220 research outputs found

    De aquakultuur met benuttiging van bio-industriële afvalstoffen en thermische effluenten = L'aquaculture utilisant des dechets bio-industriels et des effluents thermiques

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    The possibility of recycling biodegradable waste materials (manure and waste from agricultural crops) into new proteins was investigated through experiments with various aquaticfood chains. The possibility of increasing the biomass yield through recuperation of the lost energy of thermal effluents was continually taken into consideration. The most promising production procedures which could lead to industrial applificatians are: a) the controlled mass production of pickling lobsters (Artemia) in "batch" or "flow through" systems using agricultural wastes, b). the nursery production of edible shell-fish (oysters, Paphia pullastra clams) using microscopic algae which were grown on manure. Units were designed of both types on a semi-industrial scale and were built on the Belgian coast. In conclusion it can also be mentioned that the mass production of water fleas (Daphnia) using manure and agricultural waste gave very encouraging results on a laboratory scale

    Steady nearly incompressible vector fields in 2D: chain rule and renormalization

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    Given bounded vector field bcolonRRdoRRdbcolon RR^d o RR^d, scalar field ucolonRRdoRRucolon RR^d o RR and a smooth function etacolonRRoRReta colon RR o RR we study the characterization of the distribution div(eta(u)b)div(eta(u)b) in terms of divbdiv b and div(ub)div(u b). In the case of BVBV vector fields bb (and under some further assumptions) such characterization was obtained by L. Ambrosio, C. De Lellis and J. Mal'y, up to an error term which is a measure concentrated on so-called emph{tangential set} of bb. We answer some questions posed in their paper concerning the properties of this term. In particular we construct a nearly incompressible BVBV vector field bb and a bounded function uu for which this term is nonzero. For steady nearly incompressible vector fields bb (and under some further assumptions) in case when d=2d=2 we provide complete characterization of div(eta(u)b)div(eta(u) b) in terms of divbdiv b and div(ub)div(u b). Our approach relies on the structure of level sets of Lipschitz functions on RR2RR^2 obtained by G. Alberti, S. Bianchini and G. Crippa. Extending our technique we obtain new sufficient conditions when any bounded weak solution uu of dtu+bcdotablau=0d_t u + b cdot abla u=0 is emph{renormalized}, i.e. also solves dteta(u)+bcdotablaeta(u)=0d_t eta(u) + b cdot abla eta(u)=0 for any smooth function etacolonRRoRReta colonRR o RR. As a consequence we obtain new uniqueness result for this equation

    'It's a Form of Freedom': The experiences of people with disabilities within equestrian sport

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    This paper explores the embodied, gendered experiences of disabled horse‐riders. Drawing on data from five in‐depth interviews with paradressage riders, the ways in which their involvement in elite disability sport impacts upon their sense of identity and confidence are explored, as well as the considerable health and social benefits that this involvement brings. Social models of disability are employed and the shortcomings of such models, when applied to disability sport, are highlighted. The data presented here demonstrates the necessity of seeing disability sport as an embodied experience and acknowledging the importance of impairment to the experiences of disabled athletes. Living within an impaired body is also a gendered experience and the implications of this when applied to elite disability sport are considered

    AAC W1876 hard red spring wheat

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    AAC W1876 hard red spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has grain yield and time to maturity within the range of the check cultivars: Katepwa, Laura, Lillian, Carberry, and CDC Kernen. AAC W1876 has an awned spike, a low lodging score indicative of strong straw, and a short plant stature typical of a semidwarf wheat. AAC W1876 expressed resistance to prevalent races of leaf rust, moderate resistance to stem rust, intermediate resistance to fusarium head blight, yellow rust, common bunt, and loose smut. Compared to the Canada Western Red Spring check cultivars, AAC W1876 had improved flour yield and lower flour ash. AAC W1876 is eligible for grades of Canada Western Red Spring

    AAC Penhold Canada Prairie Spring Red Wheat

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    AAC Penhold, an awned hard red spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivar, yielded significantly more grain than 5700PR while maturing 2 days earlier, and 7.5 cm shorter stature. The seed size was significantly larger than 5700PR and 5701PR, with a test weight significantly heavier than both checks. AAC Penhold expressed resistance to prevalent races of leaf rust and common bunt, and moderate resistance to fusarium head blight and stem rust. AAC Penhold had higher grain and flour protein than the checks and improved Hagberg Falling Number, amylograph viscosity, and water absorption. AAC Penhold is eligible for grades of the market class, Canada Prairie Spring Red wheat

    AAC Congress Durum Wheat

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    Congress durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. subsp. durum (Desf.) Husn.) is adapted to the durum production area of the Canadian prairies. Averaged over three years, AAC Congress yielded significantly more grain than Strongfield and AC Navigator. AAC Congress had protein concentration significantly lower than Strongfield but significantly higher than Brigade. AAC Congress is eligible for grades of Canada Western Amber Durum. It has lower grain cadmium concentration and higher yellow pigment concentration than the check cultivars, except AAC Cabri

    Enhancing disabilities: transhumanism under the veil of inclusion?

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    Technological developments for disabled athletes may facilitate their competition in standard elite sports. They raise intriguing philosophical questions that challenge dominant notions of body and normality. The case of 'bladerunner' Oscar Pistorius in particular is used to illustrate and defend 'transhumanist' ideologies that promote the use of technology to extend human capabilities. Some argue that new technologies will undermine the sharp contrast between the athlete as a cultural hero and icon and the disabled person that needs extra attention or care; the one exemplary of the peak of normality, human functioning at its best, the other representing a way of coping with the opposite. Do current ways of classification do justice to the performances of disabled athletes? The case of Oscar Pistorius will be used to further illustrate the complexities of these questions, in particular when related to notions of normality and extraordinary performances. Pistorius' desire to become part of 'normal' elite sport may be interpreted as an expression of a right to 'inclusion' or 'integration', but at the same time it reproduces new inequalities and asymmetries between performances of able and dis-abled athletes: we propose that if one accepts that Pistorius should compete in the 'regular' Olympic Games, this would paradoxically underline the differences between able and disabled and it would reproduce the current order and hierarchy between able and disabled bodies. © 2010 Informa UK, Ltd
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