74,940 research outputs found

    Social and urban study of Carlton : programme

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    Project No. 3 :Urban Studies Investigation Programme1. Analysis of survey and census material / by R. Billard -- 2. Analysis of survey and census material / by C. Hardwick -- 3. Census data: Drummond and Palmerston Streets / [Author unknown] -- 4. Census data, 1966 / [Author unknown] -- 5. Carlton urban study / G. Marshall -- 6. Carlton: population characteristics /J. Wade

    Collisions of Silylium Cations with Hydroxyl-Terminated and other Self-Assembled Monolayer Surfaces: Reactions, Dissociation and Surface Characterization

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    Silylium cations, SiCl3+ and Si(CH3)(3)(+), undergo dissociative ion/surface reactions in the course of low-energy (20-90 eV) collisions with hydroxyl-terminated (HO-SAM), hydrocarbon (H-SAM), and fluorocarbon (F-SAM) self-assembled monolayer surfaces. Formation of the substitution product, SiCl2F+, upon collision of SiCl3+ With the F-SAM surface is the result of a transhalogenation reaction. In an analogous fashion, one observes substitution of a chlorine in the SiCl3+ projectile ion by either an OH group from the HO-SAM surface or a CH3 group from the H-SAM surface to form the scattered reaction products, SiCl2OH+ and SiCl2CH3+, respectively. The concomitant transfer of a Cl atom from the projectile ion into the surface is indicated by the sputtered ion, CH2Cl+. The scattered product SiCl(OH)(2)(+) involves disubstitution, and reaction with more than one chain at the surface. These and related reactions involve the activation of C-O, C-F, C-C, C-H, and O-H bonds at the appropriate surface, and they occur after, or in concert with, surface-induced dissociation of the polyatomic projectile. Surface effects on the dissociation of projectile ions are studied using the Si(C2H5)(4)(.+) ion, and threshold values for translational to internal energy (T double right arrow V) conversion for this ion are measured as 13%, 13%, and 20% for the H-SAM, MO-SAM, and F-SAM surfaces, respectively. At higher collision energies, (>40 eV), the MO-SAM surface demonstrated greater internal energy conversion efficiency than the H-SAM surface. The process of neutralization and the accompanying release of chemically sputtered ions also served to distinguish the three surfaces. Decreased neutralization at the F-SAM surface is associated with increased amounts of dissociatively and reactively scattered product ions. Thermodynamic estimates regarding charge exchange between the surface and the projectile ion are consistent with the relative amounts of chemically sputtered products observed for each of the surfaces

    R code for “Forest structural-complexity metrics derived from aerial lidar across four Experimental Forests”

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    R code for "Lidar-derived structural-complexity metrics across four Experimental Forests". The code describes data processing and generation of pixel- and tree-level output metrics for the Hitchiti Experimental Forest. The output metrics are housed on the USFS Research Data Archive: Ross, C. Wade; Loudermilk, E. Louise; O’Brien, Joseph J.; Snitker, Grant. 2024. Forest structural-complexity metrics derived from aerial lidar across four Experimental Forests. Fort Collins, CO: Forest Service Research Data Archive. https://doi.org/10.2737/RDS-2024-0019Raw point-cloud data is available for download via Box.com: https://usfs.box.com/s/tl4b5x4zusopisto6trvxqbovsub6ydw</p

    Busyconidae Wade 1917

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    FAMILY BUSYCONIDAE WADE, 1917 (1867) &lt;p&gt;(FIGS 15A&ndash;C, 16A, B)&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;SUBFAMILY BUSYCONINAE WADE, 1917 (1867)&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;i&gt;Type genus:&lt;/i&gt; &lt;i&gt;Busycon&lt;/i&gt; R&ouml;ding, 1798&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; = Fulguridae Stoliczka, 1867. Type genus: &lt;i&gt;Fulgur&lt;/i&gt; Montfort, 1810&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Kantor, Yuri I., Fedosov, Alexander E., Kosyan, Alisa R., Puillandre, Nicolas, Sorokin, Pavel A., Kano, Yasunori, Clark, Roger &amp; Bouchet, Philippe, 2022, Molecular phylogeny and revised classification of the Buccinoidea (Neogastropoda), pp. 789-857 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 194&lt;/i&gt; on page 82

    "Closing the R&D Gap, Evaluating the Sources of R&D Spending"

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    Both spending and tax policies have been implemented in the United States with the goal of stimulating private sector research and development (R&D). Karier questions whether current R&D policy, especially the research and experimentation tax credit, can contribute to closing the gap between nondefense expenditures on R&D in the United States and such expenditures in other countries, such as Japan and Germany. He also explores possible changes to our current R&D policy to make it more effective.

    Professor Napoleon

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    Gift of Dr. Mary Jane Esplen.As produced in the principal cities of the United States and Canada ; music by J. Mahlon Duganne and R. Wade Davis ; direction of Davis Bros. [note]Piano vocal [instrumentation]The poetry there's music in music there is joy [first line]See how the moon is softly shining [first line of chorus]C [key]Allegro Moderato [tempo]Popular song [form/genre]Woman in graduation gowns and caps, football ; J. Mahlon Duganne, R. Wade Davis and W. Wade Davis (photographs) [illustration]Publisher's advertisement on back cover [note

    Taxonomy, biostratigraphy, and phylogeny of Oligocene and lower Miocene Dentoglobigerina and Globoquadrina

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    The taxonomy, phylogeny, and biostratigraphy of Oligocene and lower Miocene Dentoglobigerina and Globoquadrina are reviewed. Because of the discovery of spine holes in various species assigned to these genera, the entire group is now considered to have been fully or sparsely spinose in life and hence part of Family Globigerinidae. One new species, Dentoglobigerina eotripartita Pearson, Wade, and Olsson n. sp., is named. Dentoglobigerina includes forms with and without umbilical teeth and species for which the presence or absence of a tooth is a variable feature. A significant finding has been the triple synonymy of Globigerina tripartita Koch, Globigerina rohri Bolli, and Globoquadrina dehiscens praedehiscens Blow, which greatly simplifies part of the taxonomy. The genus Globoquadrina is restricted to its type species, Globigerina dehiscens Chapman and others. The following species from the time interval of interest are regarded as valid: Dentoglobigerina altispira (Cushman and Jarvis), Dentoglobigerina baroemoenensis (LeRoy), Dentoglobigerina binaiensis (Koch), Dentoglobigerina eotripartita Pearson, Wade, and Olsson n. sp., Dentoglobigerina galavisi (Bermúdez), Dentoglobigerina globosa (Bolli), Dentoglobigerina globularis (Bermúdez), Dentoglobigerina juxtabinaiensis Fox and Wade, Dentoglobigerina larmeui (Akers), Dentoglobigerina prasaepis (Blow), Dentoglobigerina pseudovenezuelana (Blow and Banner), Dentoglobigerina sellii (Borsetti), Dentoglobigerina taci Pearson and Wade, Dentoglobigerina tapuriensis (Blow and Banner), Dentoglobigerina tripartita (Koch), Dentoglobigerina venezuelana (Hedberg), and Globoquadrina dehiscens (Chapman, Parr, and Collins). The genus Dentoglobigerina also comprises other Neogene/Quaternary species not listed, including the living species Dentoglobigerina cf. conglomerata (Schwager)

    Stanley L. Wade v. F. C. Stangl III : Reply Brief

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    REPLY BRIEF OF APPELLANT STANLEY L. WADE On Appeal from the Judgment of the Third Judicial District Court for Salt Lake County, State of Utah Honorable Michael R. Murphy, District Judg
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