195,828 research outputs found

    R.W. Sanders to James C. Furman

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    A two page letter from R.W. Sanders to James C. Furman

    R.W. Sanders to James C. Furman

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    A two page letter from R.W. Sanders to James C. Furma

    Joshua M. Sanders to James C. Furman

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    A two page letter and envelope from Joshua M. Sanders to James C. Furma

    Sulfur geochemistry of the Salitre Formation phosphorites

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    Comma-delimited version of table containing measured δ34S of CAS, PAS, CRS, and pyrite in phosphatic and non-phosphatic microfacies of the Salitre Formation.Sample ID includes abbreviation for stratigraphic column and locality, as well as numbers indicating stratigraphic height and lateral distance in a measured section (both in meters) from a datum for the given column, or depth in a drill core (in cm) from the top of the core. Powders collected from the same hand samples (within centimeters of each other) are indicated with lowercase letters a-c. Note: Aris = Aristeia, Min = Minotaur, Cer = Cerberus, FuroV = CBPM Core 5, and FuroX = CBPM Core 10. Locality/Section names, stratigraphic columns, and geographic location are provided in Sanders and Grotzinger (2021), Sanders et al. (2023), and Sanders et al. (submitted).Microfacies A = carbonate-cemented grainstone, B = carbonate-cemented grainstone adjacent to phospatic digitate stromatolite buildup, C = carbonate-cemented grainy inter-stromatolite fill, D = carbonate-cemented laminated mudstone, E = carbonate-cemented stromatolite laminae, and F = CFA-cemented stromatolite laminae. CAS = trace structural sulfate in the lattice of the indicated carbonate mineral(s), collected via protocols for trace sulfate extraction and purification, and measured via ICP-MS. PAS = trace structural sulfate in the lattice of the indicated phosphate mineral, collected via protocols for bulk phosphate-associated sulfate extraction, and measured via EA-IRMS. CRS = chromium-reducible sulfur, extracted and fixed as Ag2S from acid-insoluble residues, representative of sulfur in the lattice of pyrite measured via EA-IRMS. “Pyrite” and “pyrite/marcasite/pyrrhotite” refer to SIMS measurement of structural sulfur in individual crystals or aggregates of crystals. ‰ is expressed with respect to Vienna Canyon Diablo Troilite (VCDT). Works Cited: 1. Sanders C. B., Eiler J. C. and Grotzinger J. P. (2023) Paragenesis of an Ediacaran carbonate-platform phosphorite: Constraints from optical petrography and texture-specific clumped isotope paleothermometry. Sediment. Geol. 444, 106316. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2022.106316.2. Sanders C. and Grotzinger J. (2021) Sedimentological and stratigraphic constraints on depositional environment for Ediacaran carbonate rocks of the São Francisco Craton: Implications for phosphogenesis and paleoecology. Precambrian Res. 363, 106328. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2021.106328.3. Sanders C., Present T., Marroquin S. and Grotzinger J. (submitted) Sulfur geochemistry of the Salitre Formation phosphorites: Implications for the role of microbial ecology, sulfur cycling in phosphogenesis on an Ediacaran carbonate platform. Geochim. et Cosmochim. Acta

    Diary of C. J. Sanders

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    Diary - This document is the personal diary of Constance Jukes Sanders, daughter of Gilbert E. Sanders, Superintendent of the Northwest Mounted Police 1905-1908. The diary begins on August 27, 1910, and ends April 6, 1911. Diary entries include daily activities of C. J. Sanders during her nineteenth and twentieth years, while living in Athabasca Landing with her parents. C. J. spent her days doing housework at the family's home, and often taught Sunday School at the local church. A favourite pastime was having friends over to play bridge in the evening, or riding ponies during the daytime. Church was a big part of the family's week. The women also spent a lot of time cooking, cleaning and sewing. C. J. took a boat over to Europe with her mother and father just before Christmas in 1910. She was very seasick during the trip. While in Europe they visited family and friends in England, Ireland and France (45 pages

    Sanders, J. C., 1829- : Confederate Service Record, 1906.

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    This service record is an account of military actions during the American Civil War by veteran J. C. Sanders (1829- ), dated from 1906.1 leaf ; 2 pdf pages.All descriptive lists and service records in this United Confederate (Civil War) Veterans manuscript collection believed to be based out of Robert E. Lee Camp #158 of the United Confederate Veterans (Fort Worth, Tex.). United Confederate Veterans. R.E. Lee Camp No. 158 (Fort Worth, Tex.)The Southwest Collection Manuscript Record can be accessed at the following URL: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/ttusw/00119/tsw-00119.htm

    Haruki Murakami’s Deconstructive Reading of the Myth of Johnnie Walker and Colonel Sanders in Kafka on the Shore

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    This study aims to analyze how Haruki Murakami reads the real icons of Johnnie Walker and Colonel Sanders in Kafka on the Shore deconstructively. First, we will focus on the signification process of the icon, which are to a great extent molded by advertisements, and then on the deconstruction of their signifieds. For the purpose, we will apply Barthes‟ idea of myth. We are also interested in revealing how Murakami constructs Johnnie Walker and Colonel Sanders to be characters in the novel. The analysis shows that the construction of the icons through advertisements leads to the creation of their mtyhs, and then Murakami reads them deconstructively to be opposite signifieds

    Johnson C. Smith University president Daniel J. Sanders

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    Photograph of JCSU president Daniel J. Sanders. Caption beneath photo reads ""First Colored President, Biddle, now Johnson C. Smith University"

    Salmon Swimming Upstream

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    This quilt is a birthday gift for my brother Solomon C. Sanders who nickname is Salmon. It is a lap quilt, since he is wheelchair bound

    Interview with Gary H. Sanders

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    Interview October 16, 1998, with Gary H. Sanders, then project manager for LIGO; currently (2010) project manager for the Thirty-Meter Telescope. Recalls building cyclotron, Stuyvesant High School. Physics major, Columbia University (BA 1967): Mel Schwartz, Leon Lederman, Jack Steinberger, T. D. Lee; politically active. PhD, high-energy physics (MIT, 1971). Three years with Samuel C. C. Ting at DESY in Germany. Princeton postdoc with A. J. S. Smith. Brookhaven and Fermilab. Leaves for Los Alamos, 1978. To Brookhaven, 1984, kaon decay experiment. Proposes neutrino experiment, Los Alamos. Meets Barry Barish, member DOE review committee. Discusses neutrino oscillation experiments. Involved with SSC [Superconducting Super Collider] in 1989 through Ting, who builds a detector for it. Troubles between Ting and Roy Schwitters, SSC director. Barish as co-leader of U.S. groups with Ting. Ting detector project falls through; Sanders and Barish pick it up. 1993, Congress cancels SSC. Barish returns to Caltech; Sanders to Los Alamos to GLAST [Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope]; investigates WWII human radiation experiments at Los Alamos. Rochus (Robbie) Vogt removed as LIGO director, replaced by Barish (1994), who brings Sanders in as project manager. His first impressions of LIGO. Comments on Kip Thorne, Rainer Weiss, Vogt, and Ronald W. P. Drever. NSB review of LIGO, fall 1994. Many LIGO scientists left. Caltech as ideal LIGO venue. Collaboration with foreign gravity-wave groups. Common data format. LIGO Scientific Collaboration. LIGO origins at Caltech in 1970s. Discusses need for openness in LIGO
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