2,816 research outputs found

    Settlement Patterns and the Origins of African Jamaican Society: Seville Plantation, St. Ann\u27s Bay, Jamaica

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    Archaeological and historical research at Seville Plantation, Jamaica, are used to explain changes in settlement patterns within the estate\u27s African Jamaican community between 1670 and the late nineteenth century. Sugar plantations, such as Seville, are marked by well-defined spatial order based upon economic and power relations that was imposed upon enslaved communities by planters and managers. Archaeological evidence is used to explore how enslaved Africans modified this imposed order and redefined boundaries in ways that correspond with the development of a distinct African Jamaican society. The rigidly defined linear housing arrangements initially established by the planter, and their relations to the Great House, sugar works, and fields, were reinterpreted by the enslaved residents of the village to create a degree of autonomy and freedom from constant surveillance that was at odds with the motives of the planter class. These changes occurred within the spatial parameters established by the planter, yet they reflect dynamic and creative social processes that resulted in the emergence of an African Jamaican community

    A Study of United States Hydroelectric Plant Ownership

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    Ownership of United States hydroelectric plants is reviewed from several perspectives. Plant owners are grouped into six owner classes as defined by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The numbers of plants and the corresponding total capacity associated with each owner class are enumerated. The plant owner population is also evaluated based on the number of owners in each owner class, the number of plants owned by a single owner, and the size of plants based on capacity ranges associated with each owner class. Plant numbers and corresponding total capacity associated with owner classes in each state are evaluated. Ownership by federal agencies in terms of the number of plants owned by each agency and the corresponding total capacity is enumerated. A GIS application that is publicly available on the Internet that displays hydroelectric plants on maps and provides basic information about them is described

    Community‐Based Interdisciplinary Research: Introduction to the Special Issue

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    This special issue on community‐based interdisciplinary research grew out of the work of the SCRA Interdisciplinary Task Force and an Interdisciplinary Working Conference held at Vanderbilt University in May, 2004. In this introduction to the special issue, the historical context for interdisciplinary underpinnings for community psychology theory, research, action and training is first depicted. This is followed by a brief description of the mission and work of the recent SCRA Interdisciplinary Task Force and the Interdisciplinary Working Conference. The introduction concludes with a brief summary of the papers in the two main sections of the special issue, Prospects and Perspectives (four scholarly papers and three commentaries) and Community‐Based Interdisciplinary Action‐Research (four interdisciplinary action‐research projects).Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/117166/1/ajcp9063.pd

    IR observations of MS 1054-03: Star Formation and its Evolution in Rich Galaxy Clusters

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    We study the infrared (IR) properties of galaxies in the cluster MS 1054-03 at z=0.83 by combining MIPS 24 micron data with spectra of more than 400 galaxies and a very deep K-band selected catalog. 19 IR cluster members are selected spectroscopically, and an additional 15 are selected by their photometric redshifts. We derive the IR luminosity function of the cluster and find strong evolution compared to the similar-mass Coma cluster. The best fitting Schechter function gives L*_{IR}=11.49 +0.30/-0.29 L_sun with a fixed faint end slope, about one order of magnitude larger than that in Coma. The rate of evolution of the IR luminosity from Coma to MS 1054-03 is consistent with that found in field galaxies, and it suggests that some internal mechanism, e.g., the consumption of the gas fuel, is responsible for the general decline of the cosmic star formation rate (SFR) in different environments. The mass-normalized integrated SFR within 0.5R_200 in MS 1054-03 also shows evolution compared with other rich clusters at lower redshifts, but the trend is less conclusive if the mass selection effect is considered. A nonnegligible fraction (13%) of cluster members, are forming stars actively and the overdensity of IR galaxies is about 20 compared to the field. It is unlikely that clusters only passively accrete star forming galaxies from the surrounding fields and have their star formation quenched quickly afterward; instead, many cluster galaxies still have large amounts of gas, and their star formation may be enhanced by the interaction with the cluster.Comment: 49 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Ap

    Computer memories: the history of computer form

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    This paper looks at the computer as a truly global form. The similar beige boxes found in offices across the world are analysed from the perspective of design history rather than that of the history of science and technology. Through the exploration of an archive of computer manufacturer's catalogues and concurrent design texts, this paper examines the changes that have occurred in the production and consumption of the computer in the context of the workplace, from its inception as a room-sized mainframe operated through a console of flashing lights, to the personal computer as a 'universal' form, reproduced by many manufacturers. It shows how the computer in the past has been as diverse as any other product, and asks how and why it now appears as a standardised, sanitised object. In doing so our relationship with the office computer, past and present is explored, revealing a complex history of vicissitude.</p

    Identification of Candidate Regulators of Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation by Comparative Phosphoprotein Affinity Profiling

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    Embryonic stem cells are a unique cell population capable both of self-renewal and of differentiation into all tissues in the adult organism. Despite the central importance of these cells, little information is available regarding the intracellular signaling pathways that govern self-renewal or early steps in the differentiation program. Embryonic stem cell growth and differentiation correlates with kinase activities, but with the exception of the JAK/STAT3 pathway, the relevant substrates are unknown. To identify candidate phosphoproteins with potential relevance to embryonic stem cell differentiation, a systems biology approach was used. Proteins were purified using phosphoprotein affinity columns, then separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and detected by silver stain before being identified by tandem mass spectrometry. By comparing preparations from undifferentiated and differentiating mouse embryonic stem cells, a set of proteins was identified that exhibited altered post-translational modifications that correlated with differentiation state. Evidence for altered post-translational modification included altered gel mobility, altered recovery after affinity purification, and direct mass spectra evidence. Affymetrix microarray analysis indicated that gene expression levels of these same proteins had minimal variability over the same differentiation period. Bioinformatic annotations indicated that this set of proteins is enriched with chromatin remodeling, catabolic, and chaperone functions. This set of candidate phosphoprotein regulators of stem cell differentiation includes products of genes previously noted to be enriched in embryonic stem cells at the mRNA expression level as well as proteins not associated previously with stem cell differentiation status
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