9,842 research outputs found

    Preliminary Archaeological Examination of Ohio's First Blast Furnace: The Eaton (Hopewell)

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    Author Institution: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Youngstown State UniversityThe Eaton (Hopewell) Furnace located near Struthers, Ohio was built in 1802-1803. The first blast furnace west of the Alleghenies and the first industry of any kind in the Western Reserve, it went out of blast circa 1808 due to a combination of factors and fell into ruin. Historical sources on the Eaton are scarce and informational sources are vague, but archaeological excavations carried out in 1975, 1976, and 1977 have led to some interesting findings concerning early blast furnace operations. Subsequent chemical and metallurgical analyses of furnace artifacts and specimens provided insights into the level of efficiency of the operation and the quality of the raw materials, products, and byproducts. Foremost among these findings is the fact that the Eaton's use of bituminous coal in combination with charcoal was the earliest use substantiated in the New World

    Analyses and Evaluation of the Raw Materials Used in the Eaton (Hopewell) Furnace

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    Author Institution: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Youngstown State UniversityAnalyses of samples of the raw materials locally available for use in the Eaton (Hopewell) Furnace indicate that the iron ore and bituminous coal were of good smelting quality while the limestone (flux) was not. The limestone had a much higher then desirable silica content and a low calcium content. The limestone was insufficient to the task of removing impurities introduced through the fuel combination of charcoal and raw coal and contributed to the early demise of the furnace operation only 6 years after its start

    Brief Note: Faunal Remains from the Eaton (Hopewell) Furnace Site

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    Author Institution: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Youngstown State Universit

    Perspectives of the Real Estate Community on Historic Preservation

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    Antigenic relationships between bluetongue virus serotypes as defined by monoclonal antibodies

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    Panels of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were generated to individual proteins of an Australian isolate of bluetongue virus (BTV) serotype 1 (VP2, VPS, VP5, VP6, NS1 and NS2). The number of individual epitopes and antigenic regions each panel defined were then determined. Relative epitope conservation levels amongst heterologous serotypes of BTV from three geographic regions (Australia, the United States and South Africa) were then investigated for each protein through the development of a quantitative binding assay. Epitopes on VP2 displayed the most and VP7 and NS1 epitopes the least, variation in epitope conservation across the BTV serogroup. Epitopes on VPS and VP6 showed moderate to high levels of variation and NS2 epitopes displayed surprisingly high levels of variation. A comparison of epitope reactivity on released and cytoplasmic lysate antigen preparations revealed the expression of several epitopes on VP2 and VP7 are blocked through the conformational changes induced by the incorporation of each protein into the virus particle* This suggested some form of environmental pressure/s were responsible for the selection of specific protein conformations. For VP7, the patterns of epitope expression on the virus displayed some relationship to the geographic origin of BTV isolates and therefore indicated the detection of such epitopes might assist in the topotyping of unknown isolates. Binding and neutralization studies applied to the reaction of VP2-specific MAbs with natural and experimentally selected BTV-1 variants showed at least seven neutralization epitopes exist within a single domain. However, only one of these appeared crucial to serotype determination. In addition, escape from virus neutralization was shown to involve the re-conformation of previously neutralizing epitopes to a non-neutralizing orientation which did not necessarily compromise the binding properties of the epitope. The simultaneous reaction of certain neutralization-resistant variants and heterologous serotypes with several MAbs specific for such epitopes, resulted in low level virus neutralization. This may explain the phenomenon of heterotypic immune responses frequently observed in natural hosts

    Breeding for improved nitrogen use efficiency in oilseed rape

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    Oilseed rape has a high requirement for nitrogen (N) fertiliser relative to its seed yield. This paper uses published and unpublished work to explore the extent to which the N use efficiency (seed yield ÷ N supply) of oilseed rape could be improved without reducing seed yield. It was estimated that if the concentration of N in the stem and pod wall at crop maturity could be reduced from 1.0 to 0.6%, the root length density increased to 1 cm/cm3 to 100 cm soil depth and the post flowering N uptake increased by 20 kg N/ha then the fertiliser requirement could be reduced from 191 to 142 kg N/ha and the N use efficiency could be increased from 15.2 to 22.4 kg of seed dry matter per kg N. Genetic variation was found for all of the traits that were estimated to be important for N use efficiency. This indicates that there is significant scope for plant breeders to reduce N use efficiency in oilseed rape

    Coastal wetland area change for two freshwater diversions in the Mississippi River Delta

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    Coastal systems around the globe are being re-integrated with adjacent river systems to restore the natural hydrologic connection to riparian wetlands. The Mississippi River sediment diversions or river reconnections are one such tool to combat high rates of wetland loss in coastal Louisiana, USA by providing freshwater, sediment, and nutrients. There has been some disagreement in the published literature whether re-establishing river reconnection is slowing or contributing to coastal wetland loss. This issue is due to the difficulties in the application of remote sensing in low-relief environments where water level changes could indicate either land loss or simply temporary submergence. We analyzed land change at the receiving areas of two existing freshwater river diversions, Davis Pond and Caernarvon, which have been intermittently receiving river water for up to 2+ decades. This study provides a robust analysis of wetland land change rates in proximity these river diversions including years before river reconnection. Our analyses indicate a net land gain since river reconnection operations began at Davis Pond Diversion (+3.42 km2; range: +2.02–4.81 km2) and no statistically significant change at the Caernarvon Diversion. The Davis Pond wetland results are corroborated with data from a decadal field study documenting increased inorganic sedimentation in the soil. It is clear from this study and others, that river reconnection can increase or, in the case of Caernarvon, have no statistical effect on the land change in these systems due to differences in vegetation, hydroperiod, sediment delivery and external factors including hurricane impacts. Our remote sensing analysis was compared with a global water area change analysis mapping tool which also supported our findings

    The Extraordinarily Rapid Expansion of the X-ray Remnant of Kepler's Supernova (SN1604)

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    Four individual high resolution X-ray images from ROSAT and the Einstein Observatory have been used to measure the expansion rate of the remnant of Kepler's supernova (SN 1604). Highly significant measurements of the expansion have been made for time baselines varying from 5.5 yrs to 17.5 yrs. All measurements are consistent with a current expansion rate averaged over the entire remnant of 0.239 (+/-0.015) (+0.017,-0.010) % per yr, which, when combined with the known age of the remnant, determines the expansion parameter m, defined as RtmR\propto t^m, to be 0.93 (+/-0.06) (+0.07,-0.04). The error bars on these results include both statistical (first set of errors) and systematic (second set) uncertainty. According to this result the X-ray remnant is expanding at a rate that is remarkably close to free expansion and nearly twice as fast as the mean expansion rate of the radio remnant. The expansion rates as a function of radius and azimuthal angle are also presented based on two ROSAT images that were registered to an accuracy better than 0.5 arcseconds. Significant radial and azimuthal variations that appear to arise from the motion of individual X-ray knots are seen. The high expansion rate of the X-ray remnant appears to be inconsistent with currently accepted dynamical models for the evolution of Kepler's SNR.Comment: 14 pages, including 7 postscript figs, LaTeX, emulateapj. Accepted by Ap
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