1,722,985 research outputs found
Oral history interview with Lloyd M. Thorndyke
Transcript not available electronically. Please contact CBI.Thorndyke discusses the evolution of Control Data Corporation's peripherals business and describes the development of various peripherals, emphasizing disk storage products.Thorndyke, Lloyd M.. (1980). Oral history interview with Lloyd M. Thorndyke. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107669
Oral history interview with Lloyd M. Thorndyke
Transcript not available electronically. Please contact CBI.Thorndyke describes the development of peripherals engineering at Control Data Corporation and his own research in flying head drum memory, and concludes the interview with a discussion of the advances made possible through the use of large scale integrated circuitry.Thorndyke, Lloyd M.. (1982). Oral history interview with Lloyd M. Thorndyke. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107670
Falls in Wilson Canyon
Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows a cascade in Wilson Canyon, a tributary to the Colorado River
Benny Bullard at an Anasazi ruin
Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows Benny Bullard at Wasp House, an Ancestral Puebloan ruin in Lake Canyon, a tributary side canyon of Glen Canyon, Utah
Maurice Cooley pondering his next climb. Frank Wright\u27s boat is in the river
Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows Maurice Cooley standing in a small motorized boat on the Colorado River in Glen Canyon, Utah
Keyhole, Glen Canyon, 1958
Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows The Keyhole, a landmark along the Colorado River
Camp layout, Dr. Barbury in forefront
Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows Dr. Barbury and others in the expedition setting up camp on a beach by the Colorado River in Glen Canyon
Swimming deer, Colorado River
Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows a deer swimming in the Colorado River
Lloyd M. Went
3 x 2 photograph, portrait of a man wearing a pinstriped suit and a tiePersons Venners - Wyckoff P70 Divider "W" Accordion Folder "W" P70 Original Index 25. Went, Lloyd M. Envelope P70 "W" 25. Went, Lloyd M. Photo See: S. D. Hist. collection Vol. 22 [stamp] Property of South Dakota State Historical Society Pierre, South Dakota [stamp] Give photo credit to: South Dakota State Historical Society.Went, Lloyd M
Lloyd M. Dickie, a marine biologist, argues that responses to the decline of fis
Lloyd M. Dickie, a marine biologist, argues that responses to the decline of fisheries around the world and in the Gulf of Maine have inappropriately focused on collecting ever-more-accurate data rather than reassessing the theory of fishery management. He suggests the focus should shift to analyzing the total energy produced by the undersea food chain and to counting local fish density rather than total abundance. A related insert notes that unlike other predators, fishermen do not stop hunting when sated, so unregulated fishing remains as much a threat as climatic change. Details, seven related articles on the Gulf of Maine this issue
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