16,701 research outputs found

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from L. N. Yepsen

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    A letter addressed to Sanford Bates from L. N. Yepsen concerning the American Association on Mental Deficiency annual meeting and Bates' responsibilities

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from L. N. Yepsen Page 2

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    The second page of a letter addressed to Sanford Bates from L. N. Yepsen concerning the American Association on Mental Deficiency annual meeting and Bates' responsibilities

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from L. N. Yepsen Page 1

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    The first page of a letter addressed to Sanford Bates from L. N. Yepsen concerning the American Association on Mental Deficiency annual meeting and Bates' responsibilities

    Bates Letter, 1902

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    F. L. Bates was an author on the Lincoln assassination and a lawyer. He believed Booth escaped the Garrett Farm barn. In the bulk of this letter Bates explains, at least to his satisfaction, that he has a tintype of a man he believes to be Booth, which can prove his belief about Booth's escape to others.As a young man in Granbury, Texas, Bates met local barkeep John St. Helen, who claimed to be John Wilkes Booth, long a fugitive following his murder of Abraham Lincoln. Bates believed St. Helen's story. Years later when another would-be Booth, David George, committed suicide in Oklahoma, Bates viewed the body and decided it was that of his old acquaintance St. Helen. Bates acquired the corpse and for years he and his heirs exhibited the mummified remains throughout the South. Bates promoted his contention in "Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth," published in 1907, which included a purported confession

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from Nicholas N. Kittrie

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    A letter addressed to Sanford Bates from Nicholas N. Kittrie in which Kittrie announces he is leaving as Director of the Project on the Rights of the Mentally Ill

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from Nicholas N. Kittrie Page 2

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    The second page of a letter addressed to Sanford Bates from Nicholas N. Kittrie

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from Nicholas N. Kittrie Page 1

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    The first page of a letter addressed to Sanford Bates from Nicholas N. Kittrie

    Sanford Bates Correspondence to "Will"

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    A letter addressed to "Will" from Sanford Bates concerning copies of Will's N. P. P. A. statement. Part of this letter is missing, the page appears cut off

    Multi-decadal uptake of carbon dioxide into subtropical mode water of the North Atlantic Ocean

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    Natural climate variability impacts the multi-decadal uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (Cant) into the North Atlantic Ocean subpolar and subtropical gyres. Previous studies have shown that there is significant uptake of CO2 into subtropical mode water (STMW) of the North Atlantic. STMW forms south of the Gulf Stream in winter and constitutes the dominant upper-ocean water mass in the subtropical gyre of the North Atlantic Ocean. Observations at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) site near Bermuda show an increase in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) of +1.51±0.08 ?mol kg?1 yr?1 between 1988 and 2011, but also an increase in ocean acidification indicators such as pH at rates (?0.0022±0.0002 yr?1) higher than the surface ocean (Bates et al., 2012). It is estimated that the sink of CO2 into STMW was 0.985±0.018 Pg C (Pg=10 15gC) between 1988 and 2011 (70±1.8 % of which is due to uptake of Cant). The sink of CO2 into the STMW is 20 % of the CO2 uptake in the North Atlantic Ocean between 14?–50? N (Takahashi et al., 2009). However, the STMW sink of CO2 was strongly coupled to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), with large uptake of CO2 into STMW during the 1990s during a predominantly NAO positive phase. In contrast, uptake of CO2 into STMW was much reduced in the 2000s during the NAO neutral/negative phase. Thus, NAO induced variability of the STMW CO2 sink is important when evaluating multi-decadal changes in North Atlantic Ocean CO2 sinks

    Sanford Bates Correspondence from Ella Ulman

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    A letter addressed to Sanford Bates from Ella Ulman expressing her gratitude for his assistance with her late husband's memorial, Judge Joseph N. Ulman
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