9 research outputs found

    A Preliminary Study of the Relationship of Yield to Preseasonal Climatological Factors in Central South Dakota

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    One of the most important factors in the determination of crop yields in South Dakota is precipitation. When rainfall is deficient, yields are generally below average. The effect of other climatological factors during the growing season is often apparent. High temperatures, drying winds, and cloudless days frequently hasten the appearance of drought conditions and lessen the beneficial effects of seasonal rainfall, particularly if it is light. Research conducted in this field in the past has largely ignored the preseasonal period. However, the attention has become focused upon this period due to a recent study in which preseasonal precipitation was used as the independent variable in yield forecasting regression equations. The influence of preseasonal precipitations on crop yields, however, probably depends in part on other preseasonal factors like relative humidity, wind movement, sunshine, cloud cover, and temperature. These factors are effective to the extent that they limit the actual accumulation of moisture during the preseasonal period. The objective of this study is to investigate the relationship between the yield per acre of wheat, oats and barley and the preseasonal climatological factors. If these factors are found to exert an important influence, reference will be made to cultural practices which have for their purpose the control of this influence

    The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) during MRO’s Primary Science Phase (PSP)

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    IUPHAR-DB: the IUPHAR database of G protein-coupled receptors and ion channels

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    The IUPHAR database (IUPHAR-DB) integrates peer-reviewed pharmacological, chemical, genetic, functional and anatomical information on the 354 nonsensory G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), 71 ligand-gated ion channel subunits and 141 voltage-gated-like ion channel subunits encoded by the human, rat and mouse genomes. These genes represent the targets of approximately one-third of currently approved drugs and are a major focus of drug discovery and development programs in the pharmaceutical industry. IUPHAR-DB provides a comprehensive description of the genes and their functions, with information on protein structure and interactions, ligands, expression patterns, signaling mechanisms, functional assays and biologically important receptor variants (e.g. single nucleotide polymorphisms and splice variants). In addition, the phenotypes resulting from altered gene expression (e.g. in genetically altered animals or in human genetic disorders) are described. The content of the database is peer reviewed by members of the International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology Committee on Receptor Nomenclature and Drug Classification (NC-IUPHAR); the data are provided through manual curation of the primary literature by a network of over 60 subcommittees of NC-IUPHAR. Links to other bioinformatics resources, such as NCBI, Uniprot, HGNC and the rat and mouse genome databases are provided. IUPHAR-DB is freely available at http://www.iuphar-db.org

    The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) during MRO’s Primary Science Phase (PSP)

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    The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) acquired 8 terapixels of data in 9137 images of Mars between October 2006 and December 2008, covering ~0.55% of the surface. Images are typically 5–6 km wide with 3-color coverage over the central 20% of the swath, and their scales usually range from 25 to 60 cm/pixel. Nine hundred and sixty stereo pairs were acquired and more than 50 digital terrain models (DTMs) completed; these data have led to some of the most significant science results. New methods to measure and correct distortions due to pointing jitter facilitate topographic and change-detection studies at sub-meter scales. Recent results address Noachian bedrock stratigraphy, fluvially deposited fans in craters and in or near Valles Marineris, groundwater flow in fractures and porous media, quasi-periodic layering in polar and non-polar deposits, tectonic history of west Candor Chasma, geometry of clay-rich deposits near and within Mawrth Vallis, dynamics of flood lavas in the Cerberus Palus region, evidence for pyroclastic deposits, columnar jointing in lava flows, recent collapse pits, evidence for water in well-preserved impact craters, newly discovered large rayed craters, and glacial and periglacial processes. Of particular interest are ongoing processes such as those driven by the wind, impact cratering, avalanches of dust and/or frost, relatively bright deposits on steep gullied slopes, and the dynamic seasonal processes over polar regions. HiRISE has acquired hundreds of large images of past, present and potential future landing sites and has contributed to scientific and engineering studies of those sites. Warming the focal-plane electronics prior to imaging has mitigated an instrument anomaly that produces bad data under cold operating conditions

    The Relevance of the State for Party System Change

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