10,858 research outputs found

    Jonathan Shaw letter to Thomas Rotch, Upper Sandusky 3rd mo 28, 1820

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    A letter to Thomas Rotch from sub-agent for Indian affairs, Jonathan Shaw, discussing the Treaty of St. Mary's, 1818, attended by Thomas and Charity Rotch as Quaker representatives to insure that Native Americans were fairly treated. 7.75" x 9.8" (19.7 by 24.9 cm

    The application of molecular data to the phylogenetic delimitation of species in bryophytes: A note of caution

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    Vanderpoorten, Alain, Shaw, A. Jonathan (2010): The application of molecular data to the phylogenetic delimitation of species in bryophytes: A note of caution. Phytotaxa 9: 229-237, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.9.1.1

    <strong>Bryophytes:The closest living relatives of early land plants Title page</strong>

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    Konrat, Matt Von, Shaw, A. Jonathan, Renzaglia, Karen Sue, Konrat, Matt Von, Shaw, A. Jonathan, Renzaglia, Karen Sue (2010): &lt;strong&gt;Bryophytes:The closest living relatives of early land plants Title page&lt;/strong&gt;. Phytotaxa 9 (1): 3-4, DOI: 10.11646/PHYTOTAXA.9.1.1, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.9.1.

    NewFotoScapes

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    Photography has never been a more dominant and embedded part of contemporary culture than it is now. The Internet, digital technology and social media have amplified our ability to connect and build communities, and sharing and communication of images has facilitated an exponential growth in picture capture and digital distribution. NEWFOTOSCAPES seeks to navigate the evolving topography surrounding the image in the twenty-first century; offering a focused eye on the contemporary creative author-curator and image-maker and on the possibilities afforded by an increasingly complex professional landscape. Jonathan Shaw advocates a new way of thinking about photographic production and education in a post-digital era. NEWFOTOSCAPES is a collection of curated texts arising from a series of in-depth conversations with key stakeholders in, and influential commentators on, photography; including Andy Adams (Flakphoto), David Campbell, Charlotte Cotton, Dónall Curtin, Nathaniel Pitt, Mishka Henner, Francis Hodgson, Dewi Lewis, Stephen Mayes and Katrina Sluis. Perspectives and views cover a wide range of topics such as; agencies, appropriation, archives, community, curation, governance, licensing, mobile, networked-image, open education, photobooks, power and value. In the spirit of today’s mobile and connected world NEWFOTOSCAPES will be simultaneously available on the web under a Creative Commons license and versioned in online, eBook and Print formats

    NewFotoScapes

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    Photography has never been a more dominant and embedded part of contemporary culture than it is now. The Internet, digital technology and social media have amplified our ability to connect and build communities, and sharing and communication of images has facilitated an exponential growth in picture capture and digital distribution. NEWFOTOSCAPES seeks to navigate the evolving topography surrounding the image in the twenty-first century; offering a focused eye on the contemporary creative author-curator and image-maker and on the possibilities afforded by an increasingly complex professional landscape. Jonathan Shaw advocates a new way of thinking about photographic production and education in a post-digital era. NEWFOTOSCAPES is a collection of curated texts arising from a series of in-depth conversations with key stakeholders in, and influential commentators on, photography; including Andy Adams (Flakphoto), David Campbell, Charlotte Cotton, Dónall Curtin, Nathaniel Pitt, Mishka Henner, Francis Hodgson, Dewi Lewis, Stephen Mayes and Katrina Sluis. Perspectives and views cover a wide range of topics such as; agencies, appropriation, archives, community, curation, governance, licensing, mobile, networked-image, open education, photobooks, power and value. In the spirit of today’s mobile and connected world NEWFOTOSCAPES will be simultaneously available on the web under a Creative Commons license and versioned in online, eBook and Print formats

    Contemporary Literature. Analysis of Jonathan Bazzi's novels

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    openDopo una breve panoramica della letteratura italiana degli ultimi vent’anni si analizzano i due romanzi di Jonathan Bazzi "Febbre" e "Corpi minori" dai punti di vista formale, stilistico e tematico. Si discute inoltre il rapporto tra social media, autofiction e autore; nel capitolo 4 si riporta l'intervista che Bazzi ci ha gentilmente concesso, in cui questi argomenti vengono ripresi. Si individuano alcune differenze che i testi mostrano rispetto alla letteratura moderna, e gli aspetti che hanno in comune con quella contemporanea; nel fare questo si accennano quindi alcune caratteristiche della società che li ha prodotti.The paper starts off with a brief overview of the contemporary Italian literature; then the reader is guided through an analysis of Jonathan Bazzi's novels, "Febbre" ("Fever") and "Corpi minori" ("Minor bodies"), both translated in English and published by Scribe. The relationship between author, autofiction and social media will also be discussed; in chapter four the reader will find the interview Bazzi kindly granted us

    Population genetics and ecology of rare bumblebee species in the UK

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    The population genetic structure of three rare and declining bumblebee species, Bombus muscorum, B. humilis, and B. sylvarum was examined using microsatellite markers. We find evidence of significant genetic structuring in both oceanic island populations of B. muscorum and in fragmented mainland populations of B. jumilis and B. Sylvarum. In the former species we find that all populations greater than 10km apart are significantly differentiated from one another suggesting dispersal above this distance is infrequent. Evidence of genetic bottlenecks was found in populations of both B. muscorum and B. humilis. All three species show reduced genetic diversity relative to the common B. pascuorum and fragmented UK populations of B. sylvarum show reduced genetic diversity relative to a continental population. Effective population sizes were found to be low in B. humilis and B. sylvarum, especially so in the latter species. Diploid male production was observed in all three rare species, but was infrequent. We propose that diploid male production is not an appropriate measure of inbreeding depression for social Hymenoptera. Why some bumblebee species have declined in the face of agricultural intensification while others have not is not well understood. Diet breadth of rare species was examined as a possible explanation of this. To some extent all three rare species studied show a narrow diet breadth. We hypothesize that this is because as these species emerge late, they must specialize on plants with higher quality pollen in order to raise the brood more quickly. Following losses of floral diversity, agricultural intensification has than affected these species more greatly.</p

    To what extent is Lemuel Gulliver in Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift a reflection of the writer with regard to political and religious views, and attitudes toward women and the concept of family?

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    This extended essay is an examination of the extent to which the protagonist Lemuel Gulliver in Gulliver’s Travels is a reflection of Jonathan Swift. It involves the exploration of this research question in terms of politics, religion, attitude to women and family; with references to this piece of literature and some secondary resources when necessary. The quotations from published literary criticism are either refuted by examples from the novel or supported in the light of evidence from the novel. Other secondary resources include Swift’s two other prose works, The Modest Proposal and A Letter to a Very Young Lady on Her Marriage, which are referred to briefly for clarification of the evidence. The purpose of this study is to analyse in what ways and to what extent the protagonist is an author-surrogate in the abovementioned ways. This essay is comprised of two sections, namely “politics and religion” and “women and family”, each focusing on a particular aspect of the investigation. In the first section, Swift’s political and religious standpoint is discussed extensively in order to correctly evaluate Gulliver’s paradigm. By making connections between the beliefs of the author and those of Gulliver, the relation between the two is established to support the claim of this essay. In the second section, the female figures in the novel and Gulliver’s perception of them are inspected. The plot is also taken into consideration in this part of the inquiry although the central focus is on the persona. In the conclusion, it is validated that Gulliver is a reflection of Jonathan Swift with regard to political and religious vision, and attitude towards women and family, by juxtaposing and assembling the main elements of personification of Gulliver and Jonathan Swift’s personal ideas and experiences

    Administration and Curricula of the Introductory Graduate Music Research Course

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    The introductory research course is an integral part of many graduate music programs, yet there have been few studies that discuss its curricula across institutions. A questionnaire was sent to instructors of the course to identify shared pedagogical approaches among North American schools of music. The survey was divided into sections that prompted respondents to identify issues discussed in the course, including the types and titles of resources, research methodologies, and library use topics. With a response rate of over 40 percent, the survey also contains valuable data concerning the professional identifications of instructors, assignments used for grading, common textbooks, perception of the course’s efficacy, and more. Shared features of the course included the importance of electronic resources; the minimal use of Internet-mediated instruction formats; a strong preference for English-language materials; and a focus on resources such as databases, style guides, collected works, monuments of music, and thematic catalogs over and above others such as repertoire guides, discographies, directories, and iconographies.Peer reviewedThis publication first appeared in Notes Volume 71, Number 3, March 2015, pp. 448-478. This material may not be copied or reposted without explicit permission. Copyright 2015, Jonathan Sauceda

    FIGURE 3 in A special issue of Phytotaxa dedicated to Bryophytes: The closest living relatives of early land plants

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    FIGURE 3. Sphagnum pulchrum (Lindberg 1880: 25) Warnstorf (1900: 42), Alaska (Photo: Blanka Shaw). Sphagnum comprises a speciose clade of mosses that dominates many wetland ecosystems, especially in the boreal zone of the Northern Hemisphere (Shaw et al. 2003). In particular, Sphagnum is an important and conspicuous component in peatlands, which perform a significant global function in regulating the Earth's atmospheric chemistry as well as providing valuable economic commodities (Rochefort 2000). Sphagnum holds an interesting position amongst mosses, with Cox et al. (2004) indicating that Sphagnum and Takakia form a clade sister to all remaining mosses.Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Konrat, Matt Von, Shaw, A. Jonathan &amp; Renzaglia, Karen Sue, 2010, A special issue of Phytotaxa dedicated to Bryophytes: The closest living relatives of early land plants, pp. 5-10 in Phytotaxa 9 (1)&lt;/i&gt; on page 8, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.9.1.3, &lt;a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10087086"&gt;http://zenodo.org/record/10087086&lt;/a&gt
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