33,897 research outputs found
Right to repair: will the public choose to reuse e-products for longer?
The University of Southampton’s Olanrewaju S. Shittu, Ian D. Williams and Peter J. Shaw look at the right to repair, and ask will the public follow the waste hierarchy and choose to reuse e-products for longer
Leçons de chymie propres à perfectionner la physique, le commerce et les arts
par M. Pierre Shaw, premier Médecin du Roi d'Angleterre; traduites de l'anglois ...Titelvignett
Portrait of Lyndsay Kingsmill Shaw in a tutu, Sydney
Title devised by cataloguer from acquisition documentation.; Inscriptions: "Peter Pan Sydney"--In pencil lower left.; Condition: Spotting.; Part of the collection: Portraits of Lyndsay Kingsmill Shaw, ballet dancer, Sydney.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6250024; Donated by Christopher McCullough in 2012
Shaw, Peter
Shaw, Peter. Chemical Lectures publickly read at London in the years 1731, and 1732; and since at Scarborough, in 1733, for the improvement of arts, trades, and natural philosophy, [1734]
Full text
Notes: First edition
Language: Englishhttps://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/rare-books/1072/thumbnail.jp
Peter Shaw and Angela Lansbury, 1951
Angela Lansbury with her husband Peter Shaw, 1951. 4 x 5 b&w negative
Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /
Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia
A Dialogue: Peter Shaw and Robert J. Taylor on Editing the Adamses
This dialogue is a feature of the Newsletter intended to promote that exchange of ideas for which the Association of Documentary Editing exists. Mr. Shaw was asked to focus his comments both on things done well and on things that might have been done differently-the latter request being an invitation to describe those alternatives to which an editor may, rightly, have said No. The review, with Mr. Shaw\u27s name deleted, was sent to Mr. Taylor, who was asked to comment on the observations. Again, the intention is to foster instructive dialogue. Although the etiquette of some scholarly periodicals suggests that a reply to a review is evidence of ill grace, we stress here that Mr. Taylor\u27s reply was invited. We are especially grateful to Messrs. Shaw and Taylor for graciously accomodating our deadlines amid their busy schedule
The effect of pH, dissolved humic substances, and ionic composition on the transfer of iron and phosphate to particulate size fractions in epilimnetic lake water.
Transformations of dissolved iron and phosphate to particulate material (>0.2 \mu m) were investigated by adding ^55 FeCl_3, and ^32 PO_4^3- to pH adjusted epilimnetic lake water samples of contrasting ionic strengths and dissolved humic substances (DHS) concentrations. The distributions of these tracers between particulate size fractions in samples without appreciable DHS after 24 h of dark incubation varied markedly over the pH range 4-8. The effect of pH on the movement of ^55 Fe and ^32 P to particulate size fractions in clear-water samples depended on the ionic strength. Over the same pH range, the presence of DHS suppressed the movement of ^55 Fe and ^32 P to particulate size fractions. There was little difference between low and high ionic strength DHS-rich samples. The capability of DHS to maintain added ^55 Fe and ^32 P in solution (<0.2 \mu m) was confirmed by simultaneous measurements of precipitation losses.<br/
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