24,559 research outputs found
Interim report on the ground-water resources of Seminole County, Florida
Salt-water encroachment is undoubtedly the problem of most concern to
users of ground water in Florida. This is a problem in many coastal areas
where water levels are lowered excessively by heavy pumping. It is a
problem also in some inland areas where the water-bearing formations contain
salty water at relatively shallow depths. Among the coastal areas where wells
have become contaminated with salt water are Pinellas County and the Miami
area of Dade County. Inland areas where wells are likely to become contaminated
with salt water include Seminole County and the southwestern part
of Volusia County.
The purpose of the investigation is to make a detailed study of the
geology and ground-water resources of the county with special emphasis on
the problems associated with declining water levels and salt-water
contamination. This report reviews briefly the progress of the investigation
through February 1954. (PDF contains 43 pages.
Integers represented as a sum of primes and powers of two
It is shown that every sufficiently large even integer is a sum of two primes
and exactly 13 powers of 2. Under the Generalized Rieman Hypothesis one can
replace 13 by 7. Unlike previous work on this problem, the proof avoids
numerical calculations with explicit zero-free regions of Dirichlet
L-functions. The argument uses a new technique to bound the measure of the set
on which the exponential sum formed from powers of 2 is large.Comment: 32 Pages; typos correcte
Paternal alcoholism and offspring conduct disorder: Evidence for the \u27common genes\u27 hypothesis
Postal survey of contacts between cattle farms on the Isle of Lewis
The British Cattle Movement Service (BCMS) database contains an unprecedented quantity of data on the movement of cattle within the UK. These data may be used to construct models of the contact structure of the UK cattle herd, for epidemiological purposes. There are two significant potential sources of inaccuracy within such models: movements that are not reported or are reported inaccurately to the BCMS, and contacts between farms that might transmit infection, but are not animal movements. This field study addressed these issues. Cattle farmers on the Isle of Lewis were recruited with the assistance of the local veterinary surgeon, and asked to record a range of potential risk behaviours for a one-month period. They were also asked questions about husbandry practices on their farm. Comparison of the BCMS contact data with that reported by Lewis' farmers highlighted use of common grazing land as a significant source of contact, and potential disease transmission, between cattle that currently goes unreported; around half of responding holdings on Lewis use common grazing land at some point during the year, and these movements are not reported to the BCMS
Histone crosstalk directed by H2B ubiquitination is required for chromatin boundary integrity
Genomic maps of chromatin modifications have provided evidence for the partitioning of genomes into domains of distinct chromatin states, which assist coordinated gene regulation. The maintenance of chromatin domain integrity can require the setting of boundaries. The HS4 insulator element marks the 3′ boundary of a heterochromatin region located upstream of the chicken β-globin gene cluster. Here we show that HS4 recruits the E3 ligase RNF20/BRE1A to mediate H2B mono-ubiquitination (H2Bub1) at this insulator. Knockdown experiments show that RNF20 is required for H2Bub1 and processive H3K4 methylation. Depletion of RNF20 results in a collapse of the active histone modification signature at the HS4 chromatin boundary, where H2Bub1, H3K4 methylation, and hyperacetylation of H3, H4, and H2A.Z are rapidly lost. A remarkably similar set of events occurs at the HSA/HSB regulatory elements of the FOLR1 gene, which mark the 5′ boundary of the same heterochromatin region. We find that persistent H2Bub1 at the HSA/HSB and HS4 elements is required for chromatin boundary integrity. The loss of boundary function leads to the sequential spreading of H3K9me2, H3K9me3, and H4K20me3 over the entire 50 kb FOLR1 and β-globin region and silencing of FOLR1 expression. These findings show that the HSA/HSB and HS4 boundary elements direct a cascade of active histone modifications that defend the FOLR1 and β-globin gene loci from the pervasive encroachment of an adjacent heterochromatin domain. We propose that many gene loci employ H2Bub1-dependent boundaries to prevent heterochromatin spreading
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