576 research outputs found

    Pre-Columbian Contact With Americas Across the Oceans: an Annotated Bibliography.

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    Recent Trends In American Ethnology

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/99690/1/aa.1946.48.2.02a00020.pd

    Doppler-free Yb Spectroscopy with Fluorescence Spot Technique

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    We demonstrate a simple technique to measure the resonant frequency of the 398.9 nm 1S0 - 1P1 transition for the different Yb isotopes. The technique, that works by observing and aligning fluorescence spots, has enabled us to measure transition frequencies and isotope shifts with an accuracy of 60 MHz. We provide wavelength measurements for the transition that differ from previously published work. Our technique also allows for the determination of Doppler shifted transition frequencies for photoionisation experiments when the atomic beam and laser beam are not perpendicular and furthermore allows us to determine the average velocity of the atoms along the direction of atomic beam

    The illusory paradise revisited.

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    This article is a translation of the Epilogue in the Revised Edition of Amazônia, originally published in 1971, and reprinted by the Smithsonian Institution Press in 1996. It summarizes climatological, biological, ethnographic, and archaeological data accumulated since 1971, which support and amplify the original interpretations. Unfortunately, the unique properties of the Amazonian ecosystem continue to be ignored by national and foreign governments and corporations, in spite of the failure of ambitious projects of “development”and the acceleration of environmental degradadion. Anthropologists have an obligation to join researchers in other disciplines in the effort to create sustainable methods of long-term utilization of this remarkable region.Este artigo é uma tradução do Epílogo da edição revista de Amazônia, originalmente publicado em 1971 e reeditado pela Editora do Smithsonian Institution em 1996. Ele sumaria os dados climatológicos, biológicos, etnográficos e arqueológicos acumulados desde 1971, que apoiam e ampliam as interpretações originais. Infelizmente, as propriedades únicas do ecossistema amazônico continuam a ser ignoradas pelos governos e corporações nacionais e estrangeiras, apesar do fracasso de ambiciosos projetos de desenvolvimento e da acelerada degradação meio ambiental. Os antropólogos deveriam se juntar aos pesquisadores de outras disciplinas em seus esforços para criar métodos sustentáveis de aproveitamento a longo prazo desta notável regiã

    Desenvolvimento cultural no Brasil

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    Re II and Other Exotic Spectra in HD 65949

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    Powerful astronomical spectra reveal an urgent need for additional work on atomic lines, levels, and oscillator strengths. The star HD 65949 provides some excellent examples of species rarely identified in stellar spectra. For example, the Re II spectrum is well developed, with 17 lines between 3731 and 4904 [A], attributed wholly or partially to Re II. Classifications and oscillator strengths are lacking for a number of these lines. The spectrum of Os II is well identified. Of 14 lines attributed wholly or partially to Os II, only one has an entry in the VALD database. We find strong evidence that Te II is present. There are NO Te II lines in the VALD database. Ru II is clearly present, but oscillator strengths for lines in the visual are lacking. There is excellent to marginal evidence for a number of less commonly identified species, including Kr II, Nb II, Sb II, Xe II, Pr III, Ho III, Au II, and Pt II (probably Pt-198), to be present in the spectrum of HD 65949. The line Hg II at 3984 [A] is of outstanding strength, and all three lines of Multiplet 1 of Hg I are present, even though the surface temperature of HD 65949 is relatively high. Finally, we present the case of an unidentified, 24 [mA], line at 3859.63 [A], which could be the same feature seen in magnetic CP stars. It is typically blended with a putative U II line used in cosmochronology.Comment: ASOS9 Poster (Lund, Sweden, August 2007), to be published in Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS), 6 pages 1 figur

    Factors controlling the depth habitat of planktonic foraminifera in the subtropical eastern North Atlantic

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    Planktonic foraminifera preserved in marine sediments archive the physical and chemical conditions under which they built their shells. To interpret the paleoceano-graphic information contained in fossil foraminifera, the recorded proxy signals have to be attributed to the habitat and life cycle characteristics of individual species. Much of our knowledge on habitat depth is based on indirect methods, which reconstruct the depth at which the largest portion of the shell has been calcified. However, habitat depth can be best studied by direct observations in stratified plankton nets. Here we present a synthesis of living planktonic foraminifera abundance data in vertically resolved plankton net hauls taken in the eastern North Atlantic during 12 oceanographic campaigns between 1995 and 2012. Live (cytoplasm-bearing) specimens were counted for each depth interval and the vertical habitat at each station was expressed as average living depth (ALD). This allows us to differentiate species showing an ALD consistently in the upper 100m (e.g., Globigerinoides ruber white and pink), indicating a shallow habitat; species occurring from the surface to the subsurface (e.g., Globigerina bulloides, Globorotalia inflata, Globorotalia truncatulinoides); and species inhabiting the subsurface (e.g., Globorotalia scitula and Globorotalia hirsuta). For 17 species with variable ALD, we assessed whether their depth habitat at a given station could be predicted by mixed layer (ML) depth, temperature in the ML and chlorophyll a concentration in the ML. The influence of seasonal and lunar cycle on the depth habitat was also tested using periodic regression. In 11 out of the 17 tested species, ALD variation appears to have a predictable component. All of the tested parameters were significant in at least one case, with both seasonal and lunar cyclicity as well as the environmental parameters explaining up to >50% of the variance. Thus, G. truncatulinoides, G. hirsuta and G. scitula appear to descend in the water column towards the summer, whereas populations of Trilobatus sacculifer appear to descend in the water column towards the new moon. In all other species, properties of the mixed layer explained more of the observed variance than the periodic models. Chlorophyll a concentration seems least important for ALD, whilst shoaling of the habitat with deepening of the ML is observed most frequently. We observe both shoaling and deepening of species habitat with increasing temperature. Further, we observe that temperature and seawater density at the depth of the ALD were not equally variable among the studied species, and their variability showed no consistent relationship with depth habitat. According to our results, depth habitat of individual species changes in response to different environmental and ontogenetic factors and consequently planktonic foraminifera exhibit not only species-specific mean habitat depths but also species-specific changes in habitat depth.Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [SFRH/BD/78016/2011]; MARUM - Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; European Union [228344-EUROFLEETS]; DFG (German Research Foundation) [WA2175/2-1, WA2175/4-1]; German Climate Modeling consortium PalMod - German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); CANIGO project (EU) [MAS-CT96-0060]; DFGinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Quantum transport through a DNA wire in a dissipative environment

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    Electronic transport through DNA wires in the presence of a strong dissipative environment is investigated. We show that new bath-induced electronic states are formed within the bandgap. These states show up in the linear conductance spectrum as a temperature dependent background and lead to a crossover from tunneling to thermal activated behavior with increasing temperature. Depending on the strength of the electron-bath coupling, the conductance at the Fermi level can show a weak exponential or even an algebraic length dependence. Our results suggest a new environmental-induced transport mechanism. This might be relevant for the understanding of molecular conduction experiments in liquid solution, like those recently performed on poly(GC) oligomers in a water buffer (B. Xu et al., Nano Lett 4, 1105 (2004)).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Ab-initio study of model guanine assemblies: The role of pi-pi coupling and band transport

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    Several assemblies of guanine molecules are investigated by means of first-principle calculations. Such structures include stacked and hydrogen-bonded dimers, as well as vertical columns and planar ribbons, respectively, obtained by periodically replicating the dimers. Our results are in good agreement with experimental data for isolated molecules, isolated dimers, and periodic ribbons. For stacked dimers and columns, the stability is affected by the relative charge distribution of the pi orbitals in adjacent guanine molecules. pi-pi coupling in some stacked columns induces dispersive energy bands, while no dispersion is identified in the planar ribbons along the connections of hydrogen bonds. The implications for different materials comprised of guanine aggregates are discussed. The bandstructure of dispersive configurations may justify a contribution of band transport (Bloch type) in the conduction mechanism of deoxyguanosine fibres, while in DNA-like configurations band transport should be negligible.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Optical emission spectroscopy of metal-halide lamps: Radially resolved atomic state distribution functions of Dy and Hg

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    Absolute line intensity measurements are performed on a metal-halide lamp. Several transitions of atomic and ionic Dy and atomic Hg are measured at different radial positions from which we obtain absolute atomic and ionic Dy intensity profiles. From these profiles we construct the radially resolved atomic state distribution function (ASDF) of the atomic and ionic Dy and the atomic Hg. From these ASDFs several quantities are determined as functions of radial position, such as the (excitation) temperature, the ion ratio Hg^+/Dy^+, the electron density, the ground state, and the totaldensity of Dy atoms and ions. Moreover, these ASDFs give us insight about the departure from equilibrium. The measurements show a hollow density profile for the atoms and the ionization of atoms in the center. In the outer parts of the lamp molecules dominate
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