6,196 research outputs found
Brief von Graham Meadows an Kurt Rothschild
BRIEF VON GRAHAM MEADOWS AN KURT ROTHSCHILD
Brief von Graham Meadows an Kurt Rothschild ([1]
Brief von Kurt Rothschild an Graham Meadows
BRIEF VON KURT ROTHSCHILD AN GRAHAM MEADOWS
Brief von Kurt Rothschild an Graham Meadows ([1]
Dr Hannah Graham on Australian leadership: Integrity, relational leadership and tenacious courage of conviction
Hannah Graham talks to Victor Perton about Australian Leadership. Criminologist, author and university lecturer Dr Hannah Graham was born in Tasmania and studied and worked at the University of Tasmania, before moving to Scotland to work in the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research at the University of Stirling. Hannah has worked on justice and health-related projects with the EU, the Scottish Government, the Australian Government and Tasmanian Government, and she does ongoing research and writing on innovation and justice. Connect to Hannah on Twitter: @DrHannahGraham and @Innovative_Jus
Data and scripts from: Deeper eelgrass are refugia from disease and environmental stressors
Please cite as: Olivia Graham, Lillian Aoki, Brendan Rappazzo, Morgan Eisenlord, Drew Harvell (2025) Data and scripts from: Deeper eelgrass are refugia from disease and environmental stressors [dataset] Cornell University Library eCommons Repository. https://doi.org/10.7298/gw50-gx83These files contain data and code supporting all results reported in Graham et al. "Data and scripts from: Deeper eelgrass are refugia from disease and environmental stressors." In Graham et al., we found:
Eelgrass (Zostera marina) creates valuable, biodiverse habitats worldwide, but is at risk from combined environmental stressors and disease. We surveyed paired intertidal and subtidal meadows for seagrass wasting disease in the San Juan Islands, WA, USA in summers 2017-2019 to determine how disease varied with depth, salinity and temperature, and the influence of eelgrass densities on disease. We anticipated reduced disease in deeper meadows with narrower temperature and salinity ranges (i.e. more stable environments) compared to shallower, intertidal meadows, and reduced densities in meadows with high disease. Leveraging a machine-learning algorithm for detection and quantification of disease, we detected high levels of disease and large changes in meadow densities, particularly in the warmer 2018 summer. Daily mean in situ and remote-sensed temperatures captured exposure to warming, though in situ temperatures better identified site-specific, seasonal thermal ranges. Subtidal meadows experienced nearly 14°C cooler maximum in situ temperatures compared to intertidal meadows. Disease severity was significantly reduced by 8.34 ± 0.012% in deeper, subtidal meadows compared to shallower, intertidal over the entire study and by 11.88 ± 0.13% (mean ± SE) during the 2018 warming, indicating that subtidal meadows may serve as valuable refugia against environmental and pathogenic stressors. Reduced eelgrass densities were also associated with increased severity, suggesting an important link between disease and meadow size. Disease prevalence was also associated with greater salinity ranges, emphasizing salinity as a key factor in eelgrass health. Our work highlights the strong value of both subtidal meadows and sites with more stable environmental conditions as refugia from multiple stressors. More broadly, understanding how eelgrass responds to various stressors can directly inform conservation and management efforts within and beyond the Salish Sea.The following generous funds supported this work: Cornell University’s Atkinson Center for Sustainable Biodiversity Fund, Cornell Engaged Graduate Student Grant, Cornell Sigma Xi Research Grant, Andrew W. Mellon Student Research Grant, Dr. Carolyn Haugen, University of Washington Friday Harbor Labs Graduate Research Fellowship Endowment, Women Diver’s Hall of Fame Scholarship in Marine Conservation to OJG; NSF-REU and Susan Lynch support for the Cornell Ocean Research Apprenticeship for Lynch Scholars to summer research assistants Corinne Klohmann, Sukanya Dayal, Coco Dawkins, and Jack Novack; NSF award OCE-1829921 to CDH; Washington SeaGrant (grant no. NA18OAR4170095) to Carolyn Friedman, Colleen Burge, and CDH; NSF CompSustNet: Expanding the Horizons of Computational Sustainability (grant no. 1522054) to CG
Annual budget (Graham County, Ariz.)
The Board of Supervisors make an estimate of the different amounts required to meet the public expenditures/expenses for the ensuing year, also an estimate of revenues from sources other than direct taxation, and the amount to be raised by taxation upon real and personal property of Graham County.Electronic version includes only selected pages and lacks a title page
Stephen Graham Jones - Sowell Conference 2017
Stephen Graham Jones, University of Colorado-Boulder, author of "Mongrels" and "Growing Up Dead in Texas
Emily Graham Interview
Emily Graham (Class of 2007) was interviewed by Camille Davis via the Zoom internet-based video conferencing software on December 12, 2022. Ms. Graham was born in Shreveport, Louisiana, but grew up in the Dallas area, living in Oak Cliff and Duncanville, and then after third grade in Cedar Hills, where she completed high school. To help combat her extreme shyness, she studied dance from an early age, which she credits with building her confidence. After visiting SMU in high school, she became enthralled with attending the university, where she enrolled and received a Bachelor's Degree in corporate communications and public affairs with a minor in ethics. She said she did not experience racism from white students, but did notice cliques and some colorism within the Black student community. She was very active on campus, including as a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, and ultimately received SMU's M award for service. She worked as an RA at several dorms, held a variety of campus jobs, and participated in multiple internships, including at Southwest Airlines, the Richards Group, and Burson-Marsteller. She fell in love with financial communications and began a long career in the field, working at companies like Burson-Marsteller. After moving to New York City, she noticed a great deal of racism and otherness in the corporate world, which over time led to a career shift into more actively pursuing inclusivity and equity. At the time of the interview, she was working as the Chief Equity and Impact Officer at Omnicom Group. Also at the time of the interview, she was serving as the Meadows School of the Arts 2050 Council, a young alumni group, as well as the as liaison on the executive board for Meadows School of the Arts. She had recently received the Emerging Leader Distinguished Alumni Award for SMU and has spoken at SMU's commencement
Graham Greene An Approach to the Novels
This study reveals Greene in a dual role as author, one who projects literary experience into his view of life and subsequently projects both his experience and its "literary" interpretation into his fiction; and it defines two phases of Greenes novels through the changing relationship between writer and protagonists. The first phase progresses from acutely sensitive, self-divided young men somewhat like the young Greene to embittered, alienated characters ostensibly at great distance from their creator. The second phase (1939) includes a series of "portraits of the artist" through which Greene confronts more directly the tensions and conflicts of his private life.Book Cover -- Half-Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Introduction -- Acknowledgements -- GRAHAM GREENE -- CHAPTER ONE Protagonists of the First Phase -- YOUTH -- DIVIDED SELVES -- WOMEN AND REDEMPTION -- MARRIAGE IN THE FIRST PHASE -- THE LITERARY FRAME -- THE FIRST-PHASE PROTAGONIST AND THE AUTHOR -- CHAPTER TWO Letters and Diaries -- LETTERS TO VIVIEN -- DIARIES -- CHAPTER THREE A Gun for Sale -- A GUN FOR SALE AND BROWNING'S "CHILDE ROLAND" -- A GUN FOR SALE AND TENNYSON'S MAUD -- CHAPTER FOUR Brighton Rock -- PINKIE AS NAPOLEONIC STRATEGIST -- CHARACTERS AND NAMES -- BRIGHTON ROCK AS A FAUSTIAN NOVEL -- CHAPTER FIVE Protagonists of the Second Phase -- AGE -- CHILDREN AND CHILDHOOD -- SELF-DIVISION -- MARRIAGE IN THE SECOND PHASE -- CHAPTER SIX The Strategy of Allusion in the Second Phase -- TOWARD THE WRITER AS PROTAGONIST -- CHAPTER SEVEN Portraits of the Artist -- CHAPTER EIGHT Travels with My Aunt -- CHAPTER NINE The Honorary Consul -- CHAPTER TEN The Human Factor -- CHAPTER ELEVEN Dr. Fischer of Geneva -- CHAPTER TWELVE Monsignor Quixote -- POSTSCRIPT: "YOUR DREAM HAS BEEN YOUR LIFE. -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN The Captain and the Enemy -- FINIS -- Selected Bibliography -- (A) WORKS BY GRAHAM GREENE -- (B) CRITICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORKS -- Index -- Permissions Acknowledgements -- PENGUIN PUTNAM INC. -- SIMON & -- SCHUSTERThis study reveals Greene in a dual role as author, one who projects literary experience into his view of life and subsequently projects both his experience and its "literary" interpretation into his fiction; and it defines two phases of Greenes novels through the changing relationship between writer and protagonists. The first phase progresses from acutely sensitive, self-divided young men somewhat like the young Greene to embittered, alienated characters ostensibly at great distance from their creator. The second phase (1939) includes a series of "portraits of the artist" through which Greene confronts more directly the tensions and conflicts of his private life.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
The Massett-Graham Island Coal Company: the Nearest Coal Fields to Prince Rupert:
This little booklet is compiled to show the possibilities of the property controlled by this company in The Graham Island Coal Fields, near Prince Rupert, British Columbia Canada.--P. [1
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