2,925,536 research outputs found

    Role of tephra in dating Polynesian settlement and impact, New Zealand

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    Tephrochronology in its original sense is the use of tephra layers as time-stratigraphic marker beds to establish numerical or relative ages (Lowe and Hunt, 2001). Tephra layers have been described and studied in New Zealand for more than 160 years (the German naturalist and surgeon Ernst Dieffenbach described ‘recognizable’ tephra sections in his 1843 book Travels in New Zealand), and the first isopach map, showing fallout from the deadly plinian basaltic eruption of Mt Tarawera on 10 June 1886, was published in 1888 (Lowe, 1990; Lowe et al., 2002). More recently, a wide range of tephra-related paleoenvironmental research has been undertaken (e.g., Lowe and Newnham, 1999; Newnham and Lowe, 1999; Newnham et al., 1999, 2004; Shane, 2000), including new advances in the role of tephra in linking and dating sites containing evidence for abrupt climatic change (e.g., Newnham and Lowe, 2000; Newnham et al., 2003). Here we focus on the use of tephrochronology in dating the arrival and impacts of the first humans in New Zealand, a difficult problem for which this technique has proven to be of critical importance

    Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Portraits Playing Card deck featuring Abraham Lincoln

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    Box (2671 C) containing Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Portrait Playing Cards. One deck illustrated with portrait of A. Lincoln (2671 A), the other with George Washington (2671 B). There are 54 cards total. On the back of each card is a portrait of President George Washington. printed by Standcraft Products a subsidiary of Brown & Bigelow (American, 1920s-1980s) copyright held by Eisenhower College (American, 1965-1982)https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-artifacts/4667/thumbnail.jp

    Gendered retailing: a study of customer perceptions of front line staff in the DIY sector

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    This paper reports findings from a small scale study exploring the role gender plays in the interactions between customers and front-line staff in DIY retailing. Drawing on materials gathered through observations, informal discussions with staff and focus groups, this study suggests that “maleness” pervades many aspects of DIY retailing. For the respondents the image of the case retailer, B&Q, and the products sold had male connotations. Furthermore, male customers perceived male customer-facing staff to have better knowledge of technical DIY than female employees, even though this was not always the case. Given the rising interest from women in home improvements, it would appear that measures need to be put in place to create a more “inclusive” DIY store environment for female customers, and one that challenges the stereotypical assumptions held by many male home improvement customers
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