1,425,096 research outputs found
Paul Larsen
Paul B. Larsen. The author taught air and space law for more than 40 years respectively at Southern Methodist University and at Georgetown University. He is co-author of Lyall and Larsen, Space Law a Treatise (2ne edition Routledge 2017) and of Larsen, Sweeney and Gillick, Aviation Law. Cases and Related Sources (second edition, Martinus Nijhof, 2012)https://commons.erau.edu/stm-images/1095/thumbnail.jp
Monkey Wrench quilt, by Susannah T. Larsen
Image of Monkey Wrench quilt created circa 1891-1911 by Susannah T. Larsen. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Nancy T. Williams as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. This quilt was given to Hazel Larsen Trimble (1891-1960) when she was a young girl. It was made in Logan, Uta
a low-activity cold seep in the Larsen B area, western Weddell Sea, Antarctica
First videographic indication of an Antarctic cold seep ecosystem was recently obtained from the collapsed Larsen B ice shelf, western Weddell Sea (Domack et al., 2005). Within the framework of the R/V Polarstern expedition ANTXXIII-8, we revisited this area for geochemical, microbiological and further videographical examinations. During two dives with ROV Cherokee (MARUM, Bremen), several bivalve shell agglomerations of the seep-associated, chemosynthetic clam <I>Calyptogena</I> sp. were found in the trough of the Crane and Evans glacier. The absence of living clam specimens indicates that the flux of sulphide and hence the seepage activity is diminished at present. This impression was further substantiated by our geochemical observations. Concentrations of thermogenic methane were moderately elevated with 2 μM in surface sediments of a clam patch, increasing up to 9 μM at a sediment depth of about 1 m in the bottom sections of the sediment cores. This correlated with a moderate decrease in sulphate from about 28 mM at the surface down to 23.4 mM, an increase in sulphide to up to 1.43 mM and elevated rates of the anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) of up to 600 pmol cm<sup>&minus;3</sup> d<sup>&minus;1</sup> at about 1 m below the seafloor. Molecular analyses indicate that methanotrophic archaea related to ANME-3 are the most likely candidates mediating AOM in sediments of the Larsen B seep
Amanda Bright and Helge Larsen: Art Forum
4 May 1988. Side A: Amanda Bright presentation and discussionHelge Larsen presentation. -- Bright specialised in patination and in the material properties of metal, particularly ferrous metals. In 1988, as part of the bicentennial celebrations in Australia, she was invited to Canberra School of Art to represent the UK in a metalsmith’s masterclass
Viipurin sottiisi
Instrumentaaliesitys.Äänitetty joulukuussa 1930 tai tammikuussa 1931, [New York]
Presentation: Deena Larsen
In this audiovisual recording from Tuesday, March 23, 2010, as part of the 41st Annual UND Writers Conference: Mind the Gap: Print, New Media, Art, Deena Larsen talks about reading, writing, and understanding electronic literature in a variation of her lecture “See Spot Link, Link Spot Link”. She reads from “I’m Simply Saying,” published in Inflect. Other works Larsen discusses are “Disappearing Rain, “Intruder”.
Introduced by Dr. Heidi Czerwiec, Department of English.
A transcription of this reading is available here
Wilmer Nyholm Larsen
Wilmer Wil Nyholm Larsen, a longtime Palo Alto resident and local educator, died on June 28, following a decline due to congestive heart failure. He was 88. He was born on Aug. 7, 1926, in Junction City, Oregon, to Lars and Sigrid Larsen, who were Danish immigrants. In 1944, Wil joined the U.S. Navy at age 18 and served as a radioman during World War II and the Korean War. He attended Grand View College in Des Moines, Iowa, where in 1947 he met Inger Jensen, whom he married in 1950. Wil then studied at the University of Washington School of Education, earning a bachelor's degree in 1951. He also taught in Seattle public schools. Soon Wil and Inger moved their growing family to Menlo Park, and he took up a post teaching fourth grade at Ladera Elementary School and became principal in 1959. He also finished a master's degree at Stanford University in 1960. In 1969, he became the principal of Las Lomitas School in Atherton. In 1964, the family moved to a home in Palo Alto on Christine Drive, where Wil and Inger - except for a year at University of Oregon when Wil earned his education doctorate - remained until 2010. Wil was often seen in his garage teaching children woodworking, playing ping pong or chatting with neighbors. After retiring in 1985, he served as a school administration consultant, worked as a financial planner for Foothill Financial Services and was chairman of the Board of Trustees at the First Congregational Church of Palo Alto. In 2010, Wil and Inger moved to Santa Rosa to be closer to family. Over the years, Wil and Inger hosted many family get-togethers, including the tradition of a Danish Christmas Eve. Together they also enjoyed lectures, book clubs, concerts, volunteer work, hiking, golfing and travel. Wil is survived by his wife, Inger Larsen of Santa Rosa, and children, Nancy Chapin of Oceanside, California Bruce (Robin) Larsen of Santa Cruz Peter Larsen of Seattle Kurt (Karen Pitkin) Larsen of Bloomington, Indiana Ronald (Susana Ember) Larsen of Santa Rosa and
Podcasts
Photograph from a IANR pamphlet: The Purpose of the Tractor Law - provided through the Nebraska Tractor Law and Rules for Official Tractor Tests, Circular 10, 1919; 3 of 4 Shown are Les Larsen and the Tractor Test Board reviewing a test repor
Soittajan kohtalo
Valssi.Kansansävelmä.Instrumentaaliesitys.Äänitetty 17.2.1930, [New York]
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