1,055 research outputs found
Design for the Museum for the Native American Indian
Thesis (M. Arch.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1997.Includes bibliographical references (p. 27-28).Museums are becoming increasingly specialized as they carry out their general function to offer the public pathways and insights to various aesthetic and cultural fields. Traditional displays of arts and cultural history are giving away to the development of a new, more focused museum. In Washington two years ago, the Holocaust museum opened. A tribute to the Native American Indian surfaces will soon become a reality in the Nation's capitol. The architecture of and for the Native American Indian expresses significant relationship with the landscape. The building types are about moving outwards towards the landscape. Sites have been primarily rural. Therefore designing a museum for and about the Native American Indian on the mall site is a complicated development. The challenge is to build a normally extroverted building type on a constrained site. The design for a Museum of the Native American Indian involves three cultural and architectural issues. The first consideration is the history of Native Americans as well as a contemporary focus. The Native American Indian plays an essential role in the design backbone for the museum. This role is synthetic, to bring together vastly diverse American tribes and represent them in the museum's design and function. Second, the site; contextual issues of the mall and the oversight of the National Planning Commission add a layer of constraint and conformity which must be acknowledged. Third, the role of the museum should also be given consideration: will it function as a "tribute", or as a memorial, or as a monument and tool of understanding. Usually, a combination of all of these is typical in the success of a museum. However, at the largest scale, the new museum will be a designed environment, a reflective place, comprised of spaces which create an understanding of a culture.by Phoebe R. Millon.M.Arch
Age and sex-selective predation moderate the overall impact of predators
© 2014 The Authors. Journal of Animal Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society. Acknowledgements: Thanks to J. Reid, S. Redpath, A. Beckerman and an anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments on a previous version of the manuscript. This work was partly funded by a Natural Environment Research Council studentship NE/J500148/1 to SH and a grant NE/F021402/1 to XL and by Natural Research Limited. Forest Research funded all the fieldwork on goshawks, tawny owls and field voles during 1973–1996. We thank B. Little, P. Hotchin, D. Anderson and all field assistants for their help with data collection and Forest Enterprise, T. Dearnley and N. Geddes for allowing and facilitating work in Kielder Forest. In addition, we are grateful to English Nature and the BTO for kindly issuing licences annually visit goshawk nest sites. Data accessibility: All data associated with the study which have not already been given in the text are available from the Dryad Digital Repository: http://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.h1289 (Hoy et al. 2014).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
On the relevance of large scale pulsed-laser deposition: Evidence of structural heterogeneities in ZnO thin films
Pulsed-laser deposition is known as a well-suited method for growing thin films of oxide compounds presenting a wide range of functional properties. A limitation of this method for industrial process is the very anisotropic expansion dynamics of the plasma plume, which induces difficulties to grow on large scale films with homogeneous thickness and composition. The specific aspect of the crystalline or orientation uniformity has not been investigated, despite its important role on oxide films properties. In this work, the crystalline parameters and the texture of zinc oxide films are studied as a function of position with respect to the central axis of the plasma plume. We demonstrate the existence of large non-uniformities in the films. The stoichiometry, the lattice parameter, and the distribution of crystallites orientations drastically depend on the position with respect to the plume axis, i.e., on the oblique incidence of the ablated species. The origin of these non-uniformities, in particular, the unexpected tilted orientation of the ZnO c-axis may be attributed to the combined effects of the oblique incidence and of the ratio between oxygen and zinc fluxes reaching the surface of the growing film
Production of Gas Phase Zinc Oxide Nanoclusters by Pulsed Laser Ablation
We present experimental results on the photoluminescence (PL) of
gas-suspended zinc oxide nanoclusters prepared during ablation of sintered ZnO
targets by a pulsed ArF laser in the presence of oxygen ambient gas. The PL
spectra in the UV spectral region correspond to the exciton recombination in
the nanoclusters which are crystallized and cooled down to the temperature of
the ambient gas in the ablation chamber. The time evolution of the spectra as
well as their dependence on the ambient gas pressure are discussed.Comment: EMRS-2004, Strasbourg, France. Paper N-I.
Density-dependent increase in superpredation linked to food limitation in a recovering population of northern goshawks, Accipiter gentilis
We are grateful to R. Lourenço and A.K. Mueller for their helpful comments. We thank Forest Research for funding all fieldwork on goshawks during 1973-1996, Forest Enterprise for funding fieldwork after 1998 and T. Dearnley and N. Geddes for allowing and facilitating work in Kielder Forest. This work was also partly funded by a Natural Environment Research Council studentship NE/J500148/1 to SH and a grant NE/F021402/1 to XL and by Natural Research. We thank I. Yoxall and B. Little for the data they collected and their contributions to this study. Lastly, we thank English Nature and the British Trust for Ornithology for kindly issuing licences to monitor goshawk nest sitesPeer reviewedPostprin
Characterization of Color Production in Xalla´s Palace Complex, Teotihuacan
A multi-analytical approach was used to characterize color remains from Xalla, a Teotihuacan palace complex (project Teotihuacan, Elite and Government. Excavations in Xalla led by Linda R. Manzanilla). Color samples were obtained from polished lithic instruments and pigment ores. Those samples were analyzed combining microscopic and spectroscopic techniques. Our results coincide with previous studies in Teotihuacan, with the chromatic palette displaying a predominance of iron oxides such as hematite, yellow ochre and natural earths, as well as malachite, celadonite and glauconite. We have enlarged the corpus of raw materials with the characterization of jarosite and bone white and mica as aggregate. The identification of raw materials crossed with functional analysis of polished lithic artefacts suggests a production and application process for the pigmenting materials that were divided in four phases, from the crushing of the raw material to the application and finishing of the painted surfaces
Food availability and predation risk, rather than intrinsic attributes are the main factors shaping the reproductive decisions of a long-lived predator
Acknowledgements We thank B. Sheldon and two anonymous reviewers for all their helpful comments on a previous version of the manuscript. Our thanks also go to M. Davison, B. Little, P. Hotchin, D. Anderson and all other field assistants for their help with data collection and Forest Enterprise, particularly Tom Dearnley and Neville Geddes for facilitating work in Kielder Forest. We are also grateful to C. Sutherland for his help and advice on statistical analyses. This work was partly funded by Natural Research Limited and a Natural Environment Research Council studentship NE/J500148/1 to SH and grant NE/F021402/1 to XL. Forest Research funded all the fieldwork on goshawks, tawny owls and field voles during 1973-1996. In addition, we are grateful to English Nature and the BTO for issuing licences to visit goshawk nest sites.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Bcl-2/Bax protein ratio predicts 5-fluorouracil sensitivity independently of p53 status
p53 tumour-suppressor gene is involved in cell growth control, arrest and apoptosis. Nevertheless cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induction can be observed in p53-defective cells after exposure to DNA-damaging agents such as 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) suggesting the importance of alternative pathways via p53-independent mechanisms. In order to establish relationship between p53 status, cell cycle arrest, Bcl-2/Bax regulation and 5-FU sensitivity, we examined p53 mRNA and protein expression and p53 protein functionality in wild-type (wt) and mutant (mt) p53 cell lines. p53 mRNA and p53 protein expression were determined before and after exposure to equitoxic 5-FU concentration in six human carcinoma cell lines differing in p53 status and displaying marked differences in 5-FU sensitivity, with IC 50 values ranging from 0.2–22.6 mM. 5-FU induced a rise in p53 mRNA expression in mt p53 cell lines and in human papilloma virus positive wt p53 cell line, whereas significant decrease in p53 mRNA expression was found in wt p53 cell line. Whatever p53 status, 5-FU altered p53 transcriptional and translational regulation leading to up-regulation of p53 protein. In relation with p53 functionality, but independently of p53 mutational status, after exposure to 5-FU equitoxic concentration, all cell lines were able to arrest in G1. No relationship was evidenced between G1 accumulation ability and 5-FU sensitivity. Moreover, after 5-FU exposure, Bax and Bcl-2 proteins regulation was under p53 protein control and a statistically significant relationship (r= 0.880,P= 0.0097) was observed between Bcl-2/Bax ratio and 5-FU sensitivity. In conclusion, whatever p53 status, Bcl-2 or Bax induction and Bcl-2/Bax protein ratio were correlated to 5-FU sensitivity. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
Faith in the Republic: A Frances Lewis Law Center Conversation
This is a spontaneous conversation discussing Hauserwas’ singular political theology in response to Levinson and Tushnet’s constitutional jurisprudence. It developed into a highly interesting debate concerning constitutional faith. This conversation was recorded at Washington and Lee’s Law Center on December 11, 1987
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