102,005 research outputs found

    The Family History of Parker Weddle

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    The Family History of Parker G. Weddle 27 November 2022 Parker Weddle has authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550 Your Family in History offered online in Fall 2022 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State Uni-versity Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected] This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

    139-O30 Weddle covered bridge (Jefferson, Thomas Creek)

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    Weddle bridge, 5 miles southeast of Jefferson, Oregon, over Thomas Creek, is a 120 foot Howe covered bridge built in 1937. Location: T10S R2W S21Photo by Glenn G. Groff.Courtesy of State Library of Oregon

    136-O30 Weddle covered bridge (Jefferson, Thomas Creek)

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    Weddle bridge, 5 miles southeast of Jefferson, Oregon, over Thomas Creek, is a 120 foot Howe covered bridge built in 1937. Location: T10S R2W S21Photo by Glenn G. Groff.Courtesy of State Library of Oregon

    137-O30 Weddle covered bridge (Jefferson, Thomas Creek)

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    Weddle bridge, 5 miles southeast of Jefferson, Oregon, over Thomas Creek, is a 120 foot Howe covered bridge built in 1937. Location: T10S R2W S21Photo by Glenn G. Groff.Courtesy of State Library of Oregon

    140-O30 Weddle covered bridge (Jefferson, Thomas Creek)

    No full text
    Weddle bridge, 5 miles southeast of Jefferson, Oregon, over Thomas Creek, is a 120 foot Howe covered bridge built in 1937. Location: T10S R2W S21Photo by Glenn G. Groff.Courtesy of State Library of Oregon

    138-O30 Weddle covered bridge (Jefferson, Thomas Creek)

    No full text
    Weddle bridge, 5 miles southeast of Jefferson, Oregon, over Thomas Creek, is a 120 foot Howe covered bridge built in 1937. Location: T10S R2W S21Photo by Glenn G. Groff.Courtesy of State Library of Oregon

    Touching the Gods: physical interaction with cult statues in the Roman world

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    „Touching the Gods: physical interaction with cult statues in the Roman world‟ explores different forms of physical interaction with cult statues in the many cults and beliefs evident across the Roman world, and proposes wide-ranging implications of this for the understanding of Roman religions and Roman art. Despite the theoretical detachment of the cult statue in the Roman world, an ideological language of close physical interaction was developed, which manifested itself through both „regular‟ (for example, ritual decoration and washing) and „irregular‟ (such as sexual and violent) contact. Although modern scholarship accepts that cult statues formed part of religious worship within which physical interaction took place, they are generally treated as passive objects. This research addresses the implications of physical interaction for the active role of the statue within Roman societies, through the assessment of the anthropological, social and psychological functions the statue could embody. It establishes a socio-cultural definition of the cult statue in the Roman world, supported by an assessment of Greek and Latin vocabulary for statuary and an assessment of the physical evidence for cult images. The thesis separately considers the different types of interaction, including washing and clothing, verbal communication, transportation, embrace, violence and feeding. The conclusions drawn from these separate types are based partly on a broad study of the full range of interactions, with an additional focus on the points in the ancient dialogue at which their limitations are placed. The cumulative effect of the evidence, across the whole empire and across all interactions possible, illuminates the vast complexity and vast potential of images of the gods in forming, informing and being influenced by human relationships with the divine

    Bibliographie Hilarion G. Petzold 1958 – 2009 mit Anhang als Einführung

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    Dieses Archiv enthält die Gesamtbibliographie der Werke des Autors nebst einiger Texte „Über H. G. Petzold“ im Schlussteil der Bibliographie sowie einen Anhang mit einer Einführung in die Architektur des Werkes in seinem wissenslogischen Aufbau als Ausarbeitung seines „Tree of Science Modells“ (2007).This archive contains the complete bibliography of the author and some texts about H. G. Petzold, moreover an epilogue with an introduction to the architecture of the works in its epistemological structure and composition and as an elaborations of Petzold’s „Tree of Science Modell (2007).https://www.fpi-publikation.de/polyloge/01-2009-petzold-h-g-gesamtbibliographie-h-g-petzold-1958-2009-updating-november2009/peerReviewedpublishedVersio

    Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts

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    We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more sophisticated methods

    Author-springer.pdf

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