190,589 research outputs found
Chèque de John Neilson à D. Sutherland
2 pages, originalChèque de J[ohn] Neilson à D. Sutherland
The William G. Sutherland, D.O. Collection
Finding aid for The William G. Sutherland, D.O. CollectionWilliam Garner Sutherland, D.O. (1872-1954), a Minnesota Osteopathic physician and student of Andrew Taylor Still, discovered the field of cranial osteopathy. Dr. Sutherland referred to his discovery as "Osteopathy in the Cranial Field" (OCF). He founded the Osteopathic Cranial Association in 1946 (which changed its name to the Cranial Academy when it became a component of the American Academy of Osteopathy in 1960). He also founded the Sutherland Cranial Teaching Foundation in 1953 to guide the training of physicians in cranial osteopathic techniques.The Sutherland Collection contains the writings, memorabilia, recorded lectures and voluminous correspondence of Dr. Sutherland, tracing the growth of the Sutherland Cranial Teaching Foundation as well as documenting the spread of the cranial concept as a viable specialty within the osteopathic profession. Included are the unofficial papers of the Sutherland Cranial Teaching Foundation (1950-1971) and the Moorestown Cranial Study Group. The papers were gathered by Anne L. Wales, D.O., an early faculty member of the Sutherland Cranial Teaching Foundation. The Moorestown Cranial Study Group was created by and met in the home/office of Rebecca Conrow Lippincott, D.O. and Howard A. Lippincott, D.O. for the further study and review of cranial procedures and advancements. Materials from the New England Cranial Study Group are also included. The collection contains transcriptions and slides from lectures by Dr. Sutherland, et al (1947-48), a manuscript copy of his seminal work, The Cranial Bowl (1939), photographs of Dr. Sutherland and many other early pioneers in the field, and audio and video presentations of classroom and conference lectures by Dr. Sutherland and other leading cranial experts of the time. Also included in the collection are personal items belonging to Dr. Sutherland and correspondence from Dr. and Mrs. Sutherland to Drs. Chester Handy and Anne Wales
Charles D Phillips
Charles D. Phillips receives a plaque when retiring from the Gulf Oil Company
Letter - Mr. Hands from D. Sutherland, 27 March 1824
Letter to Mr. Hands from D. Sutherland of Quebec. The letter asks that a set of Pare’s
receipts for the quarter ending April 5, 1823, and properly witnessed, be sent to the
General Post Office in London. The Accountant General objected to the ones that were
sent already, as they were not properly signed by witnesses, March 27, 1824. No
postmark
Letter - Alexander Hamilton of Queenston from D. Sutherland of Quebec, 2 May 1822
Letter to Alexander Hamilton of Queenston from D. Sutherland of Quebec. The letter
addresses Hamilton’s concerns about the new tariff of distances and rates of Postage, and
how they were calculated. Sutherland acknowledges that there are several errors, but
that the distances were taken from the Surveyor General’s Office in Upper Canada, and
the rates of postage are determined by an Act of the British Parliament, May 2, 1822.
Postmarked Quebec MY 4 22
William D. Phillips Resignation Letter to President Bush
A letter to President Bush from William D. Phillips, Associate Director for Industrial Technology at the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). Phillips requests permission to resign his position as Associate Director, effective September 28, 1991, citing personal reasons
U-Pn geochronology of deformed metagranites in central Sutherland, Scotland: evidence for widespread late Silurian metamorphism and ductile deformation of the Moine Supergroup during the Caledonian orogeny
Within the Caledonides of central Sutherland, Scotland, the Neoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Moine Supergroup record NW-directed D2 ductile thrusting and nappe assembly, accompanied by widespread tight-to-isoclinal folding and amphibolite-facies metamorphism. A series of metagranite sheets which were emplaced and penetratively deformed during D2 have been dated using SHRIMP UâPb geochronology. Zircon ages of 424 8 Ma (Vagastie Bridge granite), 420 6 Ma (Klibreck granite) and 429 11 Ma (Strathnaver granite) are interpreted to date emplacement, and hence regional D2 deformation, during
mid- to late Silurian time. Titanite ages of 413 3 Ma (Vagastie Bridge granite) and 416 3 Ma (Klibreck granite) are thought to date post-metamorphic cooling through a blocking temperature of c. 550â 500 8C. A mid- to late Silurian age for D2 deformation supports published models that have viewed the internal ductile thrusts of this part of the orogen as part of the same kinematically linked system of forelandpropagating thrusts as the marginal Moine Thrust Zone. The new data contrast with previous interpretations that have viewed the dominant structures and metamorphic assemblages within the Moine Supergroup as having formed during the early to mid-Ordovician Grampian arcâcontinent orogeny. The mid-to late Silurian D2 nappe stacking event in Sutherland is probably a result of the collision of Baltica with the Scottish segment of Laurentia
Sutherland, A D, 311323
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/420040Surname: SUTHERLAND. Given Name(s) or Initials: A D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 311323. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-2290.244620
Item: [2016.0049.52301] "Sutherland, A D, 311323
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