2,974 research outputs found

    Signs of the Times: Nineteenth - Twentieth Century Graffiti in the Farms of the Yorkshire Wolds

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    This paper is concerned with graffiti found in farm buildings on the Yorkshire Wolds, dating between the late nineteenth and late twentieth centuries. It uses an archaeological approach to explore the social and performative nature of these inscriptions, to analyse their content and character, and to consider the communities responsible for their creation. We argue that this was a vital medium of expression for a particular group of farm-workers – the horselads – and was part of the way in which they negotiated their status and identity during a period of great social upheaval and agricultural change (Giles and Giles 2007). We situate the making of these marks within the horselads’ seasonal rhythms of labour and broader patterns of inhabitation. Finally, we explore spatial and stratigraphic relationships associated with graffiti panels, to elucidate different groups within these communities, and analyse how they changed over time

    A workbook to accompany All Around Us, science book for grade two

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    Current, April 04, 2016

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    April Fools Editionhttps://irl.umsl.edu/current2010s/1227/thumbnail.jp

    Biocultural Diversity and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

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    At the dawn of the third millennium, dramatic challenges face human civilization everywhere. Relations between human beings and their environment are in peril, with mounting threats to both biological diversity of life on earth and cultural diversity of human communities. The peoples of the Circumpolar Arctic are at the forefront of these challenges and lead the way in seeking meaningful responses. In Biocultural Diversity and Indigenous Ways of Knowing, Karim-Aly Kassam positions the Arctic and sub-Arctic as a homeland rather than simply as a frontier for resource exploitation. Kassam aims to empirically and theoretically illustrate the synthesis between the cultural and the biological, using human ecology as a conceptual and analytical lens. Drawing on research carried out in partnership with indigenous northern communities, three case studies illustrate that subsistence hunting and gathering are not relics of an earlier era but rather remain essential to both cultural diversity and to human survival. This book deals with contemporary issues such as climate change, indigenous knowledge, and the impact of natural resource extraction. It is a narrative of community-based research, in the service of the communities for the benefit of the communities. It provides resource-based industry, policy makers, and students with an alternative way of engaging indigenous communities and transforming our perspective on conservation of ecological and cultural diversity

    Volume CXXX, Number 9, November 9, 2012

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    Movement ecology and habitat use of Canada geese using major metropolitan areas in the context of human-wildlife conflicts

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    Canada geese (Branta canadensis) are economically and socially important due to their popularity as a game species and association with human-wildlife conflicts. The species’ ability to adapt to human-altered agricultural and urban landscapes has contributed to the success of temperate-breeding Canada goose populations. Differences in habitat resources and predation risks across the rural to urban gradient of the upper Midwest shape the movement and behavioral ecology of Canada geese, requiring unique life history strategies to maximize survival through-out the annual cycle. Winter is an energetically costly period due to food limitation and increased thermoregulatory costs. Urban areas have altered these dynamics and facilitate northward shifts in wintering distributions by providing anthropogenic food sources, reduced predations risk, and thermal refugia for many avian species. Large abundances of Canada geese winter in highly developed, urban areas of Chicago, leading to concerns over risks to air traffic. Previous work indicates that safety due to hunting restrictions are driving these patterns rather than food availability or thermal refugia. We used global positioning system (GPS) transmitters equipped with tri-axial accelerometers to quantify factors influencing use of both urban and rural areas during two energetically costly portions of the annual cycle: winter and remigial molt. Pertaining to winter ecology, my research sought to examine, 1) differences in wintering strategies of geese in rural versus urban areas, 2) environmental and behavioral factors influencing goose movements and subsequent risk to air traffic, and 3) behavioral responses to targeted harassment. Regarding differences in wintering strategies, I found no differences in winter survival between rural- and urban-wintering geese but differences in cause-specific mortality indicating strong effects of temperature on survival in urban areas and alternatively harvest in rural areas. In addition, movements and behavioral time budgets suggest access to high-energy foods in rural areas may ameliorate energetic costs during extreme cold periods while geese in urban areas must rely on energetically conservative behaviors and endogenous reserves. Regarding movements and risks to air traffic, the risk of movements to air traffic varied by the juxtaposition of habitats relative to important air traffic areas but were associated with novel urban goose habitats including rooftops and railyards. In response to harassment, geese left the harassment site more often, were more alert, and flew more, but changes in habitat preferences during cold periods likely reduced discernible effects of harassment on survival or emigration from the area. Remigial molt is the loss and regrowth of flight feathers and occurs simultaneously in waterfowl, rendering them flightless. Because of the energetic cost of replacing all remiges and risk of predation due to flightlessness, geese should select areas to undergo molt that provide high quality foraging environments and low predation risk. These decisions can occur at the landscape scale, involving the choice to molt near breeding areas or migrate to another area. This molt migratory behavior is common in temperate-breeding Canada goose populations, which undertake molt migrations of thousands of kilometers to the Subarctic. However, the trade-offs associated with molt migration may be altered by increased availability of novel molting habitat in temperate regions, in the form of urban greenspaces, and increased predation risk from hunting during migration. My research sought to determine 1) landscape factors influencing molt migration, 2) trade-offs in foraging environments between subarctic and temperate molting areas, and 3) differences in survival. My results demonstrate that the propensity to molt migrate decreases with the greater proportions of land uses that provide escape from predators (i.e. waterbodies), that foraging and alert behaviors indicate a better quality foraging environment in the subarctic, even when corrected for differences in day length, and that survival of molt migrants is greater than non-molt migrants until September when a large proportion were harvested on return migration. While nest removal to induce molt migration may serve as an important tool to indirectly decrease adult survival of urban-wintering geese. However, increased harvest of molt migrants is likely to affect breeding areas differentially and disproportionately decrease survival of geese nesting in more natural wetland and rural areas
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