90 research outputs found

    The biology of Australian seagrasses

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    Seagrasses are angiosperms which have ventured into the marine environment, where they produce totally submerged flowers which are pollinated under water. They occur in many regions of the world,but the following account is concerned primarily with studies on the biology of these plants in Australian waters. It also attempts to contrast some of the features displayed by the seagrasses with those of more familiar terrestrial plants

    'Making Friends or Making Things?': Interfirm Transactions in the Sheffield Metal-working Cluster

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    The paper comprises an examination of the material inputs of a sample of 70 small firms in the Sheffield metal-working cluster and an assessment of the extent to which purchases are accompanied by face-to-face (embodied) transactions. It is shown that there are no significant differences between the level of embodied transactions accompanying local (intra-cluster) material links and those associated with non-local flows. It seems that, on this measure at least and within this cluster, the Sheffield metal-working cluster lacks the dense network of embodied transactions with local suppliers suggested in the wider literature. The lower-than-expected measures of embodied transactions suggest that one of the mechanisms for the transfer of knowledge between buyers and suppliers within an industrial cluster is poorly developed in this particular case.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline

    Study of the doubly charmed tetraquark T+cc

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    Quantum chromodynamics, the theory of the strong force, describes interactions of coloured quarks and gluons and the formation of hadronic matter. Conventional hadronic matter consists of baryons and mesons made of three quarks and quark-antiquark pairs, respectively. Particles with an alternative quark content are known as exotic states. Here a study is reported of an exotic narrow state in the D0D0π+ mass spectrum just below the D*+D0 mass threshold produced in proton-proton collisions collected with the LHCb detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The state is consistent with the ground isoscalar T+cc tetraquark with a quark content of ccu⎯⎯⎯d⎯⎯⎯ and spin-parity quantum numbers JP = 1+. Study of the DD mass spectra disfavours interpretation of the resonance as the isovector state. The decay structure via intermediate off-shell D*+ mesons is consistent with the observed D0π+ mass distribution. To analyse the mass of the resonance and its coupling to the D*D system, a dedicated model is developed under the assumption of an isoscalar axial-vector T+cc state decaying to the D*D channel. Using this model, resonance parameters including the pole position, scattering length, effective range and compositeness are determined to reveal important information about the nature of the T+cc state. In addition, an unexpected dependence of the production rate on track multiplicity is observed

    The loss of seagrasses in Cockburn Sound, Western Australia. I. The time course and magnitude of seagrass decline in relation to industrial development

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    The areas of seagrass meadows in Cockburn Sound, a marine embayment in Western Australia, were estimated from historical aerial photographs supplemented by ground surveys, studies on meadows in adjoining areas, and coring for rhizome remains. Ten species of seagrasses with different habitat tolerances are recorded for the area, with Posidonia sinuosa Cambridge et Kuo forming the most extensive meadows. It is estimated that from 1954 to 1978 the meadow area was reduced from some 4200 to 900 ha. Based on measurements of aboveground productivity at several sites, this represents a reduction of leaf detritus production from 23 000 to 4000 t (dry wt.) y−1. The major loss of seagrass occurred during a period of industrial development on the shore, and the discharge of effluents rich in plant nutrients

    The location, organisation and development of foreign direct investment in the United Kingdom paper and packaging industry, 1970-1980

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D58474/85 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Ultrastructure of the seagrass rhizoshere

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    Bacterial colonies, fungi and other micro-organisms occur in the rhizosphere and peripheral root tissues of seagrasses of the genus, Posidonia. Fungi penetrate the epidermal cells and lyse the thick polysaccharide materials in the walls of the hypodermal cells. A suberin lamella in the wall of the hypodermal cell is more resistant but fungi and bacteria occur both within the lumen of hypodermal cells and in cortical cells adjacent to the hypodermis. It is suggested that these micro-organisms in the rhizosphere and peripheral root tissues may be involved in nutrient uptake and nitrogen fixation into seagrasses

    Slowness methods in seismology

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D58398/85 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Studies in Shakespeare and the English Romantic Imagination

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D53137/85 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
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