2,369 research outputs found
Cwbr Author Interview: Reluctant Rebels: The Confederates Who Joined The Army After 1861
Interview with Dr. Kenneth W. Noe, Professor of History at Auburn University Interviewed by Nathan Buman Civil War Book Review (CWBR): I\u27m here today with Kenneth Noe, author of Reluctant Rebels: The Confederates Who Joined the Army after 1861. Professor Noe, thank you for joining me. Kenneth Noe (KN): I\u27m happy to be here Nathan
Kenneth W. Ashley
Image submitted by author for Poetry Spotlight 2023.https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/vapoets-images/1083/thumbnail.jp
Modification of nektonic fish distribution by piers and pile fields in an urban estuary
Large urban piers degrade habitat value for several estuarine benthic fish species by shading, but their effects on mobile nektonic species is less well understood due to sampling challenges. Dual Frequency Identification Sonar (DIDSON) allowed equal access to sampling in the water column of structured shaded and unshaded vs. open environments in both dark and light conditions by methods similar to video but without light. Sampling (n = 228, 5-minute transects) occurred under and around four large municipal piers of varying dimensions in the Hudson River estuary during day and night from summer and fall in 2007 - 2009. The distribution of small (5 - 25 cm in length) and large (25 – 850 cm) fishes were analyzed separately in recognition of functional guild differences. Small fishes occupied open water, shaded under-pier, and un-decked relict piling habitats, but were significantly more abundant during the day in open unshaded water than under adjacent piers or in piling habitats.. Small fish occurred under 3 of 4 piers of varying size and configuration at 10 - 20% of the median abundances of adjacent open water. However, while schools were rare under piers they could be very large, so that abundance greatly exceeded mean open water abundance variance so as to preclude confidence in differences among piers. The differences among habitats was not significant at night, and the difference among piers was also not significant at night. School membership for small fish appeared to mitigate adverse effects of shading and may influence scaling of their response to shading and could therefore influence pier design. Large (>25 cm) predatory fish were uncommon but responded similarly to habitat effects as did small fish. Habitats did not segregate fish by guild as small forage fish co-occurred in 65.8% of samples with large piscivores. Studies that provide species-specific and mechanistic interpretation of dynamic habitat use as well as further quantification of scaling effects could improve our understanding of how fishes respond to piers and other structures on urban shorelines.Peer reviewed
Mrs. Charles Pearson
Miss Olive Janice Holcombe, 4818 Bryce, became the bride of Charles Hugh Pearson, 4604 Harley, at Conell Baptist Church. Reverend Ira A. Bentley read the ceremony and Mrs. Orene Suffern was organist. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Holcombe of Stanton. He is the son of Mrs. W. N. Pearson of Gainesville and the late Mr. Pearson. Mrs. C. H. Berry, Jr. and Gerald Pearson of Gainesville, the bridegroom\u27s brother, were attendants. Kenneth Holcombe, brother of the bride, ushered. The bride wore a ballerina length gown of white organdy and a white lace calot with a face veil. She carried a white Bible topped with an orchid. Mrs. Charles Pearson is shown smiling for the photograph. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram morning edition June 3, 1951.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/12831/thumbnail.jp
Upcoming Post: Similarities in the Prison-Themed Messages of Kenneth W. Hagin and F.F. Bosworth
Copyright © 2018 by Roscoe Barnes III
#FFBosworthThis blog post is as an
announcement of a forthcoming post/article on the writings of Kenneth W. Hagin and
F.F. Bosworth. The author suggests that Hagin’s minibook, The Prison Door is Open: What Are You Still Doing Inside?, seems to
borrow from Bosworth’s article, "The Opening of the Prison," without
proper attribution.For more information on F.F. Bosworth, follow the Bosworth
Matters blog at: http://ffbosworth.strikingly.com#ChristTheHealer #BosworthMatters #BosworthMention</p
Fig. 1 in The Life History Of Ostrocerca Dimicki (Frison) In A Short-Flow, Summer-Dry Oregon Stream
Fig. 1. Outgate Beck stream channel obscured by grass, looking upstream from the emergence trap; author Anderson straddling the stream.Published as part of Stewart, Kenneth W. & Anderson, Norman H., 2010, The Life History Of Ostrocerca Dimicki (Frison) In A Short-Flow, Summer-Dry Oregon Stream, pp. 52-57 in Illiesia 6 (6) on page 53, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.475962
Phyllotis haggardi Thomas 1908
Phyllotis haggardi Thomas, 1908. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 7, 2: 270. TYPE LOCALITY: Ecuador, Pichincha Prov., Monte Pichincha, above Quito, 4000 m. DISTRIBUTION: Andean Ecuador. COMMENT: Reviewed by Pearson, 1972, J. Mammal., 53:683, and Pearson and Patton, 1976, J. Mammal., 57:339-350. ISIS NUMBER: 5301410008042007001.Published as part of James H. Honacki, Kenneth E. Kinman & James W. Koeppl, 1982, Order Rodentia (Part 3), pp. 392-476 in Mammal Species of the World (1 st Edition), Lawrence, Kansas, USA :Alien Press, Inc. & The Association of Systematics Collections on page 457, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735303
On Poetic Inhabiting of the World According to Kenneth White
The article constitutes an interpretation of a collection of essays by K. White La carte de Guido. Un pèlerinage europeén (2011), which serves the author to present the method of geopoetics as proposed by the author. The essays in question are also proof of his thesis which puts forth that writing is an „intellectual and existential geography”.Uniwersytet w Białymstoku2415
Hydrochaeridae Gray 1825
Family Hydrochaeridae REVIEWED BY: J. P. Jorgenson (JPJ); M. A. Mares (MAM); T. Pearson (TP); C. A. Woods (CAW). ISIS NUMBER: 5301410020000000000.Published as part of James H. Honacki, Kenneth E. Kinman & James W. Koeppl, 1982, Order Rodentia (Part 6), pp. 560-594 in Mammal Species of the World (1 st Edition), Lawrence, Kansas, USA :Alien Press, Inc. & The Association of Systematics Collections on page 575, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735303
Chinchillidae Bennett 1833
Family Chinchillidae REVIEWED BY: M. A. Mares (MAM); T. Pearson (TP); C. A. Woods (CAW). ISIS NUMBER: 5301410023000000000.Published as part of James H. Honacki, Kenneth E. Kinman & James W. Koeppl, 1982, Order Rodentia (Part 6), pp. 560-594 in Mammal Species of the World (1 st Edition), Lawrence, Kansas, USA :Alien Press, Inc. & The Association of Systematics Collections on page 577, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735303
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