823 research outputs found

    Coloniality and the Politicisation of Literary Heritage Conservation

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    In his autobiography The Life and Rhymes of Benjamin Zephaniah, the dub poet reflects on the relationship between architecture, the built environment, the writing process, and the politics that underpin them. In particular, he notes the impact of colonial legacies in urban planning, his experience as patron of the Ujima Housing Co-operative Group, and the inspiration gained from the diversity of the built environment in Newham (where Zephaniah has resided since 1980). This paper uses these reflections as a starting point to explore the politics of literary heritage conservation in Britain and the colonialism implicit within it. There has been a wave of recent interest in the politics underpinning literary production in the UK sparked by Bernardine Evaristoā€™s ā€˜Black Britain, Writing Backā€™ campaign to correct ā€˜historical bias in publishingā€™ and the colonial legacies that foster it. However, far less attention has been paid to the politics behind the conservation of literary heritage. A 2020 report by the National Trust pointed to the role played by ā€˜conservedā€™ writersā€™ houses, such as Batemanā€™s, Shawā€™s Corner, and Monkā€™s House, in sparking the republication of previous out of print works by writers. The conservation of literary heritage therefore clearly expresses a cultural power, articulating who is left in, or out, of an ever-changing ā€˜canonā€™ while providing access points to the literary legacy of writers. Yet, despite attempts to ā€˜decoloniseā€™ heritage sites, such as the National Trustā€™s Colonialism and Historic Slavery Report, there is only limited reflection of the coloniality of the values that underpin what is conserved and how we conserve it. In France, the fact that the renovation of Andre Gideā€™s house in Cuverville sparked a government heritage conservation debate, while the destruction of James Baldwinā€™s house in St Paul de Vence (2014) failed to elicit similar protests, has led to a rethinking of the politics that facilitate literary heritage conservation. Yet, in Britain, there has been a significant lack of debate on the legacies of Empire and the destruction of black British writersā€™ houses. This paper reflects on Toni Morrisonā€™s sense of writing as ā€˜literary archaeologyā€™ to argue for the conservation of writersā€™ houses as a form of ā€˜literary architextureā€™ utilising the semiotics of lived experience to conserve and interpret writersā€™ homes. First, it applies this methodology to case studies of writersā€™ homes to examine the coloniality built into the process of heritage conservation. Noting, for example, that the conservation plans for Bloomsbury Group heritage sites dwell on their networks with white literati while failing to mention the significance of global majority figures like Pat Nelson and Berto Pasuka. Secondly, it asks that we re-examine the coloniality behind heritage conservation to fully explore the power structures that override whose literary heritage is conserved and the consequences of this for future

    21-cm signatures of residual HI inside cosmic HII regions during reionization

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    We investigate the impact of sinks of ionizing radiation on the reionization-era 21-cm signal, focusing on 1-point statistics. We consider sinks in both the intergalactic medium and inside galaxies. At a fixed filling factor of HII regions, sinks will have two main effects on the 21-cm morphology: (i) as inhomogeneous absorbers of ionizing photons they result in smaller and more widespread cosmic HII patches; and (ii) as reservoirs of neutral gas they contribute a non-zero 21-cm signal in otherwise ionized regions. Both effects damp the contrast between neutral and ionized patches during reionization, making detection of the epoch of reionization with 21-cm interferometry more challenging. Here we systematically investigate these effects using the latest semi-numerical simulations. We find that sinks dramatically suppress the peak in the redshift evolution of the variance, corresponding to the midpoint of reionization. As previously predicted, skewness changes sign at midpoint, but the fluctuations in the residual HI suppress a late-time rise. Furthermore, large levels of residual HI dramatically alter the evolution of the variance, skewness and power spectrum from that seen at lower levels. In general, the evolution of the large-scale modes provides a better, cleaner, higher signal-to-noise probe of reionization.Comment: Minor edits to agree with MNRAS published versio

    Determining the probability of cyanobacterial blooms: the application of Bayesian networks in multiple lake systems

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    A Bayesian network model was developed to assess the combined influence of nutrient conditions and climate on the occurrence of cyanobacterial blooms within lakes of diverse hydrology and nutrient supply. Physicochemical, biological, and meteorological observations were collated from 20 lakes located at different latitudes and characterized by a range of sizes and trophic states. Using these data, we built a Bayesian network to (1) analyze the sensitivity of cyanobacterial bloom development to different environmental factors and (2) determine the probability that cyanobacterial blooms would occur. Blooms were classified in three categories of hazard (low, moderate, and high) based on cell abundances. The most important factors determining cyanobacterial bloom occurrence were water temperature, nutrient availability, and the ratio of mixing depth to euphotic depth. The probability of cyanobacterial blooms was evaluated under different combinations of total phosphorus and water temperature. The Bayesian network was then applied to quantify the probability of blooms under a future climate warming scenario. The probability of the "high hazardous" category of cyanobacterial blooms increased 5% in response to either an increase in water temperature of 0.8Ā°C (initial water temperature above 24Ā°C) or an increase in total phosphorus from 0.01 mg/L to 0.02 mg/L. Mesotrophic lakes were particularly vulnerable to warming. Reducing nutrient concentrations counteracts the increased cyanobacterial risk associated with higher temperatures

    Analysing Habitat Connectivity and Home Ranges of Bigmouth Buffalo and Channel Catfish Using a Large-Scale Acoustic Receiver Network

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    The determination if fish movement of potadromous species is impeded in a river system is often difficult, particularly when timing and extent of movements are unknown. Furthermore, evaluating river connectivity poses additional challenges. Here, we used large-scale, long-term fish movement to study and identify anthropogenic barriers to movements in the Lake Winnipeg basin including the Red, Winnipeg, and Assiniboine rivers. In the frame of the project, 80 Bigmouth Buffalo (Ictiobus cyprinellus) and 161 Channel Catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) were tagged with acoustic transmitters. Individual fish were detected with an acoustic telemetry network. Movements were subsequently analyzed using a continuous-time Markov model (CTMM). The study demonstrated large home ranges in the Lake Winnipeg basin and evidence of frequent transborder movements between Canada and the United States. The study also highlighted successful downstream fish passage at some barriers, whereas some barriers limited or completely blocked upstream movement. This biological knowledge on fish movements in the Lake Winnipeg basin highlights the need for fish passage solutions at different obstructions

    Corrections in an electronic environment

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    The need to publish corrections to scientific articles, and occasionally to retract them, has been recognized for decades. However very little emphasis has been attached to how this is done, provided that the retraction or correction is accessible. We are considering a policy to directly correct our online publications

    Evaluation of acoustic telemetry grids for determining aquatic animal movement and survival

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    1. Acoustic telemetry studies have frequently prioritized linear configurations of hydrophone receivers, such as perpendicular from shorelines or across rivers, to detect the presence of tagged aquatic animals. This approach introduces unknown bias when receivers are stationed for convenience at geographic bottlenecks (e.g. at the mouth of an embayment or between islands) as opposed to deployments following a statistical sampling design. 2. We evaluated two-dimensional acoustic receiver arrays (grids: receivers spread uniformly across space) as an alternative approach to provide estimates of survival, movement and habitat use. Performance of variably spaced receiver grids (5ā€“25 km spacing) was evaluated by simulating (1) animal tracks as correlated random walks (speed: 0.1ā€“0.9 m/s; turning angle SD: 5ā€“30Ā°); (2) variable tag transmission intervals along each track (nominal delay: 15ā€“300 s); and (3) probability of detection of each transmission based on logistic detection range curves (midpoint: 200ā€“1,500 m). From simulations, we quantified (i) time between successive detections on any receiver (detection time), (ii) time between successive detections on different receivers (transit time), and (iii) distance between successive detections on different receivers (transit distance). 3. In the most restrictive detection range scenario (200 m), the 95th percentile of transit time was 3.2 days at 5 km, 5.7 days at 7 km and 15.2 days at 25 km grid spacing; for the 1,500 m detection range scenario, it was 0.1 days at 5 km, 0.5 days at 7 km and 10.8 days at 25 km. These values represented upper bounds on the expected maximum time that an animal could go undetected. Comparison of the simulations with pilot studies on three fishes (walleye Sander vitreus, common carp Cyprinus carpio and channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus) from two independent large lake ecosystems (lakes Erie and Winnipeg) revealed shorter detection and transit times than what simulations predicted. 4. By spreading effort uniformly across space, grids can improve understanding of fish migration over the commonly employed receiver line approach, but at increased time cost for maintaining grids

    Retrospective study of long-term outcomes of enzyme replacement therapy in Fabry disease: Analysis of prognostic factors

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    Despite enzyme replacement therapy, disease progression is observed in patients with Fabry disease. Identification of factors that predict disease progression is needed to refine guidelines on initiation and cessation of enzyme replacement therapy. To study the association of potential biochemical and clinical prognostic factors with the disease course (clinical events, progression of cardiac and renal disease) we retrospectively evaluated 293 treated patients from three international centers of excellence. As expected, age, sex and phenotype were important predictors of event rate. Clinical events before enzyme replacement therapy, cardiac mass and eGFR at baseline predicted an increased event rate. eGFR was the most important predictor: hazard ratios increased from 2 at eGFR 90. In addition, men with classical disease and a baseline eGFR 60. Proteinuria was a further independent risk factor for decline in eGFR. Increased cardiac mass at baseline was associated with the most robust decrease in cardiac mass during treatment, while presence of cardiac fibrosis predicted a stronger increase in cardiac mass (3.36 gram/m2/year). Of other cardiovascular risk factors, hypertension significantly predicted the risk for clinical events. In conclusion, besides increasing age, male sex and classical phenotype, faster disease progression while on enzyme replacement therapy is predicted by renal function, proteinuria and to a lesser extent cardiac fibrosis and hypertension

    Evaluation of acoustic telemetry grids for determining aquatic animal movement and survival

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    1. Acoustic telemetry studies have frequently prioritized linear configurations of hydrophone receivers, such as perpendicular from shorelines or across rivers, to detect the presence of tagged aquatic animals. This approach introduces unknown bias when receivers are stationed for convenience at geographic bottlenecks (e.g. at the mouth of an embayment or between islands) as opposed to deployments following a statistical sampling design. 2. We evaluated two-dimensional acoustic receiver arrays (grids: receivers spread uniformly across space) as an alternative approach to provide estimates of survival, movement and habitat use. Performance of variably spaced receiver grids (5ā€“25 km spacing) was evaluated by simulating (1) animal tracks as correlated random walks (speed: 0.1ā€“0.9 m/s; turning angle SD: 5ā€“30Ā°); (2) variable tag transmission intervals along each track (nominal delay: 15ā€“300 s); and (3) probability of detection of each transmission based on logistic detection range curves (midpoint: 200ā€“1,500 m). From simulations, we quantified (i) time between successive detections on any receiver (detection time), (ii) time between successive detections on different receivers (transit time), and (iii) distance between successive detections on different receivers (transit distance). 3. In the most restrictive detection range scenario (200 m), the 95th percentile of transit time was 3.2 days at 5 km, 5.7 days at 7 km and 15.2 days at 25 km grid spacing; for the 1,500 m detection range scenario, it was 0.1 days at 5 km, 0.5 days at 7 km and 10.8 days at 25 km. These values represented upper bounds on the expected maximum time that an animal could go undetected. Comparison of the simulations with pilot studies on three fishes (walleye Sander vitreus, common carp Cyprinus carpio and channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus) from two independent large lake ecosystems (lakes Erie and Winnipeg) revealed shorter detection and transit times than what simulations predicted. 4. By spreading effort uniformly across space, grids can improve understanding of fish migration over the commonly employed receiver line approach, but at increased time cost for maintaining grids
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