682 research outputs found

    Interview with Margaret Toohey

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    This interview was conducted by Prof. Donald Raichle in preparation for his book From a Normal Beginning: the Origins of Kean College of New Jersey, printed in 1980. It’s a transcript between Margaret Toohey and Raichle. In this interview, Toohey recalls various presidents of Newark State during her time as the Supervisor of Payroll and Records

    Helping Client to Rise Above the Impact of An Abusive Relationship-Identifying Patterned Behaviour in Culturally Diverse Clients

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    Helping Client to Rise Above the Impact of An Abusive Relationship-Identifying Patterned Behaviour in Culturally Diverse Clients by Monique Toohey for 1st Malaysia International Counselling Conference (MICC 2014). Monique Toohey is a consultant psychologist and owner of private psychology practice,NasihahConsulting Group Pty.Ltd. She is an award winning youth advocate and the author of Without You: Rising above the Impact of an abusive realtionship. The workshop covers risk factors for SV/DV, Prevention, Intercultural competence skills, cross cultural counselling skills

    M-081 Bedrock geologic map of the Silver Island Lake, Wilson Lake, and western Toohey Lake quadrangles, Lake and Cook Counties, Minnesota

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    Scale 1:24,000.Boerboom, T.J.; Miller, James D., Jr.. (1994). M-081 Bedrock geologic map of the Silver Island Lake, Wilson Lake, and western Toohey Lake quadrangles, Lake and Cook Counties, Minnesota. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/60050

    The Belle of Washington schottisch /

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    Mapping the Discipline of the Olympic Games An Author-Cocitation Analysis

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    The authors conducted an author cocitation analysis on prominent authors writing about the Olympics during the 1990s. Author cocitation is an established bibliometric technique that can be used to measure the relative similarities of topics written about by the cited authors. This enables a visual representation of the “intellectual space” of the discipline, in this case the Olympics, to be created for the period under review. So core and peripheral research areas are identified, along with their major contributors. The representation appears as a two-dimensional cluster-enhanced map. Subject expertise was then applied to the results to place labels on the generated clusters of authors and their topics

    Aircraft profiles of stable isotope ratios in atmospheric total and condensed water from the NASA ORACLES mission.

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    Aircraft in-situ measurements of water concentration and heavy water isotope ratios D/H and 18O/16O of cloud water and total water (water vapor plus condensed water) were collected during the NASA ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS (ORACLES) project. Aircraft sampling took place in the southeast Atlantic marine boundary layer and lower troposphere (equator to 22 degrees south) over the months of Sept. 2016, Aug. 2017, and Oct. 2018. Isotope measurements were made using cavity ring-down spectroscopic analyzers integrated into the Water Isotope System for Precipitation and Entrainment Research (WISPER). The WISPER data are processed into mean latitude-altitude curtains and individual vertical profiles for each sampling period. The WISPER data accompanied a suite of other variables including standard meteorological quantities (wind, temperature, moisture), trace gas and aerosol concentrations, radar, and lidar remote sensing, which can be accessed through the DOIs listed further down. The ORACLES campaigns are described by Redemann et al., (2021). The water isotope measurements are further described in Henze et al., (2021). The absolute error with respect to the SMOW-SLAP scale is explained in detail by Henze et al., (2021). Total water concentration and isotope ratios were binned and averaged onto latitude-altitude grids using a kernel estimation approach, with weighting designed to estimate the mean during the approximate month-long duration of each sampling period. Standard deviations for each bin are also computed using kernel density estimation. Time intervals during aircraft vertical profiling are isolated and averaged onto 50-meter vertical levels. The files include water concentration and isotope ratios for both total water and cloud water in addition to temperature, pressure, latitude, and longitude. See included file README.txt for additional details. References --------------- Henze, D., Noone, D., and Toohey, D.: Aircraft measurements of water vapor heavy isotope ratios in the marine boundary layer and lower troposphere during ORACLES, Earth Syst. Sci. Data Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2021-238, in review, 2021. Redemann, J., Wood, R., Zuidema, P., Doherty, S. J., Luna, B., LeBlanc, S. E., Diamond, M. S., Shinozuka, Y., Chang, I. Y., Ueyama, R., Pfister, L., Ryoo, J.-M., Dobracki, A. N., da Silva, A. M., Longo, K. M., Kacenelenbogen, M. S., Flynn, C. J., Pistone, K., Knox, N. M., Piketh, S. J., Haywood, J. M., Formenti, P., Mallet, M., Stier, P., Ackerman, A. S., Bauer, S. E., Fridlind, A. M., Carmichael, G. R., Saide, P. E., Ferrada, G. A., Howell, S. G., Freitag, S., Cairns, B., Holben, B. N., Knobelspiesse, K. D., Tanelli, S., L'Ecuyer, T. S., Dzambo, A. M., Sy, O. O., McFarquhar, G. M., Poellot, M. R., Gupta, S., O'Brien, J. R., Nenes, A., Kacarab, M., Wong, J. P. S., Small-Griswold, J. D., Thornhill, K. L., Noone, D., Podolske, J. R., Schmidt, K. S., Pilewskie, P., Chen, H., Cochrane, S. P., Sedlacek, A. J., Lang, T. J., Stith, E., Segal-Rozenhaimer, M., Ferrare, R. A., Burton, S. P., Hostetler, C. A., Diner, D. J., Seidel, F. C., Platnick, S. E., Myers, J. S., Meyer, K. G., Spangenberg, D. A., Maring, H., and Gao, L.: An overview of the ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) project: aerosol–cloud–radiation interactions in the southeast Atlantic basin, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 21, 1507–1563, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-1507-2021, 2021. The complete archive of ORACLES data are accessible via the digital object identifiers (DOIs) provided under ORACLES Science Team references as follows: ORACLES Science Team: Suite of Aerosol, Cloud, and Related Data Acquired Aboard P3 During ORACLES 2018, Version 3, NASA Ames Earth Science Project Office, https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/P3/2018_V3, 2020a.  ORACLES Science Team: Suite of Aerosol, Cloud, and Related Data Acquired Aboard P3 During ORACLES 2017, Version 3, NASA Ames Earth Science Project Office, https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/P3/2017_V3, 2020b.  ORACLES Science Team: Suite of Aerosol, Cloud, and Related Data Acquired Aboard P3 During ORACLES 2016, Version 3, NASA Ames Earth Science Project Office, https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/P3/2016_V3, 2020c.  ORACLES Science Team: Suite of Aerosol, Cloud, and Related Data Acquired Aboard ER2 During ORACLES 2016, Version 3, NASA Ames Earth Science Project Office, https://doi.org/10.5067/Suborbital/ORACLES/ER2/2016_V3, 2020d.See also mission information: https://espo.nasa.gov/ORACLES/content/ORACLES Raw data archive: https://espoarchive.nasa.gov/archive/browse/oracle

    National Law Librarians Conference 1983 : Aboriginal Customary Law

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    tag=1 data=National Law Librarians Conference 1983 : Aboriginal Customary Law tag=2 data=Toohey, Justice John tag=6 data=^d ^m ^y1983 tag=8 data=LIBRARIES & MUSEUMS%ABORIGINAL CULTURE tag=15 data=PA

    Volcanic stratospheric sulfur injections during the Holocene (past 11 500 years) from a bipolar ice-core array, HolVol version 1.1

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    Based on a set of continuous sulfate and sulfur records from four ice cores, one from Greenland and three from Antarctica, the HolVol v.1.0 database (Sigl et al., 2021, PANGAEA) included estimates of the magnitudes and approximate source latitudes of major volcanic stratospheric sulfur injection (VSSI) events for the Holocene (from 9500 BCE or 11 500 years BP to 1900 CE). In total, we reconstructed 850 volcanic eruptions with injections more than 1 teragram of sulfur (Tg S). These eruptions injected 7410 Tg S into the stratosphere. With the entire reconstructions based on the same four ice cores this reconstruction is best suited to study the frequency and spatial distribution of volcanic activity and resulting VSSI over long time periods and to study drivers and feedbacks between volcanism and climate through time (Sigl et al., 2022). Here we update the database to HolVol v.1.1 as follows: First, we replace the HolVol reconstruction younger than 500 BCE with a similar reconstruction (eVolv2k; Toohey & Sigl 2017) which is based on a larger network of ice cores with on average higher depth resolution and for which important eruption source parameters (i.e. SSI, latitude, eruption season) have been constrained through dedicated geochemical (e.g. cryptotephra, sulfur isotopes, trace element) analyses (eVolv2k_version4, Sigl & Toohey, PANGAEA, doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.971968). For consistency across the different datasets, we updated the default latitudes for unidentified volcanic eruptions suspected in the Northern Hemisphere extra-tropics from 45°N to 48°N, for those suspected in the Southern Hemisphere extra-tropics from 45°S to 37°S and for those suspected in the tropics from 0° to 5°N (with the latter values being the default latitudes for HolVol, calculated from the mean distribution of large volcanic eruptions in geologic eruption catalogues). Second, we updated strengths of VSSI, the timing and location of specific caldera-forming (VEI≥6) volcanic eruptions that we identified through geochemical fingerprinting (e.g. cryptotephra analysis; sulfur isotope analysis) and geochronological tools during the Mid-to-late Holocene using additional ice cores and new analyses (e.g. Aniakchak II, Crater Lake). The new HolVol v.1.1 database includes 1365 VSSI events between 9500 BCE to 2000 CE which injected in total 7370 TgS or 0.65 TgS per year on average. Dating uncertainties are +/- 1 to +/-3 years over the past 2,500 years, +/-5 years between 2000 BCE and 500 BCE, and less than +/-10 years before 2000 BCE

    Mapping the Discipline of the Olympic Games An Author- Cocitation Analysis

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    When most people think about the Olympic Games it is usually in terms of athletic performance. Clearly they are more than that (see Toohey & Veal, 1990). Even the mass media does not confine itself to covering only the sporting angle. For example, symbolism, economic factors, nationalism and politics routinely appear in mass media articles relating to the Olympic Games. There are scholarly journals that are devoted exclusively to the Olympic Games, such as Olympika and the Journal of Olympic History. So what do we mean when we talk about Olympic scholarship? Cursory scanning of other sport journals also reveals a plethora of subjects ranging from legal aspects to history to philatelic aspects among a host of Olympic topics. This paper questions how can we identify, classify and measure them.Olympic Games, Olympic scholarship, sport journal

    Heracles in Pindar : studies in his role and adaptation /by Peter G. Toohey.

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    This thesis was scanned from the print manuscript for digital preservation and is copyright the author. Researchers can access this thesis by asking their local university, institution or public library to make a request on their behalf. Monash staff and postgraduate students can use the link in the References field
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