6,436 research outputs found

    Population Growth and Other Statistics of Middle-sized Irish Towns. General Research Series Paper No. 85, April 1976

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    The basic aim of the study is the presentation of tables of comparative statistical data relating to 97 towns with population 5OO-1O,OOO in 1971 and analyses of such data. The exclusion of the four County Boroughs and Dun Laoghaire together with twelve other large towns and all small towns and villages, was to impart a degree of homogeneity to the inquiry, as regards function of town. The 97 towns range from Mullingar, the largest with a population of 9,245 to Cootehill with 1,542

    Effects of Open Court on Students\u27 Spelling

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    The purpose of this research is to explore the effects the Open Court phonics instruction has on students\u27 spelling. The current study intends to find the answers to two questions. The first question is: What Open Court phonetic rules and patterns are first grade students using in daily writing and. on spelling assessments? In order to discover this, I will be analyzing two sets of data. At the beginning of the study, a qualitative spelling inventory will be given to determine the students\u27 current stage. I will also look at children\u27s informal journal writing to look for Open Court phonetic rules and patterns. After the study, the same qualitative spelling inventory will be given to measure learning

    Temporal and spatial dynamics of spawning, settlement, and growth of gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus) from the West Florida shelf as determined from otolith microstructures

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    The goal of our study was to understand the spatial and temporal variation in spawning and settlement of gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus) along the West Florida shelf (WFS). Juvenile gray snapper were collected over two consecutive years from seagrass meadows with a benthic scrape and otter trawl. Spawning, settlement, and growth patterns were compared across three sampling regions (Panhandle, Big bend, and Southwest) by using otolith microstructure. Histology of adult gonads was also used for an independent estimate of spawning time. Daily growth increments were visible in the lapilli of snapper 11–150 mm standard length; ages ranged from 38 to 229 days and estimated average planktonic larval duration was 25 days. Estimated growth rates ranged from 0.60 to 1.02 mm/d and did not differ among the three sampling regions, but did differ across sampling years. Back-calculated fertilization dates from otoliths indicated that juveniles in the Panhandle and Big Bend were mainly summer spawned fish, whereas Southwest juveniles had winter and summer fertilization dates. Settlement occurred during summer both years and in the winter of 1997 for the southern portion of the WFS. Moon phase did not appear to be strongly correlated with fertilization or settlement. Histological samples of gonads from adults collected near the juvenile sampling areas indicated a summer spawning period

    Exploring Wage Determination by Education Level: A U.S. MSA Analysis for 2005-2012

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    The purpose of this study is to explain urban wage differentials with a special focus on educational levels. The authors explore whether the share of people with a bachelor’s degree or higher in the community matters to the wages of those within specific educational cohorts, accounting for cost of living, human capital externalities, consumer externalities, policy factors, and local labor market conditions. Using data for all U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas between 2005 and 2012, the authors find that the presence of more highly educated people will result in a higher median wage in the community overall, as do many studies, but that this factor does not significantly increase the wage for any individual education cohort. These results are hidden if we only look at the entire workforce in the aggregate

    Diets of Young King and Spanish Mackerel Off the Southeast United States

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    The diet of larval and post-larval (n = 95 and 307), and juvenile (n = 489 and 508) king (Scomberomorus cavalia) and Spanish mackerel (S. maculatus) from the Gulf of Mexico and southeastern Atlantic coastal waters of the U.S. consisted principally of fishes. Carangids, clupeids, and engraulids occurred in 23, 7 and 9% of larval and post-larval king mackerel stomachs and in 20, 40 and 7% of larval and post-larval Spanish mackerel stomachs, respectively. Sciaenids were also common in king mackerel, occurring in 21% of the stomachs. Prey fishes included the genera Cynoscion, Caranx, and Anchoa, and the species Opisthonema oglinum. Invertebrates, principally small crustaceans and nudibranch larvae, occurred infrequently in the diets of both species, but more so in Spanish mackerel than king mackerel. The dominant prey items for juvenile mackerels from the Atlantic were engraulids, clupeids, balistids, and squids, collectively accounting for 73.3% by volume of the diet of king mackerel and 88.8% of Spanish mackerel. More invertebrates occurred in the diet of juvenile Spanish mackerel than king mackerel, but they accounted for a smaller volume, i.e., 2.1% as compared to 5.4% for the Atlantic fish. Chi-square tests indicated significant differences between the diets of juvenile mackerel from the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic coast

    From solid solution to cluster formation of Fe and Cr in α\alpha-Zr

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    To understand the mechanisms by which Fe and Cr additions increase the corrosion rate of irradiated Zr alloys, a combination of experimental (atom probe tomography, x-ray diffraction and thermoelectric power measurements) and modelling (density functional theory) techniques are employed to investigate the non-equilibrium solubility and clustering of Fe and Cr in binary Zr alloys. Cr occupies both interstitial and substitutional sites in the {\alpha}-Zr lattice, Fe favours interstitial sites, and a low-symmetry site that was not previously modelled is found to be the most favourable for Fe. Lattice expansion as a function of alloying concentration (in the dilute regime) is strongly anisotropic for Fe additions, expanding the cc-axis while contracting the aa-axis. Defect clusters are observed at higher solution concentrations, which induce a smaller amount of lattice strain compared to the dilute defects. In the presence of a Zr vacancy, all two-atom clusters are more soluble than individual point defects and as many as four Fe or three Cr atoms could be accommodated in a single Zr vacancy. The Zr vacancy is critical for the increased solubility of defect clusters, the implications for irradiation induced microstructure changes in Zr alloys are discussed.Comment: 15 pages including figure, 9 figures, 2 tables. Submitted for publication in Acta Mater, Journal of Nuclear Materials (2015

    Engineering the free vacancy and active donor concentrations in phosphorus and arsenic double donor-doped germanium

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    In germanium, donor atoms migrate or form larger immobile clusters via their interaction with lattice vacancies. By engineering the concentration of free vacancies, it is possible to control the diffusion of the donor atoms and the formation of those larger clusters that lead to the deactivation of a significant proportion of the donor atoms. Electronic structure calculations in conjunction with mass action analysis are used to predict the concentrations of free vacancies and deactivated donor atoms in germanium doped with different proportions of arsenic and phosphorous. We find, for example, that at low temperatures, the concentration of free vacancies is partially suppressed by increasing the proportion of arsenic doping, whereas at high temperatures (above 1000 K), the concentration of free vacancies is relatively constant irrespective of the donor species. It is predicted that the free vacancy and active donor concentrations vary linearly with the arsenic to phosphorous ratio across a wide range of temperatures
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