3,556 research outputs found

    A chart of certain skills in written communication for grades seven to twelve

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    The Best Journey in the World: Adventures in Canada's High Arctic, by Jim Lotz

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    Anders Rapp (1927-1998)

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    Anders Rapp, Professor Emeritus of Physical Geography at the University of Lund, Sweden was best known for his work on rockslides, avalanches, periglacial debris accumulations, mass wasting features, and especially rock glaciers. Anders Rapp was an outstanding geomorphologist and teacher, with vast field experience in many parts of the world including Scandinavia, Yukon and Africa. He will be sorely missed in Swedish and international geographical circles

    Skaftafell in Iceland: A Thousand Years of Change, by Jack D. Ives

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    Innocents in the Arctic: The 1951 Spitsbergen Expedition, by Colin Bull

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    Valter Schytt (1919-1985)

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    Valter Schytt, Sweden's leading glaciologist and polar scientist, died 30 March 1985 in the Tarfala valley, Kebnekaise, Swedish Lapland. ... Always an internationalist, Schytt became the first non-British president of the International Glaciological Society (1969-72), he was long-time council member and then president (1977-79) of the Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography, he was president of the Swedish Travellers' Club (1976-85), and he was a council member of Comite Arctique International (1979-85). Elected to membership in the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1974, he maintained his active interest in polar research and at the same time continued as director of the station at Tarfala. His standing in the Swedish scientific community was recognized in 1976 by his appointment as Lord Chamberlain in Waiting to the Court of King Carl XVI Gustav, a post that he enjoyed and handled with aplomb. The culmination of Valter Schytt's work in the field of polar research came in 1980, when the Swedish icebreaker Ymer made a voyage to commemorate Nordenskiold's attainment of the Northeast Passage (and the circumnavigation of Asia) in Vega between 1878 and 1880. Schytt was responsible for much of the organization and, as scientific leader, he was on board for both legs of the expedition, which ranged around Svalbard, to Greenland in the west, to the waters north of Franz Josef Land in the east, and to latitude 82 30 N. Schytt would have been pleased with the final report of this multifaceted expedition, issued in 1987 by the Swedish Academy of Sciences under the editorship of Gunnar Hoppe. For his outstanding work on the Ymer-80 Expedition Valter Schytt was awarded the Vega Medal, the highest award of the Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography, in 1981. Another result of Schytt's efforts to stimulate polar research was the creation of a Committee for Polar Research within the Secretariat (a special government entity). Sweden acceded to the Antarctic Treaty in 1984, and during several recent austral summers Swedish glaciologists, physical geographers, and Quaternary geologists have again worked in the Antarctic. This is Valter Schytt's legacy

    Russian Settlement and Land Rise in Nordaustlandet, Spitsbergen

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    Presents evidence of stable shoreline in the Murchisonfjorden region from 1957-1958 studies of a Russian hunting hut on Nordre Russoya. Age of the hut is determined as at least 100 years from settlement records and radiocarbon dating. It is located only 1.2 m above high-tide level and 0.8 m above the highest tides; hence the land has risen less than one meter in the past century. Any uplift that is occurring is probably balanced by the rise in sea level from glacier shrinkage

    The yellow pigment in the flower petals of bird\u27s foot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus L.)

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    Bird\u27s foot trefoil is a low growing, bushy legume which is gaining popularity as a forage plant. Its small sweet-pea-like blossoms are bright yellow, bearing a few thing scarlet lines along the standard (the topmost petal). The buds are scarlet-tipped, the scarlet disappearing as the flower matures. For this investigation, the flowers were picked when mature, or nearly so, then were air-dried at 20-30 degrees celsius. The petals were not separated from the calyx
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