe

    The largest Au deposits in the St Ives Goldfield (Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia) may be located in a major Neoarchean volcano-sedimentary depo-centre

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    The largest Neoarchean gold deposits in the world-class St Ives Goldfield, Western Australia, occur in an area known as the Argo-Junction region (e.g. Junction, Argo and Athena). Why this region is so well endowed with large deposits compared with other parts of the St Ives Goldfield is currently unclear, because gold deposits at St Ives are hosted by a variety of lithologic units and were formed during at least three different deformational events. This paper presents an investigation into the stratigraphic architecture and evolution of the Argo-Junction region to assess its implications for gold metallogenesis. The results show that the region's stratigraphy may be subdivided into five regionally correlatable packages: mafic lavas of the Paringa Basalt; contemporaneously resedimented feldspar-rich pyroclastic debris of the Early Black Flag Group; coarse polymictic volcanic debris of the Late Black Flag Group; thick piles of mafic lavas and sub-volcanic sills of the Athena Basalt and Condenser Dolerite; and the voluminous quartz-rich sedimentary successions of the Early Merougil Group. In the Argo-Junction region, these units have an interpreted maximum thickness of at least 7,130 m, and thus represent an unusually thick accumulation of the Neoarchean volcano-sedimentary successions. It is postulated that major basin-forming structures that were active during deposition and emplacement of the voluminous successions later acted as important conduits during mineralisation. Therefore, a correlation exists between the location of the largest gold deposits in the St Ives Goldfield and the thickest parts of the stratigraphy. Recognition of this association has important implications for camp-scale exploration

    Addie M. Weed, interviewed by Edward D. “Sandy” Ives, Part 2

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    Addie M. Weed, interviewed by Edward D. Sandy Ives in her Veazie, Maine home, October 7, 1975. Weed, age 92, speaks about her life and the history of her State Street home and property in Veazie, Maine. ListenPart 1. mfc_na0969_t0968_01Part 2. mfc_na0969_t0968_02Part 3. mfc_na0969_t0969_01Part 4. mfc_na0969_t0969_02Part 5. mfc_na1198_t1258_01Part 6. mfc_na1198_t1258_02https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf064/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Addie M. Weed, interviewed by Edward D. “Sandy” Ives, Part 1

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    Addie M. Weed, interviewed by Edward D. Sandy Ives in her Veazie, Maine home, October 7, 1975. Weed, age 92, speaks about her life and the history of her State Street home and property in Veazie, Maine. Listen Part 1. mfc_na0969_t0968_01 Part 2. mfc_na0969_t0968_02 Part 3. mfc_na0969_t0969_01 Part 4. mfc_na0969_t0969_02 Part 5. mfc_na1198_t1258_01 Part 6. mfc_na1198_t1258_02https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf064/1000/thumbnail.jp
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