6,501 research outputs found

    The Site Of Quirigua Through Time: The Use of Digital Reconstructions in the Context of a Comarative Photographic Project

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    Over two decades of technological and academic advances, numerous platforms and tools have been developed to help archaeologists visualize traditional data in new ways. The resulting products have ranged from realistic 3D models to virtual reality simulators to geographic information systems. In the field of digital archaeological visualization one of the main areas of development is to address the communication of the level of confidence and uncertainty in certain aspects of the visualizations. Quirigua is an ideal candidate to be used as the subject for the creation of a new digital visualization tool for archaeological sites that is designed to put to use some research materials, such as excavation photographs, largely ignored by digital archaeologists

    El pueblo navajo.

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    Sin resume

    Alien Registration- Gilbert, William P. (Auburn, Androscoggin County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/31010/thumbnail.jp

    Recycling Paper to Save Landfills and Trees

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    While some groups want to save tropical rain forests or marshy wetlands, other conservation-minded groups are interested in judiciously using sanitary landfills, or at least lengthening their lifetime by recycling paper (Hovelson, 1989). The Rolling Hills Audubon Society (RHAS), centered in Indianola (Warren County), sponsored two newspaper collections during 1989 in hopes of raising funds and reducing waste paper going to the South Central Iowa Sanitary Landfill located east of Winterset and south of Highway 92 in Madison County

    Diffractive method of measuring erythrocytes

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    Awarded the Gunning Victoria Jubilee Prize in Physiolog

    A test of civic knowledges and information in Quincy, Massachusetts

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University, 1948. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive

    From Condemnation to Conformity: Carter and Reagan\u27s Foreign Policy towards the Argentine Junta, 1977-1982.

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    This study examines how the administrations of Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan responded to the widespread human rights abuses committed by the Argentine military during the country\u27s Dirty War between 1977 and 1982. The objective is to gain a broader understanding of the policies pursued by both administrations. Under Carter, who brought human rights to the forefront of American foreign policy, Argentina was heavily targeted and sanctioned with the anticipation that such measures would enhance the human rights status in Argentina. Ultimately, such policies resulted in open hostility in bilateral relations, culminating in Argentina\u27s refusal to support Carter\u27s proposed grain embargo on the Soviet Union in 1980. Reagan moved to restore relations until Argentina\u27s invasion of the Falklands in April, 1982. The works of many authors were consulted in conjunction with newspapers, journal articles, government proceedings and declassified documents obtained from the National Security Archives
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