12,270 research outputs found

    Ecology - As I See It

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    Dr. Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds summarizes her research experiences on Saddleback Mountain in Oregon. Several handwritten corrections are included. Dirks-Edmunds began studying the area in 1933 with her advisor at Linfield College, Dr. James A. Macnab. In 1940, the research site was logged and her study switched from detailing an existing Douglas fir community to tracking its regrowth. Dr. Dirks-Edmunds graduated from Linfield College in 1937; she returned to teach in the Biology department at Linfield from 1941-1974

    Biotic Succession in a Douglas Fir Forest on Saddleback Mountain (Oregon Coast Range)

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    This grant proposal, submitted to the National Science Foundation in 1959 by Dr. Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds, requested funding to continue an ecological study at Saddleback Mountain. Dirks-Edmunds requested $15,570.05 to fund weekly trips with students to the site in order to collect meteorological and synecological data on the forest; she anticipated the project would last two years. Dr. Dirks-Edmunds graduated from Linfield College in 1937; she returned to teach in the Biology department at Linfield from 1941-1974

    Unangam Tunuu

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    Syllabus - Practicum on Unangam Tunuu, CoLang 2016This workshop prepares the student for the 3-week practicum focusing on fieldwork on a sleeping or less accessible language using archival materials; the language we focus on (for both the workshop and practicum) is Unangam Tunuu (Eastern Aleut, ISO 6390ale). The workshop class will cover the language and cultural history, linguistic structure, the history of language documentation and description in Unangam Tunuu, and the main resources and foci of previous linguistic research. Students will be required to do the readings and to familiarize themselves with leading articles or reference books in the field, in particular with the Aleut Dictionary and Aleut Grammar by Knut Bergsland. Time permitting, we will do some group activities using these reference sources

    Christmas Greetings 1967

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    This Christmas letter from Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds and her husband Ray Edmunds, sent to friends and family in 1967, shares experiences from their frequent travels during that year

    Dynamical screening away from equilibrium: hard photon production and collisional energy loss

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    We investigate the production rate for hard real photons and the collisional energy loss in the quark-gluon plasma away from chemical equilibrium. Applying the Hard-Thermal-Loop resummation scheme away from equilibrium, we can show that Landau damping provides dynamical screening for both fermion and boson exchange present in the two quantities.Comment: 5 pages RevTeX, 2 figures, remarks for clarification and one reference added, typos correcte

    Jane Claire Dirks\u27s Correspondence with Stanley G. Jewett

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    This exchange between Jane Claire Dirks (later Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds) and Stanley G. Jewett, a biologist with Region 1 of the Fish and Wildlife Service (serving Oregon and five other states), is an example of the type of correspondence Dirks had with various experts on the Pacific forest region while she was completing her doctoral thesis. Dirks-Edmunds began to study Zoology in Illinois immediately after earning her Bachelor\u27s degree in Biology from Linfield College in 1937. She returned to teach in the Biology department at Linfield from 1941-1974

    Notes for Problems of Ecology Presentation to the Linfield Research Institute

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    These notes were prepared by Dr. Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds for a presentation she gave to a Linfield Research Institute (LRI) seminar at Linfield College on March 19, 1957 on the subject of ecology. LRI was established in 1955, and Dr. Dirks-Edmunds did research under its auspices, including receiving a federal grant which funded work on biotic succession

    Humidity Graph of Saddleback Biotic Succession

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    This document reflects the succession of growth in the Saddleback research station. The old forest, it shows, was eventually replaced by stages of regrowth after logging, but never fully recovered
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