174 research outputs found

    III. 2. Terracotta figurines and the history of cult at the Bonjakët hamlet near Illyrian Apollonia

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    R. Stocker Sharon, Davis J. L., Pojani-Dhamo Iris, Dimo Vangjel. III. 2. Terracotta figurines and the history of cult at the Bonjakët hamlet near Illyrian Apollonia . In: Bulletin de correspondance hellénique. Volume 134, livraison 2, 2010. pp. 419-424

    The Mallakastra Regional Archaeological Project : First Season, 1998 / Rezultate të projektit arkeologjik rajonal të Mallakatrës : sezoni i parë 1998

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    Korkuti Muzafer, Davis Jack, Bejko Lorenc, Galaty Michael L., Muçaj Skënder, Stocker Sharon R. The Mallakastra Regional Archaeological Project : First Season, 1998 / Rezultate të projektit arkeologjik rajonal të Mallakatrës : sezoni i parë 1998. In: Iliria, vol. 28, 1998. Simpozium ndërkombëtar 9-10 Nëntor '48 Tiranë '98. 50 Vjet Arkeologji Shqiptare. pp. 253-273

    The Grave of the Griffin Warrior at Pylos: Construction, Burial, and Aftermath

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    The circumstances of the discovery, stratigraphy, and construction of the grave of the Griffin Warrior were described briefly in 2016 as an introduction to a detailed presentation of the four gold rings found inside it. Here the “life history” of the grave is considered fully. As a sealed context, the grave of the Griffin Warrior also provides a key dated context for many classes of artifact, the chronologies of which have not hitherto been well defined. Because of its importance in this regard, supporting evidence is presented that the Griffin Warrior was buried in Late Helladic IIA and that the burial deposit in the grave lay undisturbed after Late Helladic IIA

    Nexos iconográficos entre las columnas de Tula y los discos de oro de Chichén Itzá. 26. Arqueología

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    •Acosta,J. 1945. "La cuarta y quinta temporadas de exploraciones arqueológicas en Tula, Hidalgo, 1943-44", en revista mexicana de estudios antropológicos, núm. 7, pp. 23-64.•Adams, R.E.W. 1977. Prehistoric Mesoamerica Boston, Little, Brown and Co.•Andrews .IV y E.Wyllys 1977. "Archaeology and Prehistory in the Northern Maya Lowlands: An lntroduction ", en Handbook of Middle American indians, vol. 2, pp. 288-330.•Cabrera Castro, R.; S. Sugiyama y G. Cowgill 1991. "The Templo de Quetzalcoatl Project at Teotihuacan", en Ancient Mesoomerica, núm. 2, pp. 77-92.•Cohodas, M. 1978. The greal ball court al Chichen ltza, Yucatan, Mexico, New York, Garland Publishing.•Cowgill, G. 1977. "Processes of Growth, Ili and Decline at Teotihuacán: The City and the State", en los procesos de cambio en Mesoamérica y áreas circunvecinas, XI Mesa redonda, vol. 1, México, Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, pp. 183-193.•De la Fuente, B.; S.Treja y N.Gutiérrez Solana 1988.Ecultura en piedra de Tula,. México, lnstituto de Investigaciones Estéticas-Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.•Diehl, R. 1983. Tula:the Toltec capital of ancient, Mexico, EUA, Thames and Hudson , lnc.•Durán, O. 1964. The Aztecs, New York , Orion Press.•Edwards, O.y T.Stocker 2001. "Covariance of Poscclassic figurine styles, settllement patterns and political boundaries in the Basin of Mexico", en Tire New World figurine project, vol. 2, Stocker y C. Charlton (eds.), pp. 55-87.•Feldman. L. 1974. "Tollan in Hidalgo: native accounts of the Central Mexican Tolteca ", en Studies in ancient Tollan, R . Diehl (ed.), University of Missouri Monographs in Anthropology, núm. 1, pp. 130-149.•Gillespie, S. 1989. The Aztec kings, Tucson, Universi­ty of Arizona .•Kaplan, J. 2000. "A great emblematic depiction of throned rule and royal sacrifice at Late PreClassic Kaminaljuyu" , en Ancient Mesoamerica, núm . 11, pp. 185-198.•Kelekna , P. 1998. "'War and Theocracy", en Chief­doms and chieftaincy in the Americas, E. Redmond (ed.), Gainesville, Universiry of Florida Press, pp. 164-188.•Kelley, E. 1978. "The Temple of the Skulls at Alcavisca, Cha lchihuites", en Across the Chichimec sea, C. Riley y B. Hedrick (eds.), Carbondale, Souchern Illinois University Press, pp. 102-126.•Kristan-Graham .C. 1989. Art, rulership and tire Mesoamerican body p olitic al Tula and Chichen Itza, UCLA, dissercation.•Kubler, G. 1984. The art and orclritecture of ancient America: the Mexican, Maya and Andean peoples , New York, Penguin Books.•Luján, L.; R.Cobean y A.G. Mastache 1995. Xochicalco y Tula, México, Jaca Book. •Mandeville, M. 1974. "Chipped Stone points from Tula'', en Studies in oncimt To/Ion, R. Diehl (ed.), Univers iry of Missiuri Monographs in Anchropology , pp. 95-104.•Mílbrath S. 1999. Star gods of the Mayo astronomy in art,folklore and calendars, Austin, Universicy of Texas Press.•Miller M. 1999. Maya art and architecture, New York, Thames and Hudson.•Proskouriakoff, T. 1974. Jades from the Cenote of Sa­ crifice, Chichen ltza, Yucacan, en Memoirs o/ the Peabody Museum of Ar­ chaeology and Ethnology, vol. 1O, núm. 1, Cambridge, Harvard University.•Ringle, W., T. Negrón y G.Bey 111 1998. "The return of Queczalcoacl", en Ancient Mesoamerica, núm. 9, pp. 183-232.•Schele, L 1998. "The iconography of Maya ar­chitectural facades during the Late classic period'', en Function and meaning in Classic Maya architecture, S. Houscon (ed.), Washington, D.C., Dumbarton Oaks, pp. 479-518.•Schmookler .A. 1984. Parable o/ the tribes: theproblem of social evolution, Boscon, Houghron Mifflin.•Stocker, T. 1974. "A small temple in che Tula residential zone", en Studies in ancient Tollan, R. Diehl (ed.), Uni­ versity of Missouri Monographs in An chropology, núm . 1, pp. 25-31.1983. Figurines from Tula, Hidalgo, Mexi­ co, tesis, Universicy of Illinois, Urbana. 1987. "Conquesc, tribute and che rise of the state", en Studies in the neolithic and urban revolutions, L. Manzanilla (ed.), BAR Internacional Series 349, pp. 365-376.1991. "lntroduccion", en The New Worldfigurine project,vol. 1, Stocker (ed.),_Provo, Research Press, pp. 1-2.1993a. "Contradicrlons in religious myts: Tezcatlipoca and his exis­tence at Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico", en Notas Mesoamericanas, 14, pp. 63-92.1993b. Who were che Toltecs and what did they do?, ponencia presen­ tada en la XIII reunión de IAES, México.2000a . "Ethnohistorical input for the Mesoamerican obsidian indus try", en Nahua Newsletter, núm . 30, pp. 27-31.2000b. "Reconsidering commems on Sahagún's 260 day signs", Nahua Newsletter, núm. 30, pp. 25-26.2001a. "Further coments on Towns­end's the Azcecs, en Nahua Newsletter, en prensa.2001b. A walk through an Aztec dream , Taejon, South Korea, Heliot House.2002 "The Aztec Trickster on Display", en www.tr ickster.org s.f. The Aztec augury table, manus­crito original.•Stocker, T.y D.James 1988. "Semiotic analysis of Prehis­toric texts, en Semiotics, J.Deely (ed.), N.Y., Un iversity Press of Amer ica, 1987, pp. 183-192. •Slocker, T. y E.Kylar 1984. "Aztec warfare. Sacrifice and cannibalism", en The Explorers Journal, mím 62, pp. 126-133.•Stocker, T., S. Meltzoff y S.Armsev 1979. "Further incerpretations in Formative period iconography", en American antiquity , núm. 45, pp. 740-58.•Stocker T.y M.Spence 1974. "Obsidian eccencrics from Central Mexico'', en Studies in ancient Tollan, R. Diehl (ed.), University of Missouri Monographs in Anthropology, núm. l, pp. 88-94.•Tezozomoc , Hernando Alvarado 1975. Crónica mexicayotl , México, UNAM.•Tozzer ,A. 1957. "Chichén Itzá and its Cenote of Sacrifice: A comparative scudy of contemporaneous Maya and Toltec", en Memoirs of the Peobody Museum of Archaeologyond Ethnology, vols. 11-12.•Umberger, E. 1987. Antiques, revivals, and references to the pase in the Aztec are, en Res, núm. 13, pp. 61-105.•Van de Guchte, M. 1999. "The Inca cognition of landscape", en Archaeologies of landscape: Contemporary perspectives, T. Ashmore y B. Knapp (eds.), Oxford, Blackwell

    The construction of Karen Karnak: The multi-author-function

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    This thesis is situated within the comparatively recent developments of Web 2.0 and the emergence of interactive WikiMedia, and explores the mode of authorship within a Read/Write culture compared to that of a Read/Only tradition. The hypothesis of this study is that the role of the audience has become merged with the author, and as such, represents new functions and attributes, distinct from a more conventional concept of authorship, in which the roles of audience and author are more separate. Read/Write and participatory culture, as defined by this study, is focused on collaboration, and includes the influences of D.I.Y. culture, Open-Source practices and the production of text by multiple authors. Multi-authorship presents a re-thinking of several concepts which support the notion of the individual author, since the focus of multi-authorship is not on attribution and ownership of a finished text, but on the continued malleability of a text. Modes of multi-authorship, demonstrated in the use of the pseudonyms Alan Smithee and Karen Eliot, represent declarative authors whose names signify multiple origins, whilst concurrently indicating a distinct body of work. The function of these names form an important context to this study, since primary research involves the construction of an experimental mode of multi-authorship utilising WikiMedia technology and the interaction of thirty nine participants, who are invited to create a body of work under the collective pseudonym Karen Karnak. The data generated by this experiment is analysed using aspects of Michel Foucault's author-function to identify and determine power structures inherent in the WikiMedia context. The interplay of power structures, including concepts such as identity, ownership and the body of work, affect the resulting mode of authorship and contribute to the construction of Karen Karnak, suggesting further areas of research into the emerging multi-author

    Mean variance analysis of winter wheat stocker cattle: distribution of cash, traditional hedge, and calendar spread gross margins

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    2022 Spring.Includes bibliographical references.The purpose of this research is to evaluate historic returns for Oklahoma stocker cattle wheat pasture operations using cash and futures prices to determine potential risk management strategies that optimize returns and reduce risk. Returns are only evaluated for the stocker segment of dual-purpose winter wheat production. Producers face risk in a variety of forms; however, price risk and basis risk are the main interests of this analysis. The cash market for feeder cattle is subject to notable price volatility because of external market factors such as demand for feeder cattle from feedlot operations, changes in input prices like pasture and corn, availability of inputs, and feeder cattle supply levels. Price moves occur that impact the purchase cost and sale revenue of stocker operations that can result in unexpected financial losses. Risk management strategies have the potential to mitigate price risk associated with stocker cattle production. Cash gross margins were evaluated for a variety of production scenarios that represent Oklahoma winter wheat production to develop a baseline for expected gross returns. The traditional hedge was evaluated over the 21-year period for each scenario to determine the influence of using basis adjusted futures prices to calculate a projected forward sale price, prior to the sale in the physical cash market. Calendar spread margins were calculated using basis adjusted futures prices for the appropriate futures contracts, purchase weight and sale weight of each scenario for the summer to fall period prior to the purchase of cattle. Finally, cash, hedging, and spread returns were compared to determine how the three strategies impact gross margin returns and the variance of returns

    Reconsideración del elemento trilobulado en Mesoamérica: examen de los datos, interpretaciones sobre su continuidad y sugerencias para investigaciones futuras. 30. Arqueología

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    Filtration of submicrometer particles by pelagic tunicates

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    Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2010. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 (2010): 15129-15134, doi:10.1073/pnas.1003599107.Salps are common in oceanic waters and have higher per individual filtration rates than any other zooplankton filter feeder. Though salps are centimeters in length, feeding via particle capture occurs on a fine, mucous mesh (fiber diameter d ~ 0.1 μm) at low velocity (U = 1.6 ± 0.6 cm s-1, mean ± SD) and is thus a low-Reynolds number (Re ~ 10-3) process. In contrast to the current view that particle encounter is dictated by simple sieving of particles larger than the mesh spacing, a low-Re mathematical model of encounter rates by the salp feeding apparatus for realistic oceanic particle size distributions shows that submicron particles, due to their higher abundances, are encountered at higher rates (particles per time) than larger particles. Data from feeding experiments with 0.5, 1 and 3 μm diameter polystyrene spheres corroborate these results. Though particles larger than 1 μm (e.g. flagellates, small diatoms) represent a larger carbon pool, smaller particles in the 0.1–1 μm range (e.g. bacteria, Prochlorococcus) may be more quickly digestible because they present more surface area, and we find that particles smaller than the mesh size (1.4 μm) can fully satisfy salp energetic needs. Furthermore, by packaging submicrometer particles into rapidly sinking fecal pellets, pelagic tunicates can substantially change particle size spectra and increase downward fluxes in the ocean.This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (OCE-0647723 to LPM and OCE-074464- CAREER to RS) and the WHOI Ocean Life Institute

    1979-1980 Women\u27s Basketball Team 1

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    These students were members of the 1979-1980 women\u27s basketball team at Jacksonville State University. Shown from left are, front row, Karen Mitchell, Tess Stocker, Vickie Holmes, Felecia Kendricks, Sharon Armour, Maureen Weebur, back row, Assistant Coach Danny Singleton, Jill Collins, Susan Carroll, Cheryl Van Pelt, Katrina Helton, Jonnie Mae Williams, Robin Catanzano, and Head Coach Ronnie Akers.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/38327/thumbnail.jp
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