919 research outputs found
Wyatt, Doug, August 26 and 28, 2014 [Interview]
Doug Wyatt was interviewed on August 26 and 28, 2014, by Devin McKinney about his life before, during, and after his years at Gettysburg College, with specific focus on his participation in the spring 1971 Christ Chapel production of "Jesus Christ Superstar."Mara, Richard T.; Wagnild, Parker B.; Recla, Lawrence R.; Hylton, John; Breton, Tom; Shirley, Beth Kershaw; Deibert, Katherine Louise; Nixon, Richard M.; Raskin, Jef; Warnock, John; Curtis, Pavel; Garcia, Jerry; Fornof, Gretchen Cranz; Myers, Whitney; Teich, Mark; Leinbach, Carl; Barndt, Tim; Brandenburg, ZaneCarl Arnold Hanson Years
Sally Noel and author Wyatt Blassingame at Manatee Junior College
Manatee Junior College creative writing instructors are Sally Noel and local Anna Maria Island author Wyatt Blassingame
Siam and Laos, 1767-1827
Article on the history of Thai invasions and rebellions against Vientiane and the Chakri DynastySiam and Laos, 1767-1827
David K. Wyatt
Journal of Southeast Asian History
Vol. 4, No. 2 (Sep., 1963), pp. 13-3
UNESCO Harmful Algae News NO.2
Noxious Blooms in the Bay of Izmir, Aegean Sea, Tufan Koray.................................................................. 1
Major PSP Outbreak in Chile, 1991-1992, Georgina Lembeye............................................................ 1
A new Chrysochromulina outbreak and fish kills in Danish coastal waters, Frode Knipschildt ............................................................2
ETI - a computer approach to taxonomy and identification of organisms, Peter H. Schalk ............................................................3
Gymnodinium catenatum in Europe, Tim Wyatt............................................................ 4
Graduate and postdoctor al course, Stefano Guersoni .................................................................................................4
Update from Uruguay, Silvia Méndez ........................................................................................................................5
PSP in Morocco, M . Baddyr ........................................................................................................................5
Red Tide Research Programme in China, Qi Yu-Zao & Hong Ying ............................................................6
What the haptonema is for, Ralph A. Lewin ............................................................6
ICES-IOC Study group on the Dynamics of Harmful Algal Blooms, Beatriz Reguera ............................................................7
International Society, Ted Smayda ............................................................7
The development of the IOC-FAO Harmful Algal Bloom Programme continues, Henrik Enevoldsen .....................................7
Early red tides, Gunnar Stein Jónsson ............................................................8
Future events ............................................................
Letter from [John Victor Carson], Dominguez Estate Company to MR. John L. Wyatt, June 20, 1938
Referring Mr. Wyatt to Mr. H.H. Jarrett concerning land sales
Tim Paul : New Moon : Celebrating the Cycles of the Nuu-chah-nulth Moon
This catalogue for Paul’s exhibition of sculptures based on the Nuu-chah-nulth Moon calendar, contains a brief introductory text by Wyatt that focuses on the artist’s contemporary interpretation of traditional Northwest Coast native art. Includes photographic documentation of 25 pieces, and brief comments on selected works
ngungara_backed_artefacts: v1.0.0
<p>The data and R code to accompany Way, A. M., Koungoulos, L., Wyatt-Spratt, S., & Hiscock, P. (2023). Investigating hafting and composite tool repair as factors creating variability in backed artefacts: Evidence from from Ngungara (Weereewa/Lake George), Southeastern Australia. <em>Archaeology in Oceania</em>, 1–18.</p>
<p>Code Author: Amy Mosig Way, Loukas Koungoulos, Simon Wyatt-Spratt</p>
<p>Abstract: Across the Australian continent, backed artefacts are produced in enormous numbers during the mid-late Holocene. Previous examinations have revealed variation in the average shape of these artefacts, at both continental and regional scales. To better understand the factors creating this variability, we examine a large assemblage of backed artefacts from Ngungara (Weereewa/Lake George), in southeastern Australia. This is one of the few open sites in Australia which has high-resolution evidence for spatially distinct, short-term workshops. Within these well-bounded workshops both locally manufactured and imported backed artefacts are present. However, across this landscape the shape of these artefacts is not uniform; rather similarly shaped backed artefacts are concentrated in different workshop areas. Through the analysis of backed artefacts in different workshops, we suggest that ‘insert copying’ or the replacement of spent inserts with similarly shaped, locally manufactured artefacts creates variability in backed artefact shape.</p>
<p>Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank the traditional landowners for their assistance in undertaking the original PhD study and for sharing language names for the lake.</p>
Wyatt Abroad:Tudor Diplomacy and the Translation of Power
During the 1520s and 1530s Sir Thomas Wyatt, the poet and diplomat, composed a number of translations and adaptations of European poetry (including the Penitential Psalms and works by Petrarch) when he was in embassy, or when he was engaged in other forms of international negotiations.This volume presents a comparative analysis of those poems which were directly or indirectly shaped by his ambassadorial experience. By examining the key points of divergence from and adaptation of his Italian, Latin and French sources and analogues, the author identifes the specific ways in which Wyatt reformed those sources in order to comment upon the lability of Tudor diplomacy and the political machinations at home and abroad which informed it - as well as the personal cost to Wyatt himself. The volume also identifies Wyatt's innovations and his debts, so redressing earlier interpretations of Wyatt's work which ignored its translative ontology. Through noting Wyatt's specific alterations and ameliorations, it allows a clearer image of his poetics to develop
UNESCO Harmful Algae News NO.15
Noxious Gymnodinium species in South African waters. Grant Pitcher & Sue Mathews …………….1
Gymnodinium catenatum and autumnal toxicity in Mar del Plata, José I. Carreto……………………. 1
Gymnodinium catenatum on west coast of India, Anna Godhe, Indrani & Iddya Karunasagar………...1
Awareness of Cyanobacterial or Algal Blooms at the Premonstratensian Monastery of the Green Loch, Soulseat Scotland, from the Twelfth Century, and Cattle Poisonings Attributed to Cyanobacterial Hepatotoxins at this location Eight Hundred Years Later, Geoffrey A. Codd……………………………………………4
Can we predict harmful algae blooms, A. Cemal Saydam………………………………………………..5
Filamentous and mucilaginous algal blooms in a Corsican Bay (Calvi-France), Michael Janssens……………………..7
The first Aureococcus anophagefferens brown tide in New Jersey, Robert Nuzzi, Paul Olsen, John B. Mahoney & Gerald Zodl …………………………………………………………………………………8
Massive mortality of yellow clams, Mesoderma mactroides, in Monte Hermosa Beach, Argentina, Sandra M. Fiori..............9
New Zealand update on HABs, 1992-1996, Leslie Rhodes, Lincoln Mackenzie, Allison Haywood & Kirsten Todd.....................10
Liver failure and human deaths at a haemodialysis centre in Brazil: microcystins as a major contributing factor, Wayne W. Carmichael …………………………………………………………………………..11
Early Red Tides, Ed. Tim Wyatt……………………………………………………………………………..…..12
NATO ADVANCED STUDY INSTITUTE Held jointly with SCOR and IOC “The Physiological Ecology of Harmful Algal Blooms” Bermuda Biological Station 27 May-6 June, 1996, Discussion Groups, Conclusions and Recommendations Donald M. Anderson, Allan D. Cembella & Gustaaf M. Hallegraeff ………………………………………………………………………13
Zooplankton grazing experiments, Kevin Sellner, Jeff Turner ...........……………………….13
Bulk-phase rheology and small scale processes, Ian Jenkinson, Patrick Gentien…………………...…....13
Advanced Imaging and Flow Cytometry, Mike Sieracki.........................................................................15
Dinoflagellate cell cycle and cell regulatory mechanisms, Fran van Dolah & Gaspar Taroncher-Oldenburg …………….16
NATO-ASI demonstration: Demonstration on dinoflagellate mixotrophy and heterotraphy, G.J. Doucette & F.M. Van Dolah………………………………………………………………………..…..16
Molecular Probes, Jane Gallager………………………………………………………………………17
Neuroreceptor Binding Assays, G. J. Doucette and F.M. van Dolah…………………………………..18
Future events……………………………………………………………………………………………2
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