935 research outputs found
Eureka Valley (Castro) Historic Context Statement , Adopted by the San Francisco Historic Preservation Commission December 2017
The place San Franciscans know as Eureka Valley has had many names since its first settlement by Europeans in the mid nineteenth century: Rancho San Miguel, Hornerâs Addition, Most Holy Redeemer Parish, âthe Sunny Heart of San Francisco,â and most recently, The Castro.1 Two hundred and forty years ago, the valley was a hinterland to the Mission Dolores settlement and then part of a large Mexican rancho. Over the course of less than fifty years in the late nineteenth century, Eureka Valley went from a rural fringe area of agricultural and industrial production to one of the cityâs burgeoning streetcar suburbs. After surviving the 1906 earthquake and fire largely intact, the valley became a fullâfledged urban district, complete with its own local commercial district, civic and religious institutions, and city services. Widespread demographic shifts in the city and greater urban decentralization after World War II affected longâstanding change in Eureka Valley, underwriting its transition in the 1960s and 1970s into one of the countryâs most wellâknown predominantly gay neighborhoods.
As a neighborhood, Eureka Valley boasts historic properties ranging from some of San Franciscoâs earliest surviving dwellings to sites significant for their association with LGBTQ history of the last twenty five years. Eureka Valley is also a neighborhood that continues to change, as evidenced by schemes of new infill residential development, new commercial development, and changing institutions and demographics
Hydraulic Fracturing Mine Back Trials â Design Rationale and Project Status
Last year, a joint Mining and Oil & Gas industry consortium was established in Canada to conduct hydraulic fracturing (HF) tests accompanied by a mine-back of fractured regions to assess HF models and microseismic monitoring data during controlled experiments. Details about the displacement field, fracture aperture and extent, and micro-seismic parameters could then be verified and used as calibration data for modeling of HF processes in igneous and dense sedimentary rocks
Validation of Observed Bedload Transport Pathways Using Morphodynamic Modeling
Phenomena related to braiding, including local scour and fill, channel bar development, migration
and avulsion, make numerical morphodynamic modeling of braided rivers challenging. This paper investigates
the performance of a Delft3D model, in a 2D depth-averaged formulation, to simulate the
morphodynamics of an anabranch of the Rees River (New Zealand). Model performance is evaluated using
data from field surveys collected on the falling limb of a major high flow, and using several sediment
transport formulas. Initial model results suggest that there is generally good agreement between observed and
modeled bed levels. However, some discrepancies in the bed level estimations were noticed, leading to bed
level, water depth and water velocity estimation errors
Use of and irradiation from plain lumbar spine radiography in Switzerland.
Plain lumbar spine radiographic examination (LSRE) is frequently used in medical practice and delivers a high dose of ionising radiation. The objectives of the study were to determine the annual frequency of LSRE in Switzerland and its distribution according to practitioners' and patients' characteristics, as well as the related population dose of ionising radiation.
Data were extrapolated from a nationwide questionnaire survey on radiation exposure resulting from medical imaging in 1998, involving physicians and other healthcare providers performing radiological examinations in Switzerland.
An estimated number of 273,000 LSRE are performed annually in Switzerland (39 LSRE per 1000 inhabitants per year). The collective dose to the population due to LSRE was 1130 Sv (0.16 mSv per person per year). 50-60% of these procedures were performed to confirm or rule out a diagnosis, the majority (85%) in the context of an illness.
LSRE is the third most frequent radiographic procedure performed and delivers the highest population dose of ionising radiation of any radiodiagnostic procedure. Efforts to reduce the frequency and the radiation dose of this procedure must be kept up, technically by optimising the equipment and radioprotection measures, and clinically by implementing evidence-based approaches to appropriate indications for this imaging technique
The Arcadia Veteran, April 1939
Bulletin published monthly by the veterans of 1116 Co. C.C.C.- V.C. Camp Arcadia, Hope Valley, RI
Red Parkes-Quasars: Evidence for Soft X-ray Absorption
The Parkes Half-Jansky Flat Spectrum Sample contains a large number of
sources with unusually red optical-to-near-infrared continua. If this is to be
interpreted as extinction by dust in the line-of-sight, then associated
material might also give rise to absorption in the soft X-ray regime. This
hypothesis is tested using broadband (0.1-2.4 keV) data from the {\it ROSAT}
All-Sky Survey provided by Siebert et al. (1998). Significant (
confidence level) correlations between optical (and near-infrared)--to--soft
X-ray continuum slope and optical extinction are found in the data, consistent
with absorption by material with metallicity and a range in gas-to-dust ratio
as observed in the local ISM. Under this simple model, the soft X-rays are
absorbed at a level consistent with the range of extinctions (
magnitudes) implied by the observed optical reddening. Excess X-ray absorption
by warm (ionised) gas, (ie. a `warm absorber') is not required.Comment: 23 pages of text, 3 figures, to appear in Jan 10 (1999) issue of The
Astrophysical Journa
Revisiting the 'Missing Middle' in English Sub-National Governance
In the light of the new Coalition Governmentâs proposed ârescalingâ of sub-national governance away from the regional level, it is an opportune time to re-consider the strength and weaknesses of the city or sub-regional approach to economic development and to search, once more, for the âmissing middleâ in English Governance. In this context, the article initially assesses the case for city or sub regions as tiers of economic governance, before examining the lessons to be learnt from the experiences of the existing city regions in the North East of England. It argues that while contemporary plans to develop Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) can be usefully considered within the context of the emerging city regional developments under the previous Labour Governments, a number of important challenges remain, particularly in relation to ensuring accountable structures of governance, a range of appropriate functions, adequate funding, and comprehensive coverage across a variety of sub-regional contexts. While the proposals of the new Government create the necessary âspaceâ to develop sub-regional bodies and offer genuine opportunities for both city and county LEPs, the scale of the sub-regional challenge should not be underestimated, particularly given the context of economic recession and major reductions in the public sector
A procedural development for the analysis of <sup>56/54</sup>Fe and <sup>57/54</sup>Fe isotope ratios with new generation IsoProbe MC-ICP-MS
We have developed a procedure for iron isotope analysis using a hexapole collision cell MC-ICP-MS which is capable of Fe isotope ratio analysis using two different extraction modes. Matrix effects were minimised and the signal-to-background ratio was maximised using high-concentration samples (~ 5ÎŒg Fe) and introducing 1.8 mL/min<sup>-1</sup> Ar and 2 mL/min H<sub>2</sub> into the collision cell to decrease polyatomic interferences. The use of large intensity on the faraday cups considerably decreases the internal error of the ratios and ultimately, improves the external precision of a run. Standard bracketing correction for mass bias was possible when using hard extraction. Mass bias in soft extraction mode seems to show temporal instability that makes the standard bracketing inappropriate. The hexapole rf amplitude was decreased to 50 % to further decrease polyatomic interferences and promote the transmission of iron range masses. We routinely measure Fe isotopes with a precision of ± 0.05 â° and ± 0.12 â° (2Ï) for ÎŽ<sup>56</sup>Fe and ÎŽ<sup>57</sup>Fe respectively
The Canada-UK Deep Submillimetre Survey: The Survey of the 14-hour field
We have used SCUBA to survey an area of 50 square arcmin, detecting 19
sources down to a 3sigma sensitivity limit of 3.5 mJy at 850 microns. We have
used Monte-Carlo simulations to assess the effect of source confusion and noise
on the SCUBA fluxes and positions, finding that the fluxes of sources in the
SCUBA surveys are significantly biased upwards and that the fraction of the 850
micron background that has been resolved by SCUBA has been overestimated. The
radio/submillmetre flux ratios imply that the dust in these galaxies is being
heated by young stars rather than AGN. We have used simple evolution models
based on our parallel SCUBA survey of the local universe to address the major
questions about the SCUBA sources: (1) what fraction of the star formation at
high redshift is hidden by dust? (2) Does the submillimetre luminosity density
reach a maximum at some redshift? (3) If the SCUBA sources are
proto-ellipticals, when exactly did ellipticals form? However, we show that the
observations are not yet good enough for definitive answers to these questions.
There are, for example, acceptable models in which 10 times as much
high-redshift star formation is hidden by dust as is seen at optical
wavelengths, but also acceptable ones in which the amount of hidden star
formation is less than that seen optically. There are acceptable models in
which very little star formation occurred before a redshift of three (as might
be expected in models of hierarchical galaxy formation), but also ones in which
30% of the stars have formed by this redshift. The key to answering these
questions are measurements of the dust temperatures and redshifts of the SCUBA
sources.Comment: 41 pages (latex), 17 postscript figures, to appear in the November
issue of the Astronomical Journa
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