3,687 research outputs found

    Herons illustration photograph

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    Drawing of herons alighting on piles in Okanogen County, Washington, by William L. Dawson. This pen-and-ink sketch of two herons includes the handwritten caption "Herons alighting on piles (see text)." Dawson was an ornithologist and author of "The Birds of Ohio" (Columbus: Wheaton Publishing Company, 1903); "Birds of Washington" (Seattle: The Occidental Publishing Col, 1909), and "The Birds of California" ( San Diego: South Moulton Co., 1923, 4 vol.). Dawson was an alumnus of Oberlin College (1897, 1903) and Oberlin Theological Seminary (1899). He was an ordained minister who served as pastor of North Church, Columbus, Ohio, from 1900 to 1902. Circa 1904 he moved to Washington State, and later moved to California (1911?), where he was a co-founder and the director of the International Museum of Comparative Oology, Santa Barbara (now the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History). Dawson founded Wheaton Publishing Co. (Columbus), Occidental Publishing Co. (Seattle), and Birds of California Publishing Company (Santa Barbara)

    The UHE cosmic ray energy spectrum measured by the Pierre Auger Observatory

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    The UHE cosmic ray spectrum has been measured with the Pierre Auger Observatory using two complementary techniques. Those techniques are described, emphasising the advantages and cross-checks afforded by the hybrid nature of the Observatory. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.Bruce R. Dawson, for the Pierre Auger Collaboratio

    Female American Velvet Scoter illustration

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    Sketch of a female American Velvet Scoter, Okanogen County, Washington, December 10, 1895. by William L. Dawson 1873-1928). This pencil sketch includes a profile view of the duck's head and bill as well as an overhead view of the bill. A caption located on the lower left corner reads: "Female Am. Velvet Scoter, Showing encroachment of frontal feathers. Dec. 10, 1895. WLD." Dawson was an ornithologist and author of "The Birds of Ohio" (Columbus: Wheaton Publishing Company, 1903); "Birds of Washington" (Seattle: The Occidental Publishing Col, 1909), and "The Birds of California" ( San Diego: South Moulton Co., 1923, 4 vol.). Dawson was an alumnus of Oberlin College (1897, 1903) and Oberlin Theological Seminary (1899). He was an ordained minister who served as pastor of North Church, Columbus, Ohio, from 1900 to 1902. Circa 1904 he moved to Washington State, and later moved to California (1911?), where he was a co-founder and the director of the International Museum of Comparative Ooology, Santa Barbara (now the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History). Dawson founded Wheaton Publishing Co. (Columbus), Occidental Publishing Co. (Seattle), and Birds of California Publishing Company (Santa Barbara)

    Letter from C. D. Dawson, Tusayan Copper Mining and Smelting, to Carl Hayden

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    Letter from C. D. Dawson to Carl Hayden urging him to consider the rights of miners and farmers when drawing up the boundaries for the proposed park

    Fela Dawson Scott Folder

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    3 pages of family history documents containing and related to Fela Dawson Scott; Shadow of Desire; Ghost Dancer; Spirit of the Mountain - including: Articles on Books published by author Fela Scot

    The polymer chain: plastic itineraries and plastic images in a sociomaterialist assemblage

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    The chapter describes the authors residency at The Compound13 Lab in Dharavi, the worlds largest informal settlement and the centre for plastic recycling in Mumbai. The author maps the waste routes that plastics take as they travel through Dharavi. By diverting a flow of these plastics into the Compound13 lab Dawson facilitates a participatory art project that co-aligns the toxic entanglements of waste plastic with 3D printing. By taking a socio materialists stance the author explores a circular economy to build material based understandings. The author challenges the extractive process of ‘cognitive’ mining and proposes that ‘plastic’ images can accumulate to make a more productive form of destabilised and unfinished images that are always ‘in the making’

    Corrigendum to “Assessing the capacity of three production efficiency models in simulating gross carbon uptake across multiple biomes in conterminous USA” [Agric. Forest Meterol. 174–175 (2013) 158–169]

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    The authors regret that the printed version of the above article missed out the third author's name. The correct and final version follows. The authors would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused.We wish to add: Terence P. Dawson, School of the Environment, University of Dundee, Dundee, DD1 4HN, United Kingdom as a co-author in the article

    Fielding Dawson

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    Portrait of Fielding Dawson. Author. New York, NY. Black Mountain Artist exhibited at Harwood Museum

    R&D studies for very high energy gamma-ray astrophysics at energies greater than 10 TeV

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    In spite of more than 100 discoveries of TeV gamma-ray sources by the current imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescope (IACT) arrays, Galactic cosmic ray accelerators up to the knee energies (∼ PeV) still remain unclear. PeV Explorer (or PeX) is a future project of a relatively small IACT array, optimized to detect gamma rays of energies greater than 10 TeV and aiming to explore Galactic accelerators up to PeV energies. We present the status of our hardware R & D studies for this project and some extension plans.T. Yoshikoshi, R. W. Clay, B. R. Dawson, Y. Matsubara, M. Mori, T. Naito, K. Nishijima, M. Ohishi, G. P. Rowell, T. Toyam

    Cougarcast: Kate Winkler Dawson

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    Interview with Kate Winkler Dawson, author of Death in the Air
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