215 research outputs found

    Tuttle to City Desk, Miami Herald, 30 September 1962

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    Tuttle is at the thrift motel in Water Valley.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/west_union_med/1102/thumbnail.jp

    Tuttle to City Desk, 30 September 1962

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    Article focuses on Mississippi lawyer Phil Stone and his opinions on federal attempts at integration and racial differences. Tuttle notes he has to change lodgings due to state troopers taking it over.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/west_union_med/1063/thumbnail.jp

    I Have to Write

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    Frank Tuttle lives and writes in the perpetually humid wilderness of North Mississippi. Frank tried to be a proper Southern author and write about pickups and hound dogs, but trolls and magic kept creeping into his stories, so Frank is a fantasy author. Although hounds do make occasional appearances in his fiction. His Markhat series features a hard-boiled, wise-cracking detective in a world where magic works. He also has a Young Adult series called The Paths of Shadow, and has short stories published in numerous magazines

    New Madrid in motion

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    The Contribution of Palaeoseismology to Seismic Hazard Assessment in Site Evaluation for Nuclear Installations

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    In the framework of site evaluation/re-evaluation procedures for nuclear power plants and other nuclear installations, this publication aims at encouraging and supporting Member States, especially from newcomer countries, to include paleoseismic investigations into the geologic database. In fact, paleoseismology is not just a crucial discipline for Fault Displacement Hazard Assessment (FDHA) but also an indispensable tool for Seismic Hazard Assessment (SHA), as recommended in the reference IAEA Safety Guide (IAEA SSG-9 [1]). Within this scope, this document provides an updated review of the state of the art of paleoseismology, integrated with practical recommendations addressed to Member States, aiming to emphasize the value of earthquake geology studies for nuclear safety. Paleoseismic investigations in the context of site evaluation of nuclear installations, as described in the IAEA SSG-9 [1], have the following main objectives: •Identification of seismogenic structures based on the recognition of effects of past earthquakes in the region; •Improvement of the completeness of earthquake catalogs, through the identification and dating of ancient moderate to large earthquakes, whose trace has been preserved in the geologic record; •Estimation of the maximum seismic potential associated with an identified seismogenic structure/source, typically on the basis of the amount of displacement per event (evaluable in paleoseismic trenches), as well as of the geomorphic and stratigraphic features interpretable as the cumulative effect of repeated large seismic events (concept of ‘seismic landscape’); •Rough calibration of probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA), by using the recurrence interval of large earthquakes detectable by paleoseismic investigations, and providing a ‘reality check’ based on direct observations of earthquake environmental effects

    Varying Perceived Social Threat Modulates Pain Behavior in Male Mice

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    This is a truly collaborative paper, with one of my former senior thesis students (Alex Tuttle \u2708) and one of Mogil\u27s graduate students (Langford) sharing first authorship. Some of the research was carried out in our lab, some was carried out in Mogil\u27s lab at McGill. Illustrating the preparation that my lab provides to prospective research scientists, Tuttle is now a graduate student in Mogil\u27s lab pursuing a PhD in neuroscience, being trained by one of the finest pain labs in the world. --author-supplied descriptio
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