4,450 research outputs found

    Mr Fox Vegetarian Menu 2017

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    After years of cooking around the world, Anthony Smith settles down in his native northside of Dublin and opens Mr Fox on 1/11/2016. At the heart of Dublin 1, Mr Fox is an informal atmospheric bar & dining room serving the best of local & seasonal ingredients to create modern international dishes. Anthony’s cooking has been described as natural & honest, presented in a relaxed setting. We are open for lunch & dinner, Tuesday to Saturday. The restaurant is closed Sundays, Mondays & bank holidays. We look forward to welcoming you soon in Mr Fox.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1267/thumbnail.jp

    Mr Fox Wine List 2017

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    After years of cooking around the world, Anthony Smith settles down in his native northside of Dublin and opens Mr Fox on 1/11/2016. At the heart of Dublin 1, Mr Fox is an informal atmospheric bar & dining room serving the best of local & seasonal ingredients to create modern international dishes. Anthony’s cooking has been described as natural & honest, presented in a relaxed setting. We are open for lunch & dinner, Tuesday to Saturday. The restaurant is closed Sundays, Mondays & bank holidays. We look forward to welcoming you soon in Mr Fox.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1268/thumbnail.jp

    Mr Fox A La Carte Menu 2017

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    After years of cooking around the world, Anthony Smith settles down in his native northside of Dublin and opens Mr Fox on 1/11/2016. At the heart of Dublin 1, Mr Fox is an informal atmospheric bar & dining room serving the best of local & seasonal ingredients to create modern international dishes. Anthony’s cooking has been described as natural & honest, presented in a relaxed setting. We are open for lunch & dinner, Tuesday to Saturday. The restaurant is closed Sundays, Mondays & bank holidays. We look forward to welcoming you soon in Mr Fox.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1266/thumbnail.jp

    Mr Fox Lunch and Pre Theatre Menu 2017

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    After years of cooking around the world, Anthony Smith settles down in his native northside of Dublin and opens Mr Fox on 1/11/2016. At the heart of Dublin 1, Mr Fox is an informal atmospheric bar & dining room serving the best of local & seasonal ingredients to create modern international dishes. Anthony’s cooking has been described as natural & honest, presented in a relaxed setting. We are open for lunch & dinner, Tuesday to Saturday. The restaurant is closed Sundays, Mondays & bank holidays. We look forward to welcoming you soon in Mr Fox.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1269/thumbnail.jp

    Mr Fox Restaurant Menu 2020

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    There\u27s a quiet confidence about Mr Fox - you\u27re unlikely to hear them shouting about how great they are any time now - which makes the food an almost shockingly fantastic surprise when you get there. Every element on every plate has a reason for being there and the nostalgia-laden deserts, like the super split and the coffee iceberger, are a joyful way to end a meal.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1508/thumbnail.jp

    SimFusion: A Unified Similarity Measurement Algorithm for Multi-Type Interrelated Web Objects

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    In this paper, we use a Unified Relationship Matrix (URM) to represent a set of heterogeneous web objects (e.g., web pages, queries) and their interrelationships (e.g., hyperlink, user click-through relationships). We claim that iterative computations over the URM can help overcome the data sparseness problem (a common situation in the Web) and detect latent relationships among heterogeneous web objects, thus, can improve the quality of various information applications that require the combination of information from heterogeneous sources. To support our claim, we further propose a unified similarity-calculating algorithm, the SimFusion algorithm. By iteratively computing over the URM, the SimFusion algorithm can effectively integrate relationships from heterogeneous sources when measuring the similarity of two web objects. Experiments based on a real search engine query log and a large real web page collection demonstrate that the SimFusion algorithm can significantly improve similarity measurement of web objects over both traditional content based similarity-calculating algorithms and the cutting edge SimRank algorithm

    Westernmost Grand Canyon incision: Testing thermochronometric resolution

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    The timing of carving of Grand Canyon has been debated for over 100 years with competing endmember hypotheses advocating for either a 70 Ma (“old”) or <6 Ma (“young”) Grand Canyon. Several geological constraints appear to support a “young” canyon model, but thermochronometric measures of cooling history and corresponding estimates of landscape evolution have been in debate. In particular, 4He/3He thermochronometric data record the distribution of radiogenic 4He (from the 238U, 235U and 232Th decay series) within an individual apatite crystal and thus are highly sensitive to the thermal history corresponding to landscape evolution. However, there are several complicating factors that make interpreting such data challenging in geologic scenarios involving reheating. Here, we analyze new data that provide measures of the cooling of basement rocks at the base of westernmost Grand Canyon, and use these data as a testbed for exploring the resolving power and limitations of 4He/3He data in general. We explore a range of thermal histories and find that these data are most consistent with a “young” Grand Canyon. A problem with the recovered thermal history, however, is that burial temperatures are under predicted based on sedimentological evidence. A solution to this problem is to increase the resistance of alpha recoil damage to annealing, thus modifying He diffusion kinetics, allowing for higher temperatures throughout the thermal history. This limitation in quantifying radiation damage (and hence crystal retentivity) introduces non-uniqueness to interpreting time–temperature paths in rocks that resided in the apatite helium partial retention zone for long durations. Another source of non-uniqueness, is due to unknown U and Th distributions within crystals. We show that for highly zoned with a decrease in effective U of 20 ppm over the outer 80% of the radius of the crystal, the 4He/3He data could be consistent with an “old” canyon model. To reduce this non-uniqueness, we obtain U and Th zonation information for separate crystals from the same rock sample through LA-ICP-MS analysis. The observed U and Th distributions are relatively uniform and not strongly zoned, thus supporting a “young” canyon model interpretation of the 4He/3He data. Furthermore, we show that for the mapped zonation, the difference between predicted 4He/3He data for a uniform crystal and a 3D model of the crystal are minimal, highlighting that zonation is unlikely to lead us to falsely infer an “old” Grand Canyon

    Animal Behaviour Packs a Punch: From Parasitism to Production, Pollution and Prevention in Grazing Livestock

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    Behaviour is often the fundamental driver of disease transmission, where behaviours of individuals can be seen to scale up to epidemiological patterns seen at the population level. Here we focus on animal behaviour, and its role in parasite transmission to track its knock-on consequences for parasitism, production and pollution. Livestock face a nutrition versus parasitism trade-off in grazing environments where faeces creates both a nutritional benefit, fertilizing the surrounding sward, but also a parasite risk from infective nematode larvae contaminating the sward. The grazing decisions of ruminants depend on the perceived costs and benefits of the trade-off, which depend on the variations in both environmental (e.g., amounts of faeces) and animal factors (e.g., physiological state). Such grazing decisions determine the intake of both nutrients and parasites, affecting livestock growth rates and production efficiency. This impacts on the greenhouse gas costs of ruminant livestock production via two main mechanisms: (1) slower growth results in longer durations on-farm and (2) parasitised animals produce more methane per unit food intake. However, the sensitivity of behaviour to host parasite state offers opportunities for early detection of parasitism and control. Remote monitoring technology such as accelerometers can detect parasite-induced sickness behaviours soon after exposure, before impacts on growth, and thus may be used for targeting individuals for early treatment. We conclude that livestock host x parasite interactions are at the centre of the global challenges of food security and climate change, and that understanding livestock behaviour can contribute to solving both

    Animal Behaviour Packs a Punch: From Parasitism to Production, Pollution and Prevention in Grazing Livestock

    Get PDF
    Behaviour is often the fundamental driver of disease transmission, where behaviours of individuals can be seen to scale up to epidemiological patterns seen at the population level. Here we focus on animal behaviour, and its role in parasite transmission to track its knock-on consequences for parasitism, production and pollution. Livestock face a nutrition versus parasitism trade-off in grazing environments where faeces creates both a nutritional benefit, fertilizing the surrounding sward, but also a parasite risk from infective nematode larvae contaminating the sward. The grazing decisions of ruminants depend on the perceived costs and benefits of the trade-off, which depend on the variations in both environmental (e.g., amounts of faeces) and animal factors (e.g., physiological state). Such grazing decisions determine the intake of both nutrients and parasites, affecting livestock growth rates and production efficiency. This impacts on the greenhouse gas costs of ruminant livestock production via two main mechanisms: (1) slower growth results in longer durations on-farm and (2) parasitised animals produce more methane per unit food intake. However, the sensitivity of behaviour to host parasite state offers opportunities for early detection of parasitism and control. Remote monitoring technology such as accelerometers can detect parasite-induced sickness behaviours soon after exposure, before impacts on growth, and thus may be used for targeting individuals for early treatment. We conclude that livestock host x parasite interactions are at the centre of the global challenges of food security and climate change, and that understanding livestock behaviour can contribute to solving both

    Calciphylaxis following kidney transplantation: a case report

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    Introduction: Calciphylaxis occurring after kidney transplantation is rare and rarely reported. It results in chronic non-healing wounds and is associated with a poor prognosis and is often fatal. We present a case of proximal lower limb calciphylaxis that occurred early after kidney transplantation. The patient had no classic associated risk factors. He had previously had a total parathyroidectomy but had normal serum calcium-phosphate product and parathyroid hormone levels. The clinical outcome of this case was favorable and highlights some fundamental issues relating to management. Case prsentation: A 70-year-old British Caucasian man with end-stage renal failure secondary to IgA nephropathy presented six months post kidney transplantation with cutaneous calciphylaxis lesions involving the medial aspect of the thigh bilaterally. Conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first reported case of rapid onset cutaneous calciphylaxis occurring soon after kidney transplantation that was associated with a favorable outcome. Cutaneous calciphylaxis lesions should be promptly managed with meticulous wound care, antimicrobial therapy and the correction of calcium-phosphate product where indicated
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