164,554 research outputs found
Redfern, M J, 5716567
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/412558Surname: REDFERN. Given Name(s) or Initials: M J. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 5716567. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-4792.229268
Item: [2016.0049.44820] "Redfern, M J, 5716567
Triphora abacoensis Rolan & Redfern 2008
Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 — Rolán & Fernández-Garces 2008: 158, fig. 31A-G. Type locality. Bahamas, Abaco, East of Chub Rocks, 26°44’00”N, 77°09’00”W, 52 m deep. Type material. BMSM 15499, holotype. ANSP 369222 BMSM 55373, BMSM 55375, paratypes. Distribution. Bahamas (Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008; Redfern 2013).Published as part of Bakker, Piet A. J. & Albano, Paolo G., 2022, Nomenclator, geographic and stratigraphic distribution of the family Triphoridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda), pp. 1-216 in Zootaxa 5088 (1) on page 14, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5088.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/583653
Triphora portoricensis Rolan & Redfern 2008
Triphora portoricensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 Triphora portoricensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 — Rolán & Fernández-Garcés, 2008: 158, fig. 32A–E. Type locality. Puerto Rico. Type material. FLMNH 363895, holotype. Distribution. Bahamas (Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008; Redfern 2013; Lamy & Pointier 2017), Brazil (Fernandes & Pimenta 2015b; Fernandes & Pimenta 2020), Guadeloupe (Lamy & Pointier 2017), Puerto Rico (Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008; Lamy & Pointier 2017).Published as part of Bakker, Piet A. J. & Albano, Paolo G., 2022, Nomenclator, geographic and stratigraphic distribution of the family Triphoridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda), pp. 1-216 in Zootaxa 5088 (1) on page 142, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5088.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/583653
Triphora abacoensis Rolan & Redfern 2008
Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 — Rolán & Fernández-Garces 2008: 158, fig. 31A-G. Type locality. Bahamas, Abaco, East of Chub Rocks, 26°44’00”N, 77°09’00”W, 52 m deep. Type material. BMSM 15499, holotype. ANSP 369222 BMSM 55373, BMSM 55375, paratypes. Distribution. Bahamas (Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008; Redfern 2013).Published as part of Bakker, Piet A. J. & Albano, Paolo G., 2022, Nomenclator, geographic and stratigraphic distribution of the family Triphoridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda), pp. 1-216 in Zootaxa 5088 (1) on page 14, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5088.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/583653
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #1]
Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #2]
Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney
Properties, Redfern Croydon and Homebush, in the estate of the late Wm. Hudson Esq. [cartographic material] : for sale by order of the Perpetual Trustee Compy., at the rooms 11 a m. 17 April 1893 /
Sales plan for land in the suburbs of Redfern, Croydon and Homebush in Sydney, New South Wales, bounded by George Street (in Redfern), Liverpool Road and Brighton Street (in Croydon) & Creek Street and Underwood Road (in Homebush).; "Terms liberal."; "J. Haydon Cardew, surveyor licensed under Real Property Act, Victoria Chambers, Elizabeth Street."; Includes local sketches of Redfern, Croydon and Homebush.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-lfsp2771
Performance Anxiety: An exploration of spectacle, spectatorship and moral panic in the twenty-first century
In the last decade there has been an explosion of new technologies that enable discourse, power and truth formations to be produced, contested and dispersed. As communication and information technologies continue to evolve, so too do the ways in which individuals construct identities and form communities. The notion of a moral panic is utilised to describe those critical moments in time and space when social norms are perceived to be under threat. I suggest that the complex interplay of spectacle, spectatorship and moral panic involved in such instances can be both conceptualised and interrogated as performance. This dissertation draws upon two distinct performance paradigms – one theoretical and the other practical – to inform a critical reading of three significant ‘social events’ of the last decade: the drug-trafficking trial of Australian woman Schapelle Corby in Indonesia in 2005, the end-of-life legal case focused on American woman Terri Schiavo, which culminated in 2005, and the race relations associated with the ‘Redfern riots’ which occurred in Sydney in 2004. Informed by a range of theoretical positions from Michel Foucault, Zygmunt Bauman, Giorgio Agamben, Judith Butler, Baz Kershaw, and Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, this dissertation fleshes out contemporary understandings of mediatised spectacle and spectatorship, with the aim of revealing the ways in which they contribute to creating and sustaining moral panic. A critical finding of the dissertation is that through both subjectification and objectification processes the central players and the spectators become indivisible from the spectacle itself, thus maintaining the interweaving cycle of spectator, spectacle and moral panic. By exploring the ways in which people interpret and respond to social phenomena, the possibilities for performance and social theory can be extended
The process of outpatient referral and care: the experiences and views of patients, their general practitioners, and specialists
Background. The primary care system in the United Kingdom, involving the general practitioner (GP) as gatekeeper to further services, has helped to keep health care costs down. Despite this, unexplained variation in referral rates and increasing health care costs have led to the search for methods of improving efficiency. There is relatively little recent descriptive data on the processes of care at the primary-secondary care interface. The study reported here provides information about this.Aim, To analyse the patterns and process of care for the referral of outpatients, together with the views of patients, their GPs, and specialists.Method. A questionnaire survey of outpatients, their hospital specialists, and GPs in randomly sampled district health authorities in the North Thames Region. The measures included items and scales measuring satisfaction and processes.Results. Almost all of the outpatients thought that their consultation with the specialist was 'necessary' and 'worthwhile: Most of the GPs felt that they could nor have given the study patients the care, treatment, and investigations they received in hospital, and most of the sampled patients' attendances were rated by the specialists as 'appropriate: However, for just over one-fifth of new patients, the specialists reported that the GP could have done more tests and examinations prior to referring the study patient. Large proportions of GPs in this survey also reported having technical equipment in their practices as well as direct access to a range of services and hospital-based facilities.Conclusion. A large amount of work is carried out in general practice prior to the hospital referral of patients, and GPs have direct access to some technologies and services that can act to reduce the burden on hospitals. The discrepancy between GPs' and specialists' perceptions about the potential for further investigative work prior to patient referral merits further investigation
Evidence for multiple ice centres during the late Palaeozoic ice age in Oman:Outcrop sedimentology and provenance of the late Carboniferous-Early Permian Al Khlata Formation
This paper proposes a model for glaciation in Oman during the late Palaeozoic ice age (LPIA) based on sedimentological and provenance analyses of the Late Carboniferous–Early Permian Al Khlata Formation, exposed in the Huqf, Oman. The results demonstrate a complex pattern of glaciation across Oman, not fully recognized in previous models. Striated glacial pavements provide evidence for two phases of ice advance: a phase of ice sheet advance towards the NE, and a second and probably younger phase where an ice centre localized on the Huqf High flowed towards the SW. The stratigraphy is constrained by previous palynological studies and is subdivided into three units, from oldest to youngest: ‘early’ AKP5, ‘late’ AKP5 and AKP5/P1. ‘Early’ AKP5 palaeogeography is characterized by ice-contact glacial lacustrine and deltaic sedimentary environments along the western margin of the Huqf High. Meltwater discharge flowed into the lake from ice margins located to the east, upon the Huqf High, recorded by progradational delta and fan complexes. ‘Late’ AKP5 palaeogeography is characterized by pro-glacial fluvial-deltaic outwash braidplains that record high-magnitude meltwater discharge from an ice margin located to the SW of the study area. The youngest undifferentiated AKP5/P1 palaeogeography is characterized by re-establishment of ice-contact glaciolacustrine conditions
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