131,458 research outputs found

    Real solids and radiations, by A. E. Hughes, D. Pooley

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    Epelboin Yves. Real solids and radiations, by A. E. Hughes, D. Pooley. In: Bulletin de la Société française de Minéralogie et de Cristallographie, volume 99, 4, 1976. p. 256

    Big Sinnergy

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    This writing encapsulates and situates the artworks of Graham Pooley, made during his time at SUNY Purchase in observance of the requirements necessary to complete the MFA program. Purchase College SUNYVisual ArtsMasters ThesisDavis, Damien D

    Jefferson D. POOLEY (2016), James W. Carey and Communication Research: Reputation at the University’s Margins

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    Les recherches de Jefferson Pooley portent principalement sur l’histoire des études en communication et participent au regain d’intérêt, depuis une dizaine d’années, envers l’histoire du champ d’études. Pooley a notamment coédité un ouvrage destiné à devenir un classique, The history of media and communication research: Contested memories (Pooley et Park, 2008), et assemblé une imposante bibliographie thématique sur l’histoire intellectuelle de la communication. Son dernier ouvrage, James W. ..

    Folder 43: Cahill, T.A., R.A. Eldred, B.H. Kusko, D. Dutschke, R.N. Schwab, G. Möller, and A. Pooley. Comparison of PIXE Microprobe and Removed Microparticle…, 1989

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    This folder contains three copies of an abstract of a conference presentation: Cahill, Thomas A., R. A. Eldred, B. H. Kusko, D. Dutschke, R. N. Schwab, Greg Möller, and Alan Pooley. "Comparison of PIXE Microprobe and Removed Microparticle Analyses of the 'Vinland Map'." Presented at the Fifth International PIXE Conference, Amsterdam, August 25-30, 1989. Only one copy has been digitized and is presented here.The items in this folder are part of the Thomas A. Cahill Papers--Crocker Historical and Archaeological Project, 1981-2009. They are from Series 1: Thomas A. Cahill Research Papers, 1981-1994. This series consists of various research papers and published articles based upon Dr. Cahill's research using Particle Induced X-ray Emission (PIXE) techniques in analyzing inks and papers.PIXE V, VU, AMSTERDAM. Abstract form. COMPARISON OF PIXE MICROPROBE AND REMOVED MICROPARTICLE ANALYSES OF THE "VINLAND MAP" Thomas A. Cahill, Robert A. Eldred, Bruce H. Kusko*, Dennis Dutschke, Richard N. Schwab, Greg Moller, and Alan Pooley** Crocker Historical and Archoeological Projects, Crocker Nuclear Laboratory, University of California, Davis, CA 95616 U.S.A. The "Vin1and Map", discovered in the 1950s, was thought for two decades to be the first map to show part of North America at a pre-Columbian date around 1440 A.D. However, optical and X-ray analyses of micropartic1es removed from the map in 1974, were interpreted as proof that the map was a 20th century fake. Our re-ana1ysis of the map in 1987 showed the prior "proof" to be erroneous, and opens once again the map to serious study. This paper will describe the differences between the two approaches and the present state of the controversy. *** AGLAE, Lourve Museum, Paris, France Peabody Museum, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut I. t:./3 -

    Relationism Rehabilitated? I: Classical Mechanics

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    The implications for the substantivalist--relationist controversy of Barbour and Bertotti's successful implementation of a Machian approach to dynamics are investigated. It is argued that in the context of Newtonian mechanics the Machian framework provides a genuinely relational interpretation of dynamics and that it is more explanatory than the conventional, substantival interpretation. In a companion paper (Pooley 2001), the implications of the Machian approach for the interpretation of relativistic physics are explored

    Changing home and workplace in Victorian London : the life of Henry Jaques shirtmaker.

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    The paper uses unusually rich evidence from a manuscript life history written in 1901 from personal diaries to explore the changing relationship between home and workplace in Victorian London. The life history of Henry Jaques demonstrates the way in which decisions about employment and residence were related both to each other and to stages of the family life course. The uncertainty of work, lack of income to support a growing family, rising aspirations, the constant threat of illness, the ease of moving between rented property, close ties between home and workplace, the stresses produced by home working, and the attractions of suburbanization all interacted to shape the residential and employment history of Jaques and his family. The themes exemplified by this detailed life history were also relevant to many other people. Evidence collected from a large-scale project on lifetime residential histories is used to place the experiences of Henry Jaques in a broader context, and to show how they related to the changing social and economic structure of Victorian London
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