1,160 research outputs found
Rapid Technique for Liquid Scintillation Counting of Carbon-14-labelled Barium Carbonate
Rapid technique for liquid scintillation counting of carbon-14-labelled barium carbonat
Grasslands of the Great Plains: Their Nature and Use
This book is the result of a long-felt need by the authors and their students for a comprehensive survey of the numerous studies that have been made on plains grasslands. From southern Texas far into Saskatchewan the mid and short grasses form a magnificent prairie nearly 2,500 miles in length and approximately 400 miles wide. Kinds of communities, their composition, nature, significance and uses are fully described. Such information is of value not only to students, range technicians, and other professional conservationists, but also to ranchers and other land owners-in fact, to anyone interested in the economy of our midwestern grasslands. The damaging effects of drought on forage production in this unstable climate and the restoration of the plant cover are of such great importance that they have been given special attention. Climate, soils, and. the proper use of the forage for its sustained production are described.
A third of a century of study and experimentation in plains grassland by the authors permits accurate description and interpretation. Important studies that have been made on the vegetation since the coming of the white man to the present day are reviewed. Early investigations have been recorded in papers, bulletins and books, many of which are now out of print or difficult of access. Therefore permission was asked and promptly given by the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Duke University Press, Ecological Monographs, Ecology, and several other journals to re-use materials originally furnished by the authors. Such sources are carefully cited in the text. Only by such cooperation has this book been made possible.
This great prairie land has been thoroughly examined as to its way of life both above ground and deep into the soil, which it has helped to build and so efficiently protects. Extensive, long-time investigations have elucidated many problems. The scope of the work has been broadened and deepened by the aid of a large number of advanced students who have sought graduate study in this field. To them, many of whom are today leaders in conservation of range management or in teaching a new generation of students the values of ecology in our economy, we are deeply grateful for their interest and cooperation. Two of them are so familiar with the grasslands of Texas and New Mexico, respectively, that each has contributed a chapter to this book.
Both common and scientific names of grasses are according to Hitchcock and Chase (1950) revised Manual of the Grasses of the United States. Other scientific names follow Gleason\u27s New Britton and Brown Illustrated Flora (1952) or Harrington\u27s Manual of the Plants of Colorado (1954). Common names are nearly all according to the second edition (1913) of Britton and Brown or the second edition of Standardized Plant Names (1942).
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Anonymous shell companies: A global audit study and field experiment in 176 countries
To test whether firms behave consistently with international law prohibiting anonymous incorporation, we conducted a global audit study and field experiment, using data from 1639 incorporation firms in 176 countries. We requested anonymous incorporation and randomly assigned references to international law, threat of penalties, norms of appropriate behavior, or a placebo. We find a substantial number of firms willing to flout international standards and show that those in OECD countries proved significantly less compliant with rules than in developing countries or tax havens. Firms in tax havens displayed significantly greater compliance and were sensitive to experimental interventions invoking international law
Detection techniques for tenuous planetary atmospheres
The development of new types of detectors for analysis of planetary atmospheres is discussed. Initially, the interest was in detectors for use under partial vacuum conditions; recently, the program has been extended to include detectors for use at one atmosphere and adsorption systems for control and separation of gases. Results to date have included detector for O2 and H2 under partial vacuum conditions. Experiments on detectors for use at high pressures began in 1966; and systems for CO, H2, and O2 were reported in 1967 and 1968. In 1968 studies began on an electrically controlled adsorbent. It was demonstrated that under proper conditions a thin film of semiconductor material could be electrically cycled to absorb and desorb a specific gas. This work was extended to obtain quantitative data on the use of semiconductors as controllable adsorbents
Simulations of the Mg II k and Ca II 8542 lines from an AlfvÉn Wave-heated Flare Chromosphere
We use radiation hydrodynamic simulations to examine two models of solar flare chromospheric heating:
Alfven wave dissipation and electron beam collisional losses. Both mechanisms are capable of strong chro- ´
mospheric heating, and we show that the distinctive atmospheric evolution in the mid-to-upper chromosphere
results in Mg ii k-line emission that should be observably different between wave-heated and beam-heated simulations.
We also present Ca ii 8542Ã… profiles which are formed slightly deeper in the chromosphere. The
Mg ii k-line profiles from our wave-heated simulation are quite different from those from a beam-heated model
and are more consistent with IRIS observations. The predicted differences between the Ca ii 8542Ã… in the two
models are small. We conclude that careful observational and theoretical study of lines formed in the mid-toupper
chromosphere holds genuine promise for distinguishing between competing models for chromospheric
heating in flares
Electron doped Ca10(Pt3As8)(Fe2As2)5 and Ca10(Pt4As8)(Fe2As2)5 - High Tc superconductors with skutterudite intermediary layers
It has been argued that the very high transition temperatures of the highest
Tc cuprate superconductors are facilitated by enhanced CuO2 plane coupling
through the (Bi,Tl,Hg)-O intermediary layers. Whether enhanced coupling through
intermediary layers can also influence Tc in the iron arsenide superconductors
has never been tested due the lack of appropriate systems for study. Here we
report the crystal structures and properties of two iron arsenide
superconductors, Ca10(Pt3As8)(Fe2As2)5 (the 10-3-8 phase) and
Ca10(Pt4As8)(Fe2As2)5 (the 10-4-8 phase). Based on -Ca-(PtnAs8)-Ca-Fe2As2-
layer stacking, the most important difference in the structures lies in the
structural and electronic characters of the intermediary platinum arsenide
layers. Electron doping through partial substitution of Pt for Fe in the Fe2As2
layers leads to Tc of 11 K in the 10-3-8 phase and 25 K in the 10-4-8 phase.
Using the chemical concepts of Zintl ion electron counting and the stability of
Pt in the 5d8 configuration we argue that the dramatic difference in Tc arises
because the intermediary layer is semiconducting in the 10-3-8 phase but
metallic in the 10-4-8 phase, leading to enhanced interlayer coupling in the
10-4-8 phase. The results suggest that metallic intermediary layers may offer a
new road to higher Tc in iron arsenide superconductors
New York's Southern Tier Landowners' Management for Early Successional Forest Habitat: Attitudes, Barriers and Motivations
Click on the PDF for an Executive Summary and the full report. Visit the HDRU website for a complete listing of HDRU publications at: http://hdru.dnr.cornell.edu
Comparing computer-generated and pathologist-generated tumour segmentations for immunohistochemical scoring of breast tissue microarrays
BACKGROUND: Tissue microarrays (TMAs) have become a valuable resource for biomarker expression in translational research. Immunohistochemical (IHC) assessment of TMAs is the principal method for analysing large numbers of patient samples, but manual IHC assessment of TMAs remains a challenging and laborious task. With advances in image analysis, computer-generated analyses of TMAs have the potential to lessen the burden of expert pathologist review. METHODS: In current commercial software computerised oestrogen receptor (ER) scoring relies on tumour localisation in the form of hand-drawn annotations. In this study, tumour localisation for ER scoring was evaluated comparing computer-generated segmentation masks with those of two specialist breast pathologists. Automatically and manually obtained segmentation masks were used to obtain IHC scores for thirty-two ER-stained invasive breast cancer TMA samples using FDA-approved IHC scoring software. RESULTS: Although pixel-level comparisons showed lower agreement between automated and manual segmentation masks (κ=0.81) than between pathologists' masks (κ=0.91), this had little impact on computed IHC scores (Allred; [Image: see text]=0.91, Quickscore; [Image: see text]=0.92). CONCLUSIONS: The proposed automated system provides consistent measurements thus ensuring standardisation, and shows promise for increasing IHC analysis of nuclear staining in TMAs from large clinical trials
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