162,577 research outputs found
Floyd L. Stone of Walhalla: North Korea, Korean War
North Dakota Prisoner of War Report by Floyd L. Stone (1929-1999) of Walhalla. Stone was a POW of North Korea during the Korean War.
46 page
Rapa Nui (Easter Island)’s Stone Worlds
This article explores the spatial, architectural and conceptual relationships between landscape places, stone quarrying, and stone moving and building during Rapa Nui’s statue-building period. These are central themes of the ‘Rapa Nui Landscapes of Construction Project’ and are discussed using aspects of the findings of our recent fieldwork. The different scales of expression, from the detail of the domestic sphere to the monumental working of quarries, are considered. It is suggested that the impressiveness of Rapa Nui’s stone architecture is its conceptual coherence at the small scale as much as at the large scale. </div
Halsted M. Stone, M.D., oral history interview, December 18, 1992
Dr. Laurie L. Brown, M.D., and Dr. Allen Brown, M.D., conducted this oral history interview at the 145th Annual Meeting of the South Carolina Medical Association (SCMA) at the Omni Hotel in Charleston, South Carolina, on April 23, 1993. In this interview, Dr. Halsted M. Stone, M.D., discusses his family, educational background, career in medicine, and service in organized medicine. Stone also discusses his tenure as a councilor for SCMA and as President for the association from 1980 to 1981. Among the issues facing the association and the field of medicine during his tenure, Dr. Stone notes: healthcare access, rising healthcare costs, high insurance premiums, national health insurance, the establishment of health maintenance organizations for industry professions, and the creation of a committee to help physicians renegotiate salary contracts. Stone also discusses his work in beginning the professional review organization (PSRO) and with South Carolina Governor Richard Riley to place non-physicians on all boards
An engineering perspective on the Industrial Archaeology of the Purbeck Stone Industry
This thesis is a study of the industrial archaeology of the Purbeck Stone Industry, set within the context of local social and economic history and informed especially by
an engineering perspective on the quarrying and mining operations. A wide range of existing published sources and archive evidence has been evaluated, placing the work in the context of existing knowledge, and an extensive field survey of stone extraction and related industrial sites in the Purbeck area has been undertaken,including the creation of a large photographic archive. Major buildings in which
Purbeck stone has been used as a constructional material have also been examined to illustrate the market for the material at various historical periods and to show
how the various types of stone were able to be used, and the relationship of potential use to methods of extraction and working. The study examines all aspects of the extraction and working of the stone in Purbeck, illustrating how masons quarried, dressed and carved the stone before it was transported to its major markets, and examines the techniques of quarrying, mining, working, carving and transporting the stone providing a much improved understanding of this neglected area of the industry. In addition, the effect of the industry on the local community is examined, and the roles of the craft guild, landowners and stone merchants evaluated and explained. The importance of transport is also stressed, and the changing technical approaches to the movement of this heavy raw material are considered. Finally the thesis explores some important aspects of twentieth century stone
production, noting the importance of changes in planning laws, apprentice training and stone conservation and how these relate to the future prospects for the industry
Floyd Stone, U.S. Army: Camp 5, North Korea, Korean War
Oral history interview with Floyd Stone of the 1st Cavalry Division, U.S. Army, during the Korean War. Stone was taken prisoner by Communist forces on November 22, 1951. He was imprisoned at Camp 5 in North Korea until he was involved in a prisoner exchange in August 1953. For his service in the Korean War, Stone earned both a Silver Star and a Purple Heart.
Floyd L. Stone was born in a log cabin near Vang, North Dakota, on 12 February 1929. He died on 15 October 1999 and is buried at the North Dakota Veterans Cemetery in Mandan
Lijndenia meeusei R. D. Stone
Lijndenia meeusei (H. Perrier) R.D. Stone, comb. nova. ≡ Memecylon meeusei H. Perrier in Notul. Syst. (Paris) 12: 106. 1945. Lectotypus (designated by STONE, 2017: 80): MADAGASCAR. Prov. Toamasina: Soanierana-Ambahoabé, 75 m, 3.XII.1938, fl., Lam & Meeuse 5624 (L [L0009293]!; isolecto-: BR [BR000000626121]!, P [P00057569, P00057570]!, WAG [WAG0002347]!). = Lijndenia memecyloides R.D. Stone in Candollea 72: 80. 2017 [nom. illeg.]. ≡ Memecylon lutescens Naudin in Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot., ser. 3, 18: 269. 1852 [nom. illeg.] [non M. lutescens C. Presl]. ≡ Spathandra lutescens Jacq.Fél. in Adansonia ser. 2, 18: 228. 1978. ≡ Lijndenia lutescens (Jacq.-Fél.) Jacq.-Fél. in Bull. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat., B, Adansonia 7: 44. 1985. Lectotypus (designated by STONE, 2017: 80): MADAGASCAR: sine loco, s.d., fl., du Petit-Thouars s.n. (P [P00057566]!; isolecto-: P [P00057567]!; BR [BR000000626115] fragment!). Notes. – The leaf shape and peduncle length of Lam & Meeuse 5624 (type of Memecylon meeusei) are unusual in comparison to the remaining collections assigned to Lijndenia lutescens (STONE, 2017). Because of this, it is rather unfortunate that the new combination L. meeusei must be taken up in accordance with the rule of priority. Under the present circumscription, however, these plants are regarded as conspecific. If future workers determine that the type of Memecylon meeusei belongs to a different species, then L. lutescens (Jacq.Fél.) Jacq.-Fél. would become the correct name for the plants previously known as L. lutescens (Jacq.-Fél.) Jacq.-Fél. The replacement name L. memecyloides R.D. Stone was illegitimate when published and will remain so unless conserved (ICN: Art. 6.4).Published as part of Stone, R. Douglas, 2018, Lijndenia meeusei, the correct name for the species previously known as L. lutescens (Melastomataceae, Olisbeoideae), pp. 257-259 in Candollea 73 (2) on page 258, DOI: 10.15553/c2018v732a10, http://zenodo.org/record/572462
Tacit knowledge, learning and expertise in dry stone walling
This is a detailed study of learning in the context of dry stone walling. It examines
what happens in the learning situation. The aim of this work was:
'To understand the nature of expertise in dry stone walling, how it is understood
by those practising the craft, and how it is transmitted to others'.
The main research questions were, therefore:
What happens when dry stone wallers are learning their craft?
How do they acquire expertise in dry stone walling?
How is this learning communicated?
This process necessitated developing a way of engaging with the practitioners,
eliciting descriptive data about what they were doing, and why they were doing it,
through interviews (or conversations) with both individuals and groups, whilst
they practiced their skill. Twenty three wailers were interviewed as they worked,
building walls.
The material obtained was analysed under seven different themes:
'Knowing how'
The use of tacit knowledge or intuition
'Flow'
Constant decision making, reflection and learning from mistakes
Individual and subjective variations and experiences
The relevance of emotion
The use of 'rules of thumb' or maxims.
Learning walling does not fit simply into any of the seven themes. It is
contextualised, complex and individual. It demonstrates tacit knowledge and
intuition. It involves emotion, sometimes consciously, sometimes not. It involves
memory, problem solving, and learning from mistakes, and reflection. Maxims or
'rules of thumb' were a key element in the learning process at all stages. Linear
stages of learning were not evidenced. Deep understanding of the practice is
evidenced, and the wider learning and teaching implications are explored
Understanding Chipped Stone Tools
Understanding Chipped Stone Tools is a beginner’s guide to the study of stone artefacts, written for an undergraduate student audience. In a clear and easy-to-interpret style, Brian Hayden explores the complex issue of using stone artefacts as a key source for reconstructing past activities and his preferred approaches. At 140 pages long this volume is an easy read for academics.No Full Tex
Archeometric Investigation of the Stone Tools of the Vatya Culture (Pest County, Hungary)
With the analysis of the middle Bronze Age (2000–1350 BC) Vatya culture findings in Pest county (Central Hungary) comprising of more than 400 polished stone tools and instrument tools this is the first archaeometric study with such scale in Hungary. In order to characterize petrographically the raw-material of the stone tools macroscopic and microscopic stone analyses were made together with mineralogical and geochemical analyses. In the course of the work a new digital database the Archaeometric Stone Tool Database was established. Based on the results, the material of the instrument stones is mainly sandstone and quartzite that were easy to collect from their source areas. Local volcanics, mostly amphibole containing andesite variations dominated among the material of the polished stone tools. Ophiolites (metamorphic basic rocks, serpentinized basic and ultrabasic rocks) were the raw-material of stone axes that indicate either more distant travels for raw-material or exchange import
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