168 research outputs found
William Lilley, III to Senator James O. Eastland, 17 August 1976
Typed letter signed dated 17 August 1976 from William Lilley, III, Acting Director of Council on Wage & Price Stability, re: Occupational Safety & Health Administration\u27s proposal to mandate sanitation facilities for agricultural field workers. Attached: Council on Wage & Price Stability press release dated 6 August 1976, re: above topic; 6 pages.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joecorr_g/1013/thumbnail.jp
An economic evaluation of the potential for distributed energy in Australia
Australiaâs Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) recently completed a major study investigating the value of distributed energy (DE; collectively demand management, energy efficiency and distributed generation) technologies for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from Australiaâs energy sector (CSIRO, 2009). This comprehensive report covered potential economic, environmental, technical, social, policy and regulatory impacts that could result from the wide scale adoption of these technologies. In this paper we highlight the economic findings from the study. Partial Equilibrium modeling of the stationary and transport sectors found that Australia could achieve a present value welfare gain of around $130 billion when operating under a 450 ppm carbon reduction trajectory through to 2050. Modeling also suggests that reduced volatility in the spot market could decrease average prices by up to 12% in 2030 and 65% in 2050 by using local resources to better cater for an evolving supply-demand imbalance. Further modeling suggests that even a small amount of distributed generation located within a distribution network has the potential to significantly alter electricity prices by changing the merit order of dispatch in an electricity spot market. Changes to the dispatch relative to a base case can have both positive and negative effects on network losses.Distributed energy; Economic modeling; Carbon price; Electricity markets
Proteomic analysis of the EhV-86 virion
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens
Reorganizing public value for city life in the Anthropocene
Public value and city governance are fundamental notions in contemporary settings, but, currently conceived, they are not fit for the challenges presented by the proposed new epoch of geological time â the Anthropocene. Walking through the locked-down streets or calle of Venice, we face the sudden emptiness that starkly reveals the impact of human activity on the city and its waterways. Reflecting on the walk, our starting point is to problematize how a city organizes and manages public value and what actually constitutes public value. In this, we develop a new definition, âNew Public Value for the Anthropocene Epochâ (NPVA), which expands the notion of public value through the questions: âwhoâ is it valuable to do things for, beyond humans and economic actors, building on a relational epistemology to incorporate the planet and its biosphere; and âwhatâ is valuable to do, in order to ensure the inclusion of social, environmental, and cultural values alongside economic values. We conclude by arguing that NPVA is organized across scales in a manner that embeds global attentiveness towards local ecosystems solutions to drive the global response to the environmental crisis we all face
Reorganizing public value for city life in the Anthropocene
Public value and city governance are fundamental notions in contemporary settings, but, currently conceived, they are not fit for the challenges presented by the proposed new epoch of geological time â the Anthropocene. Walking through the locked-down streets or calle of Venice, we face the sudden emptiness that starkly reveals the impact of human activity on the city and its waterways. Reflecting on the walk, our starting point is to problematize how a city organizes and manages public value and what actually constitutes public value. In this, we develop a new definition, âNew Public Value for the Anthropocene Epochâ (NPVA), which expands the notion of public value through the questions: âwhoâ is it valuable to do things for, beyond humans and economic actors, building on a relational epistemology to incorporate the planet and its biosphere; and âwhatâ is valuable to do, in order to ensure the inclusion of social, environmental, and cultural values alongside economic values. We conclude by arguing that NPVA is organized across scales in a manner that embeds global attentiveness towards local ecosystems solutions to drive the global response to the environmental crisis we all face
Lackluster Adoption of Cryptocurrencies as a Consumer Payment Method in the United StatesâHypothesis: Is This Independent Technology in Need of a Brand, and What Kind?
Cryptocurrencies were supposed to replace traditional payment methods when they were invented over 13 years ago, but adoption by the general consumer is still lacking, at least in the United States. Instead, crypto is often used as a speculative investment, by illicit actors, or for use cases unrelated to everyday purchases. A literature review on general adoption barriers and interviews with experts has only unearthed factors like usability, performance, and political drivers, among other barriers. Brand as an adoption barrier is mostly missing from literature, at least for cryptocurrencies. This led to the formation of a hypothesis related to cryptoâs lack of adoption as a payment method. A framework is being designed based on the technology adoption model to find out if âbrandâ has an impact on cryptocurrency adoption, which was paradoxically designed to be brandless and not needing any institutional trust. The intent is to focus on what âBitcoin 2.0â might look like, and to also delve further and gauge perceptions about various types of brands getting involved in the next generation of cryptocurrencies, including traditional banks, governments, technology companies, and also some of the decentralized and hybrid consortia currently vying to get consumers to use stablecoins, nation-issued cryptocurrencies, and other forms of digital instruments. While other studies had focused on trust, early adopter usability, or performance of blockchain networks, this work intends to focus on the general consumerâs perceptions about digital money, and the types of brands and evolution of this instrument liable to increase uptak
Explorations, Vol. 4, No. 3
Articles include:
Cover: Trophy: MooseHorn, from the Trophy Series, by Caellaigh B. Desrosiers.
Editorial Reflections, by Carole J. Bombard
North Cascade Glacier Climate Project, by Mauri Pelto
Stained Glass Molecules, by Anne P. Sherblom
Lobsters Inside-Out: A Guide to the Maine Lobster
Community Forestry: UMaine Cooperative Extension Service, by Nancy E. Coverstone and William D. Lilley
Where Are They Now? â Robert F. LaPrade, M.D. â81
Little Critters with a Big Job: Ciliated Protozoa and the Gulf of Maine Food Chain, by Marcia Gauvin from a paper by Charles Gregory
The Innovation of Tradition: Low-Cost, Low-Input Alternatives for Maine Farmers, by Marcia Gauvin
Just What IS An Animal? Preschoolers Investigate Merging Two Cultures: Our Cover Artist, by Caellaigh Bennett Derosiers
Freezing and Photosynthesis, by Steven R. Dudgeon, Ian R. Davison, and Robert L. Vada
Sex-Specific Parental Effects on Offspring Lipid Levels
Background:
Plasma lipid levels are highly heritable traits, but known genetic loci can only explain a small portion of their heritability. Methods and Results:
In this study, we analyzed the role of parental levels of total cholesterol (TC), lowâdensity lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLâC), highâdensity lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLâC), and triglycerides (TGs) in explaining the values of the corresponding traits in adult offspring. We also evaluated the contribution of nongenetic factors that influence lipid traits (age, body mass index, smoking, medications, and menopause) alone and in combination with variability at the genetic loci known to associate with TC, LDLâC, HDLâC, and TG levels. We performed comparisons among different sexâspecific regression models in 416 families from the Framingham Heart Study and 304 from the SardiNIA cohort. Models including parental lipid levels explain significantly more of the trait variation than models without these measures, explaining up to â39% of the total trait variation. Of this variation, the parentâofâorigin effect explains as much as â15% and it does so in a sexâspecific way. This observation is not owing to shared environment, given that spouseâpair correlations were negligible (\u3c1.5% explained variation in all cases) and is distinct from previous genetic and acquired factors that are known to influence serum lipid levels. Conclusions:
These findings support the concept that unknown genetic and epigenetic contributors are responsible for most of the heritable component of the plasma lipid phenotype, and that, at present, the clinical utility of knowing ageâmatched parental lipid levels in assessing risk of dyslipidemia supersedes individual locus effects. Our results support the clinical utility of knowing parental lipid levels in assessing future risk of dyslipidemia
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Seafloor deformation and forecasts of the April 2011 eruption at Axial Seamount
Axial Seamount is an active submarine volcano located at the intersection between the Cobb hotspot and the Juan de Fuca spreading centre in the northeast Pacific Ocean1, 2. The volcano has been closely monitored since it erupted in 1998 (refs 3, 4). Since then, Axial Seamount seemed to exhibit a similar inflationâdeflation cycle to basaltic volcanoes on land and, on that basis, was expected to erupt again sometime before 2014 or 2020 (refs 5, 6). In April 2011 Axial Seamount erupted. Here we report continuous measurements of ocean bottom pressure that document the deflationâinflation cycle of Axial Seamount between 1998 and 2011. We find that the volcano inflation rate, caused by the intrusion of magma, gradually increased in the months leading up to the 2011 eruption. Sudden uplift occurred 40â55âmin before the eruption onset, which we interpret as a precursor event. Based on our measurements of ground deformation through the entire eruption cycle at Axial Seamount, we suggest that another eruption could occur as early as 2018. We propose that the long-term eruptive cycle of Axial Seamount could be more predictable compared with its subaerial counterparts because the volcano receives a relatively steady supply of magma through the Cobb hotspot and because it is located on thin oceanic crust at a spreading plate boundary
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