448 research outputs found

    Aimee Nezhukumatathil, 43rd Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Aimee Nezhukumatathil is a 2020 John Simon Guggenheim Fellow and the author of four books of poetry: Oceanic; Lucky Fish (winner of the Hoffer Grand Prize for Prose and Independent Books); At the Drive-In Volcano; and Miracle Fruit. She is co-author of Lace & Pyrite, a chapbook of nature poems (2014). She is the poetry editor of Orion magazine and her poems have appeared in the Best American Poetry series, American Poetry Review, New England Review, Poetry, Ploughshares, and Tin House. Awards for her writing include an NEA Fellowship in poetry and the Pushcart Prize. She is professor of English and creative writing in the MFA program of the University of Mississippi

    Aimee Nezhukumatathil, 27th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Aimee Nezhukumatathil was born in Chicago in 1974. She received her BA in English and her MFA in poetry and creative nonfiction from Ohio State University. She is the author of Fishbone, and was the Middlebrook Poetry Fellow at the Institute for Creative Writing at the University of Wisconsin. She is currently an assistant professor of English at the State University of New York in Fredonia. Her most recent book, Miracle Fruit, won the 2002 Tupelo Press Judge’s Prize in Poetry

    2016-2017 Aimee Nezhukumatathil

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    Aimee Nezhukumatathil is professor of English in the University of Mississippi\u27s MFA program. Her newest collection of poems is OCEANIC (Copper Canyon Press, 2018), published after her year as the Grisham Writer in Residence. She is also the author of the forthcoming book of illustrated nature essays, WORLD OF WONDER (2019, Milkweed), and three previous poetry collections: LUCKY FISH (2011), AT THE DRIVE-IN VOLCANO (2007), and MIRACLE FRUIT (2003)–all from Tupelo Press. Her most recent chapbook is LACE & PYRITE, a collaboration of nature poems with the poet Ross Gay. She is the poetry editor of Orion magazine and her poems have appeared in the Best American Poetry 2015 & 2018 series, American Poetry Review, New England Review, Poetry, Ploughshares, and Tin House. Honors include a poetry fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Pushcart Prize. (Photo credit: Ted Ely)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/grisham_res/1003/thumbnail.jp

    The Impact of the Sensory Environment on Participation of Preschool Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder

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    Abstract Date Presented 3/31/2017 This qualitative study explores the sensory environment to determine the impact on participation in the preschool environment. The study presents information gathered from semistructured interviews of preschool teachers and occupational therapists. Primary Author and Speaker: Aimee Piller Contributing Authors: Beth Pfeiffer</jats:p

    Short-read DNA metabarcoding using Nanopore

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    The data (.gz) provided is the resulting data from the bioinformatic pipeline that has been analysed in R Studio. A R project is provided with the data and associated code that was used to produce the results, tables and figures.    Nanopore short-read sequencing: A quick, cost-effective and accurate method for DNA metabarcoding Authors: Aimee L. van der Reis*1, Lynnath E. Beckley2, M. Pilar Olivar3 and Andrew G. Jeffs1 * Corresponding author – [email protected] 1 Institute of Marine Science and School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, New Zealand 2 Environmental and Conservation Sciences, Murdoch University, Australia 3 Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC, Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta, Barcelona, Spain</p

    Book Reviews

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    Author: LONG, NORMAN; Development Sociology: Actor Perspectives; Reviewer: Jan Kees van Donge; Editors: ADGER, W. NEIL, P. MICK KELLY and NGUYEN HUU NINH; Living with Environmental Change: Social Vulnerability, Adaptation and Resilience in Vietnam; Reviewer: Michael J.G. Parnwell; Editors: MOSER, CAROLINE O.N., and FIONA C. CLARK; Victims, Perpetrators or Actors? Gender, Armed Conflict and Political Violence; Reviewer: Helen Hintjens; Author: WORLD BANK POLICY RESEARCH REPORT; Engendering Development: Through Gender Equality in Rights, Resources, and Voice; Reviewer: Nitasha Kaul; Authors: ALAUDDIN, MOHAMMAD, and MOSHARAFF HOSSAIN; Environment and Agriculture in a Developing Economy: Problems and Prospects for Bangladesh; Reviewer: Andrew Palfreman; Editors: HUQ, MOZAMMEL, and JIM LOVE; Strategies for Industrialization: The Case of Bangladesh; Reviewer: E. Abdul Azeez; Author: McWILLIAM, MICHAEL; The Development Business: A History of the Commonwealth Development Corporation; Reviewer: Mike Faber; Author: LEFTWICH, ADRIAN; States of Development: On the Primacy of Politics in Development; Reviewer: Francis Adams; Authors: McCULLOCH, NEIL, L. ALAN WINTERS and XAVIER CIRERA; Trade Liberalization and Poverty: A Handbook; Reviewer: Guntur Sugiuarto; Author: WALLE, NICOLAS VAN DER; African Economies and the Politics of Permanent Crisis, 1979-1999; Reviewer: Jan Kees van Donge; Author: EASTERLY, WILLIAM; The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics; Reviewer: Frank Ellis; Author: WRIGHT, GRAHAM; Microfinance Systems; Reviewer: Asif Dowla; Author: GOETZ, ANNE MARIE; Women Development Workers: Implementing Rural Credit Programmes in Bangladesh; Reviewer: Asif Dowla; Editors: FINE, BEN, COSTAS LAPAVITSAS and JONATHAN PINCUS; Development Policy in the Twenty-First Century: Beyond the Washington Consensus; Reviewer: Barry Riddell; Editors: CHOWDHURY, ANIS, and IYANATUL ISLAM; Beyond the Asian Crisis: Pathways to Sustainable Growth; Reviewer: Marie-Aimee Tourres; Editors: KWON, O. YUL, and WILLIAM SHEPHERD; Korea's Economic Prospects: From Financial Crisis to Prosperity; Reviewer: Marie-Aimee TourresReview Books,

    Stable isotopic response to the late Eocene extraterrestrial impact events

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    Two large and near synchronous late Eocene (~35.4 - 35.5 Ma based on radiometric ages) impact events (Popigai and Chesapeake Bay) produced well-preserved structures, yet the environmental response to these impacts is poorly understood. Impact events generate ejecta deposits that surround source craters creating characteristic strewn fields. The Chesapeake Bay and Popigai impactors produced strewn fields that serve as stratigraphic markers for these impact events and the late Eocene. The late Eocene global temperature history and carbon budget are poorly constrained because of sparsely sampled ??18O and ??13C records. In this thesis: 1) the Chesapeake Bay microtektite layer is shown to be stratigraphically younger than the Popigai cpx-bearing (or microkrystite) layer, by ~ 4 kyr; 2) a first order correlation of the late Eocene ejecta layers identified in ODP Site 1090 to the geomagnetic polarity timescale in Chron C16n.1n (279 mbsf) is provided with a corresponding magnetochronologic age of 35.43 Ma, consistent with published radiometric ages; 3) new stable isotopic data is presented from Site 1090 and DSDP Site 612 that show a large and transient ??13C excursion (~0.5 0/00) associated with the impacts. At Site 1090, late Eocene benthic foraminifera are well preserved, the identified ejecta horizon is marked by an Ir anomaly (~950 pg/g), and the published magnetostratigraphic age control is excellent. Site 1090 ??13C and ??18O records of benthic foraminifera across the ejecta layer from 34.6 - 35.8 Ma (8 kyr sampling) and 33.7 - 36 Ma (16 kyr sampling) and a high-resolution (2 kyr sampling) bulk-carbonate record (278 - 279.5 mbsf) are presented. Coeval benthic foraminiferal records show a ??13C excursion from: 1) new benthic data from Southern Ocean Site 1090 show a 0.5 0/00 anomaly; 2) new benthic data from New Jersey slope Site 612 show a 0.5 0/00 change, though this record is partially truncated by an unconformity; 3) Southern Ocean Site 689 published data shows a 1.0 0/00 excursion; and 4) Pacific Ocean Site 1218 published data shows a 0.4 0/00 anomaly. The ??13C excursion is suggested to reflect a perturbation in the global carbon cycle and to be directly related to the late Eocene impactor(s).M.S.Includes bibliographical references (p. 60-87)

    Cover Story piece profiling Linda Greenlaw, 40, of Isle au Haut, author of Th

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    Cover Story piece profiling Linda Greenlaw, 40, of Isle au Haut, author of The Hungry Ocean

    Why I Care: Inspired by City Sprouts of Omaha and the Malcolm X Foundation

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    This digital zine talks about the following, nonfiction author and poet Aimee Nezhukumatathil, the writer of this digital also connets the work of Aimee Nezhuk to the writer\u27s own highschool experience and the local organization City Sprouts . For access and to download the complete booklet see below additional files.https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/tellallthetruthfall2024/1004/thumbnail.jp
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