6,304 research outputs found

    A Life Below with Joe Sulentic, Deadwood SD, Lawrence County

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    4 x 5 b/w photograph, man examining a rock wallChinese Authority - Joe Sulentic, author of a book on the Chinese in Deadwood, points out a bit of history in the tunnels that run below Deadwood's streets. The Chinese came to Deadwood in the 1800's. SD Tourism Phot

    Tri-Angle Lodge (Former Pierre Lodge), 23101 Triangle Trail, Hisega SD, Pennington County

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    10 x 8 photograph, group of people gathered on a covered porch and steps of the Tri-Angle I Lodge, formerly known as the Pierre Lodge, a sign reads "Whoa. Here We Are! Tri-Angle I Lodge - formerly Pierre Lodge; Good Beds, Good Food, Good Horses", there are several individuals wearing vests with name tags - from left to right: Row 1 Margurite M_ _ _ _ _ - Chicago Herald and Examiner, Ann _ _nning - Chicago Times; Row 2 M Talbot, Jo _arber, Nancy Ford, KR P_ _ _ _ _ _ - SD Highway CommissionTowns Hill City - Howard P17 Poster board Hisega P17 [stamp] Property of: South Dakota State Historical Society Pierre, South Dakota [stamp] Give photo credit to: South Dakota State Historical Society. Hwy. Dept. photoHisega [Tri-Angle Lodge]Bell Phot

    High diagnostic yield of tuberculosis from screening urine samples from HIV-infected patients with advanced immunodeficiency using the Xpert MTB/RIF assay.

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    : ABSTRACT:: We determined the diagnostic yield of the Xpert MTB/RIF assay for tuberculosis (TB) when testing small volumes of urine from ambulatory HIV-infected patients prior to starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) in South Africa. Compared to a gold standard of sputum culture, the sensitivity of urine Xpert among those with CD4 cell counts of <50, 50-100 and >100 cells/?L were 44.4%, 25.0% and 2.7% (P=0.001), respectively. Urine Xpert testing provides a means of rapid TB diagnosis in patients with advanced immunodeficiency and poor prognosis. These data are indicative of high rates of TB dissemination and renal involvement in this clinical population

    Front Façade of Hawley Residence, Howard SD, Miner County

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    35 mm slide, leafless trees in front of a two-story house with a bay window and an enclosed entry in a snow-covered landscapeDrawer info: McCook - Minnehaha; Minor CountyMinor County Howard Cameron Hawley House (Author of "Executive Suite") 2/84 M

    Rear and Side Façade of Hawley Residence, Howard SD, Miner County

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    35 mm slide, a two-story house with a bay window and an enclosed entry in a snow-covered landscapeDrawer info: McCook - Minnehaha; Minor CountyMinor County Howard Cameron Hawley House (Author of "Executive Suite") 2/84 M

    Front and Side Façade of Hawley Residence, Howard SD, Miner County

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    35 mm slide, leafless deciduous trees in front of a two-story house with a single-story addition and an enclosed entry in a snow-covered landscapeDrawer info: McCook - Minnehaha; Minor CountyMinor County Howard Cameron Hawley House (Author of "Executive Suite") 2/84 M

    Amauris (Amaura) albimaculata subsp. interposita Talbot 1940

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    Amauris (Amaura) albimaculata interposita Talbot, 1940 Larsen 1996: pl. 27, fig. 393 i. d ’ Abrera 1997: 191 (1 fig., of A. albimaculata albimaculata). Kielland 1990: 272 (3 figs, of other subspecies).SI: Figure 5a – d. Forewing length: male 31 – 38 mm [mean (n = 13) 34.75 mm, SD = 1.689]; female 35.5 – 40 mm [mean (n = 5) 38.12 mm, SD = 1.165]. Note: see Appendix 3 regarding a potential problem with the subspecies name applicable to this taxon. Records Known from the Northern Highlands, including Mt Kwaraha, the Mbulu Mountains, Oldeani-Ngorongoro, and Meru, Kilimanjaro and Longido, at 1200 – 2600 m (Kielland 1990, p. 74). The type locality is ‘ West Kilimanjaro, Ngare-Nairobi ’, with a paratype female collected at over 2200 m on Mt Meru (Talbot 1940, p. 327). The BMNH has numerous specimens of both sexes collected from West Kilimanjaro by Cooper, including the types. OUMNH has material from New Moshi (Lamborn), north Kilimanjaro (Kenya), and slopes of Kilimanjaro (ex Rogers). Said by Aurivillius (1911a, p. 77, as A. albimaculata hanningtoni Butler, 1888) to be very common on Kilimanjaro, Liseki (2009) encountered this butterfly on the mountain in November 2001, at 2000 m. Beyond Tanzania this subspecies occurs in Kenya (central and west) and Unyoro District, Uganda (Talbot 1940, p. 327). With a total of eight recognized races, A. albimaculata Butler, 1875, is generally a highland butterfly found in eastern Africa, from Somalia to Natal, but also in DRC and Cameroun (Ackery et al. 1995, p. 272).Published as part of Liseki, Steven D. & Vane-Wright, Richard I., 2015, Butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea) of Mount Kilimanjaro: Nymphalidae subfamilies Libytheinae, Danainae, Satyrinae and Charaxinae, pp. 865-904 in Journal of Natural History 50 on page 872, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2015.1091106, http://zenodo.org/record/399010

    Fort Sully Hospital, Sully County

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    7 x 5 photograph, two people in front of a two-story building with dormers and a covered wrap-around porch surrounded by a post and wire fenceFort Sully P97 [stamp] Property of: South Dakota State Historical Society Pierre, South Dakota [stamp] Give photo credit to: South Dakota State Historical Society. Ft. Sully (Hospital in 1951) As it stood on the farm of Paul Steffen in Llewellyn Park Tsp., Sully County. Photo in collection of Bessie B. Lumley, Oneida, SD. Copied from the thesie, History of Ft. Sully (underlined) by Steven Hoekman, Univ, of S.D. Photo cred-it must be acquired from author or Univ. of S.D. (underlined) A

    Jumping sustainability meme; SD transfer from society to universities

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    Since the 1972 Stockholm Conference, many Sustainable Development declarations, charters, and partnerships have been developed, both in the overall societal context and within higher education frameworks. This paper addresses two issues: (1) a comparison of the development of sustainable development initiatives in society and in universities and (2) an analysis of how those initiatives are influencing educational institutions? SD activities. The analysis indicates that SD needs to be incorporated in a transdisciplinary manner throughout: curricula, research, operations, outreach and engagement with stakeholders, collaboration with other universities, assessment and reporting, institutional framework, on-campus life experiences, and educate the educators programmes. These key elements must be integrated systemically in the HEIs in order to provide learning and career value to those participating in the SD transition. One of the key observations is that the concept of \u84meme? diffusion/transfer from the diverse declarations, charters and partnerships is slow and inefficient. The question is why is it so slow and ineffective and what can be done to speed it up throughout society? The authors propose the following ways to speed up the transfer, and implementation of the SD in higher education \u84meme?: universities and their leaders should become more proactive in engaging with SD, SD should be made the \u84Golden Thread? throughout the university system, and recognise those engaged with SD and foster multiplier effect

    How UV photolysis accelerates the biodegradation and mineralization of sulfadiazine (SD)

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    abstract: Sulfadiazine (SD), one of broad-spectrum antibiotics, exhibits limited biodegradation in wastewater treatment due to its chemical structure, which requires initial mono-oxygenation reactions to initiate its biodegradation. Intimately coupling UV photolysis with biodegradation, realized with the internal loop photobiodegradation reactor, accelerated SD biodegradation and mineralization by 35 and 71 %, respectively. The main organic products from photolysis were 2-aminopyrimidine (2-AP), p-aminobenzenesulfonic acid (ABS), and aniline (An), and an SD-photolysis pathway could be identified using C, N, and S balances. Adding An or ABS (but not 2-AP) into the SD solution during biodegradation experiments (no UV photolysis) gave SD removal and mineralization rates similar to intimately coupled photolysis and biodegradation. An SD biodegradation pathway, based on a diverse set of the experimental results, explains how the mineralization of ABS and An (but not 2-AP) provided internal electron carriers that accelerated the initial mono-oxygenation reactions of SD biodegradation. Thus, multiple lines of evidence support that the mechanism by which intimately coupled photolysis and biodegradation accelerated SD removal and mineralization was through producing co-substrates whose oxidation produced electron equivalents that stimulated the initial mono-oxygenation reactions for SD biodegradation.This is the authors' final accepted manuscript. The final publication is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10532-014-9711-
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