294 research outputs found

    Sergeant Sanders, V.C. of Leeds

    No full text
    (Color) This postcard contains a poem written and recited by C. W. Holroyd, honored by their majesties the King and Queen for six of his poems. The French and Union Jack flags are depicted ; The card is uninscribed and unposted

    Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 (P402), radiometric line data, AWAGS levelled

    No full text
    Maintenance and Update Frequency: notPlannedStatement: This Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 (P402), radiometric line data, AWAGS levelled is an airborne-derived radiometric data for the Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973. The data was acquired under the project No. 402 for the geological survey of QLD. A total of 24969 line-kilometres of data at a line spacing of 3000m were acquired during this survey. To constrain long wavelengths in the data, an independent data set, the Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey (AWAGS) airborne magnetic data, was used to control the base levels of the survey data (Milligan et al., 2009). This survey data is essentially levelled to AWAGS. Noise-adjusted singular value decomposition (NASVD) has been applied to the data. NASVD is a spectral component analysis procedure for the removal of noise from gamma-ray spectra. Details of the specifications of individual airborne surveys can be found in the Fourteenth Edition of the Index of Airborne Geophysical Surveys (Percival, 2014). This Index is also available online at http://pid.geoscience.gov.au/dataset/79134. References: Milligan, P.R., Minty, B.R.S., Richardson, M. & Franklin, R., 2009. The Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey accurate continental magnetic coverage. Preview, No. 138, p. 1-128, Percival, P.J., 2014. Index of airborne geophysical surveys (Fourteenth Edition).The radiometric, or gamma-ray spectrometric method, measures the natural variations in the gamma-rays detected near the Earth's surface as the result of the natural radioactive decay of potassium (K), uranium (U) and thorium (Th). The data collected are processed via standard methods to ensure the response recorded is that due only to the rocks in the ground. The results produce datasets that can be interpreted to reveal the geological structure of the sub-surface. The processed data is checked for quality by GA geophysicists to ensure that the final data released by GA are fit-for-purpose.<br/> This Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 (P402), radiometric line data, AWAGS levelled were acquired in 1973 by the QLD Government, and consisted of 24969 line-kilometres of data at 3000m line spacing and 150m terrain clearance. To constrain long wavelengths in the data, an independent data set, the Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey (AWAGS) airborne magnetic data, was used to control the base levels of the survey data. This survey data is essentially levelled to AWAGS

    Insertion and deletion tolerance of point processes

    No full text
    We develop a theory of insertion and deletion tolerance for point processes. A process is insertion-tolerant if adding a suitably chosen random point results in a point process that is absolutely continuous in law with respect to the original process. This condition and the related notion of deletion-tolerance are extensions of the so-called finite energy condition for discrete random processes. We prove several equivalent formulations of each condition, including versions involving Palm processes. Certain other seemingly natural variants of the conditions turn out not to be equivalent. We illustrate the concepts in the context of a number of examples, including Gaussian zero processes and randomly perturbed lattices, and we provide applications to continuum percolation and stable matching

    Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 (P402), magnetic line data, AWAGS levelled

    No full text
    Maintenance and Update Frequency: notPlannedStatement: This Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 (P402), magnetic line data, AWAGS levelled is an airborne-derived magnetic line dataset for the Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 survey. The data was acquired under the project No. 402 for the geological survey of QLD. A total of 24969 line-kilometres of data at a line spacing of 3000m and 150m terrain clearance were acquired during this survey. To constrain long wavelengths in the data, an independent data set, the Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey (AWAGS) airborne magnetic data, was used to control the base levels of the survey data (Milligan et al., 2009). This survey data is essentially levelled to AWAGS. Details of the specifications of individual airborne surveys can be found in the Fourteenth Edition of the Index of Airborne Geophysical Surveys (Percival, 2014). This Index is also available online at http://pid.geoscience.gov.au/dataset/79134. References: Milligan, P.R., Minty, B.R.S., Richardson, M. & Franklin, R., 2009. The Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey accurate continental magnetic coverage. Preview, No. 138, p. 1-128, Percival, P.J., 2014. Index of airborne geophysical surveys (Fourteenth Edition).Total magnetic intensity (TMI) data measures variations in the intensity of the Earth's magnetic field caused by the contrasting content of rock-forming minerals in the Earth crust. Magnetic anomalies can be either positive (field stronger than normal) or negative (field weaker) depending on the susceptibility of the rock. The data are processed via standard methods to ensure the response recorded is that due only to the rocks in the ground. The results produce datasets that can be interpreted to reveal the geological structure of the sub-surface. The processed data is checked for quality by GA geophysicists to ensure that the final data released by GA are fit-for-purpose.<br/> These line dataset from the Carpentaria Basin (Holroyd, Ebagoola, Cape Melville), QLD, 1973 survey were acquired in 1973 by the QLD Government, and consisted of 24969 line-kilometres of data at 3000m line spacing and 150m terrain clearance. To constrain long wavelengths in the data, an independent data set, the Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey (AWAGS) airborne magnetic data, was used to control the base levels of the survey data. This survey data is essentially levelled to AWAGS

    Michael Angelo Buonarroti,

    No full text
    Appendix: "Three dialogues on painting composed by Francisco d'Ollanda, a Portuguese miniature painter who was in Rome in the year 1538. Tr. ... with the help of Mr. A. J. Clift, by Charles Holroyd. The manuscript was published for the first time in Renasçenca portugueza, no. VII, Porto, 1896.""The works of Michael Angelo": p. 281-283."A list of the principal books consulted by the author": p. 285-286.Mode of access: Internet

    Embroidered rhetoric: the social, religious and political functions of elite women's needlework, c.1560-1630

    No full text
    This thesis focuses on the Elizabethan and Jacobean aristocracy and upper gentry to yield the first detailed study of the elite needleworking woman as fashioner of her social personage, and of the objects she produced as indices of social persona, religious conscience and political agency. The first chapter explores how needlework mediates between wtiwomeann d their social context. It surveys the way in which needlework, both as practice and as object, functioned as a vehicle for projecting persona and personage into a social context which interpreted needlework according to complex value systems of personal virtue and the husbandries of conspicuous wealth. The chapter explores needlework as a site for intellectual expression. The theories developed in the first chapter are tested in a case study of Bess of Hardwick, whose textiles show her construction of a virtuous aristocratic persona proclaiming its self-assured place in the social hierarchy. Chapter Two is the first study to consider the needlework of Elizabethan and Jacobean Catholics in the light of the Protestant proscription of iconic vestments. It recovers the history of lost needlework from English convents on the Continent, and of the English recusants' covert provision of vestments to Jesuit missioners. The first detailed case studs' of Helena Wintour's vestments reads Wintour's Jesuit-influenced Marian floral emblems and iconography alongside Hawkins's meditation handbook Partheneia Sacra to theorise Wintour's devotion to the Immaculate Conception, and explores the vestments' relationship to the liturgy and their iconographical importance to the Mass. Chapter Three considers needlework gifts as political currency within patronage structures at the Elizabethan and Jacobean courts. Narrated with a contemporary vocabulary of grace, needlework gifts contribute to the construction of court-crown relations, symbolised by needlework gifts in Jacobean court masques. Through needlework gifts a `feminine commonwealth' availed itself of power structures at the court of James's consort that parallel his departments, and the women's political agency in a female political hierarchy is seen encoded within gifts of needlework in the Queen's Courts final masque. The case study uses Mary's needlework gifts to Elizabeth as an index of changes in their relationship. Mary's needlework joins parallel texts such as poetry, portraiture and planned masques in developing an iconographical vocabulary centring on the Judgement of Paris, with which diplomatic negotiations sought to clarify the Queens' relative positions

    Guidelines for Measuring and Reporting Environmental Parameters for Experiments in Greenhouses

    No full text
    The importance of appropriate, accurate measurement and reporting of environmental parameters in plant sciences is a significant aspect of quality assurance for all researchers and their research. There is a clear need for ensuring research across the world can be compared, understood and where necessary replicated by fellow researchers. A common set of guidelines to educate, assist and encourage comparativeness is of great importance. On the other hand, the level of effort and attention to detail by an individual researcher should be commensurate with the particular research being conducted. For example, a researcher focusing on interactions of light and temperature should measure all relevant parameters and report a measurement summary that includes sufficient detail allowing for replication. Such detail may be less relevant when the impact of environmental parameters on plant growth and development is not the main research focus. However, it should be noted that the environmental experience of a plant during production can have significant impact when subsequent experiments investigate plants at a molecular, biochemical or genetic level or where species interactions are considered. Thus, researchers are encouraged to make a critical assessment of what parameters are of primary importance in their research and these parameters should be measured and reported.© 2015 Both et al. This article is distributed under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons License, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.Peer reviewe

    Asynchronous polygyny in the house wren (troglodytes aedon)

    No full text
    The mating status of house wrens was defined by social behavior and not strictly sexual relations. The incidence of polygyny was estimated by comparing the number of polygynous matings to the total number of nest attempts

    Kahawamys mbeyaensis (n. gen., n. sp.) (Rodentia: Thryonomyoidea) from the Late Oligocene Rukwa Rift Basin, Tanzania

    No full text
    [Extract] Paleogene micromammal-bearing deposits from Afro-Arabia have until recently been largely restricted to a limited number of localities in Saharan Africa and Oman (e.g., Osborn, 1908; Wood, 1968; Jaeger et al., 1985; Fejfar, 1987; Thomas et al., 1989; Holroyd, 1994; Seiffert et al., 2008; but see also Gunnell et al., 2002). Research in the Rukwa Rift Basin of Tanzania has begun to reveal a diverse late Paleogene vertebrate fauna below the equator. This work has produced evidence of primate (Stevens et al., 2005), macroscelidean (Stevens et al., 2006a) and hyracoid mammals, and in particular, an interesting array of rodent taxa (Stevens et al., 2008). Teeth attributed to the phiomorph rodent Metaphiomys have been recorded in the study area (Stevens et al., 2006b), along with a number of smaller thryonomyoid rodent specimens, many of which are severely worn, hampering precise taxonomic assessment. The recent discovery of a fairly complete, modestly worn thryonomyoid mandible allows us to recognize the presence of a new taxon from the Rukwa Rift Basin deposits. This find is significant in that it represents the first novel Paleogene rodent genus and species described from East Africa, and documents a critically under-represented temporal gap in African faunal evolution (e.g., Seiffert, 2006)
    corecore