TY - JOUR
T1 - Composition, Abundance, and Life History of Mysids (Crustacea: Mysida) in the Coastal Lagoons of MD, USA
AN - 1859497071; PQ0003989666
AB - The composition, abundance, biomass, and life history of mysid species were investigated and described for the first time in the Maryland Coastal Bays (38 degree N, 75 degree W), Mid-Western Atlantic, using data collected from 2010 to 2013. Three species of mysids were collected, with Neomysis americana being the most abundant species (maximum mean abundance 6.7 plus or minus 6.4 numbers (nos.) m super(-2) in July 2013 and biomass 2.78 plus or minus 2.76-mg dry weight (DW) m super(-2) in July 2012). Americamysis bahia was the second most abundant species (maximum mean abundance: 0.7 plus or minus 0.4 nos. m super(-2) and biomass: 0.23 plus or minus 0.14 mg DW m super(-2) in March 2012). Metamysidopsis swifti made up 0.02 to 2 % of mysids and were found in samples collected mainly from southern Chincoteague Bay close to that Bay's inlet in the fall of 2012. The two most abundant mysid species reproduced continuously from March to July (Neomysis) and May to October (Americamysis). N. americana had larger body and brood sizes than A. bahia. Mysids were relatively low in abundance in late summer, a period of relatively high biomass of fish predators, than during other seasons, suggesting that intense predation might be controlling their abundance. The increase in mysid abundance in the fall following their disappearance in late summer without evidence of reproductive activities suggests species migration from coastal waters into the Maryland Coastal Bays. This annual mysid subsidy perhaps helps to sustain their populations within the bays.
JF - Estuaries and Coasts
AU - Mayor, Ejiroghene
AU - Chigbu, Paulinus
AU - Pierson, James
AU - Kennedy, Victor S
AD - NSF CREST-Center for the Integrated Study of Coastal Ecosystem Processes and Dynamics in the Mid-Atlantic Region, and NOAA Living Marine Resources Cooperative Science Center, Department of Natural Sciences, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Princess Anne, MD, 21853, USA, pchigbu@umes.edu
Y1 - 2017/01//
PY - 2017
DA - January 2017
SP - 224
EP - 234
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 40
IS - 1
SN - 1559-2723, 1559-2723
KW - Water Resources Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources
KW - ANW, USA, Chincoteague Bay
KW - Estuarine dynamics
KW - Inlets
KW - Coastal Waters
KW - Estuaries
KW - Abundance
KW - Predation
KW - Brackish
KW - Biomass
KW - Migration
KW - Lagoons
KW - ANW, USA, Maryland
KW - Water
KW - Dominant species
KW - Life history
KW - Fish
KW - Coasts
KW - Bays
KW - O 1070:Ecology/Community Studies
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - Q2 09107:History and development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1859497071?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awaterresources&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Estuaries+and+Coasts&rft.atitle=Composition%2C+Abundance%2C+and+Life+History+of+Mysids+%28Crustacea%3A+Mysida%29+in+the+Coastal+Lagoons+of+MD%2C+USA&rft.au=Mayor%2C+Ejiroghene%3BChigbu%2C+Paulinus%3BPierson%2C+James%3BKennedy%2C+Victor+S&rft.aulast=Mayor&rft.aufirst=Ejiroghene&rft.date=2017-01-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=224&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Estuaries+and+Coasts&rft.issn=15592723&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs12237-016-0131-z
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 51
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Estuarine dynamics; Dominant species; Life history; Predation; Abundance; Fish; Biomass; Water; Bays; Inlets; Coastal Waters; Estuaries; Lagoons; Migration; Coasts; ANW, USA, Chincoteague Bay; ANW, USA, Maryland; Brackish
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12237-016-0131-z
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Lasing and anti-lasing in a single cavity
AN - 1868327418; PQ0004023531
AB - Lasing, light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation, is a key attribute for many important applications in optical communications, medicine and defence. Conversely, anti-lasing represents the time-reversed counterpart of laser emission, where incoming radiation is coherently absorbed. Here, we experimentally realize lasing and anti-lasing at the same frequency in a single cavity using parity-time symmetry. Because of the time-reversal property, the demonstrated lasing and anti-lasing resonances share common resonant features such as identical frequency dependence, coherent in-phase response and fine spectral resolution. Lasing and anti-lasing in a single device offers a new route for light modulation with high contrast approaching the ultimate limit.
JF - Nature Photonics
AU - Wong, Zi Jing
AU - Xu, Ye-Long
AU - Kim, Jeongmin
AU - O'Brien, Kevin
AU - Wang, Yuan
AU - Feng, Liang
AU - Zhang, Xiang
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, 3112 Etcheverry Hall, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
Y1 - 2016/12//
PY - 2016
DA - December 2016
SP - 796
EP - 801
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building London N1 9XW United Kingdom
VL - 10
IS - 12
SN - 1749-4885, 1749-4885
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Cavities
KW - Communication
KW - Lasers
KW - Frequency dependence
KW - Light effects
KW - W 30965:Miscellaneous, Reviews
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1868327418?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature+Photonics&rft.atitle=Lasing+and+anti-lasing+in+a+single+cavity&rft.au=Wong%2C+Zi+Jing%3BXu%2C+Ye-Long%3BKim%2C+Jeongmin%3BO%27Brien%2C+Kevin%3BWang%2C+Yuan%3BFeng%2C+Liang%3BZhang%2C+Xiang&rft.aulast=Wong&rft.aufirst=Zi&rft.date=2016-12-01&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=12&rft.spage=796&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature+Photonics&rft.issn=17494885&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fnphoton.2016.216
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cavities; Communication; Lasers; Frequency dependence; Light effects
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nphoton.2016.216
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - CERTIFIED TO COLLECT
AN - 1859471428; PQ0003968884
AB - Rainwater catchment systems are water collection systems that harvest rainwater at the first point of contact from rainfall. These systems can be used for irrigation and, when designed and evaluated properly, are suitable for drinking water usage. Catchment systems vary from rooftop coatings and liners to gutters and more. For example, a catchment system may include a rooftop coating and gutters that allow rainwater to flow to the final collection point. In the past few years, rain barrels have become increasingly popular with homeowners as a way to live a more sustainable lifestyle.
JF - Water Quality Products
AU - Holmes, Felicia
AD - NSF Intl.'s Municipal Water Products Program, fholmes@nsf.org
Y1 - 2016/12//
PY - 2016
DA - December 2016
PB - Scranton Gillette Communications, Inc.
SN - 1092-0978, 1092-0978
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Flow
KW - Catchment area
KW - Rainfall
KW - Water quality
KW - Water
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Drains
KW - Catchment Areas
KW - Coating materials
KW - Irrigation
KW - Water Quality
KW - Catchments
KW - Rain
KW - Drinking water
KW - Coatings
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1859471428?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Quality+Products&rft.atitle=CERTIFIED+TO+COLLECT&rft.au=Holmes%2C+Felicia&rft.aulast=Holmes&rft.aufirst=Felicia&rft.date=2016-12-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Quality+Products&rft.issn=10920978&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Catchment area; Rainfall; Irrigation; Coating materials; Water quality; Drinking water; Water; Catchments; Rain; Coatings; Flow; Drinking Water; Catchment Areas; Water Quality; Drains
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The history of volcanology in Costa Rica; from the Amerindian legends to the beginning of the twenty-first century
AN - 1859789558; 2017-006268
AB - We divide the narrative history of legends on volcanoes, descriptions of volcanic landscape, eruptions and products, and the gradual development of volcanology in Costa Rica as a formal science, into several periods or stages. Each stage is discussed in detail in the text: (a) pre-Columbian period (11 500 BC-AD 1502); (b) colonization period (1502-1718); (c) first period (1719-1887); (d) second period (1888-1925); (e) third period (1926-62), and (f) fourth period (1963-present). The social and economic contribution of volcanology research is also discussed.
JF - Special Publication - Geological Society of London
AU - Alvarado, Guillermo E
AU - Patino, Lina C
Y1 - 2016/11/09/
PY - 2016
DA - 2016 Nov 09
PB - Geological Society of London, London
VL - 442
SN - 0305-8719, 0305-8719
KW - methods
KW - anthropology
KW - Costa Rica
KW - research
KW - volcanology
KW - history
KW - observatories
KW - geoscience
KW - volcanism
KW - eruptions
KW - volcanoes
KW - historical documents
KW - Irazu
KW - Central America
KW - instruments
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1859789558?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Special+Publication+-+Geological+Society+of+London&rft.atitle=The+history+of+volcanology+in+Costa+Rica%3B+from+the+Amerindian+legends+to+the+beginning+of+the+twenty-first+century&rft.au=Alvarado%2C+Guillermo+E%3BPatino%2C+Lina+C&rft.aulast=Alvarado&rft.aufirst=Samir&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=3&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+research&rft.issn=00431354&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://sp.lyellcollection.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 69
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. portrs., geol. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
N1 - CODEN - GSLSBW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - anthropology; Central America; Costa Rica; eruptions; geoscience; historical documents; history; instruments; Irazu; methods; observatories; research; volcanism; volcanoes; volcanology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/SP442.35
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Characterizing Heterogeneity in Infiltration Rates During Managed Aquifer Recharge
AN - 1855075179; PQ0003960658
AB - Infiltration rate is the key parameter that describes how water moves from the surface into a groundwater aquifer during managed aquifer recharge (MAR). Characterization of infiltration rate heterogeneity in space and time is valuable information for MAR system operation. In this study, we utilized fiber optic distributed temperature sensing (FO-DTS) observations and the phase shift of the diurnal temperature signal between two vertically co-located fiber optic cables to characterize infiltration rate spatially and temporally in a MAR basin. The FO-DTS measurements revealed spatial heterogeneity of infiltration rate: approximately 78% of the recharge water infiltrated through 50% of the pond bottom on average. We also introduced a metric for quantifying how the infiltration rate in a recharge pond changes over time, which enables FO-DTS to be used as a method for monitoring MAR and informing maintenance decisions. By monitoring this metric, we found high-spatial variability in how rapidly infiltration rate changed during the test period. We attributed this variability to biological pore clogging and found a relationship between high initial infiltration rate and the most rapid pore clogging. We found a strong relationship ( R super(2)=0.8) between observed maximum infiltration rates and electrical resistivity measurements from electrical resistivity tomography data taken in the same basin when dry. This result shows that the combined acquisition of DTS and ERT data can improve the design and operation of a MAR pond significantly by providing the critical information needed about spatial variability in parameters controlling infiltration rates. Article Impact Statement: Introduces local infiltration efficiency metric for MAR monitoring and shows that spatial soil heterogeneity affects clogging.
JF - Ground Water
AU - Mawer, Chloe
AU - Parsekian, Andrew
AU - Pidlisecky, Adam
AU - Knight, Rosemary
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, CA 94305.
Y1 - 2016/11//
PY - 2016
DA - November 2016
SP - 818
EP - 829
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 54
IS - 6
SN - 0017-467X, 0017-467X
KW - Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources
KW - Aquifers
KW - Optics
KW - Aquifer
KW - Variability
KW - Electrical resistivity
KW - Infiltration Rate
KW - Basins
KW - Resistivity
KW - Ponds
KW - Water
KW - Soil
KW - Soils
KW - Ground water
KW - Heterogeneity
KW - Spatial variability
KW - Recharge
KW - Diurnal variations
KW - Fibre optics
KW - Temperature
KW - Inland water environment
KW - Maintenance
KW - Diurnal temperature
KW - Infiltration rate
KW - Aquifer recharge
KW - Water management
KW - Infiltration
KW - Clogging
KW - Monitoring
KW - Groundwater
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - Q2 09222:Methods and instruments
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - M2 556.14:Infiltration/Soil Moisture (556.14)
KW - ENA 07:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1855075179?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ground+Water&rft.atitle=Characterizing+Heterogeneity+in+Infiltration+Rates+During+Managed+Aquifer+Recharge&rft.au=Mawer%2C+Chloe%3BParsekian%2C+Andrew%3BPidlisecky%2C+Adam%3BKnight%2C+Rosemary&rft.aulast=Mawer&rft.aufirst=Chloe&rft.date=2016-11-01&rft.volume=54&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=818&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ground+Water&rft.issn=0017467X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fgwat.12423
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Aquifer; Fibre optics; Water management; Soils; Ground water; Electrical resistivity; Inland water environment; Water; Ponds; Aquifers; Infiltration rate; Aquifer recharge; Infiltration; Diurnal temperature; Spatial variability; Soil; Diurnal variations; Optics; Temperature; Basins; Groundwater; Maintenance; Recharge; Variability; Infiltration Rate; Clogging; Monitoring; Heterogeneity; Resistivity
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gwat.12423
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-scale chemical assembly of atomically thin transistors and circuits
AN - 1846397396; PQ0003843293
AB - Next-generation electronics calls for new materials beyond silicon, aiming at increased functionality, performance and scaling in integrated circuits. In this respect, two-dimensional gapless graphene and semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides have emerged as promising candidates due to their atomic thickness and chemical stability. However, difficulties with precise spatial control during their assembly currently impede actual integration into devices. Here, we report on the large-scale, spatially controlled synthesis of heterostructures made of single-layer semiconducting molybdenum disulfide contacting conductive graphene. Transmission electron microscopy studies reveal that the single-layer molybdenum disulfide nucleates at the graphene edges. We demonstrate that such chemically assembled atomic transistors exhibit high transconductance (10 mu S), on-off ratio (10 super(6)) and mobility (17cm super(2)V super(-1)s super(-1)). The precise site selectivity from atomically thin conducting and semiconducting crystals enables us to exploit these heterostructures to assemble two-dimensional logic circuits, such as an NMOS inverter with high voltage gain (up to 70).
JF - Nature Nanotechnology
AU - Zhao, Mervin
AU - Ye, Yu
AU - Han, Yimo
AU - Xia, Yang
AU - Zhu, Hanyu
AU - Wang, Siqi
AU - Wang, Yuan
AU - Muller, David A
AU - Zhang, Xiang
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA; Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
Y1 - 2016/11//
PY - 2016
DA - November 2016
SP - 954
EP - 959
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building London N1 9XW United Kingdom
VL - 11
IS - 11
SN - 1748-3387, 1748-3387
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Silicon
KW - integrated circuits
KW - Mobility
KW - Molybdenum disulfide
KW - Transmission electron microscopy
KW - Crystals
KW - Scaling
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1846397396?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature+Nanotechnology&rft.atitle=Large-scale+chemical+assembly+of+atomically+thin+transistors+and+circuits&rft.au=Zhao%2C+Mervin%3BYe%2C+Yu%3BHan%2C+Yimo%3BXia%2C+Yang%3BZhu%2C+Hanyu%3BWang%2C+Siqi%3BWang%2C+Yuan%3BMuller%2C+David+A%3BZhang%2C+Xiang&rft.aulast=Zhao&rft.aufirst=Mervin&rft.date=2016-11-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=954&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature+Nanotechnology&rft.issn=17483387&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fnnano.2016.115
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Silicon; integrated circuits; Mobility; Molybdenum disulfide; Transmission electron microscopy; Crystals; Scaling
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nnano.2016.115
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Extraction and characterization of triglycerides from coffeeweed and switchgrass seeds as potential feedstocks for biodiesel production
AN - 1815699406; PQ0003582865
AB - BACKGROUND Although switchgrass has been developed as a biofuel feedstock and its potential for bioethanol and bio-oil from fast pyrolysis reported in the literature, the use of the seeds of switchgrass as a source of triglycerides for biodiesel production has not been reported. Similarly, the potential for extracting triglycerides from coffeeweed (an invasive plant of no current economic value) needs to be investigated to ascertain its potential economic use for biodiesel production. RESULTS The results show that coffeeweed and switchgrass seeds contain known triglycerides which are 983 and 1000gkg super(-1) respectively of the fatty acids found in edible vegetable oils such as sunflower, corn and soybean oils. In addition, the triglyceride yields of 53-67gkg super(-1) of the seed samples are in the range of commercial oil-producing seeds such as corn (42gkg super(-1)). CONCLUSION The results also indicate that the two non-edible oils could be used as substitutes for edible oil for biodiesel production. In addition, the use of seeds of switchgrass for non-edible oil production (as a feedstock for the production of biodiesel) further increases the total biofuel yield when switchgrass is cultivated for use as energy feedstock for pyrolysis oil and biodiesel production.
JF - Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture
AU - Armah-Agyeman, Grace
AU - Gyamerah, Michael
AU - Biney, Paul O
AU - Woldesenbet, Selamawit
AD - NSF CREST Center for Energy & Environmental Sustainability, Roy G. Perry College of Engineering, PO Box 519, MS 2500, Prairie View A&M University, Prairie View, TX, 77446, USA.
Y1 - 2016/10//
PY - 2016
DA - October 2016
SP - 4390
EP - 4397
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., 1105 N Market St Wilmington DE 19801
VL - 96
IS - 13
SN - 0022-5142, 0022-5142
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Agriculture
KW - Fuel technology
KW - Vegetables
KW - Invasive plants
KW - Triglycerides
KW - Corn
KW - Economics
KW - Ethanol
KW - Seeds
KW - Oils
KW - Fats and oils
KW - Soybeans
KW - Pyrolysis
KW - Energy
KW - Fatty acids
KW - Diesel
KW - Plant extracts
KW - Oil and gas production
KW - Biofuels
KW - Helianthus
KW - ENA 03:Energy
KW - W 30935:Food Biotechnology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1815699406?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+Biology&rft.atitle=Viable+algae+released+by+the+seastar+Dermasteriasimbricata+feeding+on+the+symbiotic+sea+anemone+Anthopleura+elegantissima&rft.au=Bachman%2C+Sarah%3BMuller-Parker%2C+Gisele&rft.aulast=Bachman&rft.aufirst=Sarah&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=150&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=369&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+Biology&rft.issn=00253162&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00227-006-0344-y
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-12
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Seeds; Vegetables; Oils; Soybeans; Pyrolysis; Triglycerides; Energy; Economics; Fatty acids; Diesel; Plant extracts; Biofuels; Ethanol; Agriculture; Fuel technology; Invasive plants; Corn; Fats and oils; Oil and gas production; Helianthus
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.7649
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geoelectric hazard maps for the continental United States
AN - 1863566515; 2017-008668
AB - In support of a multiagency project for assessing induction hazards, we present maps of extreme-value geoelectric amplitudes over about half of the continental United States. These maps are constructed using a parameterization of induction: estimates of Earth surface impedance, obtained at discrete geographic sites from magnetotelluric survey data, are convolved with latitude-dependent statistical maps of extreme-value geomagnetic activity, obtained from decades of magnetic observatory data. Geoelectric amplitudes are estimated for geomagnetic waveforms having 240 s sinusoidal period and amplitudes over 10 min that exceed a once-per-century threshold. As a result of the combination of geographic differences in geomagnetic activity and Earth surface impedance, once-per-century geoelectric amplitudes span more than 2 orders of magnitude and are an intricate function of location. For north-south induction, once-per-century geoelectric amplitudes across large parts of the United States have a median value of 0.26 V/km; for east-west geomagnetic variation the median value is 0.23 V/km. At some locations, once-per-century geoelectric amplitudes exceed 3 V/km. Abstract Copyright (2016), . The Authors.
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
AU - Love, Jeffrey J
AU - Pulkkinen, Antti
AU - Bedrosian, Paul A
AU - Jonas, Seth
AU - Kelbert, Anna
AU - Rigler, E Joshua
AU - Finn, Carol A
AU - Balch, Christopher C
AU - Rutledge, Robert
AU - Waggel, Richard M
AU - Sabata, Andrew T
AU - Kozyra, Janet U
AU - Black, Carrie E
Y1 - 2016/09/28/
PY - 2016
DA - 2016 Sep 28
SP - 9415
EP - 9424
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 43
IS - 18
SN - 0094-8276, 0094-8276
KW - United States
KW - electrical conductivity
KW - geologic hazards
KW - magnetic storms
KW - induction
KW - geophysical methods
KW - electrical methods
KW - magnetic methods
KW - electrical field
KW - waveforms
KW - geologic hazards maps
KW - magnetic field
KW - magnetotelluric methods
KW - conductivity
KW - maps
KW - natural hazards
KW - electromagnetic methods
KW - storms
KW - electromagnetic induction
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1863566515?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.atitle=Geoelectric+hazard+maps+for+the+continental+United+States&rft.au=Love%2C+Jeffrey+J%3BPulkkinen%2C+Antti%3BBedrosian%2C+Paul+A%3BJonas%2C+Seth%3BKelbert%2C+Anna%3BRigler%2C+E+Joshua%3BFinn%2C+Carol+A%3BBalch%2C+Christopher+C%3BRutledge%2C+Robert%3BWaggel%2C+Richard+M%3BSabata%2C+Andrew+T%3BKozyra%2C+Janet+U%3BBlack%2C+Carrie+E&rft.aulast=Love&rft.aufirst=Jeffrey&rft.date=2016-09-28&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=18&rft.spage=9415&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.issn=00948276&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2F2016GL070469
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/%28ISSN%291944-8007/issues
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, United Kingdom
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 61
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-02
N1 - CODEN - GPRLAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - conductivity; electrical conductivity; electrical field; electrical methods; electromagnetic induction; electromagnetic methods; geologic hazards; geologic hazards maps; geophysical methods; induction; magnetic field; magnetic methods; magnetic storms; magnetotelluric methods; maps; natural hazards; storms; United States; waveforms
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2016GL070469
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - N-Nitrosamines and halogenated disinfection byproducts in U.S. Full Advanced Treatment trains for potable reuse.
AN - 1807079288; 27262122
AB - Water utilities are increasingly considering indirect and direct potable reuse of municipal wastewater effluents. Disinfection byproducts (DBPs), particularly N-nitrosamines, are key contaminants of potential health concern for potable reuse. This study quantified the concentrations of N-nitrosamines and a suite of regulated and unregulated halogenated DBPs across five U.S. potable reuse Full Advanced Treatment trains incorporating microfiltration, reverse osmosis, and UV-based advanced oxidation. Low μg/L concentrations of trihalomethanes, haloacetic acids, dichloroacetonitrile, and dichloroacetamide were detected in the secondary or tertiary wastewater effluents serving as influents to potable reuse treatment trains, while the concentrations of N-nitrosamines were more variable (e.g., <2-320 ng/L for N-nitrosodimethylamine). Ozonation promoted the formation of N-nitrosamines, haloacetaldehydes, and haloacetamides, but biological activated carbon effectively reduced concentrations of these DBPs. Application of chloramines upstream of microfiltration for biofouling control increased DBP concentrations to their highest levels observed along the treatment trains. Reverse osmosis rejected DBPs to varying degrees, ranging from low for some (e.g., N-nitrosamines, trihalomethanes, and haloacetonitriles) to high for other DBPs. UV-based advanced oxidation eliminated N-nitrosamines, but only partially removed halogenated DBPs. Chloramination of the treatment train product waters under simulated distribution system conditions formed additional DBPs, with concentrations often equaling or exceeding those in the treatment train influents. Overall, the concentration profiles of DBPs were fairly consistent within individual treatment trains for sampling campaigns separated by months and across different treatment trains for the same sampling time window. Weighting DBP concentrations by their toxic potencies highlighted the potential significance of haloacetonitriles, which were not effectively removed by reverse osmosis and advanced oxidation, to the DBP-associated toxicity in potable reuse waters.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
JF - Water research
AU - Zeng, Teng
AU - Plewa, Michael J
AU - Mitch, William A
AD - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Syracuse University, 151 Link Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244, United States; Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, United States; National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, United States. ; Department of Crop Sciences and Safe Global Water Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, United States. ; Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, United States; National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, United States. Electronic address: wamitch@stanford.edu.
Y1 - 2016/09/15/
PY - 2016
DA - 2016 Sep 15
SP - 176
EP - 186
VL - 101
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Potable reuse
KW - Halogenated disinfection byproducts
KW - Advanced treatment trains
KW - N-Nitrosamines
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1807079288?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+research&rft.atitle=N-Nitrosamines+and+halogenated+disinfection+byproducts+in+U.S.+Full+Advanced+Treatment+trains+for+potable+reuse.&rft.au=Zeng%2C+Teng%3BPlewa%2C+Michael+J%3BMitch%2C+William+A&rft.aulast=Zeng&rft.aufirst=Teng&rft.date=2016-09-15&rft.volume=101&rft.issue=&rft.spage=176&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+research&rft.issn=1879-2448&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.watres.2016.03.062
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date created - 2016-07-25
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2016.03.062
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - CONSUMER CONCERNS
AN - 1859471948; PQ0003968858
AB - In recent years, there has been increasing consumer concern regarding emerging contaminants in drinking water. The majority of contaminants traditionally found in drinking water either have a known adverse effect on human health or a known effect on taste. Emerging contaminants, also known as incidental contaminants, do not have substantial evidence to show adverse health effects at the trace levels at which they currently are found. However, the mere presence of these contaminants in drinking water has resulted in increased consumer concern.
JF - Water Quality Products
AU - Sheffield, Michael
AD - NSF's Global Filtration Products Program, msheffield@nsf.org
Y1 - 2016/09//
PY - 2016
DA - September 2016
PB - Scranton Gillette Communications, Inc.
SN - 1092-0978, 1092-0978
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Contamination
KW - Water Quality
KW - Taste
KW - Water quality
KW - Trace Levels
KW - Public health
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Consumers
KW - Drinking water
KW - Side effects
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1859471948?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=unknown&rft.jtitle=The+Canberra+Times&rft.atitle=Gone%2C+but+not+forgotten&rft.au=Anonymous&rft.aulast=Anonymous&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2010-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=The+Canberra+Times&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Consumers; Water quality; Taste; Drinking water; Public health; Side effects; Drinking Water; Contamination; Water Quality; Trace Levels
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The influence of melt flux and crustal processing on Re-Os isotope systematics of ocean island basalts; constraints from Galapagos
AN - 1819896293; 2016-079071
AB - New rhenium-osmium data for high-MgO (>9 wt.%) basalts from the Galapagos Archipelago reveal a large variation in (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os (0.1304 to 0.173), comparable with the range shown by primitive global ocean island basalts (OIBs). Basalts with the least radiogenic (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os occur closest to the Galapagos plume stem: those in western Galapagos have low (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os, moderate (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr, (super 143) Nd/ (super 144) Nd, (super 206) Pb/ (super 204) Pb and high (super 3) He/ (super 4) He whereas basalts in the south also have low (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os but more radiogenic (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr, (super 143) Nd/ (super 144) Nd, (super 206) Pb/ (super 204) Pb and (super 3) He/ (super 4) He. Our new Os isotope data are consistent with the previously established spatial zonation of the common global isotopic mantle reservoir "C" and ancient recycled oceanic crust in the mantle plume beneath western and southern parts of Galapagos, respectively. Galapagos basalts with the most radiogenic (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os (up to 0.1875) typically have moderate MgO (7-9 wt.%) and low Os (<50 pg g (super -1) ) but have contrastingly unenriched Sr, Nd and Pb isotope signatures. We interpret this decoupling of chalcophile and lithophile isotopic systems as due to assimilation of young Pacific lower crust during crystal fractionation. Mixing models show the assimilated crust must have higher contents of Re and Os, and more radiogenic (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os (0.32), than previously proposed for oceanic gabbros. We suggest the inferred, exceptionally-high radiogenic (super 187) Os of the Pacific crust may be localised and due to sulfides precipitated from hydrothermal systems established at the Galapagos Spreading Centre. High (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os Galapagos basalts are found where plume material is being dispersed laterally away from the plume stem to the adjacent spreading centre (i.e. in central and NE parts of the archipelago). The extent to which crustal processing influences (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os appears to be primarily controlled by melt flux: as distance from the stem of the Galapagos plume increases, the melt flux decreases and crustal assimilation becomes proportionally greater, accounting for co-variations in Os and (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os. The Os concentration threshold below which the (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os of Galapagos basalts are contaminated (100 pg g (super -1) ) is higher than the canonical value (<50 pg g (super -1) ) assumed for many other global OIBs (e.g. for Iceland, Grande Comore and Hawaii). This most likely reflects the low overall melt flux to the crust from the Galapagos plume, which has only a moderate excess temperature and buoyancy flux. Our findings have implications for the interpretation of (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os ratios in other ocean island settings, especially those where large variations in (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os have been linked to heterogeneity in mantle lithology or sulfide populations: the effect of crustal contamination on (super 187) Os/ (super 188) Os may be greater than previously recognised, particularly for basalts associated with weak, low melt flux mantle plumes, such as Tristan, Bouvet, Crozet and St Helena.
JF - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
AU - Gibson, Sally A
AU - Dale, Chris W
AU - Geist, D J
AU - Day, J A
AU - Bruegmann, G
AU - Harpp, K S
Y1 - 2016/09/01/
PY - 2016
DA - 2016 Sep 01
SP - 345
EP - 359
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 449
SN - 0012-821X, 0012-821X
KW - oceanic crust
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Galapagos Rift
KW - thermal ionization mass spectra
KW - rhenium
KW - mass spectra
KW - Os-188/Os-187
KW - platinum group
KW - stable isotopes
KW - melts
KW - assimilation
KW - Galapagos Islands
KW - basalts
KW - spectra
KW - trace elements
KW - crystal fractionation
KW - mantle plumes
KW - East Pacific
KW - recycling
KW - isotope ratios
KW - magma contamination
KW - East Pacific Ocean Islands
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - osmium
KW - ocean-island basalts
KW - crust
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1819896293?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Earth+and+Planetary+Science+Letters&rft.atitle=The+influence+of+melt+flux+and+crustal+processing+on+Re-Os+isotope+systematics+of+ocean+island+basalts%3B+constraints+from+Galapagos&rft.au=Gibson%2C+Sally+A%3BDale%2C+Chris+W%3BGeist%2C+D+J%3BDay%2C+J+A%3BBruegmann%2C+G%3BHarpp%2C+K+S&rft.aulast=Gibson&rft.aufirst=Sally&rft.date=2016-09-01&rft.volume=449&rft.issue=&rft.spage=345&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Earth+and+Planetary+Science+Letters&rft.issn=0012821X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.epsl.2016.05.021
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0012821X
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 59
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-16
N1 - CODEN - EPSLA2
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - assimilation; basalts; crust; crystal fractionation; East Pacific; East Pacific Ocean Islands; Galapagos Islands; Galapagos Rift; ICP mass spectra; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; magma contamination; magmas; mantle plumes; mass spectra; melts; metals; ocean-island basalts; oceanic crust; Os-188/Os-187; osmium; Pacific Ocean; plate tectonics; platinum group; recycling; rhenium; spectra; stable isotopes; thermal ionization mass spectra; trace elements; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2016.05.021
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Gold nanoparticle-oligonucleotide conjugate to detect the sequence of lung cancer biomarker
AN - 1827901760; PQ0003693432
AB - Aimml: The aim of this project was to synthesize and characterize gold nanoparticles (GNPs) to trace the sequence of the hnRNPB1as a lung cancer biomarker. Methods: In the synthesis of GNPs with characteristics appropriate for conjugation, the size, morphology, and shape of the synthesized GNPs were determined by using spectrophotometry and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), followed by designing a probe for hnRNPB1biomarker with characteristics suitable for conjugation. Next, the GNPs were functionalized with a single-stranded DNA probe that was specific for the biomarker, for the characterization and confirmation of the conjugation process. Finally, for determination of minimum level of detection in solution including DNA target and probe aggregation, the changes in the absorption spectra of the samples in the range of 250-750 nm were determined using the NanoDrop ND 1000 spectrophotometer. Results: The surface of GNPs can be modified by utilizing ligands to selectively attach biomarkers. Thiol-bonding of DNA and chemical functionalization of GNPs are the most common approaches. Colloidal gold was synthesized with the citrate reduction method, as described by Turkevich et al. in 1951. In this study, the probe for hnRNPB1 was designed with a thiol crosslinker. Every set of conjugated GNPs was complementary to one end of the hnRNPB1 biomarker, and the probes were aligned in a tail to tail fashion onto the target. Conclusion: Uniform GNPs were synthesized by the citrate reduction technique, and the outcomes of trials with variation in factors (shape and size of the nanoparticles, gold concentration, and conjugation between GNP and probes) were investigated. The gold nanoprobe-based technique is better than the PCR-based techniques, because there are no requirements of enzymatic amplification and gel electrophoresis, and the evaluation can be done using small amounts of sample.
JF - Artificial Cells, Nanomedicine, and Biotechnology
AU - Daraee, Hadis
AU - Pourhassanmoghadam, Mohammad
AU - Akbarzadeh, Abolfazl
AU - Zarghami, Nosratollah
AU - Rahmati-Yamchi, Mohammad
AD - Iran National Science Foundation: INSF, Iran
Y1 - 2016/08/17/
PY - 2016
DA - 2016 Aug 17
SP - 1417
EP - 1423
PB - Informa Healthcare, 52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York New York 10017 USA
VL - 44
IS - 6
SN - 2169-1401, 2169-1401
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Tails
KW - DNA probes
KW - Transmission electron microscopy
KW - Probes
KW - biomarkers
KW - Gel electrophoresis
KW - Thiols
KW - Gold
KW - Spectrophotometry
KW - nanoparticles
KW - nanotechnology
KW - Lung cancer
KW - Citric acid
KW - N 14810:Methods
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1827901760?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=unknown&rft.jtitle=The+Canberra+Times&rft.atitle=When+it%27s+my+way+or+the+highway&rft.au=Anonymous&rft.aulast=Anonymous&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2010-04-18&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=The+Canberra+Times&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-12
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Tails; Transmission electron microscopy; DNA probes; Probes; biomarkers; Gel electrophoresis; Thiols; Gold; Spectrophotometry; nanoparticles; Citric acid; Lung cancer; nanotechnology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/21691401.2015.1031905
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Urban base flow with low impact development
AN - 1815699163; PQ0003584311
AB - A novel form of urbanization, low impact development (LID), aims to engineer systems that replicate natural hydrologic functioning, in part by infiltrating stormwater close to the impervious surfaces that generate it. We sought to statistically evaluate changes in a base flow regime because of urbanization with LID, specifically changes in base flow magnitude, seasonality, and rate of change. We used a case study watershed in Clarksburg, Maryland, in which streamflow was monitored during whole-watershed urbanization from forest and agricultural to suburban residential development using LID. The 1.11-km super(2) watershed contains 73 infiltration-focused stormwater facilities, including bioretention facilities, dry wells, and dry swales. We examined annual and monthly flow during and after urbanization (2004-2014) and compared alterations to nearby forested and urban control watersheds. We show that total streamflow and base flow increased in the LID watershed during urbanization as compared with control watersheds. The LID watershed had more gradual storm recessions after urbanization and attenuated seasonality in base flow. These flow regime changes may be because of a reduction in evapotranspiration because of the overall decrease in vegetative cover with urbanization and the increase in point sources of recharge. Precipitation that may once have infiltrated soil, been stored in soil moisture to be eventually transpired in a forested landscape, may now be recharged and become base flow. The transfer of evapotranspiration to base flow is an unintended consequence to the water balance of LID.
JF - Hydrological Processes
AU - Bhaskar, Aditi S
AU - Hogan, Dianna M
AU - Archfield, Stacey A
AD - National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow hosted at U.S. Geological Survey, Eastern Geographic Science Center, 12201 Sunrise Valley Drive, MSN 521, Reston, VA, 20192, USA.
Y1 - 2016/08//
PY - 2016
DA - August 2016
SP - 3156
EP - 3171
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 30
IS - 18
SN - 0885-6087, 0885-6087
KW - Environment Abstracts; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Base Flow
KW - Forests
KW - Watersheds
KW - Storms
KW - Soil
KW - Soils
KW - Seasonal variations
KW - Topography
KW - Hydrologic analysis
KW - Base flow
KW - Landscape
KW - ANW, USA, Maryland
KW - Ecosystem disturbance
KW - Stream flow
KW - Water balance
KW - Soil moisture
KW - Flow
KW - Hydrological Regime
KW - Urbanization
KW - Stormwater
KW - Flow rates
KW - Case studies
KW - Seasonality
KW - Atmospheric precipitations
KW - Streamflow
KW - Evapotranspiration
KW - Precipitation
KW - ENA 06:Food & Drugs
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - Q2 09171:Dynamics of lakes and rivers
KW - M2 556.16:Runoff (556.16)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1815699163?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Hydrological+Processes&rft.atitle=Urban+base+flow+with+low+impact+development&rft.au=Bhaskar%2C+Aditi+S%3BHogan%2C+Dianna+M%3BArchfield%2C+Stacey+A&rft.aulast=Bhaskar&rft.aufirst=Aditi&rft.date=2016-08-01&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=18&rft.spage=3156&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Hydrological+Processes&rft.issn=08856087&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fhyp.10808
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atmospheric precipitations; Water balance; Seasonality; Urbanization; Soils; Evapotranspiration; Watersheds; Ecosystem disturbance; Stream flow; Hydrologic analysis; Base flow; Precipitation; Soil moisture; Storms; Topography; Soil; Case studies; Landscape; Forests; Seasonal variations; Flow rates; Flow; Hydrological Regime; Base Flow; Streamflow; Stormwater; ANW, USA, Maryland
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10808
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - MICROCYSTIN: DANGER IN THE LAKE
AN - 1859493129; PQ0003968848
AB - Cyanotoxins are chemical contaminants in surface water formed by cyanobacteria. Also known as blue-green algae because of their ability to use photosynthesis like plants, cyanobacteria create oxygen as they feed and grow from plentiful nutrients and sunshine.
JF - Water Quality Products
AU - Buck, Stefan
AD - NSF Intl.'s Filtration Program, sbuck@nsf.org
Y1 - 2016/07//
PY - 2016
DA - July 2016
PB - Scranton Gillette Communications, Inc.
SN - 1092-0978, 1092-0978
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Pollution Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Contamination
KW - Photosynthesis
KW - Surface water
KW - Microcystins
KW - Nutrients
KW - Surface Water
KW - Water quality
KW - Hazards
KW - Lakes
KW - Chemical pollution
KW - Algae
KW - Biological poisons
KW - Water Quality
KW - Oxygen
KW - Cyanobacteria
KW - Nutrients (mineral)
KW - Cyanophyta
KW - Feeds
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - K 03450:Ecology
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1859493129?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Quality+Products&rft.atitle=MICROCYSTIN%3A+DANGER+IN+THE+LAKE&rft.au=Buck%2C+Stefan&rft.aulast=Buck&rft.aufirst=Stefan&rft.date=2016-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Quality+Products&rft.issn=10920978&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Hazards; Cyanobacteria; Photosynthesis; Biological poisons; Surface water; Nutrients (mineral); Water quality; Algae; Oxygen; Microcystins; Nutrients; Lakes; Chemical pollution; Contamination; Water Quality; Surface Water; Cyanophyta; Feeds
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Electrical generation and control of the valley carriers in a monolayer transition metal dichalcogenide
AN - 1808738646; PQ0003392230
AB - Electrically controlling the flow of charge carriers is the foundation of modern electronics. By accessing the extra spin degree of freedom (DOF) in electronics, spintronics allows for information processes such as magnetoresistive random-access memory. Recently, atomic membranes of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) were found to support unequal and distinguishable carrier distribution in different crystal momentum valleys. This valley polarization of carriers enables a new DOF for information processing. A variety of valleytronic devices such as valley filters and valves have been proposed, and optical valley excitation has been observed. However, to realize its potential in electronics it is necessary to electrically control the valley DOF, which has so far remained a significant challenge. Here, we experimentally demonstrate the electrical generation and control of valley polarization. This is achieved through spin injection via a diluted ferromagnetic semiconductor and measured through the helicity of the electroluminescence due to the spin-valley locking in TMDC monolayers. We also report a new scheme of electronic devices that combine both the spin and valley DOFs. Such direct electrical generation and control of valley carriers opens up new dimensions in utilizing both the spin and valley DOFs for next-generation electronics and computing.
JF - Nature Nanotechnology
AU - Ye, Yu
AU - Xiao, Jun
AU - Wang, Hailong
AU - Ye, Ziliang
AU - Zhu, Hanyu
AU - Zhao, Mervin
AU - Wang, Yuan
AU - Zhao, Jianhua
AU - Yin, Xiaobo
AU - Zhang, Xiang
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, University of California, 3112 Etcheverry Hall, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
Y1 - 2016/07//
PY - 2016
DA - July 2016
SP - 598
EP - 602
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building London N1 9XW United Kingdom
VL - 11
IS - 7
SN - 1748-3387, 1748-3387
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Filters
KW - Memory
KW - Information processing
KW - Transition metals
KW - Electronic equipment
KW - Crystals
KW - Polarization
KW - W 30965:Miscellaneous, Reviews
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomacromolecules&rft.atitle=Lipase-Catalyzed+Copolymerization+of+omega-Pentadecalactone+with+p-+Dioxanone+and+Characterization+of+Copolymer+Thermal+and+Crystalline+Properties&rft.au=Jiang%2C+Zhaozhong%3BAzim%2C+Himanshu%3BGross%2C+Richard+A%3BFocarete%2C+Maria+Letizia%3BScandola%2C+Mariastella&rft.aulast=Jiang&rft.aufirst=Zhaozhong&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=2262&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomacromolecules&rft.issn=15257797&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbm070138a
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Filters; Memory; Information processing; Electronic equipment; Transition metals; Crystals; Polarization
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nnano.2016.49
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Translating microfluidics: Cell separation technologies and their barriers to commercialization.
AN - 1826698686; 27282966
AB - Advances in microfluidic cell sorting have revolutionized the ways in which cell-containing fluids are processed, now providing performances comparable to, or exceeding, traditional systems, but in a vastly miniaturized format. These technologies exploit a wide variety of physical phenomena to manipulate cells and fluid flow, such as magnetic traps, sound waves and flow-altering micropatterns, and they can evaluate single cells by immobilizing them onto surfaces for chemotherapeutic assessment, encapsulate cells into picoliter droplets for toxicity screenings and examine the interactions between pairs of cells in response to new, experimental drugs. However, despite the massive surge of innovation in these high-performance lab-on-a-chip devices, few have undergone successful commercialization, and no device has been translated to a widely distributed clinical commodity to date. Persistent challenges such as an increasingly saturated patent landscape as well as complex user interfaces are among several factors that may contribute to their slowed progress. In this article, we identify several of the leading microfluidic technologies for sorting cells that are poised for clinical translation; we examine the principal barriers preventing their routine clinical use; finally, we provide a prospectus to elucidate the key criteria that must be met to overcome those barriers. Once established, these tools may soon transform how clinical labs study various ailments and diseases by separating cells for downstream sequencing and enabling other forms of advanced cellular or sub-cellular analysis. © 2016 International Clinical Cytometry Society.
© 2016 International Clinical Cytometry Society.
JF - Cytometry. Part B, Clinical cytometry
AU - Shields, C Wyatt
AU - Ohiri, Korine A
AU - Szott, Luisa M
AU - López, Gabriel P
AD - NSF Research Triangle Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, 27708.
Y1 - 2016/06/10/
PY - 2016
DA - 2016 Jun 10
KW - microfluidic
KW - cell sorting
KW - commercial translation
KW - flow cytometry
KW - lab on a chip
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1826698686?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Cytometry.+Part+B%2C+Clinical+cytometry&rft.atitle=Translating+microfluidics%3A+Cell+separation+technologies+and+their+barriers+to+commercialization.&rft.au=Shields%2C+C+Wyatt%3BOhiri%2C+Korine+A%3BSzott%2C+Luisa+M%3BL%C3%B3pez%2C+Gabriel+P&rft.aulast=Shields&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2016-06-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Cytometry.+Part+B%2C+Clinical+cytometry&rft.issn=1552-4957&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fcyto.b.21388
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date created - 2016-07-05
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cyto.b.21388
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Oral intake of ranitidine increases urinary excretion of N-nitrosodimethylamine.
AN - 1791328489; 26992900
AB - The H2-receptor antagonist, ranitidine, is among the most widely used pharmaceuticals to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease and peptic ulcers. While previous studies have demonstrated that amines can form N-nitrosamines when exposed to nitrite at stomach-relevant pH, N-nitrosamine formation from ranitidine, an amine-based pharmaceutical, has not been demonstrated under these conditions. In this work, we confirmed the production of N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), a potent carcinogen, by nitrosation of ranitidine under stomach-relevant pH conditions in vitro We also evaluated the urinary NDMA excretion attributable to ingestion of clinically used ranitidine doses. Urine samples collected from five female and five male, healthy adult volunteers over 24-h periods before and after consumption of 150mg ranitidine were analyzed for residual ranitidine, ranitidine metabolites, NDMA, total N-nitrosamines and dimethylamine. Following ranitidine intake, the urinary NDMA excreted over 24h increased 400-folds from 110 to 47 600ng, while total N-nitrosamines increased 5-folds. NDMA excretion rates after ranitidine intake equaled or exceeded those observed previously in patients with schistosomiasis, a disease wherein N-nitrosamines are implicated as the etiological agents for bladder cancer. Due to metabolism within the body, urinary NDMA measurements represent a lower-bound estimate of systemic NDMA exposure. Our results suggest a need to evaluate the risks attributable to NDMA associated with chronic consumption of ranitidine, and to identify alternative treatments that minimize exposure to N-nitrosamines.
JF - Carcinogenesis
AU - Zeng, Teng
AU - Mitch, William A
AD - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Syracuse University, 151 Link Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, USA and National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. ; Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, USA and National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305, USA wamitch@stanford.edu.
Y1 - 2016/06//
PY - 2016
DA - June 2016
SP - 625
EP - 634
VL - 37
IS - 6
KW - Carcinogens
KW - 0
KW - Nitrosamines
KW - Ranitidine
KW - 884KT10YB7
KW - Dimethylnitrosamine
KW - M43H21IO8R
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Administration, Oral
KW - Young Adult
KW - Nitrosamines -- urine
KW - Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
KW - Humans
KW - Carcinogens -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Adult
KW - Nitrosamines -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Middle Aged
KW - Male
KW - Female
KW - Ranitidine -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Ranitidine -- administration & dosage
KW - Dimethylnitrosamine -- urine
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2017-02-06
N1 - Date created - 2016-05-24
N1 - Date revised - 2017-02-08
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-08
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgw034
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Induced Apoptosis Investigation in Wild-type and FLT3-ITD Acute Myeloid Leukemia Cells by Nanochannel Electroporation and Single-cell qRT-PCR
AN - 1808638443; PQ0003354385
AB - Nanochannel electroporation (NEP) was applied to deliver precise dosages of myeloid cell leukemia-1 (Mcl-1)-specific siRNA and molecular beacons to two types of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells, FMS-like tyrosine kinase-3 wild-type (WT) and internal tandem duplications (ITD) type at the single-cell level. NEP, together with single-cell quantitative reverse transcription PCR, led to an observation showing nearly 20-folds more Mcl-1 siRNA than MCL1 mRNA were required to induce cell death for both cell lines and patient blasts, i.e., ~8,800 siRNAs for ~500+ or -50 mRNAs in ITD cells and ~6,000 siRNAs for ~300+ or -50 mRNAs in WT cells. A time-lapse study revealed that >75% MCL1 mRNA was downregulated within 1 hour after delivery of a small amount of siRNA. However, additional siRNA was required to inhibit the newly transcribed mRNA for >12 hours until the cell lost its ability of self-protection recovery. A multidelivery strategy of low doses and short delivery interval, which require 77% less siRNA and has the potential of lower side effects and clinical cost, was as effective as a single high-dose siRNA delivery. Our method provides a viable analytical tool to investigate gene silencing at the single-cell level for oligonucleotide-based therapy.
JF - Molecular Therapy
AU - Gao, Keliang
AU - Huang, Xiaomeng
AU - Chiang, Chi-Ling
AU - Wang, Xinmei
AU - Chang, Lingqian
AU - Boukany, Pouyan
AU - Marcucci, Guido
AU - Lee, Robert
AU - Lee, Ly James
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA, lee.31@osu.edu
Y1 - 2016/05//
PY - 2016
DA - May 2016
SP - 956
EP - 964
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building London N1 9XW United Kingdom
VL - 24
IS - 5
SN - 1525-0016, 1525-0016
KW - Immunology Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Apoptosis
KW - Electroporation
KW - Acute myeloid leukemia
KW - Myeloid cells
KW - Reverse transcription
KW - siRNA
KW - Mcl-1 protein
KW - Protein-tyrosine kinase
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Blast
KW - Side effects
KW - Gene silencing
KW - W 30905:Medical Applications
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1808638443?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Molecular+Therapy&rft.atitle=Induced+Apoptosis+Investigation+in+Wild-type+and+FLT3-ITD+Acute+Myeloid+Leukemia+Cells+by+Nanochannel+Electroporation+and+Single-cell+qRT-PCR&rft.au=Gao%2C+Keliang%3BHuang%2C+Xiaomeng%3BChiang%2C+Chi-Ling%3BWang%2C+Xinmei%3BChang%2C+Lingqian%3BBoukany%2C+Pouyan%3BMarcucci%2C+Guido%3BLee%2C+Robert%3BLee%2C+Ly+James&rft.aulast=Gao&rft.aufirst=Keliang&rft.date=2016-05-01&rft.volume=24&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=956&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Molecular+Therapy&rft.issn=15250016&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fmt.2016.6
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-26
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Apoptosis; Electroporation; siRNA; Acute myeloid leukemia; Mcl-1 protein; Protein-tyrosine kinase; Polymerase chain reaction; Myeloid cells; Blast; Side effects; Reverse transcription; Gene silencing
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mt.2016.6
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - RO CERTIFICATION: RO EFFICIENCY RATING CERTIFICATION
AN - 1859480179; PQ0003968812
AB - Reverse osmosis (RO) systems are water treatment devices that reduce a variety of total dissolved solids (TDS) and other contaminants by reversing the natural flow of water. These systems use reverse pressure to force water through a semi-permeable membrane, so water passes from a more concentrated solution to a more dilute solution. Most RO systems also include pre- and post-filters to keep contaminants like silt and chlorine from damaging the membrane.
JF - Water Quality Products
AU - Andrew, Rick
AD - NSF Intl, andrew@nsf.org
Y1 - 2016/04//
PY - 2016
DA - April 2016
PB - Scranton Gillette Communications, Inc.
SN - 1092-0978, 1092-0978
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Dissolved Solids
KW - Reverse osmosis
KW - Contamination
KW - Chlorine
KW - Water quality
KW - Water
KW - Water treatment
KW - Water Treatment
KW - Dissolved solids
KW - Certification
KW - Membranes
KW - Water Quality
KW - Silt
KW - Reverse Osmosis
KW - Natural Flow
KW - Chlorination
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Journal+of+Evaluation&rft.atitle=Models+and+Mechanisms+for+Evaluating+Government-Funded+Research%3A+An+International+Comparison&rft.au=Coryn%2C+Chris+L.%3BHattie%2C+John+A.%3BScriven%2C+Michael%3BHartmann%2C+David+J.&rft.aulast=Coryn&rft.aufirst=Chris&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=28&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=437&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Journal+of+Evaluation&rft.issn=10982140&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Reverse osmosis; Water treatment; Chlorine; Silt; Certification; Water quality; Water; Membranes; Dissolved solids; Chlorination; Dissolved Solids; Contamination; Natural Flow; Water Quality; Water Treatment; Reverse Osmosis
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Particle-Free Conductive Inks for Better Printed Electronics
AN - 1783932181
AB - At the heart of printed electronics are conductive traces that connect various electronic components. Such traces are typically manufactured by sputter (vapor-phase) deposition of metals under vacuum; relatively thick traces are generally printed from paste-based inks. The inks used in these traditional processes are dispersions of micro- or nano-scale metallic or carbon particles mixed with polymeric binders and dispersants. These dispersions present several limitations.
JF - Chemical Engineering Progress
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2016/04//
PY - 2016
DA - Apr 2016
SP - 16
CY - New York
PB - American Institute of Chemical Engineers
VL - 112
IS - 4
SN - 03607275
KW - Engineering--Chemical Engineering
KW - Printed circuit boards
KW - Research
KW - Conductivity
KW - Ink jet printing
KW - Solvents
KW - Government grants
KW - United States--US
KW - 8640:Chemical industry
KW - 8350:Transportation & travel industry
KW - 9550:Public sector
KW - 5400:Research & development
KW - 9190:United States
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aabitrade&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts%3A+Annual+Meeting+-+American+Association+of+Petroleum+Geologists&rft.atitle=Deep+time%3B+a+frontier+for+paleoclimate+research&rft.au=Lane%2C+H+Richard%3BPerlmutter%2C+Martin+A%3BArmentrout%2C+John+M%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Lane&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=2007&rft.issue=&rft.spage=79&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts%3A+Annual+Meeting+-+American+Association+of+Petroleum+Geologists&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Central
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation
N1 - Copyright - Copyright American Institute of Chemical Engineers Apr 2016
N1 - Document feature - Illustrations
N1 - Last updated - 2016-04-25
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - United States--US
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Forensic analysis of tertiary-butyl alcohol (TBA) detections in a hydrocarbon-rich groundwater basin.
AN - 1771451810; 26946495
AB - Tertiary-butyl alcohol (TBA), a high-production volume (HPV) chemical, was sporadically detected in groundwater and coalbed methane (CBM) wells in southeastern Colorado's hydrocarbon-rich Raton Basin. TBA concentrations in shallow water wells averaged 75.1 μg/L, while detections in deeper CBM wells averaged 14.4 μg/L. The detection of TBA prompted a forensic investigation to try to identify potential sources. Historic and recent data were reviewed to determine if there was a discernable pattern of TBA occurrence. Supplemental samples from domestic water wells, monitor wells, CBM wells, surface waters, and hydraulic fracturing (HF) fluids were analyzed for TBA in conjunction with methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) and ethyl tertiary-butyl ether (ETBE), proxies for evidence of contamination from reformulated gasoline or associated oxygenates. Exploratory microbiological sampling was conducted to determine if methanotrophic organisms co-occurred with TBA in individual wells. Meaningful comparisons of historic TBA data were limited due to widely varying reporting limits. Mapping of TBA occurrence did not reveal any spatial patterns or physical associations with CBM operations or contamination plumes. Additionally, TBA was not detected in HF fluids or surface water samples. Given the widespread use of TBA in industrial and consumer products, including water well completion materials, it is likely that multiple diffuse sources exist. Exploratory data on stable isotopes, dissolved gases, and microbial profiling provide preliminary evidence that methanotrophic activity may be producing TBA from naturally occurring isobutane. Reported TBA concentrations were significantly below a conservative risk-based drinking water screening level of 8000 μg/L derived from animal toxicity data.
JF - Environmental monitoring and assessment
AU - Quast, Konrad W
AU - Levine, Audrey D
AU - Kester, Janet E
AU - Fordham, Carolyn L
AD - Amec Foster Wheeler, 2030 Falling Waters Road, Suite 300, Knoxville, TN, 37922, USA. konrad.quast@amecfw.com. ; National Science Foundation and Flinders University, PO Box 576, Garrett Park, MD, 20896, USA. ; Newfields, LLC, 155 Cedar Lake Drive, Wentzville, MO, 63385, USA. ; Terra Technologies Environmental Services, LLC, 2132 Augusta Drive, Evergreen, CO, 80439, USA.
Y1 - 2016/04//
PY - 2016
DA - April 2016
SP - 208
VL - 188
IS - 4
KW - Ethyl Ethers
KW - 0
KW - Gasoline
KW - Hydrocarbons
KW - Methyl Ethers
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical
KW - ethyl tert-butyl ether
KW - 3R9B16WR19
KW - tert-Butyl Alcohol
KW - MD83SFE959
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Risk-based screening levels
KW - Groundwater
KW - Tertiary-butyl alcohol
KW - Coalbed methane
KW - Hydraulic fracturing
KW - Environmental Monitoring
KW - Hydrocarbons -- analysis
KW - Gasoline -- analysis
KW - Methyl Ethers -- analysis
KW - Colorado
KW - tert-Butyl Alcohol -- analysis
KW - Groundwater -- chemistry
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical -- analysis
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+monitoring+and+assessment&rft.atitle=Forensic+analysis+of+tertiary-butyl+alcohol+%28TBA%29+detections+in+a+hydrocarbon-rich+groundwater+basin.&rft.au=Quast%2C+Konrad+W%3BLevine%2C+Audrey+D%3BKester%2C+Janet+E%3BFordham%2C+Carolyn+L&rft.aulast=Quast&rft.aufirst=Konrad&rft.date=2016-04-01&rft.volume=188&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=208&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+monitoring+and+assessment&rft.issn=1573-2959&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10661-016-5193-7
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2016-08-05
N1 - Date created - 2016-03-07
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-016-5193-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Dose and Effect Thresholds for Early Key Events in a PPARα-Mediated Mode of Action.
AN - 1760922742; 26519955
AB - Current strategies for predicting adverse health outcomes of environmental chemicals are centered on early key events in toxicity pathways. However, quantitative relationships between early molecular changes in a given pathway and later health effects are often poorly defined. The goal of this study was to evaluate short-term key event indicators using qualitative and quantitative methods in an established pathway of mouse liver tumorigenesis mediated by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα). Male B6C3F1 mice were exposed for 7 days to di (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP), di-n-octyl phthalate (DNOP), and n-butyl benzyl phthalate (BBP), which vary in PPARα activity and liver tumorigenicity. Each phthalate increased expression of select PPARα target genes at 7 days, while only DEHP significantly increased liver cell proliferation labeling index (LI). Transcriptional benchmark dose (BMDT) estimates for dose-related genomic markers stratified phthalates according to hypothetical tumorigenic potencies, unlike BMDs for non-genomic endpoints (relative liver weights or proliferation). The 7-day BMDT values for Acot1 as a surrogate measure for PPARα activation were 29, 370, and 676 mg/kg/day for DEHP, DNOP, and BBP, respectively, distinguishing DEHP (liver tumor BMD of 35 mg/kg/day) from non-tumorigenic DNOP and BBP. Effect thresholds were generated using linear regression of DEHP effects at 7 days and 2-year tumor incidence values to anchor early response molecular indicators and a later phenotypic outcome. Thresholds varied widely by marker, from 2-fold (Pdk4 and proliferation LI) to 30-fold (Acot1) induction to reach hypothetical tumorigenic expression levels. These findings highlight key issues in defining thresholds for biological adversity based on molecular changes.
Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology 2015. This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the US.
JF - Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology
AU - Lake, April D
AU - Wood, Charles E
AU - Bhat, Virunya S
AU - Chorley, Brian N
AU - Carswell, Gleta K
AU - Sey, Yusupha M
AU - Kenyon, Elaina M
AU - Padnos, Beth
AU - Moore, Tanya M
AU - Tennant, Alan H
AU - Schmid, Judith E
AU - George, Barbara Jane
AU - Ross, David G
AU - Hughes, Michael F
AU - Corton, J Christopher
AU - Simmons, Jane Ellen
AU - McQueen, Charlene A
AU - Hester, Susan D
AD - *Curriculum in Toxicology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599; Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE) participant at the National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory (NHEERL), Office of Research and Development (ORD), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711; Integrated Systems Toxicology Division, NHEERL, ORD, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711; ; Integrated Systems Toxicology Division, NHEERL, ORD, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711; ; NSF International, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105; ; Toxicology Assessment Division, NHEERL, ORD; and. ; Office of the Associate Director for Health, NHEERL, ORD, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711. ; Integrated Systems Toxicology Division, NHEERL, ORD, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711; hester.susan@epa.gov.
Y1 - 2016/02//
PY - 2016
DA - February 2016
SP - 312
EP - 325
VL - 149
IS - 2
KW - PPAR alpha
KW - 0
KW - Phthalic Acids
KW - Diethylhexyl Phthalate
KW - C42K0PH13C
KW - butylbenzyl phthalate
KW - YPC4PJX59M
KW - Index Medicus
KW - liver carcinogenesis
KW - phthalate
KW - mode of action
KW - benchmark dose
KW - peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha
KW - adverse outcome pathway
KW - Animals
KW - Liver -- pathology
KW - Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
KW - Diethylhexyl Phthalate -- toxicity
KW - Linear Models
KW - Liver -- metabolism
KW - Mice
KW - Benchmarking
KW - Cell Proliferation
KW - Phthalic Acids -- toxicity
KW - Polymerase Chain Reaction
KW - Body Weight -- drug effects
KW - Oxidative Stress
KW - Male
KW - Liver Neoplasms, Experimental -- chemically induced
KW - PPAR alpha -- physiology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1760922742?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Toxicological+sciences+%3A+an+official+journal+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology&rft.atitle=Dose+and+Effect+Thresholds+for+Early+Key+Events+in+a+PPAR%CE%B1-Mediated+Mode+of+Action.&rft.au=Lake%2C+April+D%3BWood%2C+Charles+E%3BBhat%2C+Virunya+S%3BChorley%2C+Brian+N%3BCarswell%2C+Gleta+K%3BSey%2C+Yusupha+M%3BKenyon%2C+Elaina+M%3BPadnos%2C+Beth%3BMoore%2C+Tanya+M%3BTennant%2C+Alan+H%3BSchmid%2C+Judith+E%3BGeorge%2C+Barbara+Jane%3BRoss%2C+David+G%3BHughes%2C+Michael+F%3BCorton%2C+J+Christopher%3BSimmons%2C+Jane+Ellen%3BMcQueen%2C+Charlene+A%3BHester%2C+Susan+D&rft.aulast=Lake&rft.aufirst=April&rft.date=2016-02-01&rft.volume=149&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=312&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Toxicological+sciences+%3A+an+official+journal+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology&rft.issn=1096-0929&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093%2Ftoxsci%2Fkfv236
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2016-11-02
N1 - Date created - 2016-01-26
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfv236
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Toxicological assessment of nattokinase derived from Bacillus subtilis var. natto.
AN - 1760876835; 26740078
AB - Subtilisin NAT, commonly known as "nattokinase," is a fibrinolytic enzyme produced by the bacterial strain B. subtilis var. natto, which plays a central role in the fermentation of soybeans into the popular Japanese food natto. Recent studies have reported on the potential anticoagulatory and antihypertensive effects of nattokinase administration in humans, with no indication of adverse effects. To evaluate the safety of nattokinase in a more comprehensive manner, several GLP-compliant studies in rodents and human volunteers have been conducted with the enzyme product, NSK-SD (Japan Bio Science Laboratory Co., Ltd., Japan). Nattokinase was non-mutagenic and non-clastogenic in vitro, and no adverse effects were observed in 28-day and 90-day subchronic toxicity studies conducted in Sprague-Dawley rats at doses up to 167 mg/kg-day and 1000 mg/kg-day, respectively. Mice inoculated with 7.55 × 10(8) CFU of the enzyme-producing bacterial strain showed no signs of toxicity or residual tissue concentrations of viable bacteria. Additionally consumption of 10 mg/kg-day nattokinase for 4 weeks was well tolerated in healthy human volunteers. These findings suggest that the oral consumption of nattokinase is of low toxicological concern. The 90-day oral subchronic NOAEL for nattokinase in male and female Sprague-Dawley rats is 1000 mg/kg-day, the highest dose tested.
Copyright © 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
JF - Food and chemical toxicology : an international journal published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association
AU - Lampe, Bradley J
AU - English, J Caroline
AD - NSF International, 789 N. Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105, United States. Electronic address: blampe@nsf.org. ; NSF International, 789 N. Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105, United States. Electronic address: jenglish@nsf.org.
Y1 - 2016/02//
PY - 2016
DA - February 2016
SP - 87
EP - 99
VL - 88
KW - Subtilisins
KW - EC 3.4.21.-
KW - nattokinase
KW - H81695M5OP
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Alkaline phosphatase
KW - Nattokinase
KW - Natto
KW - Bacillus subtilis var. natto
KW - Young Adult
KW - Animals
KW - Drug Administration Schedule
KW - Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
KW - Fermentation
KW - Humans
KW - Mice
KW - Rats
KW - Rats, Sprague-Dawley
KW - Adult
KW - Soy Foods
KW - Middle Aged
KW - Female
KW - Male
KW - Subtilisins -- administration & dosage
KW - Bacillus subtilis -- metabolism
KW - Subtilisins -- toxicity
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Food+and+chemical+toxicology+%3A+an+international+journal+published+for+the+British+Industrial+Biological+Research+Association&rft.atitle=Toxicological+assessment+of+nattokinase+derived+from+Bacillus+subtilis+var.+natto.&rft.au=Lampe%2C+Bradley+J%3BEnglish%2C+J+Caroline&rft.aulast=Lampe&rft.aufirst=Bradley&rft.date=2016-02-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=&rft.spage=87&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Food+and+chemical+toxicology+%3A+an+international+journal+published+for+the+British+Industrial+Biological+Research+Association&rft.issn=1873-6351&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.fct.2015.12.025
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2016-10-25
N1 - Date created - 2016-01-23
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fct.2015.12.025
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring deliberate mentoring approaches aimed at improving the recruitment and persistence of undergraduate women in the geosciences
AN - 1861110956; 787346-77
AB - In the United States, men outnumber women in many science and engineering fields by nearly 3 to 1. In fields like physics or the geosciences, the gender gap can be even wider. Previous studies have identified the early college years as a critical point where many women exit STEM. An interdisciplinary team including expertise in the geosciences, psychology, education and STEM persistence have recently begun a 5-year project focused on understanding whether mentoring can increase the interest, persistence, and achievement of undergraduate women in the geosciences. The program focuses on mentoring first and second year female undergraduate students from four universities in Colorado and Wyoming and three universities in North and South Carolina. The mentoring program includes a weekend workshop, access to professional women across geoscience fields, and both in-person and virtual peer networks. The first weekend workshops were held in October 2015. The web-platform, designed to enable peer-mentoring and provide resources, was also launched in fall 2015: geosciencewomen.org. We will present an overview of the major components and lessons learned from the workshops. Using feedback from online surveys, we aim to 1) quantify the impact of the interventions (i.e. workshops and the professional and peer mentoring) on participants' intentions and behaviors related to geoscience career choices, 2) quantify the impact of the interventions on the skills and resources participants can use to overcome barriers for a career in the geosciences, and 3) quantify the key features of the interventions that predict positive changes in participants' perceptions of and beliefs about the geosciences. We will examine key processes that may explain why intervention elements have their effect on geoscience career choices. This project directly addresses diversity issues in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. The activities aim to increase the number and diversity of women pursuing and completing an education in the geosciences. The project provides a program model and website for others to use, enhancing the potential for scalability.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Fischer, Emily V
AU - Pollack, Ilana B
AU - Burt, Melissa
AU - Bloodhart, Brittany
AU - Sample McMeeking, Laura
AU - Bowker, Cheryl
AU - Adams, Amanda
AU - Barnes, Rebecca
AU - Clinton, Sandra
AU - Godfrey, Elaine
AU - Hernandez, Paul
AU - Henderson, Heather
AU - Sayers, Jennifer
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2016
PY - 2016
DA - 2016
SP - Abstract no. 68
EP - 4
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 48
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1861110956?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefinprocess&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=American+Geophysical+Union+2006+fall+meeting&rft.au=Illangasekare%2C+T+H%3BObeysekera%2C+J%3BPetera%2C+L%3BGunatilaka%2C+A%3BDharmagunawardane%2C+H+A%3BLiyanage%2C+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Illangasekare&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=87&rft.issue=Fall+Meeting+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2016 annual meeting & exposition
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef in Process, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. After editing and indexing, this record will be added to Georef. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-24
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sedimentary Sulphur isotopes as tracers for sea level variability at southern Saurashtra coast (Gujarat, Western India)
AN - 1832687513; 782747-53
JF - V.M. Goldschmidt Conference - Program and Abstracts
AU - Banerji, Upasana S
AU - Bhushan, Ravi
AU - Agnihotri, Rajesh
AU - Khonde, Nitesh
AU - Sawlani, Ravi
AU - Sharma, C
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2016
PY - 2016
DA - 2016
SP - 153
PB - Goldschmidt Conference, [varies]
VL - 26
SN - 1042-7287, 1042-7287
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1832687513?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefinprocess&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=V.M.+Goldschmidt+Conference+-+Program+and+Abstracts&rft.atitle=Sedimentary+Sulphur+isotopes+as+tracers+for+sea+level+variability+at+southern+Saurashtra+coast+%28Gujarat%2C+Western+India%29&rft.au=Banerji%2C+Upasana+S%3BBhushan%2C+Ravi%3BAgnihotri%2C+Rajesh%3BKhonde%2C+Nitesh%3BSawlani%2C+Ravi%3BSharma%2C+C%3BJull%2C+A+J+T%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Banerji&rft.aufirst=Upasana&rft.date=2016-01-01&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=&rft.spage=153&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=V.M.+Goldschmidt+Conference+-+Program+and+Abstracts&rft.issn=10427287&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://goldschmidt.info/2016/uploads/abstracts/finalPDFs/153.pdf
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Goldschmidt 2016
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef in Process, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. After editing and indexing, this record will be added to Georef.
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-24
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Highly parallel acoustic assembly of microparticles into well-ordered colloidal crystallites
AN - 1808696339; PQ0003482341
AB - The precise arrangement of microscopic objects is critical to the development of functional materials and ornately patterned surfaces. Here, we present an acoustics-based method for the rapid arrangement of microscopic particles into organized and programmable architectures, which are periodically spaced within a square assembly chamber. This macroscale device employs two-dimensional bulk acoustic standing waves to propel particles along the base of the chamber toward pressure nodes or antinodes, depending on the acoustic contrast factor of the particle, and is capable of simultaneously creating thousands of size-limited, isotropic and anisotropic assemblies within minutes. We pair experiments with Brownian dynamics simulations to model the migration kinetics and assembly patterns of spherical microparticles. We use these insights to predict and subsequently validate the onset of buckling of the assemblies into three-dimensional clusters by experiments upon increasing the acoustic pressure amplitude and the particle concentration. The simulations are also used to inform our experiments for the assembly of non-spherical particles, which are then recovered via fluid evaporation and directly inspected by electron microscopy. This method for assembly of particles offers several notable advantages over other approaches (e.g., magnetics, electrokinetics and optical tweezing) including simplicity, speed and scalability and can also be used in concert with other such approaches for enhancing the types of assemblies achievable.
JF - Soft Matter
AU - Owens, Crystal E
AU - Shields, CWyatt IV
AU - Cruz, Daniela F
AU - Charbonneau, Patrick
AU - Lopez, Gabriel P
AD - NSF Research Triangle Materials Research Science and Engineering Center; Duke University; Durham; NC 27708; USA
Y1 - 2016/01//
PY - 2016
DA - January 2016
SP - 717
EP - 728
PB - Royal Society of Chemistry
VL - 12
IS - 3
SN - 1744-683X, 1744-683X
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Anisotropy
KW - microparticles
KW - Evaporation
KW - Acoustics
KW - Crystals
KW - Migration
KW - Models
KW - Brownian motion
KW - Kinetics
KW - Waves
KW - Nodes
KW - Pressure
KW - Electron microscopy
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1808696339?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Soft+Matter&rft.atitle=Highly+parallel+acoustic+assembly+of+microparticles+into+well-ordered+colloidal+crystallites&rft.au=Owens%2C+Crystal+E%3BShields%2C+CWyatt+IV%3BCruz%2C+Daniela+F%3BCharbonneau%2C+Patrick%3BLopez%2C+Gabriel+P&rft.aulast=Owens&rft.aufirst=Crystal&rft.date=2016-01-01&rft.volume=12&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=717&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Soft+Matter&rft.issn=1744683X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1039%2Fc5sm02348c
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-07-01
N1 - Number of references - 77
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Anisotropy; microparticles; Acoustics; Evaporation; Crystals; Migration; Brownian motion; Models; Kinetics; Waves; Pressure; Nodes; Electron microscopy
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c5sm02348c
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Use of continuous, real-time observations and model simulations to achieve autonomous, adaptive sampling of microbial processes with a robotic sampler
AN - 1780521485; PQ0002834528
AB - The Columbia River has a dynamic and fast flushing estuary impacted by strong advection and mixing of riverine and oceanic waters, and high but variable loads of suspended particulate matter. Transient, but recurring water and nutrient fluxes from end-members impart strong spatial and temporal gradients, contributing to microbiological hotspots that play important ecological roles in the estuary. Investigations of corresponding microbiota require precisely timed samples that are contextualized by physical and biogeochemical data. To accomplish this, we embedded a robotic microbial sampler (Environmental Sample Processor, ESP) within the operations of an interdisciplinary observation and prediction system (Science and Technology University Research Network, SATURN; www.stccmop.org/saturn ). Autonomous, adaptively sampled water collection by the ESP was implemented based on environmental conditions assessed from SATURN physical and biogeochemical sensors. Water was pumped from multiple depths to sensors and the ESP on dry land. If water met user-defined parameters, ESP sampling was automatically initiated. This strategy was tested during three deployments in summer 2013, during which operational tools for analysis and visualization were used to formulate well-constrained mission plans by providing estimates of the intensity and timing of oxygen-depleted ocean water intrusion and estuarine turbidity maxima. This allowed the effective characterization of the impact of these events on selected estuarine microbiota.
JF - Limnology and Oceanography: Methods
AU - Herfort, Lydie
AU - Seaton, Charles
AU - Wilkin, Michael
AU - Roman, Brent
AU - Preston, Christina M
AU - Marin, Roman
AU - Seitz, Kiley
AU - Smith, Maria W
AU - Haynes, Vena
AU - Scholin, Christopher A
AU - Baptista, Antonio M
AU - Simon, Holly M
AD - NSF Science & Technology Center for Coastal Margin Observation & Prediction (CMOP) and Institute of Environmental Health, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Y1 - 2016/01//
PY - 2016
DA - January 2016
SP - 50
EP - 67
PB - Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography
VL - 14
IS - 1
SN - 1541-5856, 1541-5856
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources
KW - Sensors
KW - Hot spots
KW - USA, Columbia R.
KW - Automation
KW - Nutrients
KW - Brackishwater environment
KW - Sampling
KW - Marine
KW - Biogeochemistry
KW - Estuaries
KW - Ocean circulation
KW - Suspended particulate matter
KW - Samplers
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Flushing
KW - Turbidity
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 5040:Data acquisition
KW - Q1 08604:Stock assessment and management
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+New+York+Academy+of+Sciences&rft.atitle=Progress+in+governance+of+converging+technologies+integrated+from+the+nanoscale.&rft.au=Roco%2C+Mihail+C&rft.aulast=Roco&rft.aufirst=Mihail&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=1093&rft.issue=&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+New+York+Academy+of+Sciences&rft.issn=00778923&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sensors; Hot spots; Biogeochemistry; Estuaries; Ocean circulation; Brackishwater environment; Suspended particulate matter; Sampling; Turbidity; Microorganisms; Flushing; Automation; Nutrients; Samplers; USA, Columbia R.; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lom3.10069
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Disturbance opens recruitment sites for bacterial colonization in activated sludge
AN - 1780516249; PQ0002774793
AB - Little is known about the role of immigration in shaping bacterial communities or the factors that may dictate success or failure of colonization by bacteria from regional species pools. To address these knowledge gaps, the influence of bacterial colonization into an ecosystem (activated sludge bioreactor) was measured through a disturbance gradient (successive decreases in the parameter solids retention time) relative to stable operational conditions. Through a DNA sequencing approach, we show that the most abundant bacteria within the immigrant community have a greater probability of colonizing the receiving ecosystem, but mostly as low abundance community members. Only during the disturbance do some of these bacterial populations significantly increase in abundance beyond background levels and in few cases become dominant community members post-disturbance. Two mechanisms facilitate the enhanced enrichment of immigrant populations during disturbance: (i) the availability of resources left unconsumed by established species and (ii) the increased availability of niche space for colonizers to establish and displace resident populations. Thus, as a disturbance decreases local diversity, recruitment sites become available to promote colonization. This work advances our understanding of microbial resource management and diversity maintenance in complex ecosystems.
JF - Environmental Microbiology
AU - Vuono, David C
AU - Munakata-Marr, Junko
AU - Spear, John R
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, NSF Engineering Research Center ReNUWIt, Colorado School of Mines, 1500 Illinois St, Golden, CO, 80401, USA.
Y1 - 2016/01//
PY - 2016
DA - January 2016
SP - 87
EP - 99
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 18
IS - 1
SN - 1462-2912, 1462-2912
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology
KW - Bacteria
KW - Colonization
KW - Activated sludge
KW - DNA sequencing
KW - Immigration
KW - Niches
KW - Bioreactors
KW - Recruitment
KW - Abundance
KW - Background levels
KW - Immigrants
KW - A 01450:Environmental Pollution & Waste Treatment
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1780516249?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologya&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Microbiology&rft.atitle=Disturbance+opens+recruitment+sites+for+bacterial+colonization+in+activated+sludge&rft.au=Vuono%2C+David+C%3BMunakata-Marr%2C+Junko%3BSpear%2C+John+R%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg+E&rft.aulast=Vuono&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2016-01-01&rft.volume=18&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=87&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Microbiology&rft.issn=14622912&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2F1462-2920.12824
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-03
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Activated sludge; Colonization; DNA sequencing; Immigration; Bioreactors; Niches; Background levels; Abundance; Recruitment; Immigrants; Bacteria
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.12824
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of Wastewater Discharge on the Metabolic Potential of the Microbial Community in River Sediments
AN - 1762369650; PQ0002491281
AB - To reveal the variation of microbial community functions during water filtration process in river sediments, which has been utilized widely in natural water treatment systems, this study investigates the influence of municipal wastewater discharge to streams on the phylotype and metabolic potential of the microbiome in upstream and particularly various depths of downstream river sediments. Cluster analyses based on both microbial phylogenetic and functional data collectively revealed that shallow upstream sediments grouped with those from deeper subsurface downstream regions. These sediment samples were distinct from those found in shallow downstream sediments. Functional genes associated with carbohydrate, xenobiotic, and certain amino acid metabolisms were overrepresented in upstream and deep downstream samples. In contrast, the more immediate contact with wastewater discharge in shallow downstream samples resulted in an increase in the relative abundance of genes associated with nitrogen, sulfur, purine and pyrimidine metabolisms, as well as restriction-modification systems. More diverse bacterial phyla were associated with upstream and deep downstream sediments, mainly including Actinobacteria, Planctomycetes, and Firmicutes. In contrast, in shallow downstream sediments, genera affiliated with Betaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria were enriched with putative functions that included ammonia and sulfur oxidation, polyphosphate accumulation, and methylotrophic bacteria. Collectively, these results highlight the enhanced capabilities of microbial communities residing in deeper stream sediments for the transformation of water contaminants and thus provide a foundation for better design of natural water treatment systems to further improve the removal of contaminants.
JF - Microbial Ecology
AU - Li, Dong
AU - Sharp, Jonathan O
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - NSF Engineering Research Center ReNUWIt, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, USA, jdrewes@tum.de
Y1 - 2016/01//
PY - 2016
DA - January 2016
SP - 78
EP - 86
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 71
IS - 1
SN - 0095-3628, 0095-3628
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Ecology Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - Sediment pollution
KW - Sulphur
KW - Man-induced effects
KW - Firmicutes
KW - Streams
KW - Public health
KW - Planctomycetes
KW - Pyrimidines
KW - Water treatment
KW - Actinobacteria
KW - Carbohydrates
KW - Metabolism
KW - Q1 08563:Fishing gear and methods
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Pollution&rft.atitle=Chronic+toxicity+of+sediment-associated+linear+alkylbenzene+sulphonates+%28LAS%29+to+freshwater+benthic+organisms&rft.au=Comber%2C+SDW%3BConrad%2C+A+U%3BHoess%2C+S%3BWebb%2C+S%3BMarshall%2C+S&rft.aulast=Comber&rft.aufirst=SDW&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=144&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=661&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Pollution&rft.issn=02697491&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.envpol.2005.12.049
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-02-01
N1 - Number of references - 28
N1 - Last updated - 2016-02-04
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sediment pollution; Pyrimidines; Sulphur; Water treatment; Man-induced effects; Carbohydrates; Streams; Metabolism; Public health; Planctomycetes; Actinobacteria; Firmicutes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00248-015-0680-x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - MacroSystems Biology: stimulating new perspectives on scaling in ecology
AN - 1762360163; PQ0002526034
JF - Landscape Ecology
AU - Gholz, Henry L
AU - Blood, Elizabeth R
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, Directorate for Biological Sciences, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 635, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA, hgholz@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2016/01//
PY - 2016
DA - January 2016
SP - 215
EP - 216
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 31
IS - 1
SN - 0921-2973, 0921-2973
KW - Ecology Abstracts
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1762360163?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=Preliminary+results+of+the+Lake+Peten+Itza+Scientific+Drilling+Project&rft.au=Hodell%2C+David%3BAnselmetti%2C+Flavio%3BAriztegui%2C+Daniel%3BBrenner%2C+Mark%3BCurtis%2C+Jason&rft.aulast=Hodell&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=5&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-02-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-03
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10980-015-0300-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Extent and impact of Cretaceous magmatism on the formation and evolution of Jurassic oceanic crust in the western Pacific
AN - 1849302377; 2016-110057
AB - Multi-channel seismic (MCS) images and wide-angle sonobuoy data acquired during a 2011 cruise on the R/V Thomas G. Thompson (TN272) show widespread emplacement of igneous sills and broadly thickened oceanic Layer 2 through hundreds of kilometers of oceanic crust in one of the oldest ocean basins in the western Pacific, a region known as the Jurassic Quiet Zone (JQZ). Oceanic crust from the JQZ has grown through at least two main magmatic phases: It was formed by mid-ocean ridge processes in the Jurassic (at nearly equal 170 Ma), and then it was added to by a substantial Cretaceous magmatic event (at nearly equal 75-125 Ma). The scale of Cretaceous magmatism is exemplified by massive seafloor features such as the Ontong Java Plateau, Mid-Pacific Mountains, Marshall-Gilbert Islands, Marcus-Wake Seamount Chain, and numerous guyots, seamounts, and volcaniclastic flows observed throughout the region. We use seismic data to image heavily intruded and modified oceanic crust along an 800-km-long transect through the JQZ in order to examine how processes of secondary crustal growth - including magmatic emplacement, transport, and distribution - are expressed in the structure of modified oceanic crust. We also model gravity anomalies to constrain crustal thickness and depth to the Moho. Our observations suggest that western Pacific crust was modified via the following modes of emplacement: (a) extrusive seafloor flows that may or may not have grown into seamounts, (b) seamounts formed through intrusive diking that pushed older sediments aside during their formation, and (c) igneous sills that intruded sediments at varying depths. Emplacement modes (a) and (b) tend to imply a focused, pipe-like mechanism for melt transport through the lithosphere. Such a mechanism does not explain the observed broadly distributed intrusive emplacement of mode (c) however, which may entail successive sill emplacement between igneous basement and sediments thickening oceanic Layer 2 along nearly equal 400 km of our seismic line. This mode of crustal growth seems to require broad zones of melt transport through the lithosphere and across the Moho.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Feng, H
AU - Lizarralde, D
AU - Tominaga, M
AU - Hart, Laney
AU - Tivey, M
AU - Swift, S A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract V21A
EP - 3016
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1849302377?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Extent+and+impact+of+Cretaceous+magmatism+on+the+formation+and+evolution+of+Jurassic+oceanic+crust+in+the+western+Pacific&rft.au=Feng%2C+H%3BLizarralde%2C+D%3BTominaga%2C+M%3BHart%2C+Laney%3BTivey%2C+M%3BSwift%2C+S+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Feng&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2015-12-01&rft.volume=2015&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbc060094n
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-16
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Volcanic evolution in the Galapagos; the geochemistry and petrology of Espanola Island
AN - 1849300063; 2016-106114
AB - The Galapagos Archipelago consists of a series of volcanic islands located approximately 1,000 km west of South America that are thought to be the result of a mantle plume. The southeasternmost island, Espanola, is one of the smallest of the major islands, measuring only 7 by 14 km and reaching an elevation of 200 m. Espanola is also the oldest island in the chain, with K-Ar dates from 3.01 + or - 0.11 to 3.31 + or - 0.36 million years (Hall et al. 1983; White et al., 1993). The southern coast is defined by cliffs that exceed 100 m in height, made up of nearly flat-lying lavas that are each several meters thick. The northern coastline consists of lavas that dip gently toward the ocean from the highlands, as well as remnants of eroded cinder cones. Paleomagnetic measurements made in the field indicate that the western half of the island is reversely polarized, whereas most lavas measured across the eastern half are normally polarized. Major element analyses of samples from across the island indicate that fractional crystallization is the dominant process controlling chemical variations in Espanola lavas, suggesting a relatively long-lived magmatic plumbing system. Stratigraphically constrained chemical variations suggest the magma chamber may have experienced periodic replenishment by compositionally homogeneous primitive melts. Variable fluid-mobile trace element concentrations provide some evidence for contributions from ancient, recycled oceanic crust to the parental melts. Espanola lavas have more depleted Sr and Pb radiogenic isotope ratios than either Floreana or Fernandina, and lie on a mixing curve between the composition of the plume and that of the depleted upper mantle. Between approximately 3 and 8 Ma, the Galapagos Spreading Center was closer to the Galapagos plume than it is today. Given that Espanola was constructed during the same period, the depleted isotopic signatures suggest that plume-ridge interaction may have been a strong influence on the island's geochemical composition.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - McGuire, Maggie
AU - Varga, Kevin Charles
AU - Harpp, Karen S
AU - Geist, Dennis
AU - Hall, Minard L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract V31D
EP - 3055
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-16
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence for a dying magma chamber at Rabida Island, Galapagos
AN - 1849300047; 2016-106113
AB - Rabida Island in the Galapagos has experienced both explosive and effusive volcanism. It is located to the east of the most active volcanoes of the Galapagos, and previously determined ages range from 0.9 to 1.1 Ma. An unusually curved escarpment cuts the western sector of the island, which might be part of a caldera wall, although its radius of curvature is much greater than that of the island. Lavas range from basalt to rhyolite, and there are also several intermediate compositions, which are unique in the archipelago. A welded ignimbrite crops out in northeast sector, the only such deposit known in the entire region. The volumetric proportion of evolved rocks is unusually high; 25% of the rocks in our comprehensive sample set are intermediate to felsic. The siliceous rocks occur in two clusters in the southern and southwestern sections of the island, suggesting two separate sources. The intermediate rocks are concentrated in the center and northwestern parts of the island. Despite these foci of more siliceous lavas, basalt is the most widespread rock type across the island. It is notable that Rabida is immediately east of Volcan Alcedo, which is the only active Galapagos volcano that has also erupted rhyolite, and south of Santiago Island, which erupted the trachyte dome observed by Charles Darwin in 1835. These observations, in conjunction with the cumulate xenoliths observed in Rabida explosive deposits, are consistent with the evolved rocks resulting from fractional crystallization of a dying magma chamber, as the volcano is carried away from the hotspot.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Bercovici, Hannah
AU - Geist, Dennis
AU - Harpp, Karen S
AU - Almeida, Marco
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract V31D
EP - 3054
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1849300047?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-16
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding magmatic plumbing system dynamics at Fernandina Island, Galapagos
AN - 1844923715; 2016-101122
AB - Fernandina is the most active Galapagos Volcano, and is located closest to the seismically defined hotspot. Allan and Simkin (2000) observed that the subaerial edifice is constructed of homogeneous basalts (Mg# = 49+ or - 2) with highly variable plagioclase phenocryst contents and sparse olivine. Geist et al. (2006) proposed a magmatic plumbing system in which the volcano is supplied by interconnected sills, the shallowest of which is density-stratified: olivine and pyroxene are concentrated at greater depths, whereas less dense plagioclase mush is higher in the sill. Consequently, olivine-rich lava erupts laterally during submarine events, but plagioclase-rich lava supplies subaerial vents. To test this hypothesis, we examine lavas erupted in 1995, 2005, and 2009. These SW flank eruptions emerged alternatively from en echelon radial fissures on the lower flanks and circumferential fissures near the caldera rim. The 1995 radial fissure unzipped downslope and then formed a cone 4 km from the coast, sending flows to the ocean. In 2005, circumferential fissures erupted five flows south of the 1995 fissure. As in 1995, the 2009 fissures opened down the SW flank before focusing to a cone near the 1995 vents, producing 6 km-long flows that also reached the ocean. By correlating plagioclase crystal size distribution and morphologies with single event chronological sequences, we examine Fernandina's magmatic plumbing system. Modal plagioclase in 1995 lava decreases (20% to <5%) throughout the middle eruptive phase. Early 2005 samples are nearly aphyric (Chadwick et al., 2010), with 1-2% plagioclase. The 2009 eruption has reduced plagioclase, similar to mid-1995 samples. Preliminary observations suggest that less plagioclase-rich mush is being flushed out during early-to-medial event sequences, whereas plag phenocrysts are transported more during later phases. Plausible plumbing dynamics suggest a zone of plagioclase-rich mush that is eroded and incorporated into radial fissure eruptions.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Varga, Kevin C
AU - McGuire, Maggie
AU - Geist, Dennis
AU - Harpp, Karen S
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract V43B
EP - 3121
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1844923715?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-01
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Bivalve shell horizons in seafloor pockmarks of the last glacial-interglacial transition suggest a thousand years of methane emissions in the Arctic Ocean
AN - 1840617653; 2016-093690
AB - We studied discrete bivalve shell horizons, in two gravity cores from seafloor pockmarks on the Vestnesa Ridge (ca. 1200 m water depth), western Svalbard (79 degrees 00'N, 06 degrees 55' W) to provide insight into the temporal and spatial dynamics of seabed methane seeps. The shell beds, are dominated by two genera of the family Vesicomyidae: Phreagena s.l. and Isorropodon sp. were 20-30 cm thick centered at 250-400 cm depth in the cores. The carbon isotope composition of inorganic (delta 13C from -13.02 ppm to +2.364 ppm) and organic (delta 13C from -29.283 ppm to -21.33 ppm) shell material indicates that these taxa derived their energy primarily from endosymbiotic chemosynthetic bacteria feeding on methane. In addition, negative delta 13C values for planktonic foraminifera (-6.7 ppm to -3.1 ppm), micritic concretions identified as methane-derived authigenic carbonates and pyrite encrusted fossil worm tubes at the shell horizons indicate a sustained paleo-methane seep environment. Combining sedimentation rates with 14C ages for bivalve material from the shell horizons, we estimate the horizons persisted for about 1000 years between approximately 17,707 to 16,680 yrs. BP (corrected). The major seepage event over a 1000-year time interval was most likely triggered by tectonic stress and the subsequent release of over-pressurized fluids.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Ambrose, William Gerald, Jr
AU - Panieri, Giuliana
AU - Schneider, Andrea
AU - Plaza-Faverola, Andreia Aletia
AU - Carroll, Michael
AU - Astrom, Emmelie K L
AU - Locke, William L
AU - Carroll, JoLynn
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract OS23B
EP - 2011
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-11-17
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Nature of the Jurassic magnetic quiet zone revealed by the sea-surface, mid-water, and near-source magnetic sensor data in the western Pacific
AN - 1832723143; 2016-091849
AB - The nature of the Jurassic Quiet Zone (JQZ) has been a long-standing debate in understanding Earth's geomagnetic field history and behavior. We present a coherent and likely globally significant marine magnetic reversal record for the JQZ by constructing a correlation of new and previously acquired magnetic anomaly profiles in the western Pacific. We obtained a high-resolution marine magnetic anomaly record using sea surface, mid-water (3-km level deep-towed), and near-bottom (Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV)) profiles that targeted a spreading corridor in the Hawaiian lineation in 2011 (TN272 on R/V Thompson) and 2014 (SKQ2014S2 on R/V Sikuliaq). To extract crustal magnetic signals, the sea surface and mid-water magnetic data were corrected for ship-to-sensor offset, the diurnal effect, and the present-day ambient geomagnetic field. Mid-water data were upward continued to a constant 3 km level plane and to the sea surface. Near-bottom data were calibrated to remove the induced magnetic field by AUV Sentry, then corrected for IGRF and diurnal variations. We used these near-source data as an anchor for correlations with the sea surface and mid-water level data because of the AUV's superb inertial navigation and hydrodynamically stable, quiet platform environment. Our sea surface anomaly correlation with the previously established Japanese lineation sequence shows (i) an excellent correlation of anomaly shapes from M29 to M42; (ii) a remarkable similarity in anomaly amplitude envelope, which decreases back in time from M19 to M38, with a minimum at M41, then increases back in time from M42; and (iii) refined locations of pre-M25 lineations in the Hawaiian lineation set. Moreover, short-wavelength anomalies from the mid-water and near-bottom profiles show a strong similarity in the M37/M38 polarity attributes found both in the magnetostratigraphic and marine magnetic records, implying that rapid magnetic reversals were occurring at that time. The average reversal rate calculated from the new Hawaiian sea surface level synthetic block model, coincides with the anomalously high reversal rate for the Japanese lineations, suggesting that reversal rates are highest during periods with the lowest anomaly amplitudes, indicating a very unique period of geomagnetic field behavior in the Earth's history.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Tominaga, Masako
AU - Tivey, Maurice
AU - Sager, William W
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract GP23B
EP - 1310
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1832723143?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-27
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Workshop for early career geoscience faculty; providing resources and support for new faculty to succeed
AN - 1819897057; 2016-078181
AB - A vital strategy to educate future geoscientists is to support faculty at the beginning of their careers, thus catalyzing a career-long impact on the early-career faculty and on their future students. New faculty members are at a pivotal stage in their careers as they step from being research-focused graduate students and post-doctoral scholars, under the guidance of advisors, towards launching independent careers as professors. New faculty commonly, and not unexpectedly, feel overwhelmed as they face challenges to establish themselves in a new environment, prepare new courses, begin new research, and develop a network of support. The workshop for Early Career Geoscience Faculty: Teaching, Research, and Managing Your Career has been offered annually in the U.S. since 1999. The workshop is currently offered through the National Association of Geoscience Teachers On the Cutting Edge professional development program with support from the NSF, AGU and GSA. This five-day workshop, with associated web resources, offers guidance for incorporating evidence-based teaching practices, developing a research program, and managing professional responsibilities in balance with personal lives. The workshop design includes plenary and concurrent sessions, individual consultations, and personalized feedback from workshop participants and leaders. Since 1999, more than 850 U.S. faculty have attended the Early Career Geoscience Faculty workshop. Participants span a wide range of geoscience disciplines, and are in faculty positions at two-year colleges, four-year colleges, comprehensive universities and research universities. The percentages of women ( nearly equal 50%) and underrepresented participants ( nearly equal 8%) are higher than in the general geoscience faculty population. Multiple participants each year are starting positions after receiving all or part of their education outside the U.S. Collectively, participants report that they are better prepared to move forward with their careers as a result of the workshop, that they plan to incorporate evidence-based teaching in their classrooms, and that they leave the workshop with a network of support and the resources needed to enable them succeed. http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/earlycareer
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Hill, T M
AU - Beane, Rachel J
AU - Macdonald, H
AU - Manduca, Cathryn A
AU - Tewksbury, Barbara J
AU - Allen-King, Richelle M
AU - Yuretich, R
AU - Richardson, R M
AU - Ormand, C J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract ED23A
EP - 0855
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-16
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mantle plume capture, anchoring and outflow during ridge interaction
AN - 1807508573; 2016-066870
AB - Geochemical and geophysical studies have shown that >40% of the world's mantle plumes are currently interacting with the global ridge system and such interactions may continue for up to 180 Myr [1]. At sites of plume-ridge interaction up to 1400 km of the spreading centre is influenced by dispersed plume material but there are few constraints on how and where the ridge-ward transfer of deep-sourced material occurs, and also how it is sustained over long time intervals. Galapagos is an archetypal example of an off-axis plume and sheds important light on these mechanisms. The Galapagos plume stem is located approximately 200 km south of the spreading axis and its head influences 1000 km of the ridge. Nevertheless, the site of enriched basalts, greatest crustal thickness and elevated topography on the ridge, together with active volcanism in the archipelago, correlate with a narrow zone ( approximately 150 km) of low-velocity, high-temperature mantle that connects the plume stem and ridge at depths of approximately 100 km[2]. The enriched ridge basalts contain a greater amount of partially-dehydrated, recycled oceanic crust than basalts elsewhere on the spreading axis, or indeed basalts erupted in the region between the plume stem and ridge. The presence of these relatively volatile-rich ridge basalts requires flow of plume material below the peridotite solidus (i.e. >80 km). We propose a 2-stage model for the development and sustainment of a confined zone of deep ridge-ward plume flow. This involves initial on-axis capture and establishment of a sub-ridge channel of plume flow. Subsequent anchoring of the plume stem to a contact point on the ridge during axis migration results in confined ridge-ward flow of plume material via a deep network of melt channels embedded in the normal spreading and advection of the plume head[2]. Importantly, sub-ridge flow is maintained. The physical parameters and styles of mantle flow we have defined for Galapagos are less-well known at other sites of plume-ridge interactions, e.g. Tristan, Amsterdam. The observations require a more dynamically complex model than proposed by most studies, which rely on radial solid-state outflow of heterogeneous plume material to the ridge. [1] Whittaker JM et al (2015) Nature Geosci 10.1038/ngeo2437 [2] Gibson SA, Geist DG & Richards MA (2015) Geochem Geophys Geosyst 10.1002/2015GC005723
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Gibson, Sally A
AU - Richards, Mark A
AU - Geist, Denise
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract DI34A
EP - 06
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1807508573?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-29
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring deliberate mentoring approaches aimed at improving the recruitment and persistence of undergraduate women in the geosciences
AN - 1807507302; 2016-064577
AB - In the United States, men outnumber women in many science and engineering fields by nearly 3 to 1. In fields like physics or the geosciences, the gender gap can be even wider. Previous studies have identified the early college years as a critical point where many women exit STEM disciplines. An interdisciplinary team including experts in the geosciences, psychology, education, and STEM persistence have recently begun a 5-year project focused on understanding whether mentoring can increase the interest, persistence, and achievement of undergraduate women in the geosciences. The program focuses on mentoring first and second year female undergraduate students from three universities in Colorado and Wyoming and four universities in North and South Carolina. The mentoring program includes a weekend workshop, access to professional women across geoscience fields and both in-person and virtual peer networks. The first weekend workshops will be held in October 2015. We will present an overview of the major components and lessons learned from these workshops and showcase the web center, including the online peer-networking forum.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Pollack, Ilana B
AU - Adams, Amanda S
AU - Barnes, Rebecca T
AU - Burt, Melissa A
AU - Clinton, Sandra M
AU - Godfrey, Elaine
AU - Hernandez, Paul
AU - Bloodhart, Brittany
AU - Donaldson, Lisa
AU - Henderson, Heather
AU - Sayers, Jennifer
AU - Sample McMeeking, Laura Beth
AU - Bowker, Cheryl
AU - Fischer, Emily V
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - Abstract ED11C
EP - 0862
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2015
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Exploring+deliberate+mentoring+approaches+aimed+at+improving+the+recruitment+and+persistence+of+undergraduate+women+in+the+geosciences&rft.au=Pollack%2C+Ilana+B%3BAdams%2C+Amanda+S%3BBarnes%2C+Rebecca+T%3BBurt%2C+Melissa+A%3BClinton%2C+Sandra+M%3BGodfrey%2C+Elaine%3BHernandez%2C+Paul%3BBloodhart%2C+Brittany%3BDonaldson%2C+Lisa%3BHenderson%2C+Heather%3BSayers%2C+Jennifer%3BSample+McMeeking%2C+Laura+Beth%3BBowker%2C+Cheryl%3BFischer%2C+Emily+V%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Pollack&rft.aufirst=Ilana&rft.date=2015-12-01&rft.volume=2015&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2015 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-29
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - In the Guise of STEM Education Reform: Opportunity Structures and Outcomes in Inclusive STEM-Focused High Schools
AN - 1773228574; EJ1081863
AB - In this article, we present findings from a three-year comparative longitudinal and ethnographic study of how schools in two cities, Buffalo and Denver, have taken up STEM education reform, including the idea of "inclusive STEM-focused schools," to address weaknesses in urban high schools with majority low-income and minority students. Although introduced with great fanfare, the data indicate that well-meaning efforts toward expanding opportunities in STEM-focused schools for low-income underrepresented minorities quickly dissolved. We focus on mechanisms that seem to underlie this dissolution and consider its contributions to short- and long-term inequalities.
JF - American Educational Research Journal
AU - Weis, Lois
AU - Eisenhart, Margaret
AU - Cipollone, Kristin
AU - Stich, Amy E.
AU - Nikischer, Andrea B.
AU - Hanson, Jarrod
AU - Ohle Leibrandt, Sarah
AU - Allen, Carrie D.
AU - Dominguez, Rachel
Y1 - 2015/12//
PY - 2015
DA - December 2015
SP - 1024
EP - 1059
PB - SAGE Publications. 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320.
VL - 52
IS - 6
SN - 0002-8312, 0002-8312
KW - New York
KW - Colorado
KW - ERIC, Current Index to Journals in Education (CIJE)
KW - High Schools
KW - Secondary Education
KW - Participant Observation
KW - Minority Group Students
KW - Ethnography
KW - STEM Education
KW - Urban Schools
KW - Equal Education
KW - Longitudinal Studies
KW - Low Income Students
KW - Outcomes of Education
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Educational Opportunities
KW - Educational Change
KW - Inclusion
KW - Interviews
KW - High School Students
KW - Disproportionate Representation
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LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 10110 3150; 3176 1387; 5015; 3232 7367; 7454; 4738 9419 10278 8016 4542; 1955 3629 6582; 6175 1326 3629 6582 8836; 3614 537 9804 9351 5964; 11182 9306 5241; Low Income Students; 6714 10278 8016 4542; 2941 2700 9804 9351 5964; 3540 3150 1566; 7613 7234; 5472 3629 6582
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sexual harassment and abuse in sport: The NOC*NSF helpline
AN - 1811939250
AB - Following a high-profile case of child sexual abuse in sport in 1996, the Netherlands Olympic Committee and the Netherlands Sports Confederation (NOC*NSF) established a telephone 'helpline' service on sexual harassment and abuse (SHA). In order to expand their understanding of this problem, NOC*NSF maintained written records of incidents reported to the helpline. These records revealed 323 separate incidents for the period 2001 to 2010. This paper presents a descriptive analysis of this data and discusses the findings. We conclude that whilst there are major limitations to working with information gathered in this way, a sustainable telephone 'helpline' can provide a valuable service for the sports community. Whilst official sources of data are known to under represent the scale of sexual abuse, through collaboration with researchers, such services can also generate important information for policymakers.
JF - International Review for the Sociology of Sport
AU - Vertommen, Tine
AU - Schipper-van Veldhoven, Nicolette HMJ
AU - Hartill, Michael J
AU - Van Den Eede, Filip
AD - University of Antwerp (UA), Belgium; Antwerp University Hospital (UZA), Belgium ; Netherlands Olympic Committee*Netherlands Sports Confederation (NOC*NSF), The Netherlands ; Edge Hill University, UK
Y1 - 2015/11//
PY - 2015
DA - Nov 2015
SP - 822
EP - 839
CY - London
PB - Sage Publications Ltd.
VL - 50
IS - 7
SN - 1012-6902
KW - Sociology
KW - incidents
KW - helpline
KW - sexual harassment and abuse
KW - sport
KW - the Netherlands
KW - Children
KW - Sports
KW - Child Sexual Abuse
KW - Cooperation
KW - Harassment
KW - Sexual Harassment
KW - Netherlands
KW - 0869:mass phenomena; sociology of sports
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LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Copyright - © The Author(s) 2013
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-08
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Netherlands
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1012690213498079
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Ovarian Development and Spawning Seasonality of Goosefish
T2 - 145th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society (AFS 2015)
AN - 1731761237; 6360615
JF - 145th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society (AFS 2015)
AU - Johnson, A
AU - Grier, Harry
AU - McBride, Richard
AU - Lindsay, Evan
AU - Richards, R
Y1 - 2015/08/16/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Aug 16
KW - Ovaries
KW - Spawning
KW - Seasonal variations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1731761237?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=145th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Fisheries+Society+%28AFS+2015%29&rft.atitle=Ovarian+Development+and+Spawning+Seasonality+of+Goosefish&rft.au=Johnson%2C+A%3BGrier%2C+Harry%3BMcBride%2C+Richard%3BLindsay%2C+Evan%3BRichards%2C+R&rft.aulast=Johnson&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2015-08-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=145th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Fisheries+Society+%28AFS+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://afs.confex.com/afs/2015/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-11-06
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-09
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Why the standard method for partitioning functional and phylogenetic diversity is wrong, and what to do about it
T2 - 100th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2015)
AN - 1731766067; 6363087
JF - 100th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2015)
AU - Scheiner, Samuel
AU - Kosman, Evsey
Y1 - 2015/08/09/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Aug 09
KW - Species diversity
KW - Phylogenetics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=100th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2015%29&rft.atitle=Why+the+standard+method+for+partitioning+functional+and+phylogenetic+diversity+is+wrong%2C+and+what+to+do+about+it&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel%3BKosman%2C+Evsey&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2015-08-09&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=100th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2015/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-11-06
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-09
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Leveraging STEM education innovation through assessment
T2 - 100th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2015)
AN - 1731760992; 6361388
JF - 100th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2015)
AU - Singer, Susan
Y1 - 2015/08/09/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Aug 09
KW - Education
KW - Innovations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1731760992?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=100th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2015%29&rft.atitle=Leveraging+STEM+education+innovation+through+assessment&rft.au=Singer%2C+Susan&rft.aulast=Singer&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2015-08-09&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=100th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2015/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-11-06
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-09
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The early Proterozoic Matachewan large igneous province; geochemistry, petrogenesis, and implications for Earth evolution
AN - 1780802262; 2016-032211
AB - The Matachewan Large Igneous Province (LIP) is interpreted to have formed during the early stages of mantle plume-induced continental break-up in the early Proterozoic. When the Matachewan LIP is reconstructed to its original configuration with units from the Superior Craton and other formerly adjacent blocks (Karelia, Kola, Wyoming and Hearne), the dyke swarms, layered intrusions and flood basalts, emplaced over the lifetime of the province, form one of the most extensive magmatic provinces recognized in the geological record. New geochemical data allow, for the first time, the Matachewan LIP to be considered as a single, coherent entity and show that Matachewan LIP rocks share a common tholeiitic composition and trace element geochemistry, characterized by enrichment in the most incompatible elements and depletion in the less incompatible elements. This signature, ubiquitous in early Proterozoic continental magmatic rocks, may indicate that the Matachewan LIP formed through contamination of the primary magmas with lithospheric material or that the early Proterozoic mantle had a fundamentally different composition from the modern mantle. In addition to the radiating geometry of the dyke swarms, a plume origin for the Matachewan LIP is consistent with the geochemistry of some of the suites; these suites are used to constrain a source mantle potential temperature of c. 1500-1550 degrees C. Comparison of these mantle potential temperatures with estimated temperatures for the early Proterozoic upper mantle indicates that they are consistent with a hot mantle plume source for the magmatism. Geochemical data from coeval intrusions suggest that the plume head was compositionally heterogeneous and sampled material from both depleted and enriched mantle. As has been documented with less ancient but similarly vast LIPs, the emplacement of the Matachewan LIP probably had a significant impact on the early Proterozoic global environment. Compilation of the best age estimates for various suites shows that the emplacement of the Matachewan LIP occurred synchronously with the Great Oxidation Event. We explore the potential for the eruption of this LIP and the emission of its associated volcanic gases to have been a driver of the irreversible oxygenation of the Earth.
JF - Journal of Petrology
AU - Ciborowski, T Jake R
AU - Kerr, Andrew C
AU - Ernst, Richard E
AU - McDonald, Iain
AU - Minifie, Matthew J
AU - Harlan, Stephen S
AU - Millar, Ian L
Y1 - 2015/08//
PY - 2015
DA - August 2015
SP - 1459
EP - 1493
PB - Oxford University Press, Oxford
VL - 56
IS - 8
SN - 0022-3530, 0022-3530
KW - flood basalts
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - upper Precambrian
KW - Paleoproterozoic
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - geochemical indicators
KW - dike swarms
KW - basalts
KW - lithogeochemistry
KW - geochemistry
KW - depletion
KW - mantle plumes
KW - Precambrian
KW - magmatism
KW - magma contamination
KW - layered intrusions
KW - Proterozoic
KW - emplacement
KW - Ontario
KW - intrusions
KW - Canada
KW - Great Oxidation Event
KW - Matachewan dike swarm
KW - large igneous provinces
KW - Eastern Canada
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 180
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 9 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-18
N1 - CODEN - JPTGAD
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; Canada; depletion; dike swarms; Eastern Canada; emplacement; flood basalts; geochemical indicators; geochemistry; Great Oxidation Event; igneous rocks; intrusions; large igneous provinces; layered intrusions; lithogeochemistry; magma contamination; magmatism; mantle; mantle plumes; Matachewan dike swarm; Ontario; Paleoproterozoic; Precambrian; Proterozoic; upper Precambrian; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egv038
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Biotransformation of trace organic chemicals during ground water recharge; how useful are first-order rate constants?
AN - 1756505408; 2016-007003
AB - This study developed relationships between the attenuation of emerging trace organic chemicals (TOrC) during managed aquifer recharge (MAR) as a function of retention time, system characteristics, and operating conditions using controlled laboratory-scale soil column experiments simulating MAR. The results revealed that MAR performance in terms of TOrC attenuation is primarily determined by key environmental parameters (i.e., redox, primary substrate). Soil columns with suboxic and anoxic conditions performed poorly (i.e., less than 30% attenuation of moderately degradable TOrC) in comparison to oxic conditions (on average between 70-100% attenuation for the same compounds) within a residence time of three days. Given this dependency on redox conditions, it was investigated if key parameter-dependent rate constants are more suitable for contaminant transport modeling to properly capture the dynamic TOrC attenuation under field-scale conditions. Laboratory-derived first-order removal kinetics were determined for 19 TOrC under three different redox conditions and rate constants were applied to MAR field data. Our findings suggest that simplified first-order rate constants will most likely not provide any meaningful results if the target compounds exhibit redox dependent biotransformation behavior or if the intention is to exactly capture the decline in concentration over time and distance at field-scale MAR. However, if the intention is to calculate the percent removal after an extended time period and subsurface travel distance, simplified first-order rate constants seem to be sufficient to provide a first estimate on TOrC attenuation during MAR. Abstract Copyright (2015) Elsevier, B.V.
JF - Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
AU - Regnery, J
AU - Wing, A D
AU - Alidina, M
AU - Drewes, J E
Y1 - 2015/08//
PY - 2015
DA - August 2015
SP - 65
EP - 75
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 179
SN - 0169-7722, 0169-7722
KW - sorption
KW - water management
KW - mass spectra
KW - simulation
KW - remediation
KW - ground water
KW - attenuation
KW - river banks
KW - retention
KW - spectra
KW - trace elements
KW - water pollution
KW - Eh
KW - experimental studies
KW - pollutants
KW - liquid chromatograms
KW - statistical analysis
KW - pollution
KW - bioremediation
KW - aquifers
KW - models
KW - recharge
KW - organic compounds
KW - ion chromatograms
KW - infiltration
KW - chromatograms
KW - mathematical methods
KW - anaerobic environment
KW - water resources
KW - 02B:Hydrochemistry
KW - 22:Environmental geology
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01697722
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 43
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 5 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - anaerobic environment; aquifers; attenuation; bioremediation; chromatograms; Eh; experimental studies; ground water; infiltration; ion chromatograms; liquid chromatograms; mass spectra; mathematical methods; models; organic compounds; pollutants; pollution; recharge; remediation; retention; river banks; simulation; sorption; spectra; statistical analysis; trace elements; water management; water pollution; water resources
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2015.05.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Crystal structure of rhodopsin bound to arrestin by femtosecond X-ray laser.
AN - 1700684450; 26200343
AB - G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) signal primarily through G proteins or arrestins. Arrestin binding to GPCRs blocks G protein interaction and redirects signalling to numerous G-protein-independent pathways. Here we report the crystal structure of a constitutively active form of human rhodopsin bound to a pre-activated form of the mouse visual arrestin, determined by serial femtosecond X-ray laser crystallography. Together with extensive biochemical and mutagenesis data, the structure reveals an overall architecture of the rhodopsin-arrestin assembly in which rhodopsin uses distinct structural elements, including transmembrane helix 7 and helix 8, to recruit arrestin. Correspondingly, arrestin adopts the pre-activated conformation, with a ∼20° rotation between the amino and carboxy domains, which opens up a cleft in arrestin to accommodate a short helix formed by the second intracellular loop of rhodopsin. This structure provides a basis for understanding GPCR-mediated arrestin-biased signalling and demonstrates the power of X-ray lasers for advancing the frontiers of structural biology.
JF - Nature
AU - Kang, Yanyong
AU - Zhou, X Edward
AU - Gao, Xiang
AU - He, Yuanzheng
AU - Liu, Wei
AU - Ishchenko, Andrii
AU - Barty, Anton
AU - White, Thomas A
AU - Yefanov, Oleksandr
AU - Han, Gye Won
AU - Xu, Qingping
AU - de Waal, Parker W
AU - Ke, Jiyuan
AU - Tan, M H Eileen
AU - Zhang, Chenghai
AU - Moeller, Arne
AU - West, Graham M
AU - Pascal, Bruce D
AU - Van Eps, Ned
AU - Caro, Lydia N
AU - Vishnivetskiy, Sergey A
AU - Lee, Regina J
AU - Suino-Powell, Kelly M
AU - Gu, Xin
AU - Pal, Kuntal
AU - Ma, Jinming
AU - Zhi, Xiaoyong
AU - Boutet, Sébastien
AU - Williams, Garth J
AU - Messerschmidt, Marc
AU - Gati, Cornelius
AU - Zatsepin, Nadia A
AU - Wang, Dingjie
AU - James, Daniel
AU - Basu, Shibom
AU - Roy-Chowdhury, Shatabdi
AU - Conrad, Chelsie E
AU - Coe, Jesse
AU - Liu, Haiguang
AU - Lisova, Stella
AU - Kupitz, Christopher
AU - Grotjohann, Ingo
AU - Fromme, Raimund
AU - Jiang, Yi
AU - Tan, Minjia
AU - Yang, Huaiyu
AU - Li, Jun
AU - Wang, Meitian
AU - Zheng, Zhong
AU - Li, Dianfan
AU - Howe, Nicole
AU - Zhao, Yingming
AU - Standfuss, Jörg
AU - Diederichs, Kay
AU - Dong, Yuhui
AU - Potter, Clinton S
AU - Carragher, Bridget
AU - Caffrey, Martin
AU - Jiang, Hualiang
AU - Chapman, Henry N
AU - Spence, John C H
AU - Fromme, Petra
AU - Weierstall, Uwe
AU - Ernst, Oliver P
AU - Katritch, Vsevolod
AU - Gurevich, Vsevolod V
AU - Griffin, Patrick R
AU - Hubbell, Wayne L
AU - Stevens, Raymond C
AU - Cherezov, Vadim
AU - Melcher, Karsten
AU - Xu, H Eric
AD - Laboratory of Structural Sciences, Center for Structural Biology and Drug Discovery, Van Andel Research Institute, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503, USA. ; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Center for Applied Structural Discovery, Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604, USA. ; Department of Chemistry, Bridge Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA. ; Center for Free Electron Laser Science, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, 22607 Hamburg, Germany. ; Joint Center for Structural Genomics, Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. ; 1] Laboratory of Structural Sciences, Center for Structural Biology and Drug Discovery, Van Andel Research Institute, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503, USA [2] Department of Obstetrics &Gynecology, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore. ; The National Resource for Automated Molecular Microscopy, New York Structural Biology Center, New York, New York 10027, USA. ; Department of Molecular Therapeutics, The Scripps Research Institute, Scripps Florida, Jupiter, Florida 33458, USA. ; Jules Stein Eye Institute and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA. ; Department of Biochemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada. ; Department of Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA. ; Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. ; 1] Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA [2] BioXFEL, NSF Science and Technology Center, 700 Ellicott Street, Buffalo, New York 14203, USA. ; 1] Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Center for Applied Structural Discovery, Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604, USA [2] Department of Physics, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287, USA. ; 1] Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Center for Applied Structural Discovery, Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604, USA [2] Beijing Computational Science Research Center, Haidian District, Beijing 10084, China. ; 1] Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Center for Applied Structural Discovery, Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604, USA [2] Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53211, USA. ; State Key Laboratory of Drug Research, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201203, China. ; Department of Obstetrics &Gynecology, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore. ; Swiss Light Source at Paul Scherrer Institute, CH-5232 Villigen, Switzerland. ; Department of Biological Sciences, Bridge Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA. ; School of Medicine and School of Biochemistry and Immunology, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland. ; 1] BioXFEL, NSF Science and Technology Center, 700 Ellicott Street, Buffalo, New York 14203, USA [2] Ben May Department for Cancer Research, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA. ; Laboratory of Biomolecular Research at Paul Scherrer Institute, CH-5232 Villigen, Switzerland. ; Department of Biology, Universität Konstanz, 78457 Konstanz, Germany. ; Beijing Synchrotron Radiation Facility, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China. ; 1] Center for Free Electron Laser Science, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, 22607 Hamburg, Germany [2] Centre for Ultrafast Imaging, 22761 Hamburg, Germany. ; 1] Department of Biochemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada [2] Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada. ; 1] Department of Chemistry, Bridge Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA [2] Department of Biological Sciences, Bridge Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA [3] iHuman Institute, ShanghaiTech University, 2F Building 6, 99 Haike Road, Pudong New District, Shanghai 201210, China. ; 1] Laboratory of Structural Sciences, Center for Structural Biology and Drug Discovery, Van Andel Research Institute, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503, USA [2] VARI-SIMM Center, Center for Structure and Function of Drug Targets, CAS-Key Laboratory of Receptor Research, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201203, China.
Y1 - 2015/07/30/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jul 30
SP - 561
EP - 567
VL - 523
IS - 7562
KW - Arrestin
KW - 0
KW - Disulfides
KW - Multiprotein Complexes
KW - Rhodopsin
KW - 9009-81-8
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Animals
KW - Reproducibility of Results
KW - Models, Molecular
KW - Humans
KW - Multiprotein Complexes -- chemistry
KW - Mice
KW - Protein Binding
KW - Disulfides -- metabolism
KW - Binding Sites
KW - Multiprotein Complexes -- biosynthesis
KW - X-Rays
KW - Disulfides -- chemistry
KW - Crystallography, X-Ray
KW - Lasers
KW - Signal Transduction
KW - Multiprotein Complexes -- metabolism
KW - Arrestin -- metabolism
KW - Rhodopsin -- metabolism
KW - Rhodopsin -- chemistry
KW - Arrestin -- chemistry
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2015-08-20
N1 - Date created - 2015-07-30
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Genetic sequence - 4ZWJ; PDB
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
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N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature14656
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Opportunities for PhD student training support at the National Science Foundation
T2 - 2015 American Dairy Science Association- American Society of Animal Science and and the Canadian Society of Animal Science Annual Meeting (JAM 2015)
AN - 1697989945; 6352416
JF - 2015 American Dairy Science Association- American Society of Animal Science and and the Canadian Society of Animal Science Annual Meeting (JAM 2015)
AU - Ellis, Steven
Y1 - 2015/07/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jul 12
KW - Training
KW - Foundations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1697989945?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+American+Dairy+Science+Association-+American+Society+of+Animal+Science+and+and+the+Canadian+Society+of+Animal+Science+Annual+Meeting+%28JAM+2015%29&rft.atitle=Opportunities+for+PhD+student+training+support+at+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Ellis%2C+Steven&rft.aulast=Ellis&rft.aufirst=Steven&rft.date=2015-07-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+American+Dairy+Science+Association-+American+Society+of+Animal+Science+and+and+the+Canadian+Society+of+Animal+Science+Annual+Meeting+%28JAM+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.jtmtg.org/JAM/2015/docs/JAM2015_Program_FINAL.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-06-30
N1 - Last updated - 2015-07-23
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Word recognition in deaf readers: Cross-language activation of German Sign Language and German
AN - 1735640515; 201512795
AB - This study addressed visual word recognition in deaf bilinguals who are proficient in German Sign Language (DGS) and German. The study specifically investigated whether DGS signs are activated during a monolingual German word recognition task despite the lack of similarity in German orthographic representations and DGS phonological representations. Deaf DGS-German bilinguals saw pairs of German words and decided whether the words were semantically related. Half of the experimental items had phonologically related translation equivalents in DGS. Participants were slower to reject semantically unrelated word pairs when the translation equivalents were phonologically related in DGS than when the DGS translations were phonologically unrelated. However, this was not the case in Turkish-German hearing bilinguals who do not have sign language knowledge. The results indicate that lexical representations are associated cross-linguistically in the bilingual lexicon irrespective of their orthographic or phonological form. Implications of these results for reading development in deaf German bilinguals are discussed. Adapted from the source document
JF - Applied Psycholinguistics
AU - Kubus, Okan
AU - Villwock, Agnes
AU - Morford, Jill P
AU - Rathmann, Christian
AD - University of Hamburg and NSF Science of Learning Center on Visual Language and Visual Learning okan.kubus@sign-lang.uni-hamburg.de
Y1 - 2015/07//
PY - 2015
DA - July 2015
SP - 831
EP - 854
VL - 36
IS - 4
SN - 0142-7164, 0142-7164
KW - Phonological Processing (65110)
KW - Bilingualism (08850)
KW - Sign Language (78400)
KW - Word Recognition (98200)
KW - Deafness (17420)
KW - German (27700)
KW - article
KW - 4026: psycholinguistics; bilingual language processing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1735640515?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Allba&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Psycholinguistics&rft.atitle=Word+recognition+in+deaf+readers%3A+Cross-language+activation+of+German+Sign+Language+and+German&rft.au=Kubus%2C+Okan%3BVillwock%2C+Agnes%3BMorford%2C+Jill+P%3BRathmann%2C+Christian&rft.aulast=Kubus&rft.aufirst=Okan&rft.date=2015-07-01&rft.volume=36&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=831&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Psycholinguistics&rft.issn=01427164&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - CODEN - APPSDZ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - German (27700); Sign Language (78400); Bilingualism (08850); Phonological Processing (65110); Word Recognition (98200); Deafness (17420)
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Postharvest Quarantine Treatments for Diaphorina citri on Infested Curry Leaves
AN - 1727684813; PQ0002117905
AB - Studies were conducted to evaluate treatments that reduce survival and attachment of Diaphorina citri nymphs on infested curry leaves (Bergera koenigii). Decontamination of curry leaves infested with D. citri in relation to disinfectant (none or Pro-San), temperature (0, 40, and 50[degrees]C), and treatment duration (0, 5, 10, and 20 min) was examined using a split-split plot design. Experiments were performed three times. Treatment duration did not significantly affect D. citri nymph survival or removal (P > 0.2). Temperature and disinfectant each significantly affected D. citri nymph survival and removal (P < 0.031). The interaction of temperature and disinfectant was significant with respect to nymph survival (P < 0.0001) but did not significantly affect removal (P = 0.4589). Tissue damage was significantly affected by temperature (P = 0.0056), duration (P = 0.0023), the interaction of temperature and duration (P = 0.0320), and the interaction of disinfectant, temperature, and duration (P = 0.0410). Of the treatments resulting in 100% D. citri nymph mortality on infested curry leaves, 40[degrees]C for 5 min with Pro-San was accompanied with the least proportion of curry leaf tissue damage (0.14 greater than untreated control, P = 0.25). Results from these studies may be useful in formulation of future regulatory policies regarding trade of citrus foliage, especially those used as condiments.
JF - Plant Disease
AU - Anco, D J
AU - Poole, G H
AU - Gottwald, T R
AD - North Carolina State University, National Science Foundation Center for Integrated Pest Management, Raleigh 27606, dan.anco@ars.usda.gov
Y1 - 2015/07//
PY - 2015
DA - July 2015
SP - 926
EP - 932
PB - American Phytopathological Society, 3340 Pilot Knob Road St. Paul MN 55121-2097 United States
VL - 99
IS - 7
SN - 0191-2917, 0191-2917
KW - Entomology Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology
KW - Citrus
KW - Temperature effects
KW - Foliage
KW - Mortality
KW - Plant diseases
KW - Leaves
KW - Survival
KW - Flavorings
KW - Decontamination
KW - Disinfectants
KW - Quarantine
KW - Diaphorina citri
KW - Z 05350:Medical, Veterinary, and Agricultural Entomology
KW - A 01330:Food Microbiology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1727684813?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologya&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Plant+Disease&rft.atitle=Postharvest+Quarantine+Treatments+for+Diaphorina+citri+on+Infested+Curry+Leaves&rft.au=Anco%2C+D+J%3BPoole%2C+G+H%3BGottwald%2C+T+R&rft.aulast=Anco&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2015-07-01&rft.volume=99&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=926&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Plant+Disease&rft.issn=01912917&rft_id=info:doi/10.1094%2FPDIS-12-14-1271-RE
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-02-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Temperature effects; Mortality; Foliage; Plant diseases; Disinfectants; Leaves; Decontamination; Flavorings; Quarantine; Survival; Citrus; Diaphorina citri
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-12-14-1271-RE
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - From Vision to Change in Undergraduate Education: Spreading Effective Practices
T2 - 2015 Annual Main Meeting of the Society for Experimental Biology (SEB 2015)
AN - 1697990052; 6351803
JF - 2015 Annual Main Meeting of the Society for Experimental Biology (SEB 2015)
AU - Singer, Susan
Y1 - 2015/06/30/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jun 30
KW - Education
KW - Spreading
KW - Vision
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1697990052?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Main+Meeting+of+the+Society+for+Experimental+Biology+%28SEB+2015%29&rft.atitle=From+Vision+to+Change+in+Undergraduate+Education%3A+Spreading+Effective+Practices&rft.au=Singer%2C+Susan&rft.aulast=Singer&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2015-06-30&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+Annual+Main+Meeting+of+the+Society+for+Experimental+Biology+%28SEB+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sebiology.org/meetings/Prague/programmes.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-06-30
N1 - Last updated - 2015-07-23
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Can Ecological Principles Be Used To Solve Taste And Odor Issues In Drinking Water Reservoirs?
T2 - 2015 American Water Works Association Annual Conference & Exposition (ACE 2015)
AN - 1658698153; 6335451
JF - 2015 American Water Works Association Annual Conference & Exposition (ACE 2015)
AU - Wilson, Alan
Y1 - 2015/06/07/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jun 07
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Water reservoirs
KW - Taste
KW - Drinking water
KW - Odors
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658698153?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+American+Water+Works+Association+Annual+Conference+%26+Exposition+%28ACE+2015%29&rft.atitle=Can+Ecological+Principles+Be+Used+To+Solve+Taste+And+Odor+Issues+In+Drinking+Water+Reservoirs%3F&rft.au=Wilson%2C+Alan&rft.aulast=Wilson&rft.aufirst=Alan&rft.date=2015-06-07&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+American+Water+Works+Association+Annual+Conference+%26+Exposition+%28ACE+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.awwa.org/conferences-education/conferences/annual-conference/ace15-professional-program.aspx
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Sustainable Infrastructure: Use Of Sustainable Water Contact Products
T2 - 2015 American Water Works Association Annual Conference & Exposition (ACE 2015)
AN - 1658696401; 6335468
JF - 2015 American Water Works Association Annual Conference & Exposition (ACE 2015)
AU - Costello, Mindy
Y1 - 2015/06/07/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jun 07
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Sustainable development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658696401?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+American+Water+Works+Association+Annual+Conference+%26+Exposition+%28ACE+2015%29&rft.atitle=Sustainable+Infrastructure%3A+Use+Of+Sustainable+Water+Contact+Products&rft.au=Costello%2C+Mindy&rft.aulast=Costello&rft.aufirst=Mindy&rft.date=2015-06-07&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+American+Water+Works+Association+Annual+Conference+%26+Exposition+%28ACE+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.awwa.org/conferences-education/conferences/annual-conference/ace15-professional-program.aspx
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Prevalence and Transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi in People of Rural Communities of the High Jungle of Northern Peru
AN - 1694975783; PQ0001637462
AB - Chagas disease causes significant morbidity and mortality throughout Central and South America. The epidemiology and control of this disease is subject to unique regional particularities, including the behavior and ecology of the local insect vector species. Significant resources have been allocated towards research and control efforts in southern Peru, yet very little is known about the prevalence and epidemiology of Trypanosoma cruzi in northern Peru. Our study highlights significant T. cruzi infection in northern Peru and is one of the first to document substantial transmission by the insect Panstrongylus lignarius. Our results illustrate major gaps in knowledge and the need for public health interventions targeted at Chagas disease in the region of Cutervo Province of northern Peru.
JF - PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
AU - Alroy, Karen A
AU - Huang, Christine
AU - Gilman, Robert H
AU - Quispe-Machaca, Victor R
AU - Marks, Morgan A
AU - Ancca-Juarez, Jenny
AU - Hillyard, Miranda
AU - Verastegui, Manuela
AU - Sanchez, Gerardo
AU - Cabrera, Lilia
AU - Vidal, Elisa
AU - Billig, Erica MW
AU - Cama, Vitaliano A
AU - Naquira, Cesar
AU - Bern, Caryn
AU - Levy, Michael Z
AD - American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Science & Technology Policy Fellow at the Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia, United States of America
Y1 - 2015/05/22/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 May 22
PB - Public Library of Science, 185 Berry Street San Francisco CA 94107 United States
VL - 9
IS - 5
SN - 1935-2727, 1935-2727
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Entomology Abstracts
KW - Trypanosoma cruzi
KW - Mortality
KW - Resource management
KW - Disease control
KW - Vectors
KW - Pest control
KW - Hosts
KW - Infection
KW - Morbidity
KW - Panstrongylus
KW - Disease transmission
KW - Public health
KW - Epidemiology
KW - ISE, Peru
KW - Aquatic insects
KW - Mortality causes
KW - Chagas' disease
KW - K 03400:Human Diseases
KW - Z 05350:Medical, Veterinary, and Agricultural Entomology
KW - Q1 08604:Stock assessment and management
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1694975783?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aasfaaquaticpollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=PLoS+Neglected+Tropical+Diseases&rft.atitle=Prevalence+and+Transmission+of+Trypanosoma+cruzi+in+People+of+Rural+Communities+of+the+High+Jungle+of+Northern+Peru&rft.au=Alroy%2C+Karen+A%3BHuang%2C+Christine%3BGilman%2C+Robert+H%3BQuispe-Machaca%2C+Victor+R%3BMarks%2C+Morgan+A%3BAncca-Juarez%2C+Jenny%3BHillyard%2C+Miranda%3BVerastegui%2C+Manuela%3BSanchez%2C+Gerardo%3BCabrera%2C+Lilia%3BVidal%2C+Elisa%3BBillig%2C+Erica+MW%3BCama%2C+Vitaliano+A%3BNaquira%2C+Cesar%3BBern%2C+Caryn%3BLevy%2C+Michael+Z&rft.aulast=Alroy&rft.aufirst=Karen&rft.date=2015-05-22&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=PLoS+Neglected+Tropical+Diseases&rft.issn=19352727&rft_id=info:doi/10.1371%2Fjournal.pntd.0003779
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Resource management; Epidemiology; Disease control; Pest control; Hosts; Aquatic insects; Mortality causes; Public health; Disease transmission; Mortality; Vectors; Infection; Morbidity; Chagas' disease; Trypanosoma cruzi; Panstrongylus; ISE, Peru
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003779
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Sensors, Dynamics and Control: Program Overview and Relevance to Acoustics Research
T2 - 169th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America
AN - 1669823027; 6341843
JF - 169th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America
AU - Ruzzene, Massimo
Y1 - 2015/05/18/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 May 18
KW - Sensors
KW - Acoustics
KW - Control programs
KW - Reviews
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1669823027?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.atitle=Molecular+Dynamics+of+Mineral-Water+Interfaces%3A+Structure%2C+Dynamics%2C+Energetics+and+Hydrogen+Bonding&rft.au=Kalinichev%2C+Andrey+G%3BWang%2C+Jianwei%3BKirkpatrick%2C+R+James&rft.aulast=Kalinichev&rft.aufirst=Andrey&rft.date=2006-09-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://asa2015spring.abstractcentral.com/planner.jsp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-03-31
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-06
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The roles of sharing, transfer, and public funding in nanotechnology knowledge-diffusion networks
AN - 1683504149
AB - Understanding the knowledge-diffusion networks of patent inventors can help governments and businesses effectively use their investment to stimulate commercial science and technology development. Such inventor networks are usually large and complex. This study proposes a multidimensional network analysis framework that utilizes Exponential Random Graph Models (ERGMs) to simultaneously model knowledge-sharing and knowledge-transfer processes, examine their interactions, and evaluate the impacts of network structures and public funding on knowledge-diffusion networks. Experiments are conducted on a longitudinal data set that covers 2 decades (1991–2010) of nanotechnology-related US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) patents. The results show that knowledge sharing and knowledge transfer are closely interrelated. High degree centrality or boundary inventors play significant roles in the network, and National Science Foundation (NSF) public funding positively affects knowledge sharing despite its small fraction in overall funding and upstream research topics.
JF - Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology
AU - Jiang, Shan
AU - Gao, Qiang
AU - Chen, Hsinchun
AU - Roco, Mihail C
AD - Department of Management Information Systems, University of Arizona, McClelland Hall 430, 1130 East Helen Street, P.O. Box 210108, Tucson, AZ, 85721, United States. ; National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA, 22230, United States. ; Department of Management Information Systems, University of Arizona, McClelland Hall 430, 1130 East Helen Street, P.O. Box 210108, Tucson, AZ, 85721, United States.
Y1 - 2015/04//
PY - 2015
DA - Apr 2015
SP - 1017
EP - 1029
CY - Hoboken
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 66
IS - 5
SN - 2330-1635
KW - Library And Information Sciences
KW - Patents
KW - Funding
KW - Inventors
KW - Knowledge sharing
KW - United States--US
KW - 6.12:FINANCE
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1683504149?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+the+Association+for+Information+Science+and+Technology&rft.atitle=The+roles+of+sharing%2C+transfer%2C+and+public+funding+in+nanotechnology+knowledge-diffusion+networks&rft.au=Jiang%2C+Shan%3BGao%2C+Qiang%3BChen%2C+Hsinchun%3BRoco%2C+Mihail+C&rft.aulast=Jiang&rft.aufirst=Shan&rft.date=2015-04-01&rft.volume=66&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=1017&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+the+Association+for+Information+Science+and+Technology&rft.issn=23301635&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fasi.23223
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation
N1 - Date revised - 2015-04-16
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-24
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - United States--US
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.23223
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Evaluation and Testing of Herbal Supplements: Lessons Learned
T2 - 54rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2015)
AN - 1669822168; 6340757
JF - 54rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2015)
AU - LeVanseler, K
Y1 - 2015/03/22/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Mar 22
KW - Toxicology
KW - Public health
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1669822168?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=54rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2015%29&rft.atitle=Evaluation+and+Testing+of+Herbal+Supplements%3A+Lessons+Learned&rft.au=LeVanseler%2C+K&rft.aulast=LeVanseler&rft.aufirst=K&rft.date=2015-03-22&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=54rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/Pub/Prog/2015Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-03-31
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-06
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - High-rate nanoscale offset printing process using directed assembly and transfer of nanomaterials.
AN - 1662428269; 25648503
AB - High-rate nanoscale offset printing using a newly developed reusable template enables the assembly of nanomaterials into nanostructures followed by their transfer onto a flexible substrate in a few minutes. The developed template can potentially be reused more than 100 times in the offset printing process without any additional functionalization. This approach provides a new way for the printing of flexible devices with nanoscale patterns.
© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
JF - Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.)
AU - Cho, Hanchul
AU - Somu, Sivasubramanian
AU - Lee, Jin Young
AU - Jeong, Hobin
AU - Busnaina, Ahmed
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for High-Rate Nanomanufacturing (CHN), Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Y1 - 2015/03/11/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Mar 11
SP - 1759
EP - 1766
VL - 27
IS - 10
KW - sensors
KW - carbon nanotubes
KW - directed assembly
KW - nanoscale printing
KW - nanoparticles
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1662428269?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.atitle=NMR+and+Molecular+Modeling+Studies+of+Geochemical+Aqueous+Interfaces&rft.au=Kirkpatrick%2C+R+James%3BKalinichev%2C+Andrey+G%3BPadma%2C+Kumar+P%3BReinholdt%2C+Marc+X%3BLi%2C+Qiang&rft.aulast=Kirkpatrick&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2006-09-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2015-05-11
N1 - Date created - 2015-03-10
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.201404769
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Enabling big geoscience data analytics with a cloud-based, MapReduce-enabled and service-oriented workflow framework
AN - 1819893569; 2016-077789
AB - Geoscience observations and model simulations are generating vast amounts of multi-dimensional data. Effectively analyzing these data are essential for geoscience studies. However, the tasks are challenging for geoscientists because processing the massive amount of data is both computing and data intensive in that data analytics requires complex procedures and multiple tools. To tackle these challenges, a scientific workflow framework is proposed for big geoscience data analytics. In this framework techniques are proposed by leveraging cloud computing, MapReduce, and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). Specifically, HBase is adopted for storing and managing big geoscience data across distributed computers. MapReduce-based algorithm framework is developed to support parallel processing of geoscience data. And service-oriented workflow architecture is built for supporting on-demand complex data analytics in the cloud environment. A proof-of-concept prototype tests the performance of the framework. Results show that this innovative framework significantly improves the efficiency of big geoscience data analytics by reducing the data processing time as well as simplifying data analytical procedures for geoscientists.
JF - PLoS One
AU - Li, Zhenlong
AU - Yang, Chaowei
AU - Jin, Baoxuan
AU - Yu, Manzhu
AU - Liu, Kai
AU - Sun, Min
AU - Zhang, Matthew
Y1 - 2015/03/05/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Mar 05
PB - Public Library of Science, San Francisco, CA
VL - 2015
IS - e0116781
KW - methods
KW - MapReduce
KW - computer programs
KW - numerical models
KW - geoscience
KW - cloud computing
KW - data processing
KW - data bases
KW - information management
KW - climate
KW - data management
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1819893569?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=PLoS+One&rft.atitle=Enabling+big+geoscience+data+analytics+with+a+cloud-based%2C+MapReduce-enabled+and+service-oriented+workflow+framework&rft.au=Li%2C+Zhenlong%3BYang%2C+Chaowei%3BJin%2C+Baoxuan%3BYu%2C+Manzhu%3BLiu%2C+Kai%3BSun%2C+Min%3BZhang%2C+Matthew&rft.aulast=Li&rft.aufirst=Zhenlong&rft.date=2015-03-05&rft.volume=2015&rft.issue=e0116781&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=PLoS+One&rft.issn=1932-6203&rft_id=info:doi/10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0116781
L2 - http://journals.plos.org/plosone/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 56
N1 - PubXState - CA
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables
N1 - SuppNotes - NSF grants PLR-1349259, IIP-1338925, and CNS-1117300
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - climate; cloud computing; computer programs; data bases; data management; data processing; geoscience; information management; MapReduce; methods; numerical models
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116781
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Today's Data, Tomorrow's Discoveries: Increasing Access to the Results of Research Funded by the National Science Foundation
AN - 1767320930; 2011-911072
AB - Public access is intended to accelerate the dissemination of fundamental research results that will advance the frontiers of knowledge and help ensure the nation's future prosperity. NSF's plan is grounded in the realization that clear and open communication of research results is central to fulfilling NSF's primary mission of promoting the progress of science. NSF is unique among science agencies for its broad scope, providing support for research and education in all branches of science and engineering. Therefore, the plan necessarily accommodates the diverse array of research results generated by NSF-funded Principal Investigators. The plan takes advantage of existing infrastructure services and seeks to build partnerships with other federal agencies as well as with public and private sector groups, such as institutions of higher education, publishers, libraries, and technology companies. Tables.
JF - National Science Foundation, Mar 2015, 35 pp.
AU - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2015/03//
PY - 2015
DA - March 2015
PB - National Science Foundation
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Partnership
KW - Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Finance
KW - Libraries
KW - Science
KW - Colleges and universities
KW - Technology
KW - book
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1767320930?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/PAIS+Index&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=National+Science+Foundation&rft.aulast=National+Science+Foundation&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2015-03-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Today%27s+Data%2C+Tomorrow%27s+Discoveries%3A+Increasing+Access+to+the+Results+of+Research+Funded+by+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.title=Today%27s+Data%2C+Tomorrow%27s+Discoveries%3A+Increasing+Access+to+the+Results+of+Research+Funded+by+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2015/nsf15052/nsf15052.pdf
LA - English
DB - PAIS Index
N1 - Date revised - 2016-03-01
N1 - Publication note - National Science Foundation, 2015
N1 - SuppNotes - NSF 15-52
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Rapid 3D fluorescence imaging of individual optically trapped living immune cells
AN - 1664201785; PQ0001193061
AB - We demonstrate an approach to rapidly characterize living suspension cells in 4 dimensions while they are immobilized and manipulated within optical traps. A single, high numerical aperture objective lens is used to separate the imaging plane from the trapping plane. This facilitates full control over the position and orientation of multiple trapped cells using a spatial light modulator, including directed motion and object rotation, while also allowing rapid 4D imaging. This system is particularly useful in the handling and investigation of the behavior of non-adherent immune cells. We demonstrate these capabilities by imaging and manipulating living, fluorescently stained Jurkat T cells. ( copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH &Co. KGaA, Weinheim) An approach is demonstrated to rapidly characterize living suspension cells in 4 dimensions while they are immobilized and manipulated within optical traps. A single, high numerical aperture objective lens is used to separate the imaging plane from the trapping plane. This facilitates full control over position and orientation of multiple trapped cells using a spatial light modulator, including directed motion and object rotation, while also allowing rapid 4D imaging.
JF - Journal of Biophotonics
AU - Wolfson, Deanna
AU - Steck, Michael
AU - Persson, Martin
AU - McNerney, Gregory
AU - Popovich, Ana
AU - Goksor, Mattias
AU - Huser, Thomas
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA, 95817, USA.
Y1 - 2015/03//
PY - 2015
DA - Mar 2015
SP - 208
EP - 216
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 8
IS - 3
SN - 1864-063X, 1864-063X
KW - Immunology Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Fluorescence
KW - Lymphocytes T
KW - Traps
KW - imaging
KW - Trapping
KW - Light effects
KW - W 30910:Imaging
KW - F 06965:Immune Cells
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1664201785?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.atitle=Effects+of+Modifying+Functional+Groups+on+Interfacial+Behavior+of+Hybrid+Silicone+Polymers&rft.au=Mehta%2C+Somil+C%3BSomasundaran%2C+P&rft.aulast=Mehta&rft.aufirst=Somil&rft.date=2006-09-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Fluorescence; Lymphocytes T; Traps; Trapping; imaging; Light effects
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbio.201300153
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Assessment of Broader Impacts in the Earth Sciences
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658699696; 6338629
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Lawrence, Justin
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Earth sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658699696?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.atitle=Assessment+of+Broader+Impacts+in+the+Earth+Sciences&rft.au=Lawrence%2C+Justin&rft.aulast=Lawrence&rft.aufirst=Justin&rft.date=2015-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Roadmap for Action: Perspectives of Funding Agencies
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658699671; 6338613
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Burrelli, Joan
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Financing
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L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - What Constitutes Broader Impacts? A Media Campaign
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658698454; 6338630
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Cohen, Jennifer
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Information sciences
KW - Imaging
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658698454?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.atitle=What+Constitutes+Broader+Impacts%3F+A+Media+Campaign&rft.au=Cohen%2C+Jennifer&rft.aulast=Cohen&rft.aufirst=Jennifer&rft.date=2015-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society+%28ACS+06%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF Perspective on Funding Science Communication in Graduate Education
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658697930; 6338972
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Boone, Richard
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Education
KW - Financing
KW - Communication
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.atitle=NSF+Perspective+on+Funding+Science+Communication+in+Graduate+Education&rft.au=Boone%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Boone&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2015-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Preparing Future Quantitative Biologists
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658697607; 6338688
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Singer, Susan
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Biologists
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658697607?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.atitle=Preparing+Future+Quantitative+Biologists&rft.au=Singer%2C+Susan&rft.aulast=Singer&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2015-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Sparking Innovative Biological Research Collaborations: Innovations and Outcomes
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658697507; 6338892
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Liarakos, Charles
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Innovations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658697507?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.atitle=Sparking+Innovative+Biological+Research+Collaborations%3A+Innovations+and+Outcomes&rft.au=Liarakos%2C+Charles&rft.aulast=Liarakos&rft.aufirst=Charles&rft.date=2015-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Modernizing Graduate Education To Mesh with 21st Century Realities
T2 - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AN - 1658696651; 6338439
JF - 2015 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2015)
AU - Boylan, Myles
Y1 - 2015/02/12/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Feb 12
KW - Education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658696651?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.atitle=Modernizing+Graduate+Education+To+Mesh+with+21st+Century+Realities&rft.au=Boylan%2C+Myles&rft.aulast=Boylan&rft.aufirst=Myles&rft.date=2015-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2015+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2015%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2015/webprogram/meeting2015-02-11.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Disturbance and temporal partitioning of the activated sludge metacommunity
AN - 1668253811; PQ0001182399
AB - The resilience of microbial communities to press disturbances and whether ecosystem function is governed by microbial composition or by the environment have not been empirically tested. To address these issues, a whole-ecosystem manipulation was performed in a full-scale activated sludge wastewater treatment plant. The parameter solids retention time (SRT) was used to manipulate microbial composition, which started at 30 days, then decreased to 12 and 3 days, before operation was restored to starting conditions (30-day SRT). Activated sludge samples were collected throughout the 313-day time series in parallel with bioreactor performance ('ecosystem function'). Bacterial small subunit (SSU) rRNA genes were surveyed from sludge samples resulting in a sequence library of >417 000 SSU rRNA genes. A shift in community composition was observed for 12- and 3-day SRTs. The composition was altered such that r-strategists were enriched in the system during the 3-day SRT, whereas K-strategists were only present at SRTs[egs]12 days. This shift corresponded to loss of ecosystem functions (nitrification, denitrification and biological phosphorus removal) for SRTs[els]12 days. Upon return to a 30-day SRT, complete recovery of the bioreactor performance was observed after 54 days despite an incomplete recovery of bacterial diversity. In addition, a different, yet phylogenetically related, community with fewer of its original rare members displaced the pre-disturbance community. Our results support the hypothesis that microbial ecosystems harbor functionally redundant phylotypes with regard to general ecosystem functions (carbon oxidation, nitrification, denitrification and phosphorus accumulation). However, the impacts of decreased rare phylotype membership on ecosystem stability and micropollutant removal remain unknown.
JF - ISME Journal
AU - Vuono, David C
AU - Benecke, Jan
AU - Henkel, Jochen
AU - Navidi, William C
AU - Cath, Tzahi Y
AU - Munakata-Marr, Junko
AU - Spear, John R
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - NSF Engineering Research Center ReNUWIt, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, USA
Y1 - 2015/02//
PY - 2015
DA - February 2015
SP - 425
EP - 435
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building London N1 9XW United Kingdom
VL - 9
IS - 2
SN - 1751-7362, 1751-7362
KW - Pollution Abstracts
KW - Pollutant removal
KW - Phosphorus
KW - Microbial activity
KW - Sludge
KW - Time series analysis
KW - Wastewater treatment
KW - Phosphorus removal
KW - Activated sludge
KW - Community composition
KW - Nitrification
KW - Bioreactors
KW - Denitrification
KW - Ecosystem stability
KW - P 1000:MARINE POLLUTION
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1668253811?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=ISME+Journal&rft.atitle=Disturbance+and+temporal+partitioning+of+the+activated+sludge+metacommunity&rft.au=Vuono%2C+David+C%3BBenecke%2C+Jan%3BHenkel%2C+Jochen%3BNavidi%2C+William+C%3BCath%2C+Tzahi+Y%3BMunakata-Marr%2C+Junko%3BSpear%2C+John+R%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg+E&rft.aulast=Vuono&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2015-02-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=425&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=ISME+Journal&rft.issn=17517362&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fismej.2014.139
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pollutant removal; Phosphorus; Microbial activity; Time series analysis; Sludge; Wastewater treatment; Phosphorus removal; Activated sludge; Community composition; Nitrification; Denitrification; Bioreactors; Ecosystem stability
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2014.139
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Data Practices and Curation Vocabulary (DPCVocab): An empirically derived framework of scientific data practices and curatorial processes
AN - 1665171631
AB - Conceptual frameworks and taxonomies are an important part of the emerging base of knowledge on the curation of research data. We present the Data Practices and Curation Vocabulary (DPCVocab), a functional vocabulary created for specifying relationships among data practices in research, types of data produced and used, and curation roles and activities. The vocabulary consists of 3 categories—Research Data Practices, Data, and Curation—with 187 terms validated through empirical studies of scientific data practices in the Earth and life sciences. The present article covers the DPCVocab development process and examines applications for mapping relationships across the 3 categories, identifying factors for projecting curation costs and important differences in curation requirements across disciplines. As a tool for curators, the vocabulary provides a framework for charting curation options and guiding systematic administration of curation services. It can serve as a shared terminology or lingua franca to support interactions and collaboration among curators, data producers, system developers, and other stakeholders in data infrastructure and services. The DPCVocab as a whole supports both the technical and the human aspects of professional curation work essential to the modern research system.
JF - Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology
AU - Chao, Tiffany C
AU - Cragin, Melissa H
AU - Palmer, Carole L
AD - Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 501 E. Daniel Street, Champaign, IL, 61820. ; National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 605N, Arlington, VA, 22230. ; Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 501 E. Daniel Street, Champaign, IL, 61820.
Y1 - 2015/02//
PY - 2015
DA - Feb 2015
SP - 616
EP - 633
CY - Hoboken
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 66
IS - 3
SN - 2330-1635
KW - Library And Information Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1665171631?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-23
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.23184
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Maximizing Wind Farm Power Output by Modified Genetic Algorithm
T2 - 95th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting
AN - 1658699220; 6337493
JF - 95th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting
AU - Williams, Grant
Y1 - 2015/01/04/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jan 04
KW - Farms
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Wind energy
KW - Algorithms
KW - wind farm
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658699220?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=95th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting&rft.atitle=Maximizing+Wind+Farm+Power+Output+by+Modified+Genetic+Algorithm&rft.au=Williams%2C+Grant&rft.aulast=Williams&rft.aufirst=Grant&rft.date=2015-01-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=95th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://ams.confex.com/ams/95Annual/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF and Space Weather -- Opportunities and Challenges
T2 - 95th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting
AN - 1658698811; 6336372
JF - 95th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting
AU - Behnke, Richard
Y1 - 2015/01/04/
PY - 2015
DA - 2015 Jan 04
KW - Weather
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1658698811?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=95th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting&rft.atitle=NSF+and+Space+Weather+--+Opportunities+and+Challenges&rft.au=Behnke%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Behnke&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2015-01-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=95th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://ams.confex.com/ams/95Annual/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-28
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-27
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - New Zealand - United States engineering research collaborations in the aftermath of the Canterbury Earthquake Sequence
AN - 1832681387; 768161-3
AB - During the 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence, earthquake engineering researchers in New Zealand (NZ) and the United States (US) joined forces to rapidly collect perishable field data about ground and structural response. These efforts developed into longer-term bi-lateral collaborative projects in geotechnical and structural earthquake engineering that addressed both fundamental research questions and design requirements for rebuilding the region. While NZ researchers collaborated with many foreign researchers, the NZ-US collaboration has been particularly close, involving a large number of academic and government researchers, students, and consultants from both countries. This strong collaboration was supported by government agencies, in particular the U.S. National Science Foundation and New Zealand's Earthquake Commission and a consortium of research agencies under the umbrella of the Natural Hazards Platform. This paper summarizes the supported geotechnical engineering research areas. Opportunities for support of continued international collaborations in the natural hazards engineering area are presented.
JF - 6th international conference on Earthquake geotechnical engineering
AU - Fragaszy, R J
AU - Cowan, H A
AU - Berryman, K R
AU - Pauschke, J M
AU - Cubrinovski, Misko
AU - Bradley, B A
AU - Price, C
AU - Chin, C Y
Y1 - 2015
PY - 2015
DA - 2015
PB - New Zealand Geotechnical Society
KW - United States
KW - Australasia
KW - earthquakes
KW - New Zealand
KW - 30:Engineering geology
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1832681387?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/GeoRef+In+Process&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Fragaszy%2C+R+J%3BCowan%2C+H+A%3BBerryman%2C+K+R%3BPauschke%2C+J+M%3BCubrinovski%2C+Misko%3BBradley%2C+B+A%3BPrice%2C+C%3BChin%2C+C+Y&rft.aulast=Fragaszy&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Continental+Margin+Research+in+the+U.+S.+Carbon+Cycle+Science+Program%3A+An+Interagency+Update+and+Prospectus&rft.title=Continental+Margin+Research+in+the+U.+S.+Carbon+Cycle+Science+Program%3A+An+Interagency+Update+and+Prospectus&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 6th international conference on Earthquake geotechnical engineering
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef in Process, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. After editing and indexing, this record will be added to Georef. Reference includes data supplied by Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences Limited (GNS Science), Lower Hutt, New Zealand
N1 - Number of references - 16
N1 - Document feature - 1 table
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-24
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - ASCENT, a discipline-specific model to support the retention and advancement of women in science
AN - 1812220475; 2016-072492
JF - Special Publications - American Geophysical Union
AU - Hallar, A Gannet
AU - Avallone, Linnea
AU - Thiry, Heather
AU - Edwards, Laura M
Y1 - 2015
PY - 2015
DA - 2015
SP - 135
EP - 148
PB - Wiley for American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 70
KW - models
KW - ASCENT model
KW - employment
KW - geoscience
KW - practice
KW - Atmospheric Science Collaboration and Enriching NeTworks
KW - academic institutions
KW - education
KW - women
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1812220475?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Special+Publications+-+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=ASCENT%2C+a+discipline-specific+model+to+support+the+retention+and+advancement+of+women+in+science&rft.au=Hallar%2C+A+Gannet%3BAvallone%2C+Linnea%3BThiry%2C+Heather%3BEdwards%2C+Laura+M&rft.aulast=Hallar&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=&rft.spage=135&rft.isbn=9781119067856&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Special+Publications+-+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 28
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2016-11-17
N1 - CODEN - #07964
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - academic institutions; ASCENT model; Atmospheric Science Collaboration and Enriching NeTworks; education; employment; geoscience; models; practice; women
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative structure-activity relationship for the ozonation of phenols
AN - 1802208118; PQ0002873792
AB - Ozonation rates of twenty-three phenols were measured. Their Quantitative Structure Activity Relationship( QSAR) models were developed by the method of genetic algorithm( GA)combining with Partial Least Squares( PLS) and Artificial Neural Networks( ANN),respectively.The degradation rate of phenols can be described by the pseudo-first-order reaction rate model. The capacity of releasing or taking electron of the substitution group in the ring has obvious effect on the ozonation rate of the phenols. The QSAR model developed by GA-PLS is lgk = 3. 439-0. 206 lg P( the logarithm of octanol-water partition coefficients) + 0. 122 x p Ka( dissociation constant)-0.3464 chi pc( four order path /cluster molecular connectivity index)-0. 0236 q C-( the maximum negative charge of carbon atom). The QSAR model developed by GA-ANN model has the descriptors of lg P,4 chi pc,p Kaand alpha ( molecular average polarizability). Based on leave-one-out cross validation,the QSAR model constructed by GA-ANN has better robustness than that by GA-PLS. The study of QSAR shows that the ozonation rate of phenols has a close relationship with electron cloud distribution and the properties of substitution groups in benzene ring. It also shows that the solvent effect of water obviously influences the ozonation rate of phenols.
JF - Environmental Chemistry - Huanjing Huaxue
AU - Yang, Jing
AU - Wang, Jianbing
AU - Wang, Yahua
AU - Zhang, Fengyuan
AU - He, Xuwen
AD - National Science Foundation of China
Y1 - 2015///0,
PY - 2015
DA - 0, 2015
PB - Science Press, 16 Donghuang Cheng Genbei Jie Beijing 100717 China
VL - 34
IS - 10
SN - 0254-6108, 0254-6108
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality
KW - ozonation
KW - phenol
KW - genetic algorithm
KW - least square regression
KW - artificial neural network
KW - Benzenes
KW - Algorithms
KW - Benzene
KW - Genetics
KW - Carbon
KW - Modelling
KW - Ozonation
KW - Geochemistry
KW - Solvents
KW - Phenols
KW - Model Studies
KW - Clouds
KW - Dissociation
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 0810:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1802208118?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Chemistry+-+Huanjing+Huaxue&rft.atitle=Quantitative+structure-activity+relationship+for+the+ozonation+of+phenols&rft.au=Yang%2C+Jing%3BWang%2C+Jianbing%3BWang%2C+Yahua%3BZhang%2C+Fengyuan%3BHe%2C+Xuwen&rft.aulast=Yang&rft.aufirst=Jing&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=34&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Chemistry+-+Huanjing+Huaxue&rft.issn=02546108&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Genetics; Carbon; Dissociation; Geochemistry; Solvents; Benzene; Phenols; Ozonation; Modelling; Clouds; Benzenes; Algorithms; Model Studies
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - REU sites in the Division of Earth Sciences at NSF
AN - 1773799440; 2016-025341
AB - The NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program supports active research participation by undergraduate students in any of the areas of research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Providing research experiences to undergraduate students has been documented to be important in motivating students to complete their science or engineering degrees and pursue a career in science (including graduate studies). These experiences provide students not only with in-depth technical knowledge of the discipline, but also help students understand the social and cultural norms of their fields. The goal of the REU program in the Division of Earth Sciences (EAR) at NSF program is to facilitate the involvement of undergraduate students in state of the art research projects and in all the steps of the scientific process, from development of hypothesis to be tasted to the presentation of the results at professional meetings. EAR fosters the implementation of a range of REU models, mindful of the diverse nature of the institutions, disciplines, and participants. Regardless of the model used, REU programs in EAR should have the following common characteristics: 1) the majority of the funds are to support participants in the program; 2) the recruitment plan should be designed to guarantee that the pool of applicants will produce a diverse group of participants; 3) the goals of each REU program should aligned with a clear set of metrics that will be used to evaluate the success of the REU in meeting its goals; 4) each REU site should not only have an strong scientific intellectual merit, but it should also have a strong REU intellectual merit; contributing to testing new approaches in mentoring, recruitment, and evaluation; 5) as with research proposals, the design of EAR REU programs should be informed by state of the art knowledge on research experience for undergraduates (e.g. peer review journal articles). It is expected that all REU sites provide a rich set of experiences that would enable the professional growth of the participants.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Patino, Lina C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015
PY - 2015
DA - 2015
SP - 312
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 47
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1773799440?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=REU+sites+in+the+Division+of+Earth+Sciences+at+NSF&rft.au=Patino%2C+Lina+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Patino&rft.aufirst=Lina&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=312&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2015 annual meeting & exposition
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-17
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Preparing K-12 teachers for high-need schools
AN - 1761074302; 2016-009219
AB - The need to recruit, prepare and retain high quality teachers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) areas in our Nation's schools is well publicized and widely discussed, yet gaps in understanding of the increasingly urgent issue exist. The designation of "high-need" is defined in federal statute and policy relative to local education agencies, schools, and students. Significant resources and effort are focused on improving the education of K-12 students in urban and rural high-need schools by addressing the characteristics and challenges of STEM teacher preparation programs for both educational settings. The Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program initiated by an Act of Congress has responded to the need for K-12 STEM teachers in high-need schools since 2002. Funded by the National Science Foundation, the program encourages talented mathematics, science, and engineering undergraduates and STEM professionals to pursue teaching careers, and also prepares Master Teachers. Projects include STEM faculty collaborating with Education faculty, school districts, exemplary teacher preparation programs, professional development for Master Teaching Fellows, and support for new teachers. Noyce projects design and implement targeted strategies to prepare teachers to effectively facilitate learning in high-need contexts, including rural and urban schools. When comparing urban and rural high-need schools, overlapping issues and related teacher preparation strategies have been identified. However, more research is needed on best practices in future preparation of STEM teachers, particularly for the challenges of teaching in high-need settings. The presentation will define "high-need", compare characteristics and challenges of high-need urban and rural schools, provide an overview of the Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program and its impact on teacher preparation for high-need schools, and highlight research needed on teacher education.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Cornelison, Deborah
AU - Sverdrup, Keith A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015
PY - 2015
DA - 2015
SP - 52
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 47
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1761074302?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Preparing+K-12+teachers+for+high-need+schools&rft.au=Cornelison%2C+Deborah%3BSverdrup%2C+Keith+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Cornelison&rft.aufirst=Deborah&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=52&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2015 annual meeting & exposition
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-29
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Finding the tipping points for broadening participation in the geosciences
AN - 1761073737; 2016-009185
AB - The National Science Foundation (NSF) has held broadening participation in the STEM disciplines as a high priority for many years, recognizing that diversity is not a "problem to be solved" but is a vital component of a healthy and productive STEM research, innovation, and education ecosystem. NSF's INCLUDES initiative--a new 6-year, NSF-wide effort for "Inclusion across the Nation of Communities of Learners that have been Underrepresented for Diversity in Engineering and Science"--seeks to achieve collective impact by catalyzing implementation of networks that leverage existing programs, people, organizations, and alliances. Other investments will support greater engagement of middle grade youth in STEM. NSF's Directorate for Geosciences expects to invest approximately $2.44 M in the pilot year of INCLUDES, building on lessons learned through the 10-year Opportunities for Enhancing Diversity in the Geosciences (OEDG) program. Collective impact models require five conditions for success (Kania and others): 1) a common agenda; 2) shared measurement systems; 3) mutually reinforcing activities; 4) continuous communication; and 5) backbone support organizations. The geosciences community should embrace such collaborative approaches for making progress on diversity. However, the community is small and the many obstacles to achieving diversity we confront are complex, making diffusion and aggregation of locally impactful approaches an inefficient strategy for systemic progress. Instead, the community needs to deploy more advective approaches that catalyze rapid transformation and promote tipping points in the system. As per Gladwell, three change agents are needed to achieve a tipping point: 1) the "Law of the Few" or the out-sized role played by a small portion of the community; 2) the "Stickiness Factor" needed to make messages memorable and viral; and 3) the "Power of Context" or the environmental readiness for social change. The messages are clear and the timing is right. But, rather than rely on "the few", every geoscientist needs to play a role in this equation, whether as--in the vernacular of Gladwell--a "Connector", who serve as a network hub; a "Maven," who serves as a broker of new information; or as a "Salesmen," who persuades others to be part of the solution. Through which role will you contribute?
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Karsten, Jill
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2015
PY - 2015
DA - 2015
SP - 46
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 47
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1761073737?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Finding+the+tipping+points+for+broadening+participation+in+the+geosciences&rft.au=Karsten%2C+Jill%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Karsten&rft.aufirst=Jill&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=46&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2015 annual meeting & exposition
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-29
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Continental degassing of (super 4) He by surficial discharge of deep groundwater
AN - 1673366082; 2015-036024
JF - Nature Geoscience
AU - Aggarwal, Pradeep K
AU - Matsumoto, Takuya
AU - Sturchio, Neil C
AU - Chang, Hung K
AU - Gastmans, Didier
AU - Araguas-Araguas, Luis J
AU - Jiang, Wei
AU - Lu, Zheng-Tian
AU - Mueller, Peter
AU - Yokochi, Reika
AU - Purtschert, Roland
AU - Torgersen, Thomas
Y1 - 2015/01//
PY - 2015
DA - January 2015
SP - 35
EP - 39
PB - Nature Publishing Group, London
VL - 8
IS - 1
SN - 1752-0894, 1752-0894
KW - isotopes
KW - atmosphere
KW - continental crust
KW - He-4
KW - krypton
KW - stable isotopes
KW - ground water
KW - aquifers
KW - Kr-81
KW - South America
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - noble gases
KW - Brazil
KW - residence time
KW - helium
KW - discharge
KW - Guarani Aquifer
KW - crust
KW - degassing
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1673366082?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature+Geoscience&rft.atitle=Continental+degassing+of+%28super+4%29+He+by+surficial+discharge+of+deep+groundwater&rft.au=Aggarwal%2C+Pradeep+K%3BMatsumoto%2C+Takuya%3BSturchio%2C+Neil+C%3BChang%2C+Hung+K%3BGastmans%2C+Didier%3BAraguas-Araguas%2C+Luis+J%3BJiang%2C+Wei%3BLu%2C+Zheng-Tian%3BMueller%2C+Peter%3BYokochi%2C+Reika%3BPurtschert%2C+Roland%3BTorgersen%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Aggarwal&rft.aufirst=Pradeep&rft.date=2015-01-01&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=35&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature+Geoscience&rft.issn=17520894&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2FNGEO2302
L2 - http://www.nature.com/ngeo/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 31
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aquifers; atmosphere; Brazil; continental crust; crust; degassing; discharge; ground water; Guarani Aquifer; He-4; helium; isotopes; Kr-81; krypton; noble gases; radioactive isotopes; residence time; South America; stable isotopes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/NGEO2302
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Big Data: An Opportunity for Collaboration with Computer Scientists on Data-Driven Science
T2 - 47th American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AN - 1651742806; 6331218
JF - 47th American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Baru, Chaitanya
Y1 - 2014/12/15/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Dec 15
KW - Data processing
KW - Computers
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L2 - https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm14/meetingapp.cgi#ModuleSessionsByDay/0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-31
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-06
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Climate Science Broader Impacts Done Well
T2 - 47th American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AN - 1651740023; 6329480
JF - 47th American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Lawrence, Justin
AU - Patino, Lina
Y1 - 2014/12/15/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Dec 15
KW - Climate
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1651740023?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm14/meetingapp.cgi#ModuleSessionsByDay/0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-31
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-06
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Progressive seismic failure, seismic gap, and great seismic risk across the densely populated North China basin
AN - 1765869921; 2016-014225
AB - Although the seismically active North China basin has the most complete written records of pre-instrumentation earthquakes in the world, this information has not been fully utilized for assessing potential earthquake hazards of this densely populated region that hosts approximately 200 million people. In this study, we use the historical records to document the earthquake migration pattern and the existence of a 180-km seismic gap along the 600-km long right-slip Tangshan-Hejian-Cixian (THC) fault zone that cuts across the North China basin. The newly recognized seismic gap, which is centered at Tianjin with a population of 11 million people and approximately 120 km from Beijing (22 million people) and Tangshan (7 million people), has not been ruptured in the past 1000 years by M> or =6 earthquakes. The seismic migration pattern in the past millennium suggests that the epicenters of major earthquakes have shifted towards this seismic gap along the THC fault, which implies that the 180- km gap could be the site of the next great earthquake with M approximately 7.6 if it is ruptured by a single event. Alternatively, the seismic gap may be explained by aseismic creeping or seismic strain transfer between active faults.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Yin, A
AU - Yu, X
AU - Shen, Z
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2014/12//
PY - 2014
DA - December 2014
SP - Abstract S23A
EP - 4476
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2014
KW - 19:Seismology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1765869921?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Progressive+seismic+failure%2C+seismic+gap%2C+and+great+seismic+risk+across+the+densely+populated+North+China+basin&rft.au=Yin%2C+A%3BYu%2C+X%3BShen%2C+Z%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Yin&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-12-01&rft.volume=2014&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2014 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-02-18
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Vanda dike swarm, Dry Valleys, Antarctica I; field relations and tectonic implications
AN - 1761073359; 2016-008881
AB - The Vanda Dike Swarm is a set of >600 compositionally diverse dikes that are unusually well exposed in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica. New precise zircon age determinations indicate that they intruded between 491 and 495 Ma. The dikes range in composition from basaltic to rhyolitic, although they are arguably bimodal. They were emplaced into both foliated and massive Cambrian granitoids of the Ross Orogeny and their Proterozoic wall rocks. There is no apparent relationship between the major element composition and the dikes' emplacement age or location. Most dikes have distinctly non-planar contacts, and there is no evidence that dike emplacement was controlled by basement structure, either on a meter scale or regionally. Instead, most dikes are sinuous, strike 28 to 44 degrees , and dip eastward (many <70 degrees ), indicating tectonic controls on emplacement. The dikes are not distributed evenly: many are concentrated in km-scale areas, which may mark the infrastructure of central volcanoes. Chilled margins and glassy groundmass indicates that the dike swarm was emplaced at shallow levels. So far as we know, there are no coeval volcanic rocks in the region, where the Devonian to Triassic Beacon Sandstone unconformably overlies the dikes and their wallrocks. Many of the dikes have strongly mylonitized margins with normal sense of shear, indicating that solidified dikes served as normal faults. Otherwise, so far as we are aware, there is no recognizable evidence for normal faulting in the area. Our interpretation is that the dikes were emplaced into the shallow crust at the end of the Ross Orogeny, at the culmination of uplift and synchronous with extension. They thus represent the transition from an Andean-type margin to a rifting environment, in all likelihood due to reconfiguration of subduction near the end of the Cambrian.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Geist, D
AU - Harpp, K S
AU - Garcia, M O
AU - Parcheta, C E
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2014/12//
PY - 2014
DA - December 2014
SP - Abstract V51C
EP - 4772
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2014
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1761073359?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+Vanda+dike+swarm%2C+Dry+Valleys%2C+Antarctica+I%3B+field+relations+and+tectonic+implications&rft.au=Geist%2C+D%3BHarpp%2C+K+S%3BGarcia%2C+M+O%3BParcheta%2C+C+E%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Geist&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2014-12-01&rft.volume=2014&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2014 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-29
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Integrating predictive modeling with control system design for managed aquifer recharge and recovery applications
AN - 1752578480; 2016-001455
AB - Aquifers around the world show troubling signs of irreversible depletion and seawater intrusion as climate change, population growth, and urbanization led to reduced natural recharge rates and overuse. Scientists and engineers have begun to re-investigate the technology of managed aquifer recharge and recovery (MAR) as a means to increase the reliability of the diminishing and increasingly variable groundwater supply. MAR systems offer the possibility of naturally increasing groundwater storage while improving the quality of impaired water used for recharge. Unfortunately, MAR systems remain wrought with operational challenges related to the quality and quantity of recharged and recovered water stemming from a lack of data-driven, real-time control. Our project seeks to ease the operational challenges of MAR facilities through the implementation of active sensor networks, adaptively calibrated flow and transport models, and simulation-based meta-heuristic control optimization methods. The developed system works by continually collecting hydraulic and water quality data from a sensor network embedded within the aquifer. The data is fed into an inversion algorithm, which calibrates the parameters and initial conditions of a predictive flow and transport model. The calibrated model is passed to a meta-heuristic control optimization algorithm (e.g. genetic algorithm) to execute the simulations and determine the best course of action, i.e., the optimal pumping policy for current aquifer conditions. The optimal pumping policy is manually or autonomously applied. During operation, sensor data are used to assess the accuracy of the optimal prediction and augment the pumping strategy as needed. At laboratory-scale, a small (18"H X 46"L) and an intermediate (6'H X 16'L) two-dimensional synthetic aquifer were constructed and outfitted with sensor networks. Data collection and model inversion components were developed and sensor data were validated by analytical measurements.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Drumheller, Z W
AU - Regnery, J
AU - Lee, Jong Hyun
AU - Illangasekare, Tissa H
AU - Kitanidis, Peter K
AU - Smits, K M
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2014/12//
PY - 2014
DA - December 2014
SP - Abstract H41G
EP - 0906
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2014
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1752578480?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Integrating+predictive+modeling+with+control+system+design+for+managed+aquifer+recharge+and+recovery+applications&rft.au=Drumheller%2C+Z+W%3BRegnery%2C+J%3BLee%2C+Jong+Hyun%3BIllangasekare%2C+Tissa+H%3BKitanidis%2C+Peter+K%3BSmits%2C+K+M%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Drumheller&rft.aufirst=Z&rft.date=2014-12-01&rft.volume=2014&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2014 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-12-31
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Contemporary localized orogenic process along the central segment of Altyn Tagh Fault using continuous GPS observation in Northern Tibetan Plateau
AN - 1739085253; 2015-116740
AB - Modern space geodesy with high-precision continuous GPS time-series data can reveal contemporary slow tectonics processes and crustal deformations in three dimensions within several years temporal scale in localizable region of continents boundary, accompanying with mountain building in geological temporal scale. 11 continuous GPS stations have been installed crossing the central segment of Altyn Tagh fault and Qimen Tagh thrust fault near Mangnai Town of Qinghai Province in northern margin of Tibetan Plateau. Within approximately 2.5 years time stage, we analyze and eliminate common mode errors of residual time series through considerations of correlation analysis with seasonal temperature and mass loading in localizable basins, including of southwestern part of Qaidam Basin, Xorkol Basin and Ayakkum Keli Basin with identical elevation and climate conditions in the southern uninhabited region of Qimen Tagh Mountain. Thus, we estimate a approximate horizontal velocity of 6-8mm/yr. along central segment of Altyn Tagh Fault and vertical relative velocity of 1 approximately 2mm/yr. near the peak of Altyn Tagh Mountain using continuous GPS stations, crossing the central segment of Atlyn Tagh Fault with respect to the lowest velocity of GPS station which is noted as ATFD, while it might be on the Qimen Tagh thrust fault plane. Some analysis show that crustal uplift velocity profile is better curvilinear correlation with the topography of Akato Tagh Mountain, which is defined as major orogenic belt in Northern Tibetan Plateau. We analyze geological setting and deformation model among Akaoto Tagh bend, Kadzi Fault and Huatugou fold. The result indicates modern episode of Akato Tagh is uplifted with left lateral oblique slip affected by tectonic activity between Qimen Tagh and central segment of Altyn Tagh Fault, accompanying with the collision between India and Eurasia. We estimate a sustained uplift and localized orogenic process is still occurred, according to explicitly constrains between our continuous GPS records in short-term geodetic observation and some terraces studies of Yaziquan spring within long-term geological temporal scale since at least Quaternary near the northern front of Qimen Tagh Mountain.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Ge, W
AU - Shen, Z
AU - Yuan, D
AU - Wang, M
AU - Shao, Y
AU - He, P
AU - Zhang, B
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2014/12//
PY - 2014
DA - December 2014
SP - Abstract G11B
EP - 0492
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2014
KW - 16:Structural geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1739085253?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Contemporary+localized+orogenic+process+along+the+central+segment+of+Altyn+Tagh+Fault+using+continuous+GPS+observation+in+Northern+Tibetan+Plateau&rft.au=Ge%2C+W%3BShen%2C+Z%3BYuan%2C+D%3BWang%2C+M%3BShao%2C+Y%3BHe%2C+P%3BZhang%2C+B%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Ge&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2014-12-01&rft.volume=2014&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2014 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-12-04
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The seamless SAR archive (SSARA) project and other SAR activities at UNAVCO
AN - 1734266336; 2015-108699
AB - The seamless synthetic aperture radar archive (SSARA) implements a seamless distributed access system for SAR data and derived data products (i.e. interferograms). SSARA provides a unified application programming interface (API) for SAR data search and results at the Alaska Satellite Facility and UNAVCO (WInSAR and EarthScope data archives) through the use of simple web services. A federated query service was developed using the unified APIs, providing users a single search interface for both archives. Interest from the international community has prompted an effort to incorporate ESA's Virtual Archive 4 Geohazard Supersites and Natural Laboratories (GSNL) collections and other archives into the federated query service. SSARA also provides Digital Elevation Model access for topographic correction via a simple web service through OpenTopography and tropospheric correction products through JPL's OSCAR service. Additionally, UNAVCO provides data storage capabilities for WInSAR PIs with approved TerraSAR-X and ALOS-2 proposals which allows easier distribution to US collaborators on associated proposals and facilitates data access through the SSARA web services. Further work is underway to incorporate federated data discovery for GSNL across SAR, GPS, and seismic datasets provided by web services from SSARA, GSAC, and COOPEUS.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Baker, S
AU - Crosby, C J
AU - Meertens, Charles M
AU - Fielding, Eric J
AU - Bryson, G R
AU - Buechler, B T
AU - Nicoll, J B
AU - Baru, C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2014/12//
PY - 2014
DA - December 2014
SP - Abstract G31A
EP - 0401
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2014
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1734266336?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+seamless+SAR+archive+%28SSARA%29+project+and+other+SAR+activities+at+UNAVCO&rft.au=Baker%2C+S%3BCrosby%2C+C+J%3BMeertens%2C+Charles+M%3BFielding%2C+Eric+J%3BBryson%2C+G+R%3BBuechler%2C+B+T%3BNicoll%2C+J+B%3BBaru%2C+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Baker&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2014-12-01&rft.volume=2014&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2014 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-19
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Zipingpu reservoir triggering of the 2008 Mw 7.9 Wenchuan earthquake, China, due to poroelastic coupling
AN - 1696872974; 2015-069804
AB - Impoundment of the Zipingpu Reservoir (ZR), China, began in September 2005 and culminated in a water depth averaging 100 meters. This impoundment was followed 2.7 years later by the 2008 Mw 7.9 Wenchuan Earthquake (WE), which ruptured the Longmen Shan Fault (LSF) with its epicenter about 12 kilometers away from the ZR. The close proximity of reservoir impoundment and the WE in both space and time suggests that the events are coupled. Previous studies, however, obtained inconclusive results. Based on the fully-coupled poroelastic theory, we employ three-dimensional Finite Element Models (FEMs) to simulate the evolution of stress and pore pressure due to reservoir impoundment, and its effect on the Coulomb stress on the LSF. The results indicate that the reservoir impoundment broke the regional balance of pore pressure, and formed a pore-pressure front that slowly propagated through the crust with fluid diffusion. Due to the diffusion of the pore pressure, the effective normal stress increased steadily, and so did the Coulomb stress change on LSF. The FEMs predict the positive Coulomb stress changes on the LSF propagating from the upper crust to lower crust. The reservoir loading had increased the Coulomb stress on the shallow part of the LSF up to tens to hundreds of kPa, significantly in favor of the failure of the LSF. It is still quite uncertain about the geometry and extent of the LSF at depth, we therefore calculate the Coulomb stress changes over a range of scenarios of hypocenter locations and fault dip angles. Our result shows that in most of the scenarios the Coulomb stress at the hypocenter either had no increase or increased moderately prior to the WE. However, the Coulomb stress grew significantly in the shallow to mid depth range of the LSF, which "advanced" the leveling of tectonic loading of the fault system for tens to hundreds of years. The initial slip of the WE might or might not be triggered by the impoundment of ZR; but a small event at the hypocenter could trigger large rupture on fault plane above, where the asperities were located. The micro-seismicity around the ZR also showed an expanding pattern from the ZR since its impoundment, which could be associated with diffusion of positive pore pressure. These results suggest a poroelastic triggering effect of the WE due to the impoundment of the ZR.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Wei, T
AU - Shen, Z
AU - Masterlark, Timothy
AU - Ronchin, Erika
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2014/12//
PY - 2014
DA - December 2014
SP - Abstract S51A
EP - 4405
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2014
KW - 19:Seismology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1696872974?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+Zipingpu+reservoir+triggering+of+the+2008+Mw+7.9+Wenchuan+earthquake%2C+China%2C+due+to+poroelastic+coupling&rft.au=Wei%2C+T%3BShen%2C+Z%3BMasterlark%2C+Timothy%3BRonchin%2C+Erika%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Wei&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2014-12-01&rft.volume=2014&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2014 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-07-17
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - New pest response guidelines: A field reference for emergency response to high priority invasive pests
T2 - 62nd Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of America (Entomology 2014)
AN - 1645173380; 6323094
JF - 62nd Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of America (Entomology 2014)
AU - Pallipparambil, Godshen
AU - van Kretschmar, Jaap
AU - Cave, Gary
AU - Suiter, Karl
Y1 - 2014/11/16/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Nov 16
KW - Emergency preparedness
KW - Guidelines
KW - Emergencies
KW - Priorities
KW - Pests
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1645173380?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://esa.confex.com/esa/2014/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-11-30
N1 - Last updated - 2015-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Plant-Wide Hybrid MPC-PID Control of a Continuous Direct Compaction Tablet Manufacturing Pilot-Plant for QbD Based Pharmaceutical Manufacturing
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AN - 1627967979; 6312129
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AU - Singh, Ravendra
AU - Sahay, Abhisheck
AU - Muzzio, Fernando
AU - Ierapetritou, Marianthi
AU - Ramachandran, Rohit
Y1 - 2014/11/16/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Nov 16
KW - Hybrids
KW - Tablets
KW - Pharmaceuticals
KW - Compaction
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L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2014/webprogram/meeting2014-11-16.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-10-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-11-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Implementation Strategies for a Large, Multi-Institutional REU Program and Key Actions of Successful Summer Research Mentors
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AN - 1627965267; 6311271
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AU - Raman, D
Y1 - 2014/11/16/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Nov 16
KW - Summer
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1627965267?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2014/webprogram/meeting2014-11-16.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-10-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-11-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Modeling the Formation and Function of Responsive Peptide Systems
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AN - 1627964228; 6310576
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AU - Hsieh, Ming-Chien
AU - Chen, Chenrui
AU - Tan, Junjun
AU - Omosun, Tolu
AU - Mehta, Anil
AU - Lynn, David
AU - Grover, Martha
Y1 - 2014/11/16/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Nov 16
KW - Peptides
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1627964228?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2014%29&rft.atitle=Modeling+the+Formation+and+Function+of+Responsive+Peptide+Systems&rft.au=Hsieh%2C+Ming-Chien%3BChen%2C+Chenrui%3BTan%2C+Junjun%3BOmosun%2C+Tolu%3BMehta%2C+Anil%3BLynn%2C+David%3BGrover%2C+Martha&rft.aulast=Hsieh&rft.aufirst=Ming-Chien&rft.date=2014-11-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2014/webprogram/meeting2014-11-16.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-10-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-11-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Integrated Dynamic Real Time Optimization and Advanced Feedback Control of Continuous Tablet Manufacturing Process
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AN - 1627962795; 6311638
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2014)
AU - Singh, Ravendra
Y1 - 2014/11/16/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Nov 16
KW - Manufacturing industry
KW - Tablets
KW - Feedback
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1627962795?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2014%29&rft.atitle=Integrated+Dynamic+Real+Time+Optimization+and+Advanced+Feedback+Control+of+Continuous+Tablet+Manufacturing+Process&rft.au=Singh%2C+Ravendra&rft.aulast=Singh&rft.aufirst=Ravendra&rft.date=2014-11-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2014/webprogram/meeting2014-11-16.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-10-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-11-26
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Market-based conservation: Aligning static theory with dynamic systems
AN - 1642615152; 21093373
AB - This paper provides a broad evaluation of the implications of market-based conservation (MBC) strategies from economic, social and ecological perspectives. After reviewing the economic theory that underlies MBC initiatives, we develop a list of approaches that have been labeled as "market-based", and categorize them according to the degree to which they are free-standing markets or require the intervention of the state. A multidisciplinary critique reveals the potential problems and pitfalls of MBC are due to a lack of ability to deal with dynamic systems in the real world. The dynamics of these three systems can undermine the intended goals of MBC.
JF - Natural Resources Forum, UN
AU - Woodward, Richard T
AU - Stronza, Amanda
AU - Shapiro-Garza, Elizabeth
AU - Fitzgerald, Lee A
AD - Applied Biodiversity Science NSF-IGERT Doctoral Program, Room 210 Nagle Hall. Texas A&M University, r-woodward@tamu.edu
Y1 - 2014/11//
PY - 2014
DA - Nov 2014
SP - 235
EP - 247
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 38
IS - 4
SN - 0165-0203, 0165-0203
KW - Environment Abstracts
KW - Natural resources
KW - Economics
KW - Conservation
KW - Intervention
KW - ENA 21:Wildlife
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1642615152?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Natural+Resources+Forum%2C+UN&rft.atitle=Market-based+conservation%3A+Aligning+static+theory+with+dynamic+systems&rft.au=Woodward%2C+Richard+T%3BStronza%2C+Amanda%3BShapiro-Garza%2C+Elizabeth%3BFitzgerald%2C+Lee+A&rft.aulast=Woodward&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2014-11-01&rft.volume=38&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=235&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Natural+Resources+Forum%2C+UN&rft.issn=01650203&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2F1477-8947.12058
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Natural resources; Economics; Intervention; Conservation
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12058
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Allopolyploidy, diversification, and the Miocene grassland expansion
AN - 1832637597; 740572-2
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
AU - Estep, Matt C
AU - McKain, Michael R
AU - Diaz, Dilys Vela
AU - Zhong, Jinshun
AU - Hodge, John G
AU - Hodkinson, Trevor R
AU - Layton, Daniel J
AU - Malcomber, Simon T
AU - Pasquet, Remy
AU - Kellogg, Elizabeth A
Y1 - 2014/10/21/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Oct 21
SP - 15149
EP - 15154
PB - National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC
VL - 111
IS - 42
SN - 0027-8424, 0027-8424
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1832637597?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefinprocess&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=70th+Annual+Educational+Conference+and+Exhibition+of+the+National+Environmental+Health+Association+%28AEC+2006%29&rft.atitle=Working+with+the+Media+to+Promote+Your+Organization&rft.au=Bowman%2C+Jerry+M&rft.aulast=Bowman&rft.aufirst=Jerry&rft.date=2006-06-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=70th+Annual+Educational+Conference+and+Exhibition+of+the+National+Environmental+Health+Association+%28AEC+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.pnas.org/content/by/year
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef in Process, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. After editing and indexing, this record will be added to Georef.
N1 - Number of references - 61
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-24
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1404177111
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Broader Impacts in the Earth Sciences Division of the National Science Foundation
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2014)
AN - 1645158739; 6318321
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2014)
AU - Lawrence, Justin
AU - Patino, Lina
Y1 - 2014/10/19/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Oct 19
KW - Foundations
KW - Earth sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1645158739?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2014%29&rft.atitle=Broader+Impacts+in+the+Earth+Sciences+Division+of+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Lawrence%2C+Justin%3BPatino%2C+Lina&rft.aulast=Lawrence&rft.aufirst=Justin&rft.date=2014-10-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2014AM/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-11-30
N1 - Last updated - 2015-01-14
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Derivation of an oral reference dose (RfD) for the plasticizer, di-(2-propylheptyl)phthalate (Palatinol® 10-P).
AN - 1561974970; 24925829
AB - Di-(2-propylheptyl) phthalate (DPHP) is a high molecular weight polyvinyl chloride plasticizer. Since increasing production volume and broad utility may result in human exposure, an oral reference dose (RfD) was derived from laboratory animal data due to the lack of human data. In addition to liver and kidney, target organs were the thyroid, pituitary and adrenal glands in rats, recognizing that reproductive performance was not altered in two successive generations of DPHP-exposed rats. DPHP caused a reduction in pup and maternal body weights but not developmental or testicular effects typical of "phthalate syndrome." DPHP was not genotoxic. Due to the lack of carcinogenicity data, there is inadequate information to assess carcinogenic potential. The RfD of 0.1mg/kg-day was derived from the human equivalent BMDL10 of 10mg/kg-day for thyroid hypertrophy/hyperplasia in male F1 adults from the two-generation study. While in utero exposure did not alter sensitivity to thyroid lesions compared to subchronic exposures beginning at 6weeks of age, F1 adult males were the longest-term exposed population. The total uncertainty factor of 100x was comprised of intraspecies (10x), study duration (3x), and database (3x) factors but not an interspecies factor since rodents are more sensitive than humans to thyroid gland effects. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
JF - Regulatory toxicology and pharmacology : RTP
AU - Bhat, Virunya S
AU - Durham, Jennifer L
AU - English, J Caroline
AD - NSF International, 789 N. Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105, USA. Electronic address: bhat@nsf.org. ; NSF International, 789 N. Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105, USA.
Y1 - 2014/10//
PY - 2014
DA - October 2014
SP - 65
EP - 74
VL - 70
IS - 1
KW - Phthalic Acids
KW - 0
KW - Plasticizers
KW - bis(2-propylheptyl)phthalate
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Reference dose
KW - Plasticizer
KW - Palatinol® 10-P
KW - DPHP
KW - Phthalate
KW - Benchmark dose
KW - Di-(2-propylheptyl)phthalate
KW - Rats
KW - Administration, Oral
KW - Animals
KW - Humans
KW - Adult
KW - Species Specificity
KW - Male
KW - Female
KW - Risk Assessment
KW - Plasticizers -- administration & dosage
KW - Phthalic Acids -- administration & dosage
KW - Toxicity Tests -- methods
KW - Plasticizers -- toxicity
KW - Phthalic Acids -- toxicity
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1561974970?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Regulatory+toxicology+and+pharmacology+%3A+RTP&rft.atitle=Derivation+of+an+oral+reference+dose+%28RfD%29+for+the+plasticizer%2C+di-%282-propylheptyl%29phthalate+%28Palatinol%C2%AE+10-P%29.&rft.au=Bhat%2C+Virunya+S%3BDurham%2C+Jennifer+L%3BEnglish%2C+J+Caroline&rft.aulast=Bhat&rft.aufirst=Virunya&rft.date=2014-10-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=65&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Regulatory+toxicology+and+pharmacology+%3A+RTP&rft.issn=1096-0295&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.yrtph.2014.06.002
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2015-10-20
N1 - Date created - 2014-09-12
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yrtph.2014.06.002
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A topic model approach to measuring interdisciplinarity at the National Science Foundation
AN - 1728645688; 201508590
AB - As the National Science Foundation (NSF) implements new cross-cutting initiatives and programs, interest in assessing the success of these experiments in fostering interdisciplinarity grows. A primary challenge in measuring interdisciplinarity is identifying and bounding the discrete disciplines that comprise interdisciplinary work. Using statistical text-mining techniques to extract topic bins, the NSF recently developed a topic map of all of their awards issued between 2000 and 2011. These new data provide a novel means for measuring interdisciplinarity by assessing the language or content of award proposals. Using the Directorate for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences as a case study and drawing on the new topic model of the NSF's awards, this paper explores new methods for quantifying interdisciplinarity in the NSF portfolio. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Scientometrics
AU - Nichols, Leah G
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22230, USA
Y1 - 2014/09//
PY - 2014
DA - September 2014
SP - 741
EP - 754
PB - Springer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands
VL - 100
IS - 3
SN - 0138-9130, 0138-9130
KW - Interdisciplinarity
KW - Topic model
KW - Network analysis
KW - Funding
KW - Visualization
KW - Research
KW - Government agencies
KW - article
KW - 17.1: RESEARCH
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1728645688?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Scientometrics&rft.atitle=A+topic+model+approach+to+measuring+interdisciplinarity+at+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Nichols%2C+Leah+G&rft.aulast=Nichols&rft.aufirst=Leah&rft.date=2014-09-01&rft.volume=100&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=741&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Scientometrics&rft.issn=01389130&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11192-014-1319-2
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - CODEN - SCNTDX
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Funding; Research; Government agencies; Visualization
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11192-014-1319-2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Trade-Offs, Limitations, and Promises of Big Data in Social Science Research
AN - 1667936128; 201503577
AB - The promise of 'big data' is a grand one. The collection and aggregation of massive datasets and the development of analytical tools by which to study these data is part of cutting-edge efforts across scientific disciplines, with social, behavioral, and economic sciences leading the way in many of these efforts. There has been a recent rise in National Science Foundation funding for 'big data' research across directorates that coincides with scholarly, public, and governmental attention to the topic. Nonetheless, there are limitations and trade-offs to 'big data' research, particularly as it corresponds to scientific modes of inquiry and the limited range of topics that fall under its umbrella, that must be recognized and incorporated into the general understanding of its long-term promise. Adapted from the source document.
JF - The Review of Policy Research
AU - White, Patricia
AU - Breckenridge, R Saylor
AD - Sociology. National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2014/07//
PY - 2014
DA - July 2014
SP - 331
EP - 338
PB - Blackwell Publishers, Malden MA
VL - 31
IS - 4
SN - 1541-132X, 1541-132X
KW - Scientific method
KW - Data collection
KW - Research
KW - Data analysis
KW - Social sciences
KW - article
KW - 13.17: NON BIBLIOGRAPHIC DATABASES, DATA BANKS
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1667936128?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=The+Review+of+Policy+Research&rft.atitle=Trade-Offs%2C+Limitations%2C+and+Promises+of+Big+Data+in+Social+Science+Research&rft.au=White%2C+Patricia%3BBreckenridge%2C+R+Saylor&rft.aulast=White&rft.aufirst=Patricia&rft.date=2014-07-01&rft.volume=31&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=331&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=The+Review+of+Policy+Research&rft.issn=1541132X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fropr.12078
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Data collection; Data analysis; Social sciences; Scientific method; Research
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ropr.12078
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Review and recent advances in battery health monitoring and prognostics technologies for electric vehicle (EV) safety and mobility
AN - 1677944480; 20164120
AB - As hybrid and electric vehicle technologies continue to advance, car manufacturers have begun to employ lithium ion batteries as the electrical energy storage device of choice for use in existing and future vehicles. However, to ensure batteries are reliable, efficient, and capable of delivering power and energy when required, an accurate determination of battery performance, health, and life prediction is necessary. This paper provides a review of battery prognostics and health management (PHM) techniques. with a focus on major unmet needs in this area for battery manufacturers, car designers, and electric vehicle drivers. A number of approaches are presented that have been developed to monitor battery health status and performance, as well as the evolution of prognostics modeling methods. The goal of this review is to render feasible and cost effective solutions for dealing with battery life issues under dynamic operating conditions.
JF - Journal of Power Sources
AU - Rezvanizaniani, Seyed Mohammad
AU - Liu, Zongchang
AU - Chen, Yan
AU - Lee, Jay
AD - NSF I/UCRC for Intelligent Maintenance Systems, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221, USA
Y1 - 2014/06/15/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Jun 15
SP - 110
EP - 124
PB - Elesevier Science B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 256
SN - 0378-7753, 0378-7753
KW - Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts (MT); Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); Electronics and Communications Abstracts (EA); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Lithium-ion battery
KW - Prognostics and health management
KW - State of charge
KW - State of health
KW - Safety
KW - Mobility
KW - Health monitoring (engineering)
KW - Electric vehicles
KW - Automotive engineering
KW - Electric batteries
KW - Devices
KW - Lithium batteries
KW - Automobiles
KW - Diagnostic systems
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1677944480?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.atitle=Review+and+recent+advances+in+battery+health+monitoring+and+prognostics+technologies+for+electric+vehicle+%28EV%29+safety+and+mobility&rft.au=Rezvanizaniani%2C+Seyed+Mohammad%3BLiu%2C+Zongchang%3BChen%2C+Yan%3BLee%2C+Jay&rft.aulast=Rezvanizaniani&rft.aufirst=Seyed&rft.date=2014-06-15&rft.volume=256&rft.issue=&rft.spage=110&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.issn=03787753&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.jpowsour.2014.01.085
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-05-04
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpowsour.2014.01.085
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Rationalising Business Intelligence Systems and Explicit Knowledge Objects: Improving Evidence-Based Management in Government Programs
AN - 1680141365; 201504170
AB - Public sector programs often fail to leverage their business intelligence systems and explicit knowledge objects to drive efficiency and effectiveness. Given the current federal fiscal environment and the need for effective government a catalyst to the requirement to use 'evidence and rigorous evaluation in budget, management, and policy decisions' federal programs look to business intelligence as an evidence-based decision-making practice leading to a more lean government, improving efficiency and effectiveness. However, cost overruns, technical obstacles, and next-generation information challenges stemming from pervasive computing can reduce any perceived value of utilising explicit knowledge systems to support evidence in decision making. Through the evaluation of five diverse projects tasked to address the use of evidence in decision-making practices, this research shows that achieving contextualisation of information requirements, stakeholder alignment, and the complexity/feasibility of information integration are key factors that should be analysed to improve the evidence-based decision-making practice in government programs, and may be accomplished through a systematic approach, such as the rationalisation of business intelligence systems. Thus, a rationalisation framework is provided to facilitate the management of business intelligence systems geared towards a more efficient and effectiye use of explicit knowledge. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Journal of Information & Knowledge Management
AU - Sapp, Carlton E
AU - Mazzuchi, Thomas
AU - Sarkani, Shahram
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suit 455, Arlington, VA. 22230 USA csapp@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2014/06//
PY - 2014
DA - June 2014
SP - 1450018
EP - 1-1450018-18
PB - World Scientific Publishing, Singapore
VL - 13
IS - 2
SN - 0219-6492, 0219-6492
KW - Business intelligence systems
KW - explicit knowledge objects
KW - evidence-based management
KW - rationalisation
KW - intelligence systems
KW - government programs
KW - Decision making
KW - Data collection
KW - Efficiency
KW - Public administration
KW - Data analysis
KW - Information systems
KW - article
KW - 10.1: INFORMATION WORK
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1680141365?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Information+%26+Knowledge+Management&rft.atitle=Rationalising+Business+Intelligence+Systems+and+Explicit+Knowledge+Objects%3A+Improving+Evidence-Based+Management+in+Government+Programs&rft.au=Sapp%2C+Carlton+E%3BMazzuchi%2C+Thomas%3BSarkani%2C+Shahram&rft.aulast=Sapp&rft.aufirst=Carlton&rft.date=2014-06-01&rft.volume=13&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1450018-1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Information+%26+Knowledge+Management&rft.issn=02196492&rft_id=info:doi/10.1142%2FS021964921450018X
L2 - http://www.worldscinet.com/jikm/jikm.shtml
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Decision making; Efficiency; Information systems; Data analysis; Data collection; Public administration
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S021964921450018X
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Three-dimensional crystalline and homogeneous metallic nanostructures using directed assembly of nanoparticles.
AN - 1529841179; 24738844
AB - Directed assembly of nano building blocks offers a versatile route to the creation of complex nanostructures with unique properties. Bottom-up directed assembly of nanoparticles have been considered as one of the best approaches to fabricate such functional and novel nanostructures. However, there is a dearth of studies on making crystalline, solid, and homogeneous nanostructures. This requires a fundamental understanding of the forces driving the assembly of nanoparticles and precise control of these forces to enable the formation of desired nanostructures. Here, we demonstrate that colloidal nanoparticles can be assembled and simultaneously fused into 3-D solid nanostructures in a single step using externally applied electric field. By understanding the influence of various assembly parameters, we showed the fabrication of 3-D metallic materials with complex geometries such as nanopillars, nanoboxes, and nanorings with feature sizes as small as 25 nm in less than a minute. The fabricated gold nanopillars have a polycrystalline nature, have an electrical resistivity that is lower than or equivalent to electroplated gold, and support strong plasmonic resonances. We also demonstrate that the fabrication process is versatile, as fast as electroplating, and scalable to the millimeter scale. These results indicate that the presented approach will facilitate fabrication of novel 3-D nanomaterials (homogeneous or hybrid) in an aqueous solution at room temperature and pressure, while addressing many of the manufacturing challenges in semiconductor nanoelectronics and nanophotonics.
JF - ACS nano
AU - Yilmaz, Cihan
AU - Cetin, Arif E
AU - Goutzamanidis, Georgia
AU - Huang, Jun
AU - Somu, Sivasubramanian
AU - Altug, Hatice
AU - Wei, Dongguang
AU - Busnaina, Ahmed
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for High-Rate Nanomanufacturing (CHN), Northeastern University , Boston, Massachusetts 02115, United States.
Y1 - 2014/05/27/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 May 27
SP - 4547
EP - 4558
VL - 8
IS - 5
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1529841179?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=ACS+nano&rft.atitle=Three-dimensional+crystalline+and+homogeneous+metallic+nanostructures+using+directed+assembly+of+nanoparticles.&rft.au=Yilmaz%2C+Cihan%3BCetin%2C+Arif+E%3BGoutzamanidis%2C+Georgia%3BHuang%2C+Jun%3BSomu%2C+Sivasubramanian%3BAltug%2C+Hatice%3BWei%2C+Dongguang%3BBusnaina%2C+Ahmed&rft.aulast=Yilmaz&rft.aufirst=Cihan&rft.date=2014-05-27&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=4547&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=ACS+nano&rft.issn=1936-086X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fnn500084g
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2015-03-30
N1 - Date created - 2014-05-27
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nn500084g
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Using Sensors and Sensor Networks to Quantify Ecosystem Services in Developed and Rural Watersheds
T2 - 2014 Joint Aquatic Sciences Meeting (JASM 2014)
AN - 1548626684; 6293163
JF - 2014 Joint Aquatic Sciences Meeting (JASM 2014)
AU - McDowell, W
AU - Potterr, J
AU - Daley, M
AU - Snyder, L
AU - Mulukutla, G
Y1 - 2014/05/18/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 May 18
KW - Sensors
KW - Watersheds
KW - Rural areas
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1548626684?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Joint+Aquatic+Sciences+Meeting+%28JASM+2014%29&rft.atitle=Using+Sensors+and+Sensor+Networks+to+Quantify+Ecosystem+Services+in+Developed+and+Rural+Watersheds&rft.au=McDowell%2C+W%3BPotterr%2C+J%3BDaley%2C+M%3BSnyder%2C+L%3BMulukutla%2C+G&rft.aulast=McDowell&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2014-05-18&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Joint+Aquatic+Sciences+Meeting+%28JASM+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sgmeet.com/jasm2014/sessionlist.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-06-30
N1 - Last updated - 2014-07-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Samarkand and its cultural heritage: perceptions and persistence of the Russian colonial construction of monuments
AN - 1567047009; 201435347
AB - This article is concerned with the creation, by the Russian colonial administration, Russian researchers and photographers/artists, of a corpus of 'historical monuments' of Samarkand in the first decades after the conquest of the city. It uses travelogues, administrative reports, memoirs, the periodical press and artistic productions to determine the mechanism of selection of representative monuments, defined as the 'cultural heritage' of Russian Turkestan and, indirectly, of the Russian Empire. The internal logic of 'patrimonialization', initiated from above and ideologically engaged, becomes more obvious when it is juxtaposed against native understandings of the significance of monuments, European practices, and the political projects of the Russian Empire. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Central Asian Survey
AU - Gorshenina, Svetlana
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation (FNS), Bern, Switzerland
Y1 - 2014/04/03/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Apr 03
SP - 246
EP - 269
PB - Routledge Publishing/Taylor & Francis, Abingdon UK
VL - 33
IS - 2
SN - 0263-4937, 0263-4937
KW - Artists
KW - Cities
KW - Colonialism
KW - Autobiographical Materials
KW - Empires
KW - Photographs
KW - Europe
KW - Monuments
KW - article
KW - 0513: culture and social structure; culture (kinship, forms of social organization, social cohesion & integration, & social representations)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1567047009?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Central+Asian+Survey&rft.atitle=Samarkand+and+its+cultural+heritage%3A+perceptions+and+persistence+of+the+Russian+colonial+construction+of+monuments&rft.au=Gorshenina%2C+Svetlana&rft.aulast=Gorshenina&rft.aufirst=Svetlana&rft.date=2014-04-03&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=246&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Central+Asian+Survey&rft.issn=02634937&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F02634937.2014.916071
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2014-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - CASUF9
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Monuments; Colonialism; Empires; Autobiographical Materials; Europe; Cities; Photographs; Artists
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02634937.2014.916071
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Recycled water for augmenting urban streams in mediterranean-climate regions: a potential approach for riparian ecosystem enhancement
AN - 1544013752; 20196730
AB - The scarcity of water in mediterranean-climate regions makes flow management in the rehabilitation of urban streams problematic. To explore potential applications of using recycled water for stream enhancement, we examine streams in the San Francisco Bay Area of California, USA, to characterize: (a) historic flow regimes at the regional scale, (b) potential unintended ecological effects and (c) specific issues related to recycled water. We analysed historic flow regimes in five basins, performed a streamflow augmentation experiment and monitored benthic macroinvertebrates above and below a recycled-water discharge. Streamflow augmentation with recycled water can provide improved aesthetics and aquatic habitat, but there are caveats to consider. Implications of inputs of recycled water in streams, whether direct or indirect, require detailed analysis of trade-offs. Augmentation is unlikely to harm the ecology of urban streams that are now just barely flowing perennially with pools of stagnant, contaminated water, and it may reduce public health problems from mosquitoes.Editor Z.W. Kundzewicz; Guest editor M. Acreman Citation Lawrence, J.E., Pavia, C.P.W., Kaing, S., Bischel, H.N., Luthy, R.G., and Resh, V.H., 2014. Recycled water for augmenting urban streams in mediterranean-climate regions: a potential approach for riparian ecosystem enhancement. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 59 (3-4), 488-501.
JF - Hydrological Sciences Journal/Journal des Sciences Hydrologiques
AU - Lawrence, Justin E
AU - Pavia, Christopher PW
AU - Kaing, Sereyvicheth
AU - Bischel, Heather N
AU - Luthy, Richard G
AU - Resh, Vincent H
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Y1 - 2014/04/03/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Apr 03
SP - 488
EP - 501
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN United Kingdom
VL - 59
IS - 3-4
SN - 0262-6667, 0262-6667
KW - Pollution Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Hydrological Regime
KW - Historical account
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Basins
KW - Freshwater
KW - Ecological Effects
KW - Recycling
KW - Streams
KW - Flow rates
KW - Public health
KW - Ecology
KW - Public Health
KW - Riparian environments
KW - Scarcity
KW - River Flow
KW - Rivers
KW - Hydrologic analysis
KW - Rehabilitation
KW - River discharge
KW - Streamflow
KW - Habitat
KW - Water reuse
KW - Water pollution
KW - Stream flow
KW - Aquatic Habitats
KW - Water management
KW - INE, USA, California, San Francisco Bay
KW - Zoobenthos
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 5010:Network design
KW - P 1000:MARINE POLLUTION
KW - Q2 09171:Dynamics of lakes and rivers
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - M2 556.16:Runoff (556.16)
KW - H 12000:Epidemiology and Public Health
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Hydrological+Sciences+Journal%2FJournal+des+Sciences+Hydrologiques&rft.atitle=Recycled+water+for+augmenting+urban+streams+in+mediterranean-climate+regions%3A+a+potential+approach+for+riparian+ecosystem+enhancement&rft.au=Lawrence%2C+Justin+E%3BPavia%2C+Christopher+PW%3BKaing%2C+Sereyvicheth%3BBischel%2C+Heather+N%3BLuthy%2C+Richard+G%3BResh%2C+Vincent+H&rft.aulast=Lawrence&rft.aufirst=Justin&rft.date=2014-04-03&rft.volume=59&rft.issue=3-4&rft.spage=488&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Hydrological+Sciences+Journal%2FJournal+des+Sciences+Hydrologiques&rft.issn=02626667&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F02626667.2013.818221
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Rivers; Water management; River discharge; Zoobenthos; Habitat; Streams; Water pollution; Public health; Stream flow; Ecology; Hydrologic analysis; Historical account; Riparian environments; Scarcity; Basins; Recycling; Water reuse; Flow rates; Hydrological Regime; Public Health; Rehabilitation; Ecosystems; Aquatic Habitats; River Flow; Streamflow; Ecological Effects; INE, USA, California, San Francisco Bay; Freshwater
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02626667.2013.818221
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The genetics of phenotypic plasticity. XIII. Interactions with developmental instability
AN - 1712570444; PQ0001955263
AB - In a heterogeneous environment, natural selection on a trait can lead to a variety of outcomes, including phenotypic plasticity and bet-hedging through developmental instability. These outcomes depend on the magnitude and pattern of that heterogeneity and the spatial and temporal distribution of individuals. However, we do not know if and how those two outcomes might interact with each other. I examined the joint evolution of plasticity and instability through the use of an individual-based simulation in which each could be genetically independent or pleiotropically linked. When plasticity and instability were determined by different loci, the only effect on the evolution of plasticity was the elimination of plasticity as a bet-hedging strategy. In contrast, the effects on the evolution of instability were more substantial. If conditions were such that the population was likely to evolve to the optimal reaction norm, then instability was disfavored. Instability was favored only when the lack of a reliable environmental cue disfavored plasticity. When plasticity and instability were determined by the same loci, instability acted as a strong limitation on the evolution of plasticity. Under some conditions, selection for instability resulted in maladaptive plasticity. Therefore, before testing any models of plasticity or instability evolution, or interpreting empirical patterns, it is important to know the ecological, life history, developmental, and genetic contexts of trait phenotypic plasticity and developmental instability. In a heterogeneous environment, natural selection on a trait can lead to a variety of outcomes, including phenotypic plasticity and bet-hedging through developmental instability. When plasticity and instability were determined by different loci, the only effect on the evolution of plasticity was the elimination of plasticity as a bet-hedging strategy, while instability was generally disfavored. When plasticity and instability were determined by the same loci, instability acted as a strong limitation on the evolution of plasticity.
JF - Ecology and Evolution
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, Virginia, 22230.
PY - 2014
SP - 1347
EP - 1360
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 4
IS - 8
SN - 2045-7758, 2045-7758
KW - Genetics Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Plasticity (developmental)
KW - Life history
KW - Temporal distribution
KW - phenotypic plasticity
KW - Simulation
KW - Natural selection
KW - Evolution
KW - Models
KW - Joints
KW - G 07740:Evolution
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1712570444?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.atitle=The+genetics+of+phenotypic+plasticity.+XIII.+Interactions+with+developmental+instability&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2014-04-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=1347&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.issn=20457758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fece3.1039
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Plasticity (developmental); Life history; phenotypic plasticity; Natural selection; Evolution; Joints; Models; Temporal distribution; Simulation
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1039
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Excursions in the super(14)C record at A.D. 774-775 in tree rings from Russia and America
AN - 1541409018; 19904877
AB - The calibration of radiocarbon dates by means of a master calibration curve has been invaluable to Earth, environmental and archeological sciences, but the fundamental reason for calibration is that atmospheric radiocarbon content varies because of changes in upper atmosphere production and global carbon cycling. Improved instrumentation has contributed to high-resolution (interannual) radiocarbon activity measurements, which have revealed sudden and anomalous activity shifts previously not observed at the common resolution of 5-10years of most of the calibration scale. One such spike has been recently reported from tree rings from Japan and then again in Europe at A.D. 774-775, for which we report here our efforts to both replicate its existence and determine its spatial extent using tree rings from larch at high latitude (northern Siberia) and bristlecone pine from lower latitude (the White Mountains of California). Our results confirm an abrupt ~15ppt super(14)C activity increase from A.D. 774 to 776, the size and now the hemispheric extent of which suggest that an extraterrestrial influence on radiocarbon production is most likely responsible. Key Points * Excursion in 774-776 A.D. due to a rapid change in 14C production * Event must be global and uniform in scale * Phenomenon is reproduced in two new locations, making a total of five
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
AU - Jull, AJTimothy
AU - Panyushkina, Irina P
AU - Lange, Todd E
AU - Kukarskih, Vladimir V
AU - Myglan, Vladimir S
AU - Clark, Kelley J
AU - Salzer, Matthew W
AU - Burr, George S
AU - Leavitt, Steven W
AD - NSF Arizona AMS Laboratory, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Y1 - 2014/04//
PY - 2014
DA - April 2014
SP - 3004
EP - 3010
PB - American Geophysical Union, 2000 Florida Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20009 United States
VL - 41
IS - 8
SN - 0094-8276, 0094-8276
KW - Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources
KW - INW, Japan
KW - Instrumentation
KW - Trees
KW - Climatic changes
KW - Carbon 14
KW - Carbon cycle
KW - Atmosphere
KW - Mountains
KW - Carbon
KW - Calibrations
KW - ANE, Europe
KW - INE, USA, California
KW - Radiocarbon dating
KW - Extraterrestrial material
KW - INW, Russia, Siberia
KW - Upper atmosphere
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - Q2 09182:Methods and instruments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1541409018?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awaterresources&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.atitle=Excursions+in+the+super%2814%29C+record+at+A.D.+774-775+in+tree+rings+from+Russia+and+America&rft.au=Jull%2C+AJTimothy%3BPanyushkina%2C+Irina+P%3BLange%2C+Todd+E%3BKukarskih%2C+Vladimir+V%3BMyglan%2C+Vladimir+S%3BClark%2C+Kelley+J%3BSalzer%2C+Matthew+W%3BBurr%2C+George+S%3BLeavitt%2C+Steven+W&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=AJTimothy&rft.date=2014-04-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=3004&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Molecular+dynamics+simulation+of+water+at+mineral+surfaces%3A+Structure%2C+dynamics%2C+energetics+and+hydrogen+bonding&rft.title=Molecular+dynamics+simulation+of+water+at+mineral+surfaces%3A+Structure%2C+dynamics%2C+energetics+and+hydrogen+bonding&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2016-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Carbon; Climatic changes; Carbon cycle; Carbon 14; Extraterrestrial material; Radiocarbon dating; Upper atmosphere; Mountains; Instrumentation; Calibrations; Trees; Atmosphere; INW, Japan; INE, USA, California; ANE, Europe; INW, Russia, Siberia
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2014GL059874
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Uncertainty, Impermanence Syndrome, and Public Land Ranching
AN - 1524422251; 19798524
AB - On the Ground times Impermanence syndrome involves farmer apprehension or uncertainty about the future and leads to disinvestment in an agricultural operation as well as erosion of producer confidence. times We explored impermanence syndrome among New Mexico public rangeland cattle producers in order to assess perceptions of impermanence syndrome impact factors in the region. times Urban fringe effects, proximity to the US-Mexico border, multiple-use of public rangelands, public perception of public land ranching, as well as economic and government agency issues were identified as causes of ranching impermanence syndrome. times Mitigation of uncertainty and perceived impermanence threats to ranching would promote management and investments that promote long-haul planning for and enhancement of rangeland health.
JF - Rangelands
AU - Parry, Samuel F
AU - Skaggs, Rhonda
AD - Authors are Former Graduate Research Assistant (Parry) and Professor, (Skaggs), Agricultural Economics and Agricultural Business, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation, NSF Grant DEB-0618210, as a contribution to the Jornada Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program, by the New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station, and by the United States Department of Agriculture-National Institute of Food and Agriculture (USDA-NIFA)., rskaggs@nmsu.edu
Y1 - 2014/04//
PY - 2014
DA - Apr 2014
SP - 20
EP - 24
PB - Society for Range Management
VL - 36
IS - 2
SN - 0190-0528, 0190-0528
KW - Ecology Abstracts
KW - Agriculture
KW - Rangelands
KW - Management
KW - Ranching
KW - D 04060:Management and Conservation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1524422251?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Rangelands&rft.atitle=Uncertainty%2C+Impermanence+Syndrome%2C+and+Public+Land+Ranching&rft.au=Parry%2C+Samuel+F%3BSkaggs%2C+Rhonda&rft.aulast=Parry&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2014-04-01&rft.volume=36&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=20&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Rangelands&rft.issn=01900528&rft_id=info:doi/10.2111%2FRANGELANDS-D-13-00034.1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-05-01
N1 - Number of references - 14
N1 - Last updated - 2014-08-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Agriculture; Rangelands; Management; Ranching
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2111/RANGELANDS-D-13-00034.1
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - From Micelles to My Cells: Data Analysis and Exposure Assessment Principles
T2 - 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2014)
AN - 1518609492; 6281239
JF - 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2014)
AU - English, Caroline
Y1 - 2014/03/23/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Mar 23
KW - Data processing
KW - Micelles
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1518609492?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=53rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2014%29&rft.atitle=From+Micelles+to+My+Cells%3A+Data+Analysis+and+Exposure+Assessment+Principles&rft.au=English%2C+Caroline&rft.aulast=English&rft.aufirst=Caroline&rft.date=2014-03-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=53rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/Pub/Prog/2014Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-23
N1 - Last updated - 2014-04-24
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Lotions Are Not Potions Lab
T2 - 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2014)
AN - 1518609423; 6281238
JF - 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2014)
AU - Bhat, Virunya
Y1 - 2014/03/23/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Mar 23
KW - Lotions
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1518609423?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=53rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2014%29&rft.atitle=Lotions+Are+Not+Potions+Lab&rft.au=Bhat%2C+Virunya&rft.aulast=Bhat&rft.aufirst=Virunya&rft.date=2014-03-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=53rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/Pub/Prog/2014Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-23
N1 - Last updated - 2014-04-24
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking tweets to the streets: A spatial of the Vinegar Protests in Brazil
AN - 1728645591; 201508431
AB - In this paper we investigate the relationship between the geographic location of protestors attending demonstrations in the 2013 Vinegar protests in Brazil and the geographic location of users that tweeted the protests. We explored the overlap between different sources of geographic information from Twitter - namely geocode, hashtag, and user profile - provided by multiple samples drawn from a population of three million tweets related to the events and compared the data to the location of protestors attending the street demonstrations. We adjusted the data for the uneven distribution of the population and performed geospatial and spatial clustering analysis over sets of spatial locations. We found evidence for the hypotheses that users tweeting the protests are geographically distant from the street protests and that users from geographically isolated areas rely on Twitter hashtags to remotely engage in the demonstrations. Adapted from the source document.
JF - First Monday
AU - Bastos, Marco Toledo
AU - Recuero, Raquel da Cunha
AU - Zago, Gabriela da Silva
AD - NSF EAGER HASTAC, Duke University, United States marco@toledobastos.com
Y1 - 2014/03/03/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Mar 03
PB - University of Illinois at Chicago Library, First Monday Editorial Group
VL - 19
IS - 3
SN - 1396-0466, 1396-0466
KW - Social networks
KW - Spatial data
KW - Location
KW - Activism
KW - Geography
KW - article
KW - 14.11: COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - NETWORKS
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1728645591?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=First+Monday&rft.atitle=Taking+tweets+to+the+streets%3A+A+spatial+of+the+Vinegar+Protests+in+Brazil&rft.au=Bastos%2C+Marco+Toledo%3BRecuero%2C+Raquel+da+Cunha%3BZago%2C+Gabriela+da+Silva&rft.aulast=Bastos&rft.aufirst=Marco&rft.date=2014-03-03&rft.volume=19&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=First+Monday&rft.issn=13960466&rft_id=info:doi/10.5210%2Ffm.v19i3.5227
L2 - http://www.firstmonday.org/
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Geography; Spatial data; Activism; Location; Social networks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.5210/fm.v19i3.5227
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - One-pot formal synthesis of biorenewable terephthalic acid from methyl coumalate and methyl pyruvate
AN - 1516748858; 19507703
AB - Diverse functionalized aromatic compounds are constructed from captodative dienophiles with exclusive regioselectivity. 100% biorenewable dimethyl terephthalate (DMT) from methyl coumalate and methyl pyruvate is achieved in a one-pot, Diels-Alder/decarboxylation/elimination sequence in nearly quantitative yield. The DMT system is solvent-free and purification is accomplished through recrystallization. DMT hydrolysis reveals the co-monomer terephthalic acid (TPA) as a bio-based drop-in replacement for the polymer industry, avoiding harsh oxidation and petrochemicals.
JF - Green Chemistry
AU - Lee, Jennifer J
AU - Kraus, George A
AD - Department of Chemistry and NSF Engineering Research Center for Biorenewable Chemicals; Iowa State University; Ames; IA 50011; USA; , gakraus@iastate.edu
Y1 - 2014/03//
PY - 2014
DA - March 2014
SP - 2111
EP - 2116
PB - Royal Society of Chemistry, c/o Springer-Verlag New York Inc. Secaucus New Jersey 07096 2485 United States
VL - 16
IS - 4
SN - 1463-9262, 1463-9262
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Aromatic compounds
KW - Oxidation
KW - Green development
KW - Petrochemicals
KW - Polymers
KW - Hydrolysis
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1516748858?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Green+Chemistry&rft.atitle=One-pot+formal+synthesis+of+biorenewable+terephthalic+acid+from+methyl+coumalate+and+methyl+pyruvate&rft.au=Lee%2C+Jennifer+J%3BKraus%2C+George+A&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=Jennifer&rft.date=2014-03-01&rft.volume=16&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=2111&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Green+Chemistry&rft.issn=14639262&rft_id=info:doi/10.1039%2Fc3gc42487a
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-01
N1 - Number of references - 54
N1 - Last updated - 2016-08-03
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Aromatic compounds; Green development; Oxidation; Petrochemicals; Polymers; Hydrolysis
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c3gc42487a
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Microbial release from seeded beach sediments during wave conditions
AN - 1656033858; 2015-012657
AB - Beach sands can sustain indigenous and introduced populations of enterococci. The objective of this study was to evaluate wave action in promoting the release of introduced bacteria. To accomplish this objective this study developed a method to assess attachment and identified conditions under which introduced bacteria are integrated into the sand. A new "shearing assay" showed that attachment of the introduced spike mimicked that of the natural sand when the spike was allowed to integrate into the sand for 24 h at room temperature at a sand moisture content of 20%. Experiments in a wave flume showed that waves were capable of releasing about 60% of the total bacteria added. This suggests that for the range of wave conditions evaluated (height: 1.9-10.5 cm, period:1-2.7 s), waves were incapable of releasing all of the bacteria. Further study is needed to evaluate bacteria attachment mechanisms. Abstract Copyright (2014) Elsevier, B.V.
JF - Marine Pollution Bulletin
AU - Phillips, Matthew C
AU - Feng, Zhixuan
AU - Vogel, Laura J
AU - Reniers, Ad J H M
AU - Haus, Brian K
AU - Enns, Amber A
AU - Zhang, Yifan
AU - Hernandez, David B
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
Y1 - 2014/02/15/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 15
SP - 114
EP - 122
PB - Elsevier, Oxford
VL - 79
IS - 1-2
SN - 0025-326X, 0025-326X
KW - sand
KW - experimental studies
KW - clastic sediments
KW - waves
KW - statistical analysis
KW - dye tracers
KW - pollution
KW - flume studies
KW - laboratory studies
KW - beaches
KW - Enterococcus
KW - bacteria
KW - sediments
KW - pore water
KW - microorganisms
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1656033858?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+Pollution+Bulletin&rft.atitle=Microbial+release+from+seeded+beach+sediments+during+wave+conditions&rft.au=Phillips%2C+Matthew+C%3BFeng%2C+Zhixuan%3BVogel%2C+Laura+J%3BReniers%2C+Ad+J+H+M%3BHaus%2C+Brian+K%3BEnns%2C+Amber+A%3BZhang%2C+Yifan%3BHernandez%2C+David+B%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M&rft.aulast=Phillips&rft.aufirst=Matthew&rft.date=2014-02-15&rft.volume=79&rft.issue=1-2&rft.spage=114&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+Pollution+Bulletin&rft.issn=0025326X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.marpolbul.2013.12.029
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0025326X
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 58
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-19
N1 - CODEN - MPNBAZ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - bacteria; beaches; clastic sediments; dye tracers; Enterococcus; experimental studies; flume studies; laboratory studies; microorganisms; pollution; pore water; sand; sediments; statistical analysis; waves
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2013.12.029
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The National Science Foundation User Facilities: Challenges and Opportunities
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AN - 1510099672; 6280007
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AU - Crim, F
Y1 - 2014/02/13/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 13
KW - Foundations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1510099672?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2014%29&rft.atitle=The+National+Science+Foundation+User+Facilities%3A+Challenges+and+Opportunities&rft.au=Crim%2C+F&rft.aulast=Crim&rft.aufirst=F&rft.date=2014-02-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-24
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Using Presentation Bootcamp Methods to Prepare Presenters for Teen Audiences
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AN - 1510095844; 6280150
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AU - Tankersley, Richard
Y1 - 2014/02/13/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 13
KW - Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1510095844?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-24
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Dimensions of Systems Thinking in a Changing Planet
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AN - 1510095269; 6280365
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AU - Whitehead, N
Y1 - 2014/02/13/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 13
KW - Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1510095269?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-24
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Arctic Change: Risk or Opportunity?
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AN - 1510095254; 6279953
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AU - Stephenson, Simon
Y1 - 2014/02/13/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 13
KW - Arctic
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1510095254?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geobios&rft.atitle=High-resolution+stratigraphy+of+the+Cenomanian-Turonian+boundary+interval+at+Pueblo+%28USA%29+and+Wadi+Bahloul+%28Tunisia%29%3B+stable+isotope+and+bio-events+correlation&rft.au=Caron%2C+Michele%3BDall%27Agnolo%2C+Stephan%3BAccarie%2C+Hugues%3BBarrera%2C+Enriqueta%3BKauffman%2C+Erle+G%3BAmedro%2C+Francis%3BRobaszynski%2C+Francis&rft.aulast=Caron&rft.aufirst=Michele&rft.date=2006-04-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=171&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geobios&rft.issn=00166995&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.geobios.2004.11.004
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-24
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Return on Investment: Evaluating Efficacy of Communication Training for Scientists
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AN - 1510095192; 6279781
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AU - Tankersley, Richard
Y1 - 2014/02/13/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 13
KW - Training
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1510095192?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2014%29&rft.atitle=Return+on+Investment%3A+Evaluating+Efficacy+of+Communication+Training+for+Scientists&rft.au=Tankersley%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Tankersley&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2014-02-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-24
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Nanotechnology and Convergence: Global Interdisciplinary Endeavors at the STI Frontier
T2 - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AN - 1510094996; 6279810
JF - 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2014)
AU - Roco, Mihail
Y1 - 2014/02/13/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 13
KW - Nanotechnology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1510094996?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2014%29&rft.atitle=Nanotechnology+and+Convergence%3A+Global+Interdisciplinary+Endeavors+at+the+STI+Frontier&rft.au=Roco%2C+Mihail&rft.aulast=Roco&rft.aufirst=Mihail&rft.date=2014-02-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2014+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2014/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-24
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-26
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Damage Survey of the El Reno, OK Tornado
T2 - 94th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2014)
AN - 1518615513; 6282133
JF - 94th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2014)
AU - Wakimoto, Roger
AU - Atkins, N
AU - Butler, K
AU - Bluestein, H
Y1 - 2014/02/02/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 02
KW - Meteorology
KW - Earth sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1518615513?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://ams.confex.com/ams/94Annual/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-23
N1 - Last updated - 2014-04-24
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Probabilistic Flash Flood Forecasting using Stormscale Ensembles
T2 - 94th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2014)
AN - 1518613053; 6281691
JF - 94th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2014)
AU - Hardy, Jill
Y1 - 2014/02/02/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 02
KW - Flood forecasting
KW - Floods
KW - River discharge
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1518613053?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=94th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting+%28AMS+2014%29&rft.atitle=Probabilistic+Flash+Flood+Forecasting+using+Stormscale+Ensembles&rft.au=Hardy%2C+Jill&rft.aulast=Hardy&rft.aufirst=Jill&rft.date=2014-02-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=94th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting+%28AMS+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://ams.confex.com/ams/94Annual/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-23
N1 - Last updated - 2014-04-24
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Space Weather at NSF: Present and Future
T2 - 94th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2014)
AN - 1518611820; 6281674
JF - 94th American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2014)
AU - Behnke, Richard
Y1 - 2014/02/02/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Feb 02
KW - Weather
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1518611820?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=94th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting+%28AMS+2014%29&rft.atitle=Space+Weather+at+NSF%3A+Present+and+Future&rft.au=Behnke%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Behnke&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2014-02-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=94th+American+Meteorological+Society+Annual+Meeting+%28AMS+2014%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://ams.confex.com/ams/94Annual/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-23
N1 - Last updated - 2014-04-24
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An examination of modern and late Holocene sedimentation in Simpson Lagoon, Alaska
AN - 1803777908; 2016-059487
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Hanna, A J
AU - Allison, M A
AU - Bianchi, T S
AU - Goff, J A
AU - Marcantonio, F
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16958
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - Simpson Lagoon
KW - Colville River delta
KW - Holocene
KW - cores
KW - variations
KW - Cenozoic
KW - acoustical methods
KW - transgression
KW - transport
KW - sedimentation rates
KW - X-ray fluorescence spectra
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - spectra
KW - Beaufort Sea
KW - patterns
KW - Quaternary
KW - sediment transport
KW - grain size
KW - sedimentation
KW - geophysical methods
KW - reflection methods
KW - provenance
KW - fluctuations
KW - sea-level changes
KW - Alaska
KW - upper Holocene
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777908?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=An+examination+of+modern+and+late+Holocene+sedimentation+in+Simpson+Lagoon%2C+Alaska&rft.au=Hanna%2C+A+J%3BAllison%2C+M+A%3BBianchi%2C+T+S%3BGoff%2C+J+A%3BMarcantonio%2C+F%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Hanna&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acoustical methods; Alaska; Arctic Ocean; Beaufort Sea; Cenozoic; Colville River delta; cores; fluctuations; geophysical methods; grain size; Holocene; patterns; provenance; Quaternary; reflection methods; sea-level changes; sediment transport; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; Simpson Lagoon; spectra; transgression; transport; United States; upper Holocene; variations; X-ray fluorescence spectra
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence of constructional ravinement on a transgressive barrier coast; storm generated morphology preserved on the inner shelf of the northwest Gulf of Mexico
AN - 1803777902; 2016-059550
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Johnson, Kyle W
AU - Dellapenna, T M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13961
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - Hurricane Ike
KW - Quaternary
KW - northwestern Gulf of Mexico
KW - Galveston Island
KW - textures
KW - geophysical methods
KW - Texas
KW - Holocene
KW - storm environment
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - Cenozoic
KW - acoustical methods
KW - sea-level changes
KW - transgression
KW - Galveston County Texas
KW - deposition
KW - side-scanning methods
KW - continental shelf
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777902?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Evidence+of+constructional+ravinement+on+a+transgressive+barrier+coast%3B+storm+generated+morphology+preserved+on+the+inner+shelf+of+the+northwest+Gulf+of+Mexico&rft.au=Johnson%2C+Kyle+W%3BDellapenna%2C+T+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Johnson&rft.aufirst=Kyle&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acoustical methods; Atlantic Ocean; Cenozoic; continental shelf; deposition; Galveston County Texas; Galveston Island; geophysical methods; Gulf of Mexico; Holocene; Hurricane Ike; North Atlantic; northwestern Gulf of Mexico; Quaternary; sea-level changes; side-scanning methods; storm environment; Texas; textures; transgression; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment transport in a tidal river and estuary during extreme discharge events
AN - 1803777901; 2016-059493
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Ralston, D K
AU - Warner, J C
AU - Geyer, W R
AU - Wall, G R
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17126
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - hydrology
KW - stream transport
KW - geologic hazards
KW - sediment transport
KW - stream sediments
KW - watersheds
KW - Eastern U.S.
KW - Tropical Storm Lee
KW - Northeastern U.S.
KW - observations
KW - Tropical Storm Irene
KW - models
KW - transport
KW - marine environment
KW - sediments
KW - natural hazards
KW - floods
KW - depositional environment
KW - discharge
KW - fluvial environment
KW - Hudson River
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777901?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sediment+transport+in+a+tidal+river+and+estuary+during+extreme+discharge+events&rft.au=Ralston%2C+D+K%3BWarner%2C+J+C%3BGeyer%2C+W+R%3BWall%2C+G+R%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Ralston&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - depositional environment; discharge; Eastern U.S.; floods; fluvial environment; geologic hazards; Hudson River; hydrology; marine environment; models; natural hazards; Northeastern U.S.; observations; sediment transport; sediments; stream sediments; stream transport; transport; Tropical Storm Irene; Tropical Storm Lee; United States; watersheds
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
AN - 1803777896; 2016-059458
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
SP - 212
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - symposia
KW - marine geology
KW - oceanography
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777896?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=2014+ocean+sciences+meeting&rft.au=Itsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Itsweire&rft.aufirst=Eric&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sgmeet.com/osm2014/advancedsearch.asp
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - SuppNotes - Individual abstracts are cited separately
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - marine geology; oceanography; symposia
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Dispersal and fate of Yellow River-derived sediments in the Bohai Sea inferring from organic geochemical tracers
AN - 1803777887; 2016-059538
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Guo, Z
AU - Hu, L
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13150
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - terrestrial environment
KW - Far East
KW - isotopes
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Laizhou Bay
KW - cores
KW - West Pacific
KW - nitrogen
KW - total organic carbon
KW - carbon
KW - tracers
KW - sediments
KW - organic carbon
KW - Northwest Pacific
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - Yellow Sea
KW - processes
KW - Bohai Sea
KW - isotope ratios
KW - grain size
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - sedimentation
KW - biomarkers
KW - Huang He
KW - provenance
KW - organic compounds
KW - North Pacific
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777887?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Dispersal+and+fate+of+Yellow+River-derived+sediments+in+the+Bohai+Sea+inferring+from+organic+geochemical+tracers&rft.au=Guo%2C+Z%3BHu%2C+L%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Guo&rft.aufirst=Z&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; biomarkers; Bohai Sea; C-13/C-12; carbon; China; cores; Far East; grain size; Huang He; isotope ratios; isotopes; Laizhou Bay; nitrogen; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; organic carbon; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; processes; provenance; sedimentation; sediments; stable isotopes; terrestrial environment; total organic carbon; tracers; West Pacific; Yellow Sea
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemical composition of size-fractionated aerosols collected over the Equatorial Pacific Ocean; ferrous iron and related compounds
AN - 1803777875; 2016-059529
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Teng, H
AU - Shank, L M
AU - Ting, H
AU - Hinz, D
AU - Johansen, A M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14998
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - phytoplankton
KW - Equatorial Pacific
KW - plankton
KW - iron
KW - geochemical cycle
KW - ferrous iron
KW - nutrients
KW - organic compounds
KW - organic acids
KW - metals
KW - carbon
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - aerosols
KW - carbon cycle
KW - chemical composition
KW - particles
KW - productivity
KW - 02A:General geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777875?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Chemical+composition+of+size-fractionated+aerosols+collected+over+the+Equatorial+Pacific+Ocean%3B+ferrous+iron+and+related+compounds&rft.au=Teng%2C+H%3BShank%2C+L+M%3BTing%2C+H%3BHinz%2C+D%3BJohansen%2C+A+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Teng&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aerosols; carbon; carbon cycle; chemical composition; Equatorial Pacific; ferrous iron; geochemical cycle; iron; metals; nutrients; organic acids; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; particles; phytoplankton; plankton; productivity
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - On thickness changes of Antarctic glaciers/ice shelves associated with polynya formation
AN - 1803777873; 2016-059472
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Schodlok, M
AU - Khazendar, A
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17193
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - sea ice
KW - firn
KW - glaciers
KW - rates
KW - ice shelves
KW - polynyas
KW - East Antarctica
KW - variations
KW - compaction
KW - melting
KW - Antarctica
KW - Moscow University Glacier
KW - ice
KW - thickness
KW - Totten Glacier
KW - glacial geology
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777873?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=45th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2006%29&rft.atitle=Health+Risk+Assessment+of+Chlorobenzenediamine+in+Drinking+Water&rft.au=Bhat%2C+V+S%3BBall%2C+G+L%3BMcLellan%2C+C+J%3BGillilland%2C+C+D&rft.aulast=Bhat&rft.aufirst=V&rft.date=2006-03-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=45th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Antarctica; compaction; East Antarctica; firn; glacial geology; glaciers; ice; ice shelves; melting; Moscow University Glacier; polynyas; rates; sea ice; thickness; Totten Glacier; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Dam-regulation dominated river regime; erosion phase of the evaluation of the Yellow River lower reaches and impact on its estuary
AN - 1803777765; 2016-059478
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Yang, Z S
AU - Zhang, X
AU - Bi, N
AU - Wang, H
AU - Fan, D
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15624
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - hydrology
KW - Far East
KW - erosion
KW - sedimentation
KW - rivers and streams
KW - suspended materials
KW - siltation
KW - Huang He
KW - hydrographs
KW - dams
KW - sediments
KW - floods
KW - estuarine environment
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777765?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Dam-regulation+dominated+river+regime%3B+erosion+phase+of+the+evaluation+of+the+Yellow+River+lower+reaches+and+impact+on+its+estuary&rft.au=Yang%2C+Z+S%3BZhang%2C+X%3BBi%2C+N%3BWang%2C+H%3BFan%2C+D%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Yang&rft.aufirst=Z&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-11-17
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; China; dams; erosion; estuarine environment; Far East; floods; Huang He; hydrographs; hydrology; rivers and streams; sedimentation; sediments; siltation; suspended materials
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of ocean acidification on bioerosion of burrowing bivalves in Moorea, French Polynesia
AN - 1803777763; 2016-059517
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Valentino, Lauren M
AU - Carpenter, R C
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16992
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - erosion
KW - Moorea French Polynesia
KW - reefs
KW - erosion rates
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - bioerosion
KW - Zoantharia
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - French Polynesia
KW - Anthozoa
KW - Invertebrata
KW - Mollusca
KW - Lithophaga
KW - pH
KW - Porites
KW - borings
KW - human activity
KW - Scleractinia
KW - Bivalvia
KW - biogenic processes
KW - Oceania
KW - burrows
KW - acidification
KW - Polynesia
KW - Cnidaria
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777763?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Effects+of+ocean+acidification+on+bioerosion+of+burrowing+bivalves+in+Moorea%2C+French+Polynesia&rft.au=Valentino%2C+Lauren+M%3BCarpenter%2C+R+C%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Valentino&rft.aufirst=Lauren&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidification; Anthozoa; bioerosion; biogenic processes; Bivalvia; borings; burrows; carbon dioxide; Cnidaria; erosion; erosion rates; French Polynesia; human activity; Invertebrata; Lithophaga; Mollusca; Moorea French Polynesia; Oceania; pH; Polynesia; Porites; quantitative analysis; reefs; Scleractinia; Zoantharia
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Contrasting scavenging of Po-210 and Pb-210 at hydrothermal and benthic layer interfaces during the GEOTRACES North Atlantic section transect
AN - 1803777760; 2016-059500
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Baskaran, M
AU - Church, T M
AU - Stewart, Gillian
AU - Rigaud, S
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15581
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - iron oxides
KW - Po-210
KW - isotopes
KW - lead
KW - TAG hydrothermal field
KW - Mid-Atlantic Ridge
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - metals
KW - manganese oxides
KW - oxides
KW - particulate materials
KW - North Atlantic
KW - GEOTRACES
KW - benthic environment
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - polonium
KW - Pb-210
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777760?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Contrasting+scavenging+of+Po-210+and+Pb-210+at+hydrothermal+and+benthic+layer+interfaces+during+the+GEOTRACES+North+Atlantic+section+transect&rft.au=Baskaran%2C+M%3BChurch%2C+T+M%3BStewart%2C+Gillian%3BRigaud%2C+S%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Baskaran&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; benthic environment; GEOTRACES; iron oxides; isotopes; lead; manganese oxides; metals; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; North Atlantic; oxides; particulate materials; Pb-210; Po-210; polonium; quantitative analysis; radioactive isotopes; TAG hydrothermal field
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Radiocesium derived from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant accident in seabed sediments; inventories and their temporal change
AN - 1803777750; 2016-059497
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Otosaka, S
AU - Kato, Y
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14137
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Fukushima Japan
KW - desorption
KW - Far East
KW - isotopes
KW - pollutants
KW - alkali metals
KW - pollution
KW - power plants
KW - ecosystems
KW - cores
KW - observations
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - nuclear energy
KW - Cs-137
KW - cesium
KW - metals
KW - sediments
KW - Cs-134
KW - Honshu
KW - Asia
KW - Japan
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777750?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Radiocesium+derived+from+the+Fukushima+Dai-ichi+nuclear+power+plant+accident+in+seabed+sediments%3B+inventories+and+their+temporal+change&rft.au=Otosaka%2C+S%3BKato%2C+Y%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Otosaka&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkali metals; Asia; cesium; cores; Cs-134; Cs-137; desorption; ecosystems; Far East; Fukushima Japan; Honshu; isotopes; Japan; marine sediments; metals; nuclear energy; observations; pollutants; pollution; power plants; radioactive isotopes; sediments
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Linking deltaic sedimentation and the pollution history; an integrated approach in the Po River delta, Italy
AN - 1803777742; 2016-059555
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Correggiari, Anna
AU - Miserocchi, Stefano
AU - Tesi, Tommaso
AU - Albertazzi, Sonia
AU - Iacovone, Valeria
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14728
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - shallow-water environment
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - isotopes
KW - lead
KW - Europe
KW - calibration
KW - Italy
KW - cores
KW - Southern Europe
KW - emission spectra
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - sediments
KW - X-ray fluorescence spectra
KW - spectra
KW - chromium
KW - seismic profiles
KW - Po Delta
KW - pollutants
KW - deltaic sedimentation
KW - sedimentation
KW - geophysical methods
KW - pollution
KW - seismic methods
KW - history
KW - metals
KW - Veneto Italy
KW - nickel
KW - surveys
KW - geophysical profiles
KW - Pb-210
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777742?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Linking+deltaic+sedimentation+and+the+pollution+history%3B+an+integrated+approach+in+the+Po+River+delta%2C+Italy&rft.au=Correggiari%2C+Anna%3BMiserocchi%2C+Stefano%3BTesi%2C+Tommaso%3BAlbertazzi%2C+Sonia%3BIacovone%2C+Valeria%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Correggiari&rft.aufirst=Anna&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - calibration; chromium; cores; deltaic sedimentation; emission spectra; Europe; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; history; isotopes; Italy; lead; metals; nickel; Pb-210; Po Delta; pollutants; pollution; radioactive isotopes; sedimentation; sediments; seismic methods; seismic profiles; shallow-water environment; Southern Europe; spectra; surveys; Veneto Italy; X-ray fluorescence spectra
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The dissolution kinetics of carbonate minerals
AN - 1803777676; 2016-059518
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Subhas, A V
AU - Rollins, N
AU - Erez, Jonathan
AU - Berelson, W
AU - Adkins, J F
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17319
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - crystal chemistry
KW - solution
KW - kinetics
KW - carbonates
KW - 01C:Mineralogy of non-silicates
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777676?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+dissolution+kinetics+of+carbonate+minerals&rft.au=Subhas%2C+A+V%3BRollins%2C+N%3BErez%2C+Jonathan%3BBerelson%2C+W%3BAdkins%2C+J+F%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Subhas&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - carbonates; crystal chemistry; kinetics; solution
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinothem mechanics on the muddy southwest Louisiana shelf
AN - 1803777675; 2016-059488
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Denommee, K C
AU - Bentley, S J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14327
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - overpressure
KW - Atchafalaya River
KW - North America
KW - progradation
KW - clastic sediments
KW - southwestern Louisiana
KW - sediment supply
KW - clinothems
KW - Gulf Coastal Plain
KW - cores
KW - observations
KW - geometry
KW - mud
KW - marine environment
KW - shelf environment
KW - sediments
KW - Louisiana
KW - ocean floors
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803777675?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Clinothem+mechanics+on+the+muddy+southwest+Louisiana+shelf&rft.au=Denommee%2C+K+C%3BBentley%2C+S+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Denommee&rft.aufirst=K&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atchafalaya River; clastic sediments; clinothems; cores; geometry; Gulf Coastal Plain; Louisiana; marine environment; mud; North America; observations; ocean floors; overpressure; progradation; sediment supply; sediments; shelf environment; southwestern Louisiana; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Role of benthic faunal burrows in methane flux measurements from tidal flat sediments
AN - 1803774535; 2016-059526
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Kang, J
AU - Woo, H
AU - Koo, B
AU - Lee, J
AU - Jeong, K
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13219
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - benthic taxa
KW - methane
KW - Vermes
KW - aliphatic hydrocarbons
KW - alkanes
KW - measurement
KW - Polychaeta
KW - spatial variations
KW - organic compounds
KW - tidal flats
KW - Phyllodocida
KW - sediments
KW - hydrocarbons
KW - burrows
KW - Invertebrata
KW - Macrophthalmus japonicus
KW - interpretation
KW - 10:Invertebrate paleontology
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774535?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Role+of+benthic+faunal+burrows+in+methane+flux+measurements+from+tidal+flat+sediments&rft.au=Kang%2C+J%3BWoo%2C+H%3BKoo%2C+B%3BLee%2C+J%3BJeong%2C+K%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Kang&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; benthic taxa; burrows; hydrocarbons; interpretation; Invertebrata; Macrophthalmus japonicus; measurement; methane; organic compounds; Phyllodocida; Polychaeta; sediments; spatial variations; tidal flats; Vermes
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geomicrobiological linkages between short-chain alkane consumption and sulfate reduction rates in seep sediments
AN - 1803774532; 2016-059507
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Rogers, D R
AU - Bose, A
AU - Adams, M M
AU - Joye, S B
AU - Girguis, P R
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15361
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - methane
KW - communities
KW - propane
KW - isotopes
KW - isotope ratios
KW - oxidation
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - aliphatic hydrocarbons
KW - ethane
KW - alkanes
KW - stable isotopes
KW - geochemical cycle
KW - oil seeps
KW - organic compounds
KW - butane
KW - marine environment
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - hydrocarbons
KW - anaerobic environment
KW - carbon cycle
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774532?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Geomicrobiological+linkages+between+short-chain+alkane+consumption+and+sulfate+reduction+rates+in+seep+sediments&rft.au=Rogers%2C+D+R%3BBose%2C+A%3BAdams%2C+M+M%3BJoye%2C+S+B%3BGirguis%2C+P+R%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Rogers&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; anaerobic environment; butane; C-13/C-12; carbon; carbon cycle; communities; ethane; geochemical cycle; hydrocarbons; isotope ratios; isotopes; marine environment; methane; oil seeps; organic compounds; oxidation; propane; sediments; stable isotopes
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Seasonal variations in aragonite saturation states in Kwangyang Bay, Korea
AN - 1803774460; 2016-059510
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Kim, D
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13148
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Far East
KW - aragonite
KW - saturation
KW - Kwangyang Bay
KW - seasonal variations
KW - Korea
KW - Asia
KW - carbonates
KW - South Korea
KW - 01C:Mineralogy of non-silicates
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774460?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Seasonal+variations+in+aragonite+saturation+states+in+Kwangyang+Bay%2C+Korea&rft.au=Kim%2C+D%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Kim&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aragonite; Asia; carbonates; Far East; Korea; Kwangyang Bay; saturation; seasonal variations; South Korea
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Floc discharge and sediment accumulation at altered macro-tidal Yeongsan Estuary of Korea
AN - 1803774443; 2016-059476
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Lee, G
AU - Shin, H
AU - Williams, J R
AU - Dellapenna, T M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15617
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - flocculation
KW - Far East
KW - stream sediments
KW - reclamation
KW - fresh water
KW - suspended materials
KW - Yeongsan Estuary
KW - intertidal environment
KW - transport
KW - sedimentation rates
KW - sediments
KW - velocity
KW - estuarine environment
KW - discharge
KW - Asia
KW - sediment transport
KW - grain size
KW - sedimentation
KW - Korea
KW - measurement
KW - organic compounds
KW - tidal flats
KW - coastal environment
KW - fluvial environment
KW - South Korea
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774443?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Floc+discharge+and+sediment+accumulation+at+altered+macro-tidal+Yeongsan+Estuary+of+Korea&rft.au=Lee%2C+G%3BShin%2C+H%3BWilliams%2C+J+R%3BDellapenna%2C+T+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; coastal environment; discharge; estuarine environment; Far East; flocculation; fluvial environment; fresh water; grain size; intertidal environment; Korea; measurement; organic compounds; reclamation; sediment transport; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; South Korea; stream sediments; suspended materials; tidal flats; transport; velocity; Yeongsan Estuary
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental controls on anoxic nitrate reduction pathways in temperate coastal sediments
AN - 1803774428; 2016-059503
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Hardison, Amber K
AU - Giblin, A
AU - Rich, J J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16898
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - communities
KW - isotopes
KW - ammonium ion
KW - ecosystems
KW - stable isotopes
KW - cores
KW - nitrogen
KW - controls
KW - spatial variations
KW - denitrification
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - reduction
KW - organic carbon
KW - nitrate ion
KW - processes
KW - temperate environment
KW - oxidation
KW - rates
KW - N-15
KW - measurement
KW - nutrients
KW - anammox
KW - bacteria
KW - coastal environment
KW - anaerobic environment
KW - aquatic environment
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774428?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Environmental+controls+on+anoxic+nitrate+reduction+pathways+in+temperate+coastal+sediments&rft.au=Hardison%2C+Amber+K%3BGiblin%2C+A%3BRich%2C+J+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Hardison&rft.aufirst=Amber&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-11-17
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - anaerobic environment; anammox; aquatic environment; bacteria; carbon; coastal environment; communities; controls; cores; denitrification; ecosystems; isotopes; measurement; N-15; nitrate ion; nitrogen; nutrients; organic carbon; processes; rates; reduction; sediments; spatial variations; stable isotopes; temperate environment; oxidation; ammonium ion
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - GOCI for the temporal dynamics of Korean coastal water
AN - 1803774409; 2016-059532
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Choi, J
AU - Yang, H
AU - Park, Y
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13007
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - currents
KW - ocean circulation
KW - imagery
KW - Far East
KW - Korea
KW - satellite methods
KW - ocean currents
KW - coastal environment
KW - turbidity
KW - algorithms
KW - Asia
KW - Geostationary Ocean Color Imager
KW - remote sensing
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774409?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=GOCI+for+the+temporal+dynamics+of+Korean+coastal+water&rft.au=Choi%2C+J%3BYang%2C+H%3BPark%2C+Y%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Choi&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algorithms; Asia; coastal environment; currents; Far East; Geostationary Ocean Color Imager; imagery; Korea; ocean circulation; ocean currents; remote sensing; satellite methods; turbidity
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A succession in microbial populations parallels the evolution of hydrocarbon chemistry in Gulf of Mexico beach sands
AN - 1803774390; 2016-059460
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Overholt, W A
AU - Rodriguez-R, L M
AU - Konstantinidis, K T
AU - Huettel, M
AU - Kostka, Joel E
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16653
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - degradation
KW - communities
KW - oxygen
KW - Pensacola Florida
KW - Florida
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - sediments
KW - geochemistry
KW - species diversity
KW - sand
KW - North America
KW - clastic sediments
KW - pollutants
KW - biochemistry
KW - pollution
KW - Escambia County Florida
KW - Gulf Coastal Plain
KW - nutrients
KW - organic compounds
KW - bacteria
KW - hydrocarbons
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774390?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=A+succession+in+microbial+populations+parallels+the+evolution+of+hydrocarbon+chemistry+in+Gulf+of+Mexico+beach+sands&rft.au=Overholt%2C+W+A%3BRodriguez-R%2C+L+M%3BKonstantinidis%2C+K+T%3BHuettel%2C+M%3BKostka%2C+Joel+E%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Overholt&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; bacteria; biochemistry; clastic sediments; communities; degradation; Escambia County Florida; Florida; geochemistry; Gulf Coastal Plain; Gulf of Mexico; hydrocarbons; North America; North Atlantic; nutrients; organic compounds; oxygen; Pensacola Florida; pollutants; pollution; sand; sediments; species diversity; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Upwelling rebound, ephemeral secondary pycnoclines, and the creation of a near-bottom wave guide; implications for shelf-sediment resuspension and transport
AN - 1803774386; 2016-059485
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Cheriton, O M
AU - Storlazzi, C D
AU - McPhee-Shaw, E E
AU - Rosenberger, K J
AU - Shaw, W J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13712
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - upwelling
KW - sediment transport
KW - shear stress
KW - Central California
KW - suspended materials
KW - pycnocline
KW - marine transport
KW - observations
KW - California
KW - transport
KW - Monterey Bay
KW - marine environment
KW - ocean waves
KW - shelf environment
KW - sediments
KW - ocean floors
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774386?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Upwelling+rebound%2C+ephemeral+secondary+pycnoclines%2C+and+the+creation+of+a+near-bottom+wave+guide%3B+implications+for+shelf-sediment+resuspension+and+transport&rft.au=Cheriton%2C+O+M%3BStorlazzi%2C+C+D%3BMcPhee-Shaw%2C+E+E%3BRosenberger%2C+K+J%3BShaw%2C+W+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Cheriton&rft.aufirst=O&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - California; Central California; marine environment; marine transport; Monterey Bay; observations; ocean floors; ocean waves; pycnocline; sediment transport; sediments; shear stress; shelf environment; suspended materials; transport; United States; upwelling
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Seasonal variability of sediment deposition into a large alpine lake
AN - 1803774382; 2016-059473
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Scheu, K
AU - Fong, D
AU - Monismith, S
AU - Fringer, O
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17645
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - terrestrial environment
KW - three-dimensional models
KW - sediment transport
KW - Lake Maggiore
KW - surface water
KW - sedimentation
KW - Europe
KW - simulation
KW - Italy
KW - temperature
KW - Southern Europe
KW - models
KW - SUNTANS model
KW - Pallanza Bay
KW - transport
KW - stratification
KW - deposition
KW - rotation
KW - lacustrine environment
KW - hydrodynamics
KW - seasonal variations
KW - alpine environment
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774382?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Seasonal+variability+of+sediment+deposition+into+a+large+alpine+lake&rft.au=Scheu%2C+K%3BFong%2C+D%3BMonismith%2C+S%3BFringer%2C+O%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Scheu&rft.aufirst=K&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-11-17
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alpine environment; deposition; Europe; hydrodynamics; Italy; lacustrine environment; Lake Maggiore; models; Pallanza Bay; rotation; seasonal variations; sediment transport; sedimentation; simulation; Southern Europe; stratification; SUNTANS model; surface water; temperature; terrestrial environment; three-dimensional models; transport
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating effects of ocean acidification on calcification rates of subarctic coralline algae
AN - 1803774356; 2016-059515
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Chan, P
AU - Halfar, Jochen
AU - Lebednik, P A
AU - Norley, C J
AU - Holdsworth, D W
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16516
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Plantae
KW - experimental studies
KW - calcification
KW - algae
KW - variations
KW - Rhodophyta
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - Corallinaceae
KW - laboratory studies
KW - saturation
KW - North Pacific
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - acidification
KW - magnesian calcite
KW - carbonates
KW - pH
KW - microfossils
KW - growth
KW - 09:Paleobotany
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774356?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Investigating+effects+of+ocean+acidification+on+calcification+rates+of+subarctic+coralline+algae&rft.au=Chan%2C+P%3BHalfar%2C+Jochen%3BLebednik%2C+P+A%3BNorley%2C+C+J%3BHoldsworth%2C+D+W%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Chan&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidification; algae; calcification; carbon dioxide; carbonates; Corallinaceae; experimental studies; growth; laboratory studies; magnesian calcite; microfossils; North Pacific; Pacific Ocean; pH; Plantae; Rhodophyta; saturation; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Impacts of summer storm activity on seafloor features offshore from Folly Beach, South Carolina, USA
AN - 1803774346; 2016-059552
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Lee, A J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14576
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - Northwest Atlantic
KW - terrestrial environment
KW - patterns
KW - South Carolina
KW - sediment transport
KW - geophysical methods
KW - nearshore environment
KW - marine transport
KW - bedforms
KW - acoustical methods
KW - transport
KW - marine environment
KW - side-scanning methods
KW - storms
KW - Folly Beach
KW - ocean floors
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774346?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Impacts+of+summer+storm+activity+on+seafloor+features+offshore+from+Folly+Beach%2C+South+Carolina%2C+USA&rft.au=Lee%2C+A+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acoustical methods; Atlantic Ocean; bedforms; Folly Beach; geophysical methods; marine environment; marine transport; nearshore environment; North Atlantic; Northwest Atlantic; ocean floors; patterns; sediment transport; side-scanning methods; South Carolina; storms; terrestrial environment; transport; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Thousandfold sediment delivery, port development and coral reef conservation; the 500 years Veracruz dilemma
AN - 1803774342; 2016-059535
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Arenas, Virgilio Eugenio
AU - Menanteau, Loic
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13066
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - soils
KW - processes
KW - erosion
KW - reefs
KW - ecosystems
KW - models
KW - Mexico
KW - Veracruz Mexico
KW - conservation
KW - sediments
KW - soil erosion
KW - deforestation
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774342?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Thousandfold+sediment+delivery%2C+port+development+and+coral+reef+conservation%3B+the+500+years+Veracruz+dilemma&rft.au=Arenas%2C+Virgilio+Eugenio%3BMenanteau%2C+Loic%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Arenas&rft.aufirst=Virgilio&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - conservation; deforestation; ecosystems; erosion; Mexico; models; processes; reefs; sediments; soil erosion; soils; Veracruz Mexico
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Event sedimentation on a subaqueous delta; understanding the interplay of sediment supply and remobilization in shaping the growth of an anthropocene delta
AN - 1803774250; 2016-059549
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Carlin, J A
AU - Dellapenna, T M
AU - Strom, K B
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13929
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - geologic hazards
KW - isotopes
KW - Brazos River
KW - sediment supply
KW - longshore currents
KW - lead
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - cores
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - mud
KW - sediments
KW - floods
KW - currents
KW - high-resolution methods
KW - clastic sediments
KW - sedimentation
KW - shorelines
KW - Texas
KW - ocean currents
KW - metals
KW - natural hazards
KW - surveys
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Pb-210
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774250?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Event+sedimentation+on+a+subaqueous+delta%3B+understanding+the+interplay+of+sediment+supply+and+remobilization+in+shaping+the+growth+of+an+anthropocene+delta&rft.au=Carlin%2C+J+A%3BDellapenna%2C+T+M%3BStrom%2C+K+B%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Carlin&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; Brazos River; clastic sediments; cores; currents; floods; geologic hazards; geophysical surveys; Gulf of Mexico; high-resolution methods; isotopes; lead; longshore currents; marine sediments; metals; mud; natural hazards; North Atlantic; ocean currents; Pb-210; radioactive isotopes; sediment supply; sedimentation; sediments; shorelines; surveys; Texas; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Spatial and temporal displacement of sinking particle fluxes and remineralization
AN - 1803774246; 2016-059462
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - McDonnell, A M
AU - Gruber, N
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17552
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - processes
KW - East Pacific
KW - currents
KW - photosynthesis
KW - ocean circulation
KW - patterns
KW - Northeast Pacific
KW - remineralization
KW - photochemistry
KW - ocean currents
KW - measurement
KW - nutrients
KW - models
KW - North Pacific
KW - Western U.S.
KW - carbon
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - velocity
KW - mineralization
KW - particles
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774246?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Spatial+and+temporal+displacement+of+sinking+particle+fluxes+and+remineralization&rft.au=McDonnell%2C+A+M%3BGruber%2C+N%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=McDonnell&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - carbon; currents; East Pacific; measurement; mineralization; models; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; nutrients; ocean circulation; ocean currents; Pacific Ocean; particles; patterns; photochemistry; photosynthesis; processes; remineralization; United States; velocity; Western U.S.
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment provenance of southwestern Cheju Island mud using principal component analysis
AN - 1803774231; 2016-059540
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Cho, H
AU - Lee, Y
AU - Kim, S
AU - Ahn, S
AU - Choi, H
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13331
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - silicates
KW - patterns
KW - Far East
KW - X-ray diffraction data
KW - principal components analysis
KW - stream sediments
KW - Yangtze River
KW - statistical analysis
KW - Korea
KW - Huang He
KW - clay minerals
KW - provenance
KW - marine sediments
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - fine-grained materials
KW - sediments
KW - sheet silicates
KW - mineral assemblages
KW - Cheju Island
KW - Asia
KW - fluvial environment
KW - China
KW - South Korea
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774231?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sediment+provenance+of+southwestern+Cheju+Island+mud+using+principal+component+analysis&rft.au=Cho%2C+H%3BLee%2C+Y%3BKim%2C+S%3BAhn%2C+S%3BChoi%2C+H%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Cho&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; Cheju Island; China; clay minerals; Far East; fine-grained materials; fluvial environment; Huang He; Korea; marine sediments; mineral assemblages; patterns; principal components analysis; provenance; quantitative analysis; sediments; sheet silicates; silicates; South Korea; statistical analysis; stream sediments; X-ray diffraction data; Yangtze River
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The spring-neap tidal asymmetry of suspended sediment transport in Yangtze River estuary during the dry season 2009
AN - 1803774211; 2016-059541
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Song, D
AU - Wang, H
AU - Cao, Z
AU - Guan, W
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13414
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - ocean circulation
KW - Far East
KW - sediment transport
KW - clastic sediments
KW - Yangtze River
KW - suspended materials
KW - variations
KW - observations
KW - tides
KW - models
KW - mud
KW - transport
KW - mixing
KW - sediments
KW - velocity
KW - seasonal variations
KW - estuarine environment
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - field studies
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774211?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+spring-neap+tidal+asymmetry+of+suspended+sediment+transport+in+Yangtze+River+estuary+during+the+dry+season+2009&rft.au=Song%2C+D%3BWang%2C+H%3BCao%2C+Z%3BGuan%2C+W%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Song&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; China; clastic sediments; estuarine environment; Far East; field studies; mixing; models; mud; observations; ocean circulation; seasonal variations; sediment transport; sediments; suspended materials; tides; transport; variations; velocity; Yangtze River
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Carbon Flux Explorer; quantifying the composition, vertical distribution, and diurnal variability of sedimentation in the Santa Cruz Basin
AN - 1803774203; 2016-059558
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Hamilton, C M
AU - Bishop, J K
AU - Wood, T J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17453
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - patterns
KW - Carbon Flux Explorer
KW - sedimentation
KW - Santa Cruz Basin
KW - observations
KW - California
KW - spatial distribution
KW - spatial variations
KW - Southern California
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - carbon
KW - diurnal variations
KW - organic carbon
KW - particles
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774203?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Carbon+Flux+Explorer%3B+quantifying+the+composition%2C+vertical+distribution%2C+and+diurnal+variability+of+sedimentation+in+the+Santa+Cruz+Basin&rft.au=Hamilton%2C+C+M%3BBishop%2C+J+K%3BWood%2C+T+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Hamilton&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - California; carbon; Carbon Flux Explorer; diurnal variations; observations; organic carbon; particles; patterns; quantitative analysis; Santa Cruz Basin; sedimentation; Southern California; spatial distribution; spatial variations; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Characteristics of sediment delivery through the tidal reach of an estuarine tributary of the San Francisco Bay
AN - 1803774196; 2016-059484
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Downing-Kunz, M A
AU - Schoellhamer, D H
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 18093
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - hydrology
KW - gauging
KW - Corte Madera Creek
KW - stream transport
KW - sediment transport
KW - Central California
KW - sedimentation
KW - watersheds
KW - suspended materials
KW - observations
KW - California
KW - San Francisco Bay
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - estuarine environment
KW - discharge
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774196?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Characteristics+of+sediment+delivery+through+the+tidal+reach+of+an+estuarine+tributary+of+the+San+Francisco+Bay&rft.au=Downing-Kunz%2C+M+A%3BSchoellhamer%2C+D+H%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Downing-Kunz&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - California; Central California; Corte Madera Creek; discharge; estuarine environment; gauging; hydrology; observations; San Francisco Bay; sediment transport; sedimentation; sediments; stream transport; suspended materials; transport; United States; watersheds
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Using radio frequency identification tags to investigate gravel transport on a sand-gravel mixed beach
AN - 1803774175; 2016-059554
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Takagawa, T
AU - Sato, S
AU - Nagasaka, Y
AU - Yamanaka, Y
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14690
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - sand
KW - experimental studies
KW - Far East
KW - sediment transport
KW - Sakawa River
KW - clastic sediments
KW - frequency
KW - marine transport
KW - gravel
KW - observations
KW - laboratory studies
KW - beaches
KW - detection
KW - transport
KW - deposition
KW - identification
KW - radio-wave methods
KW - sediments
KW - applications
KW - Asia
KW - Japan
KW - field studies
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774175?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Using+radio+frequency+identification+tags+to+investigate+gravel+transport+on+a+sand-gravel+mixed+beach&rft.au=Takagawa%2C+T%3BSato%2C+S%3BNagasaka%2C+Y%3BYamanaka%2C+Y%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Takagawa&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - applications; Asia; beaches; clastic sediments; deposition; detection; experimental studies; Far East; field studies; frequency; gravel; identification; Japan; laboratory studies; marine transport; observations; processes; radio-wave methods; Sakawa River; sand; sediment transport; sediments; transport
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Particle fluxes and source characterization on a western boundary upwelling system in southeastern Brazil; sediment trap experiments
AN - 1803774162; 2016-059536
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Albuquerque, Ana Luiza
AU - Belem, Andre L
AU - Capilla, R
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13114
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - upwelling
KW - southeastern Brazil
KW - ocean circulation
KW - experimental studies
KW - biochemistry
KW - characterization
KW - Cabo Frio
KW - provenance
KW - South America
KW - Rio de Janeiro Brazil
KW - downwelling
KW - isotherms
KW - diagenesis
KW - Brazil
KW - sediments
KW - particles
KW - Guanabara Bay
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774162?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Particle+fluxes+and+source+characterization+on+a+western+boundary+upwelling+system+in+southeastern+Brazil%3B+sediment+trap+experiments&rft.au=Albuquerque%2C+Ana+Luiza%3BBelem%2C+Andre+L%3BCapilla%2C+R%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Albuquerque&rft.aufirst=Ana&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - biochemistry; Brazil; Cabo Frio; characterization; diagenesis; downwelling; experimental studies; Guanabara Bay; isotherms; ocean circulation; particles; processes; provenance; Rio de Janeiro Brazil; sediments; South America; southeastern Brazil; upwelling
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Key geochemical factors regulating Mn(IV)-catalyzed anaerobic nitrification in coastal marine sediments
AN - 1803774109; 2016-059502
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Taillefert, M
AU - Hui, L
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14636
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - ammonium
KW - marshes
KW - ammonium ion
KW - oxidation
KW - manganese
KW - nitrogen
KW - mires
KW - marine sediments
KW - anammox
KW - catalysis
KW - salt marshes
KW - nitrification
KW - metals
KW - sediments
KW - manganese oxides
KW - oxides
KW - coastal environment
KW - anaerobic environment
KW - reduction
KW - nitrate ion
KW - geochemistry
KW - nitrite ion
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774109?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Key+geochemical+factors+regulating+Mn%28IV%29-catalyzed+anaerobic+nitrification+in+coastal+marine+sediments&rft.au=Taillefert%2C+M%3BHui%2C+L%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Taillefert&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-11-17
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - ammonium; anaerobic environment; anammox; catalysis; coastal environment; geochemistry; manganese; manganese oxides; marine sediments; marshes; metals; mires; nitrate ion; nitrification; nitrite ion; nitrogen; oxidation; oxides; reduction; salt marshes; sediments; ammonium ion
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment resuspension and nutrient dynamics in the shallow areas of the Baltic Sea; implications of climate change
AN - 1803774076; 2016-059553
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Niemisto, J P
AU - Joensuu, M
AU - Virkkala, N
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14619
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - shallow-water environment
KW - shear stress
KW - Gulf of Finland
KW - sedimentation
KW - suspended materials
KW - calibration
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - storm environment
KW - climate change
KW - measurement
KW - nutrients
KW - marine sediments
KW - sediments
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Baltic Sea
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774076?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sediment+resuspension+and+nutrient+dynamics+in+the+shallow+areas+of+the+Baltic+Sea%3B+implications+of+climate+change&rft.au=Niemisto%2C+J+P%3BJoensuu%2C+M%3BVirkkala%2C+N%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Niemisto&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; Baltic Sea; calibration; climate change; Gulf of Finland; marine sediments; measurement; North Atlantic; nutrients; paleoclimatology; sedimentation; sediments; shallow-water environment; shear stress; storm environment; suspended materials
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhanced scavenging of (super 231) Pa and (super 230) Th in benthic nepheloid layers
AN - 1803774074; 2016-059499
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Anderson, R F
AU - Hayes, C T
AU - Huang, K F
AU - Lu, Y
AU - Moran, S Bradley
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14577
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - ocean circulation
KW - Th-230
KW - isotopes
KW - solutes
KW - suspended materials
KW - ventilation
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - metals
KW - tracers
KW - protactinium
KW - thorium
KW - nepheloid layer
KW - trace elements
KW - Pa-231
KW - GEOTRACES
KW - benthic environment
KW - actinides
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774074?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Enhanced+scavenging+of+%28super+231%29+Pa+and+%28super+230%29+Th+in+benthic+nepheloid+layers&rft.au=Anderson%2C+R+F%3BHayes%2C+C+T%3BHuang%2C+K+F%3BLu%2C+Y%3BMoran%2C+S+Bradley%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Anderson&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - actinides; Atlantic Ocean; benthic environment; GEOTRACES; isotopes; metals; nepheloid layer; ocean circulation; Pa-231; processes; protactinium; radioactive isotopes; solutes; suspended materials; Th-230; thorium; trace elements; tracers; ventilation
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Factors contributing to variability in pCO2 and calcite mineral saturation state in a sensitive coastal ecosystem
AN - 1803774066; 2016-059466
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Salisbury, Joe
AU - Vandemark, Doug
AU - Hunt, C W
AU - Sabine, Chris
AU - Musielewicz, Sylvia
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17023
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - ecosystems
KW - advection
KW - variations
KW - measurement
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - calcite
KW - time scales
KW - case studies
KW - factors
KW - saturation
KW - partial pressure
KW - coastal environment
KW - ecology
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Gulf of Maine
KW - carbonates
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774066?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Factors+contributing+to+variability+in+pCO2+and+calcite+mineral+saturation+state+in+a+sensitive+coastal+ecosystem&rft.au=Salisbury%2C+Joe%3BVandemark%2C+Doug%3BHunt%2C+C+W%3BSabine%2C+Chris%3BMusielewicz%2C+Sylvia%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Salisbury&rft.aufirst=Joe&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - advection; Atlantic Ocean; calcite; carbon dioxide; carbonates; case studies; coastal environment; ecology; ecosystems; factors; Gulf of Maine; measurement; North Atlantic; partial pressure; processes; saturation; time scales; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The changing carbonate chemistry of coral reefs; implications for the future of reef formation
AN - 1803774061; 2016-059465
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Cyronak, T J
AU - Schulz, Kai G
AU - Santos, Isaac R
AU - Eyre, Bradley D
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13701
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - respiration
KW - processes
KW - photosynthesis
KW - sea water
KW - accretion
KW - human activity
KW - reefs
KW - surface water
KW - photochemistry
KW - rates
KW - ecosystems
KW - variations
KW - ground water
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - lagoonal environment
KW - acidification
KW - ecology
KW - 07:Oceanography
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774061?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+changing+carbonate+chemistry+of+coral+reefs%3B+implications+for+the+future+of+reef+formation&rft.au=Cyronak%2C+T+J%3BSchulz%2C+Kai+G%3BSantos%2C+Isaac+R%3BEyre%2C+Bradley+D%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Cyronak&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accretion; acidification; carbon dioxide; ecology; ecosystems; ground water; human activity; lagoonal environment; photochemistry; photosynthesis; processes; rates; reefs; respiration; sea water; surface water; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Satellite-detected fluorescence; decoupling non-photochemical quenching from iron stress signals in the South Atlantic and Southern Ocean
AN - 1803774054; 2016-059469
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Browning, Thomas J
AU - Bouman, H A
AU - Moore, C M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16126
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - imagery
KW - phytoplankton
KW - global
KW - plankton
KW - satellite methods
KW - iron
KW - controls
KW - spatial variations
KW - fluorescence
KW - metals
KW - South Atlantic
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - remote sensing
KW - productivity
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774054?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Satellite-detected+fluorescence%3B+decoupling+non-photochemical+quenching+from+iron+stress+signals+in+the+South+Atlantic+and+Southern+Ocean&rft.au=Browning%2C+Thomas+J%3BBouman%2C+H+A%3BMoore%2C+C+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Browning&rft.aufirst=Thomas&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; controls; fluorescence; global; imagery; iron; metals; phytoplankton; plankton; productivity; remote sensing; satellite methods; South Atlantic; Southern Ocean; spatial variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mitigation of ocean acidification in coastal systems through enhanced mineral weathering
AN - 1803774040; 2016-059467
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Montserrat, F
AU - Meysman, F J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14791
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - silicates
KW - processes
KW - biogenic structures
KW - rates
KW - olivine group
KW - solution
KW - weathering
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - nesosilicates
KW - conservation
KW - marine environment
KW - abrasion
KW - olivine
KW - orthosilicates
KW - acidification
KW - weathering rates
KW - sedimentary structures
KW - kinetics
KW - geochemistry
KW - bioturbation
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803774040?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Mitigation+of+ocean+acidification+in+coastal+systems+through+enhanced+mineral+weathering&rft.au=Montserrat%2C+F%3BMeysman%2C+F+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Montserrat&rft.aufirst=F&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - abrasion; acidification; biogenic structures; bioturbation; carbon dioxide; conservation; geochemistry; kinetics; marine environment; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; processes; rates; sedimentary structures; silicates; solution; weathering; weathering rates
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The depositional history of Oso Bay; a south Texas tidal flat
AN - 1803773972; 2016-059551
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Smith, Benjamin
AU - Silliman, James
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14456
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - aliphatic hydrocarbons
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - southern Texas
KW - nitrogen
KW - n-alkanes
KW - total organic carbon
KW - sediments
KW - processes
KW - North America
KW - Oso Bay
KW - paleohydrology
KW - Texas
KW - fresh-water environment
KW - alkanes
KW - Gulf Coastal Plain
KW - fluctuations
KW - organic compounds
KW - tidal flats
KW - deposition
KW - marine environment
KW - diagenesis
KW - hydrocarbons
KW - aquatic environment
KW - preservation
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773972?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+depositional+history+of+Oso+Bay%3B+a+south+Texas+tidal+flat&rft.au=Smith%2C+Benjamin%3BSilliman%2C+James%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Smith&rft.aufirst=Benjamin&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; aquatic environment; deposition; diagenesis; fluctuations; fresh-water environment; Gulf Coastal Plain; hydrocarbons; marine environment; n-alkanes; nitrogen; North America; organic compounds; Oso Bay; paleoclimatology; paleohydrology; preservation; processes; sediments; southern Texas; Texas; tidal flats; total organic carbon; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Contribution of sediment oxygen demand to the hypoxia off the Changjiang Estuary
AN - 1803773900; 2016-059543
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Zhang, H Y
AU - Zhao, L
AU - Sun, Y
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13521
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - currents
KW - East China Sea
KW - Far East
KW - oxygen
KW - Yangtze River
KW - solutes
KW - pycnocline
KW - ocean currents
KW - West Pacific
KW - observations
KW - measurement
KW - organic compounds
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - North Pacific
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - sediments
KW - anaerobic environment
KW - chemical oxygen demand
KW - Northwest Pacific
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773900?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Contribution+of+sediment+oxygen+demand+to+the+hypoxia+off+the+Changjiang+Estuary&rft.au=Zhang%2C+H+Y%3BZhao%2C+L%3BSun%2C+Y%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Zhang&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - anaerobic environment; Asia; chemical oxygen demand; China; currents; East China Sea; Far East; measurement; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; observations; ocean currents; organic compounds; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; pycnocline; quantitative analysis; sediments; solutes; West Pacific; Yangtze River
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment and particulate organic matter transport dynamics across a small mountainous river estuary during water flood conditions, Alsea Bay, Oregon
AN - 1803773894; 2016-059494
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Goni, M A
AU - Lerczak, J A
AU - Smith, L
AU - Lemagie, E
AU - Helm, J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14395
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - stream transport
KW - geologic hazards
KW - sediment transport
KW - Benton County Oregon
KW - Oregon
KW - organic compounds
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - natural hazards
KW - floods
KW - Alsea Bay
KW - particulate materials
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773894?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sediment+and+particulate+organic+matter+transport+dynamics+across+a+small+mountainous+river+estuary+during+water+flood+conditions%2C+Alsea+Bay%2C+Oregon&rft.au=Goni%2C+M+A%3BLerczak%2C+J+A%3BSmith%2C+L%3BLemagie%2C+E%3BHelm%2C+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Goni&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Alsea Bay; Benton County Oregon; floods; geologic hazards; natural hazards; Oregon; organic compounds; particulate materials; sediment transport; sediments; stream transport; transport; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Calcium anomalies in the northern California current system
AN - 1803773883; 2016-059516
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Ballard, J R
AU - Martz, T R
AU - Alin, Simone R
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16869
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - calcium
KW - upwelling
KW - Northeast Pacific
KW - watersheds
KW - solution
KW - Puget Sound
KW - geochemical anomalies
KW - alkalinity
KW - processes
KW - hydrology
KW - East Pacific
KW - currents
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Washington
KW - precision
KW - Columbia River
KW - calcification
KW - ocean currents
KW - measurement
KW - North Pacific
KW - metals
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - coastal environment
KW - seasonal variations
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773883?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Calcium+anomalies+in+the+northern+California+current+system&rft.au=Ballard%2C+J+R%3BMartz%2C+T+R%3BAlin%2C+Simone+R%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Ballard&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; alkalinity; calcification; calcium; coastal environment; Columbia River; currents; East Pacific; geochemical anomalies; hydrology; measurement; metals; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; ocean currents; Pacific Ocean; precision; processes; Puget Sound; seasonal variations; solution; United States; upwelling; Washington; watersheds
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Climatology of pCO2 and aragonite saturation state in the Gulf of Mexico
AN - 1803773857; 2016-059521
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Barbero, Leticia
AU - Wanninkhof, R
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 18091
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - aragonite
KW - saturation
KW - carbon
KW - air-sea interface
KW - North Atlantic
KW - carbonates
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - climate
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - measurement
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773857?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Climatology+of+pCO2+and+aragonite+saturation+state+in+the+Gulf+of+Mexico&rft.au=Barbero%2C+Leticia%3BWanninkhof%2C+R%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Barbero&rft.aufirst=Leticia&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - air-sea interface; aragonite; Atlantic Ocean; carbon; carbon dioxide; carbonates; climate; Gulf of Mexico; measurement; North Atlantic; saturation
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Impacts of anthropogenic alterations on the Yeongsan Estuary, South Korea
AN - 1803773823; 2016-059475
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Williams, J R
AU - Dellapenna, T M
AU - Lee, G H
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13225
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Far East
KW - isotopes
KW - erosion
KW - mass spectra
KW - Yeongsan Estuary
KW - stable isotopes
KW - environmental effects
KW - observations
KW - nitrogen
KW - seawalls
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - transport
KW - carbon
KW - dams
KW - sediments
KW - spectra
KW - discharge
KW - Asia
KW - scour
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - N-15/N-14
KW - sediment transport
KW - isotope ratios
KW - human activity
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - sedimentation
KW - Korea
KW - walls
KW - organic compounds
KW - X-ray data
KW - metals
KW - land use
KW - beryllium
KW - Be-7
KW - South Korea
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773823?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Impacts+of+anthropogenic+alterations+on+the+Yeongsan+Estuary%2C+South+Korea&rft.au=Williams%2C+J+R%3BDellapenna%2C+T+M%3BLee%2C+G+H%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Williams&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Asia; Be-7; beryllium; C-13/C-12; carbon; dams; discharge; environmental effects; erosion; Far East; human activity; isotope ratios; isotopes; Korea; land use; mass spectra; metals; N-15/N-14; nitrogen; observations; organic compounds; radioactive isotopes; scour; seawalls; sediment transport; sedimentation; sediments; South Korea; spectra; stable isotopes; transport; walls; X-ray data; Yeongsan Estuary
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Glacial-interglacial changes in primary productivity and organic carbon burial efficiency in the Northeast Pacific
AN - 1803773817; 2016-059468
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Lopes, Cristina C
AU - Kucera, M
AU - Mix, A C
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14018
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - last glacial maximum
KW - oxygen
KW - Northeast Pacific
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - deep-sea environment
KW - Holocene
KW - Cenozoic
KW - marine sediments
KW - carbon
KW - glacial environment
KW - sediments
KW - organic carbon
KW - productivity
KW - East Pacific
KW - oxygen cycle
KW - Quaternary
KW - interglacial environment
KW - geochemical cycle
KW - nutrients
KW - North Pacific
KW - marine environment
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - carbon cycle
KW - preservation
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773817?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Glacial-interglacial+changes+in+primary+productivity+and+organic+carbon+burial+efficiency+in+the+Northeast+Pacific&rft.au=Lopes%2C+Cristina+C%3BKucera%2C+M%3BMix%2C+A+C%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Lopes&rft.aufirst=Cristina&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - carbon; carbon cycle; Cenozoic; deep-sea environment; East Pacific; geochemical cycle; glacial environment; Holocene; interglacial environment; last glacial maximum; marine environment; marine sediments; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; nutrients; organic carbon; oxygen; oxygen cycle; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; preservation; productivity; Quaternary; sediments
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Denitrification, step-by-step; process rates of the denitrification sub-reactions in permeable sediments
AN - 1803773815; 2016-059504
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Veraart, A J
AU - Marchant, H K
AU - Strous, M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13815
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - experimental studies
KW - Western Europe
KW - isotopes
KW - nitric oxide
KW - nitrous oxide
KW - dinitrogen
KW - rates
KW - Europe
KW - N-15
KW - stable isotopes
KW - nitrogen
KW - denitrification
KW - Wadden Sea
KW - sediments
KW - nitrate ion
KW - permeability
KW - nitrite ion
KW - microorganisms
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773815?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Denitrification%2C+step-by-step%3B+process+rates+of+the+denitrification+sub-reactions+in+permeable+sediments&rft.au=Veraart%2C+A+J%3BMarchant%2C+H+K%3BStrous%2C+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Veraart&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - denitrification; dinitrogen; Europe; experimental studies; isotopes; microorganisms; N-15; nitrate ion; nitric oxide; nitrite ion; nitrogen; nitrous oxide; permeability; processes; rates; sediments; stable isotopes; Wadden Sea; Western Europe
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Following iron limitation across ocean gradients; pairing genetic fingerprinting of diatom community composition with molecular indicators of iron status
AN - 1803773745; 2016-059470
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Jenkins, B D
AU - Chappell, P D
AU - Wallace, J R
AU - Whitney, L P
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17768
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Thalassiosira oceanica
KW - Thalassiosira
KW - Plantae
KW - experimental studies
KW - phytoplankton
KW - communities
KW - plankton
KW - indicators
KW - algae
KW - iron
KW - laboratory studies
KW - organic compounds
KW - diatoms
KW - North Pacific
KW - metals
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - ecology
KW - proteins
KW - microfossils
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773745?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Following+iron+limitation+across+ocean+gradients%3B+pairing+genetic+fingerprinting+of+diatom+community+composition+with+molecular+indicators+of+iron+status&rft.au=Jenkins%2C+B+D%3BChappell%2C+P+D%3BWallace%2C+J+R%3BWhitney%2C+L+P%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Jenkins&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algae; communities; diatoms; ecology; experimental studies; indicators; iron; laboratory studies; metals; microfossils; North Pacific; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; phytoplankton; plankton; Plantae; proteins; Thalassiosira; Thalassiosira oceanica
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Seasonal distribution of suspended sediment in the Bohai Sea, China
AN - 1803773709; 2016-059479
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Wang, H
AU - Wang, A
AU - Bi, N
AU - Zeng, X
AU - Xiao, H
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13492
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Yellow Sea
KW - Bohai Sea
KW - Far East
KW - sediment transport
KW - suspended materials
KW - West Pacific
KW - spatial distribution
KW - Huang He delta
KW - monsoons
KW - transport
KW - North Pacific
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - sediments
KW - seasonal variations
KW - Shandong China
KW - Northwest Pacific
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773709?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Seasonal+distribution+of+suspended+sediment+in+the+Bohai+Sea%2C+China&rft.au=Wang%2C+H%3BWang%2C+A%3BBi%2C+N%3BZeng%2C+X%3BXiao%2C+H%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Wang&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; Bohai Sea; China; Far East; Huang He delta; monsoons; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Pacific Ocean; seasonal variations; sediment transport; sediments; Shandong China; spatial distribution; suspended materials; transport; West Pacific; Yellow Sea
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Dissolved nutrients and trace metals in sediment pore waters following the Deepwater Horizon blowout
AN - 1803773685; 2016-059525
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Miller, C M
AU - Hastings, D W
AU - Quinn, K A
AU - Masserini, R
AU - Hammaker, S
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17271
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - degradation
KW - surface water
KW - solutes
KW - pollution
KW - ecosystems
KW - northeastern Gulf of Mexico
KW - Deepwater Horizon oil spill
KW - manganese
KW - iron
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - nutrients
KW - metals
KW - marine environment
KW - carbon
KW - oil spills
KW - sediments
KW - trace metals
KW - organic carbon
KW - North Atlantic
KW - water pollution
KW - pore water
KW - Eh
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773685?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Dissolved+nutrients+and+trace+metals+in+sediment+pore+waters+following+the+Deepwater+Horizon+blowout&rft.au=Miller%2C+C+M%3BHastings%2C+D+W%3BQuinn%2C+K+A%3BMasserini%2C+R%3BHammaker%2C+S%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Miller&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; carbon; Deepwater Horizon oil spill; degradation; ecosystems; Eh; Gulf of Mexico; iron; manganese; marine environment; metals; North Atlantic; northeastern Gulf of Mexico; nutrients; oil spills; organic carbon; pollution; pore water; sediments; solutes; surface water; trace metals; water pollution
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing acetylene impacts on marine sediment N-fixers
AN - 1803773661; 2016-059501
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Fulweiler, R W
AU - Heiss, E M
AU - Newell, S E
AU - LeCleir, G R
AU - Wilhelm, S R
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17858
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - acetylene
KW - fixation
KW - sea water
KW - communities
KW - aliphatic hydrocarbons
KW - hydrochemistry
KW - assays
KW - nitrogen
KW - measurement
KW - organic compounds
KW - marine sediments
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - marine environment
KW - alkynes
KW - sediments
KW - hydrocarbons
KW - geochemistry
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773661?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Assessing+acetylene+impacts+on+marine+sediment+N-fixers&rft.au=Fulweiler%2C+R+W%3BHeiss%2C+E+M%3BNewell%2C+S+E%3BLeCleir%2C+G+R%3BWilhelm%2C+S+R%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Fulweiler&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acetylene; aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkynes; assays; communities; fixation; geochemistry; hydrocarbons; hydrochemistry; marine environment; marine sediments; measurement; nitrogen; organic compounds; quantitative analysis; sea water; sediments
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Waves, ice and sediment transport in Saginaw Bay
AN - 1803773654; 2016-059474
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Hawley, Nathan
AU - Redder, T
AU - Beletsky, R
AU - Verhamme, E
AU - Beletsky, D
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 12985
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - North America
KW - sediment transport
KW - Lake Huron
KW - waves
KW - pollution
KW - suspended materials
KW - Saginaw Bay
KW - depth
KW - nutrients
KW - models
KW - transport
KW - ice
KW - sediments
KW - lacustrine environment
KW - Great Lakes
KW - seasonal variations
KW - lake sediments
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773654?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Waves%2C+ice+and+sediment+transport+in+Saginaw+Bay&rft.au=Hawley%2C+Nathan%3BRedder%2C+T%3BBeletsky%2C+R%3BVerhamme%2C+E%3BBeletsky%2C+D%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Hawley&rft.aufirst=Nathan&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - depth; Great Lakes; ice; lacustrine environment; Lake Huron; lake sediments; models; North America; nutrients; pollution; Saginaw Bay; seasonal variations; sediment transport; sediments; suspended materials; transport; waves
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Patterns of continental margin sedimentation from Pt. Dume to Oceanside, California
AN - 1803773641; 2016-059486
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Alexander, Clark R
AU - Kidwell, S M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17818
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - continental slope
KW - Santa Monica California
KW - suspended materials
KW - marine transport
KW - cores
KW - California
KW - spatial distribution
KW - San Diego County California
KW - transport
KW - sedimentation rates
KW - sediments
KW - sand
KW - continental margin
KW - patterns
KW - sediment transport
KW - Point Dume
KW - clastic sediments
KW - Orange County California
KW - sedimentation
KW - Malibu California
KW - Oceanside California
KW - silt
KW - Southern California Bight
KW - provenance
KW - Southern California
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773641?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Patterns+of+continental+margin+sedimentation+from+Pt.+Dume+to+Oceanside%2C+California&rft.au=Alexander%2C+Clark+R%3BKidwell%2C+S+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Alexander&rft.aufirst=Clark&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - California; clastic sediments; continental margin; continental slope; cores; Malibu California; marine transport; Oceanside California; Orange County California; patterns; Point Dume; provenance; San Diego County California; sand; Santa Monica California; sediment transport; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; silt; Southern California; Southern California Bight; spatial distribution; suspended materials; transport; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of the tidal basin geometry on the net sediment transport in a tidal inlet
AN - 1803773640; 2016-059489
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Ridderinkhof, W
AU - de Swart, H E
AU - van der Vegt, M
AU - Alebregtse, N C
AU - Hoekstra, P
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14684
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - sand
KW - shore features
KW - sediment transport
KW - clastic sediments
KW - one-dimensional models
KW - geometry
KW - tidal inlets
KW - controls
KW - tidal flats
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773640?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+effect+of+the+tidal+basin+geometry+on+the+net+sediment+transport+in+a+tidal+inlet&rft.au=Ridderinkhof%2C+W%3Bde+Swart%2C+H+E%3Bvan+der+Vegt%2C+M%3BAlebregtse%2C+N+C%3BHoekstra%2C+P%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Ridderinkhof&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - clastic sediments; controls; geometry; one-dimensional models; processes; sand; sediment transport; sediments; shore features; tidal flats; tidal inlets; transport
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Redox sensitive trace elements (U, Cr, V) and their response to the redox conditions in the pore water of sediment along the coast of East China Sea
AN - 1803773615; 2016-059547
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Jiang, X
AU - Ning, J
AU - Sui, J
AU - Xu, B
AU - Yu, Z
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13773
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Far East
KW - ammonium ion
KW - manganese
KW - iron
KW - cores
KW - West Pacific
KW - marine sediments
KW - vanadium
KW - total organic carbon
KW - sedimentation rates
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - trace elements
KW - organic carbon
KW - Northwest Pacific
KW - Asia
KW - pH
KW - Eh
KW - chromium
KW - China
KW - East China Sea
KW - Zhejiang China
KW - sedimentation
KW - measurement
KW - nutrients
KW - provenance
KW - organic compounds
KW - North Pacific
KW - metals
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - uranium
KW - continental shelf
KW - actinides
KW - pore water
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773615?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Redox+sensitive+trace+elements+%28U%2C+Cr%2C+V%29+and+their+response+to+the+redox+conditions+in+the+pore+water+of+sediment+along+the+coast+of+East+China+Sea&rft.au=Jiang%2C+X%3BNing%2C+J%3BSui%2C+J%3BXu%2C+B%3BYu%2C+Z%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Jiang&rft.aufirst=X&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - actinides; ammonium ion; Asia; carbon; China; chromium; continental shelf; cores; East China Sea; Eh; Far East; iron; manganese; marine sediments; measurement; metals; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; nutrients; organic carbon; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; pH; pore water; provenance; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; total organic carbon; trace elements; uranium; vanadium; West Pacific; Zhejiang China
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sinking velocity of particulate radiocesium derived from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident
AN - 1803773612; 2016-059496
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Honda Makio, M C
AU - Kawakami Hajime, H
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14036
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Fukushima Japan
KW - Far East
KW - time series analysis
KW - isotopes
KW - pollutants
KW - statistical analysis
KW - alkali metals
KW - pollution
KW - power plants
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - nuclear energy
KW - detection
KW - Cs-137
KW - cesium
KW - North Pacific
KW - metals
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - sediments
KW - velocity
KW - particulate materials
KW - Honshu
KW - Asia
KW - Japan
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773612?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sinking+velocity+of+particulate+radiocesium+derived+from+the+Fukushima+Daiichi+nuclear+power+plant+accident&rft.au=Honda+Makio%2C+M+C%3BKawakami+Hajime%2C+H%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Honda+Makio&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkali metals; Asia; cesium; Cs-137; detection; Far East; Fukushima Japan; Honshu; isotopes; Japan; metals; North Pacific; nuclear energy; Pacific Ocean; particulate materials; pollutants; pollution; power plants; radioactive isotopes; sediments; statistical analysis; time series analysis; velocity
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A new look at ocean carbon remineralization and sequestration combining water-column and satellite data
AN - 1803773605; 2016-059461
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Guidi, L
AU - Legendre, L
AU - Uitz, J
AU - Stemmann, L
AU - Henson, S A
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15804
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - carbon sequestration
KW - remineralization
KW - biochemistry
KW - atmosphere
KW - deep-sea environment
KW - plankton
KW - satellite methods
KW - hydrochemistry
KW - variations
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - marine sediments
KW - marine environment
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - mineralization
KW - particulate materials
KW - organic carbon
KW - geochemistry
KW - remote sensing
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773605?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=A+new+look+at+ocean+carbon+remineralization+and+sequestration+combining+water-column+and+satellite+data&rft.au=Guidi%2C+L%3BLegendre%2C+L%3BUitz%2C+J%3BStemmann%2C+L%3BHenson%2C+S+A%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Guidi&rft.aufirst=L&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - atmosphere; biochemistry; carbon; carbon dioxide; carbon sequestration; deep-sea environment; geochemistry; hydrochemistry; marine environment; marine sediments; mineralization; organic carbon; particulate materials; plankton; remineralization; remote sensing; satellite methods; sediments; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Ocean acidification; the dissolution of calcium carbonate in artificial seawater
AN - 1803773596; 2016-059512
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Adhami, Zhaleh
AU - Hunter, Keith
AU - Currie, Kim
AU - Sander, Sylvia
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14037
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - sea water
KW - statistical analysis
KW - rates
KW - equations
KW - solution
KW - hydrochemistry
KW - chemical reactions
KW - acidification
KW - calcium carbonate
KW - geochemistry
KW - regression analysis
KW - pH
KW - 02B:Hydrochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773596?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Ocean+acidification%3B+the+dissolution+of+calcium+carbonate+in+artificial+seawater&rft.au=Adhami%2C+Zhaleh%3BHunter%2C+Keith%3BCurrie%2C+Kim%3BSander%2C+Sylvia%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Adhami&rft.aufirst=Zhaleh&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidification; calcium carbonate; chemical reactions; equations; geochemistry; hydrochemistry; pH; rates; regression analysis; sea water; solution; statistical analysis
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Numerical simulation of cohesive mud suspension in high-concentrated tidal channel of the Changjiang Estuary
AN - 1803773590; 2016-059533
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Ge, J
AU - Ding, P
AU - Guo, W
AU - Zheng, D
AU - Kong, Y
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13018
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - cycles
KW - Far East
KW - clastic sediments
KW - numerical analysis
KW - Yangtze River
KW - sediment supply
KW - suspended materials
KW - siltation
KW - simulation
KW - models
KW - mud
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773590?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Numerical+simulation+of+cohesive+mud+suspension+in+high-concentrated+tidal+channel+of+the+Changjiang+Estuary&rft.au=Ge%2C+J%3BDing%2C+P%3BGuo%2C+W%3BZheng%2C+D%3BKong%2C+Y%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Ge&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; China; clastic sediments; cycles; Far East; models; mud; numerical analysis; sediment supply; sediments; siltation; simulation; suspended materials; transport; Yangtze River
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Production of methane and nitrous oxide in sediments from Eckernfoerde Bay (Baltic Sea)
AN - 1803773577; 2016-059527
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Schweers, J
AU - Bange, H W
AU - Loescher, C
AU - Schmitz-Streit, R
AU - Treude, T
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13578
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - water
KW - respiration
KW - methane
KW - Archaea
KW - nitrous oxide
KW - aliphatic hydrocarbons
KW - alkanes
KW - southwestern Baltic Sea
KW - organic compounds
KW - marine sediments
KW - sampling
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - Eckernfoerde Bay
KW - marine environment
KW - denitrification
KW - bacteria
KW - shelf environment
KW - sediments
KW - hydrocarbons
KW - North Atlantic
KW - geochemistry
KW - Baltic Sea
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773577?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Production+of+methane+and+nitrous+oxide+in+sediments+from+Eckernfoerde+Bay+%28Baltic+Sea%29&rft.au=Schweers%2C+J%3BBange%2C+H+W%3BLoescher%2C+C%3BSchmitz-Streit%2C+R%3BTreude%2C+T%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Schweers&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; Archaea; Atlantic Ocean; bacteria; Baltic Sea; denitrification; Eckernfoerde Bay; geochemistry; hydrocarbons; marine environment; marine sediments; methane; nitrous oxide; North Atlantic; organic compounds; quantitative analysis; respiration; sampling; sediments; shelf environment; southwestern Baltic Sea; water
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Recent changes in the erosion-accretion patterns of the active Huanghe (Yellow River) delta lobe by human activities
AN - 1803773572; 2016-059542
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Bi, N S
AU - Wang, H J
AU - Yang, Z S
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13440
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - imagery
KW - patterns
KW - Far East
KW - accretion
KW - erosion
KW - stream sediments
KW - human activity
KW - grain size
KW - nearshore environment
KW - Huang He delta
KW - sediments
KW - bathymetry
KW - Shandong China
KW - discharge
KW - Asia
KW - fluvial environment
KW - China
KW - remote sensing
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773572?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Recent+changes+in+the+erosion-accretion+patterns+of+the+active+Huanghe+%28Yellow+River%29+delta+lobe+by+human+activities&rft.au=Bi%2C+N+S%3BWang%2C+H+J%3BYang%2C+Z+S%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Bi&rft.aufirst=N&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accretion; Asia; bathymetry; China; discharge; erosion; Far East; fluvial environment; grain size; Huang He delta; human activity; imagery; nearshore environment; patterns; remote sensing; sediments; Shandong China; stream sediments
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Fates of Asian river-derived sediments to the sea; large vs. small rivers
AN - 1803773555; 2016-059480
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Liu, P
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16939
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - clay
KW - Taiwan
KW - Far East
KW - stream transport
KW - Lanyang River
KW - stream sediments
KW - transport
KW - shelf environment
KW - sediments
KW - Pearl River
KW - Kaoping River
KW - storms
KW - Asia
KW - Mekong River
KW - China
KW - currents
KW - bedload
KW - sand
KW - sediment transport
KW - clastic sediments
KW - silt
KW - cyclones
KW - Huang He
KW - Choushui River
KW - marine environment
KW - typhoons
KW - Red River
KW - fluvial environment
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773555?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Fates+of+Asian+river-derived+sediments+to+the+sea%3B+large+vs.+small+rivers&rft.au=Liu%2C+P%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Liu&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; bedload; China; Choushui River; clastic sediments; clay; currents; cyclones; Far East; fluvial environment; Huang He; Kaoping River; Lanyang River; marine environment; Mekong River; Pearl River; Red River; sand; sediment transport; sediments; shelf environment; silt; storms; stream sediments; stream transport; Taiwan; transport; typhoons
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Submarine groundwater discharge as a source of radioactivity to the ocean from the Fukushima nuclear power plant
AN - 1803773553; 2016-059495
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Charette, M A
AU - Breier, C
AU - Kanda, J
AU - Nishikawa, J
AU - Buesseler, K O
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16094
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Sr-90
KW - Far East
KW - isotopes
KW - waste water
KW - radioactivity
KW - power plants
KW - ground water
KW - radioactive fallout
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - cesium
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - discharge
KW - Asia
KW - water pollution
KW - Fukushima Japan
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - radium
KW - pollutants
KW - background level
KW - surface water
KW - alkali metals
KW - surficial aquifers
KW - pollution
KW - aquifers
KW - nuclear energy
KW - metals
KW - Honshu
KW - strontium
KW - Japan
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773553?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Submarine+groundwater+discharge+as+a+source+of+radioactivity+to+the+ocean+from+the+Fukushima+nuclear+power+plant&rft.au=Charette%2C+M+A%3BBreier%2C+C%3BKanda%2C+J%3BNishikawa%2C+J%3BBuesseler%2C+K+O%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Charette&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkali metals; alkaline earth metals; aquifers; Asia; background level; cesium; discharge; Far East; Fukushima Japan; ground water; Honshu; isotopes; Japan; metals; nuclear energy; pollutants; pollution; power plants; quantitative analysis; radioactive fallout; radioactive isotopes; radioactivity; radium; Sr-90; strontium; surface water; surficial aquifers; waste water; water pollution
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Is twilight zone carbon sedimentation underestimated?
AN - 1803773551; 2016-059557
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Bishop, J K
AU - Hamilton, C M
AU - Fong, M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17402
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - in situ
KW - carbon
KW - sedimentation
KW - particulate materials
KW - carbon cycle
KW - organic carbon
KW - particles
KW - remote sensing
KW - inorganic materials
KW - geochemical cycle
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773551?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Is+twilight+zone+carbon+sedimentation+underestimated%3F&rft.au=Bishop%2C+J+K%3BHamilton%2C+C+M%3BFong%2C+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Bishop&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - carbon; carbon cycle; geochemical cycle; in situ; inorganic materials; organic carbon; particles; particulate materials; remote sensing; sedimentation
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Carbonate mineral saturation states in the East China Sea; present conditions and future scenarios
AN - 1803773543; 2016-059509
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Chou, W
AU - Gong, G
AU - Hung, C
AU - Wu, Y
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13049
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - East China Sea
KW - aragonite
KW - surface water
KW - solutes
KW - atmosphere
KW - ecosystems
KW - West Pacific
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - calcite
KW - saturation
KW - North Pacific
KW - future
KW - carbon
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - eutrophication
KW - alkalinity
KW - seasonal variations
KW - Northwest Pacific
KW - carbonates
KW - bottom water
KW - 01C:Mineralogy of non-silicates
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773543?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Carbonate+mineral+saturation+states+in+the+East+China+Sea%3B+present+conditions+and+future+scenarios&rft.au=Chou%2C+W%3BGong%2C+G%3BHung%2C+C%3BWu%2C+Y%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Chou&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkalinity; aragonite; atmosphere; bottom water; calcite; carbon; carbon dioxide; carbonates; East China Sea; ecosystems; eutrophication; future; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Pacific Ocean; saturation; seasonal variations; solutes; surface water; West Pacific
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Tidal-channel flow and sediment transport in environments influenced by the tidal Amazon River, Brazil
AN - 1803773539; 2016-059481
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Nowacki, D J
AU - Ogston, A S
AU - Nittrouer, C A
AU - Souza-Filho, P W
AU - Asp, N E
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17501
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - hydrology
KW - stream transport
KW - sediment transport
KW - stream sediments
KW - floodplains
KW - rivers and streams
KW - variations
KW - South America
KW - sediment budget
KW - transport
KW - Brazil
KW - Amazon River
KW - sediments
KW - fluvial features
KW - fluvial environment
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773539?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Tidal-channel+flow+and+sediment+transport+in+environments+influenced+by+the+tidal+Amazon+River%2C+Brazil&rft.au=Nowacki%2C+D+J%3BOgston%2C+A+S%3BNittrouer%2C+C+A%3BSouza-Filho%2C+P+W%3BAsp%2C+N+E%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Nowacki&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Amazon River; Brazil; floodplains; fluvial environment; fluvial features; hydrology; rivers and streams; sediment budget; sediment transport; sediments; South America; stream sediments; stream transport; transport; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Calcite saturation nutrient and oxygen impacts on calcification of benthic Foraminifera at natural low pH submarine springs
AN - 1803773496; 2016-059514
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Martinez Fernandez, A
AU - Crook, E
AU - Rebolledo-Vieyra, Mario
AU - Hernandez Terrones, Laura M
AU - Paytan, A
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16515
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - benthic taxa
KW - sea water
KW - oxygen
KW - ecosystems
KW - variations
KW - observations
KW - ground water
KW - Foraminifera
KW - laboratory studies
KW - submarine springs
KW - tests
KW - carbon
KW - springs
KW - Invertebrata
KW - alkalinity
KW - geochemistry
KW - species diversity
KW - pH
KW - experimental studies
KW - Protista
KW - aragonite
KW - calcification
KW - rates
KW - hydrochemistry
KW - inorganic materials
KW - calcite
KW - nutrients
KW - saturation
KW - carbonates
KW - microfossils
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773496?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Calcite+saturation+nutrient+and+oxygen+impacts+on+calcification+of+benthic+Foraminifera+at+natural+low+pH+submarine+springs&rft.au=Martinez+Fernandez%2C+A%3BCrook%2C+E%3BRebolledo-Vieyra%2C+Mario%3BHernandez+Terrones%2C+Laura+M%3BPaytan%2C+A%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Martinez+Fernandez&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkalinity; aragonite; benthic taxa; calcification; calcite; carbon; carbonates; ecosystems; experimental studies; Foraminifera; geochemistry; ground water; hydrochemistry; inorganic materials; Invertebrata; laboratory studies; microfossils; nutrients; observations; oxygen; pH; Protista; rates; saturation; sea water; species diversity; springs; submarine springs; tests; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The ocean circulation and stratification at the last glacial maximum
AN - 1803773492; 2016-059471
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Ferrari, R
AU - Adkins, J
AU - Burke, A
AU - Jansen, M
AU - Stewart, A
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16735
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Cenozoic
KW - ocean circulation
KW - last glacial maximum
KW - Quaternary
KW - stratification
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773492?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=The+ocean+circulation+and+stratification+at+the+last+glacial+maximum&rft.au=Ferrari%2C+R%3BAdkins%2C+J%3BBurke%2C+A%3BJansen%2C+M%3BStewart%2C+A%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Ferrari&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cenozoic; last glacial maximum; ocean circulation; Quaternary; stratification
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Frequency and intensity of exposure to carbonate corrosive waters in a near-shore upwelling environment
AN - 1803773490; 2016-059519
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Jacobsen, J R
AU - Abell, J T
AU - Shaugnessy, F
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17485
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - upwelling
KW - salinity
KW - temperature
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - California
KW - laboratory studies
KW - calcium carbonate
KW - porphyrins
KW - Northern California
KW - pH
KW - corrosion
KW - Trinidad Head
KW - experimental studies
KW - time series analysis
KW - pigments
KW - statistical analysis
KW - nearshore environment
KW - chlorophyll
KW - nutrients
KW - organic compounds
KW - stratification
KW - saturation
KW - Humboldt County California
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773490?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Frequency+and+intensity+of+exposure+to+carbonate+corrosive+waters+in+a+near-shore+upwelling+environment&rft.au=Jacobsen%2C+J+R%3BAbell%2C+J+T%3BShaugnessy%2C+F%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Jacobsen&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - calcium carbonate; California; carbon dioxide; chlorophyll; corrosion; experimental studies; Humboldt County California; laboratory studies; nearshore environment; Northern California; nutrients; organic compounds; pH; pigments; porphyrins; salinity; saturation; statistical analysis; stratification; temperature; time series analysis; Trinidad Head; United States; upwelling
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Flocculation in the water column or aggregation at the bed; case study from Nha Phu Bay, Vietnam
AN - 1803773482; 2016-059477
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Andersen, T J
AU - Markussen, T N
AU - Lund-Hansen, L C
AU - Nielsen, M H
AU - Lam, N N
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16439
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - water
KW - processes
KW - flocculation
KW - Far East
KW - sediment transport
KW - grain size
KW - suspended materials
KW - Vietnam
KW - case studies
KW - transport
KW - marine environment
KW - sediments
KW - Nha Phu Bay
KW - estuarine environment
KW - Asia
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773482?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Flocculation+in+the+water+column+or+aggregation+at+the+bed%3B+case+study+from+Nha+Phu+Bay%2C+Vietnam&rft.au=Andersen%2C+T+J%3BMarkussen%2C+T+N%3BLund-Hansen%2C+L+C%3BNielsen%2C+M+H%3BLam%2C+N+N%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Andersen&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; case studies; estuarine environment; Far East; flocculation; grain size; marine environment; Nha Phu Bay; processes; sediment transport; sediments; suspended materials; transport; Vietnam; water
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment transport in a large natural harbor and interconnecting estuarine system; the Kaipara Harbour, New Zealand
AN - 1803773465; 2016-059539
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Pritchard, M
AU - Green, M O
AU - MacDonald, I
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13203
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - Australasia
KW - time series analysis
KW - sediment transport
KW - Kaipara Harbor
KW - statistical analysis
KW - storm environment
KW - North Island
KW - models
KW - provenance
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - lagoonal environment
KW - turbidity
KW - estuarine environment
KW - discharge
KW - New Zealand
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773465?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sediment+transport+in+a+large+natural+harbor+and+interconnecting+estuarine+system%3B+the+Kaipara+Harbour%2C+New+Zealand&rft.au=Pritchard%2C+M%3BGreen%2C+M+O%3BMacDonald%2C+I%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Pritchard&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Australasia; discharge; estuarine environment; Kaipara Harbor; lagoonal environment; models; New Zealand; North Island; processes; provenance; sediment transport; sediments; statistical analysis; storm environment; time series analysis; transport; turbidity
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Tracking oil transformations in the Gulf of Mexico sediments after the 2010 Macondo blowout using biomarker ratios
AN - 1803773079; 2016-059506
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Babcock-Adams, L C
AU - Joye, S B
AU - Medeiros, P M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15361
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - pollutants
KW - pollution
KW - petroleum
KW - Deepwater Horizon oil spill
KW - biomarkers
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - marine sediments
KW - oil spills
KW - sediments
KW - North Atlantic
KW - blowouts
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773079?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Tracking+oil+transformations+in+the+Gulf+of+Mexico+sediments+after+the+2010+Macondo+blowout+using+biomarker+ratios&rft.au=Babcock-Adams%2C+L+C%3BJoye%2C+S+B%3BMedeiros%2C+P+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Babcock-Adams&rft.aufirst=L&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; biomarkers; blowouts; Deepwater Horizon oil spill; Gulf of Mexico; marine sediments; North Atlantic; oil spills; petroleum; pollutants; pollution; sediments
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Slope to basin and vertical particle transport dynamics measured with a profiling biogeochemical float
AN - 1803773074; 2016-059556
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Walsh, Ian D
AU - Murphy, D J
AU - Mitchell, T O
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16949
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - transport
KW - sediment transport
KW - mixing
KW - carbon
KW - biochemistry
KW - particulate materials
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Gulf of Lion
KW - geochemistry
KW - West Mediterranean
KW - particles
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773074?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Slope+to+basin+and+vertical+particle+transport+dynamics+measured+with+a+profiling+biogeochemical+float&rft.au=Walsh%2C+Ian+D%3BMurphy%2C+D+J%3BMitchell%2C+T+O%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Walsh&rft.aufirst=Ian&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - biochemistry; carbon; geochemistry; Gulf of Lion; Mediterranean Sea; mixing; particles; particulate materials; sediment transport; transport; West Mediterranean
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Internal tide climatology on the southern Monterey Bay shelf and associated bottom boundary layer sediment transport
AN - 1803773055; 2016-059546
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Rosenberger, K J
AU - Storlazzi, C D
AU - Cheriton, O
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13723
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - ocean circulation
KW - sediment transport
KW - clastic sediments
KW - suspended materials
KW - marine transport
KW - variations
KW - tides
KW - California
KW - mud
KW - transport
KW - Monterey Bay
KW - ocean waves
KW - sediments
KW - continental shelf
KW - instruments
KW - boundary layer
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803773055?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Internal+tide+climatology+on+the+southern+Monterey+Bay+shelf+and+associated+bottom+boundary+layer+sediment+transport&rft.au=Rosenberger%2C+K+J%3BStorlazzi%2C+C+D%3BCheriton%2C+O%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Rosenberger&rft.aufirst=K&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - boundary layer; California; clastic sediments; continental shelf; instruments; marine transport; Monterey Bay; mud; ocean circulation; ocean waves; sediment transport; sediments; suspended materials; tides; transport; United States; variations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding the IPCC WG1 fifth assessment report; ocean and carbon in past, present, and future
AN - 1803772803; 2016-059459
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Rhein, M
AU - Feely, R
AU - Masson-Delmotte, Valerie
AU - Sabine, Chris
AU - Rintoul, Steve
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13861
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Quaternary
KW - human activity
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - atmosphere
KW - Holocene
KW - oceanography
KW - Cenozoic
KW - future
KW - carbon
KW - acidification
KW - upper Holocene
KW - land use
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772803?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Understanding+the+IPCC+WG1+fifth+assessment+report%3B+ocean+and+carbon+in+past%2C+present%2C+and+future&rft.au=Rhein%2C+M%3BFeely%2C+R%3BMasson-Delmotte%2C+Valerie%3BSabine%2C+Chris%3BRintoul%2C+Steve%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Rhein&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidification; atmosphere; carbon; Cenozoic; future; Holocene; human activity; land use; oceanography; paleo-oceanography; Quaternary; upper Holocene
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross-shore sediment transport due to near-shore frontal processes in the Rhine region of freshwater influence
AN - 1803772798; 2016-059482
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Horner-Devine, A R
AU - Pietrzak, J D
AU - Souza, A
AU - Henriquez, M
AU - Meirelles, S
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 17924
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - Western Europe
KW - stream transport
KW - sediment transport
KW - stream sediments
KW - STRAtification Impacts on Nearshore Sediment
KW - grain size
KW - fresh water
KW - Europe
KW - nearshore environment
KW - measurement
KW - transport
KW - STRAINS
KW - sediments
KW - Rhine River
KW - Netherlands
KW - fluvial environment
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772798?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Cross-shore+sediment+transport+due+to+near-shore+frontal+processes+in+the+Rhine+region+of+freshwater+influence&rft.au=Horner-Devine%2C+A+R%3BPietrzak%2C+J+D%3BSouza%2C+A%3BHenriquez%2C+M%3BMeirelles%2C+S%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Horner-Devine&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Europe; fluvial environment; fresh water; grain size; measurement; nearshore environment; Netherlands; processes; Rhine River; sediment transport; sediments; STRAINS; STRAtification Impacts on Nearshore Sediment; stream sediments; stream transport; transport; Western Europe
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sedimentation pulse in the NE Gulf of Mexico following the 2010 DWH blowout
AN - 1803772795; 2016-059508
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Brooks, G R
AU - Larson, R A
AU - Reichart, G J
AU - Chanton, J P
AU - Kostka, J E
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16828
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - biogenic structures
KW - sedimentation
KW - northeastern Gulf of Mexico
KW - Deepwater Horizon oil spill
KW - Gulf of Mexico
KW - cores
KW - marine sediments
KW - deposition
KW - sedimentation rates
KW - oil spills
KW - sediments
KW - ocean floors
KW - North Atlantic
KW - sedimentary structures
KW - bioturbation
KW - preservation
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772795?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sedimentation+pulse+in+the+NE+Gulf+of+Mexico+following+the+2010+DWH+blowout&rft.au=Brooks%2C+G+R%3BLarson%2C+R+A%3BReichart%2C+G+J%3BChanton%2C+J+P%3BKostka%2C+J+E%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Brooks&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; biogenic structures; bioturbation; cores; Deepwater Horizon oil spill; deposition; Gulf of Mexico; marine sediments; North Atlantic; northeastern Gulf of Mexico; ocean floors; oil spills; preservation; sedimentary structures; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Estuarine particle tracking; divergence in sediment paths
AN - 1803772785; 2016-059534
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Brown, J M
AU - Amoudry, L O
AU - Souza, A J
AU - Rees, J
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13019
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - sand
KW - Western Europe
KW - sediment transport
KW - clastic sediments
KW - Liverpool Bay
KW - northwestern United Kingdom
KW - grain size
KW - England
KW - Europe
KW - simulation
KW - United Kingdom
KW - Great Britain
KW - observations
KW - Mersey Estuary
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - estuarine environment
KW - particles
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772785?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Estuarine+particle+tracking%3B+divergence+in+sediment+paths&rft.au=Brown%2C+J+M%3BAmoudry%2C+L+O%3BSouza%2C+A+J%3BRees%2C+J%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Brown&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - clastic sediments; England; estuarine environment; Europe; grain size; Great Britain; Liverpool Bay; Mersey Estuary; northwestern United Kingdom; observations; particles; sand; sediment transport; sediments; simulation; transport; United Kingdom; Western Europe
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - On the contribution of volcanic ash mobilization by wind to surface ocean fertilization
AN - 1803772779; 2016-059530
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Langmann, Baerbel
AU - Hudy, Alex
AU - Hort, Matthias
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 16674
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Eyjafjallajokull
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Europe
KW - Chile
KW - simulation
KW - iron
KW - observations
KW - transport
KW - climate effects
KW - volcanic ash
KW - Western Europe
KW - models
KW - pyroclastics
KW - South America
KW - Mount Hudson
KW - metals
KW - eruptions
KW - Katmai
KW - volcanoes
KW - Alaska
KW - mobilization
KW - wind transport
KW - Iceland
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=On+the+contribution+of+volcanic+ash+mobilization+by+wind+to+surface+ocean+fertilization&rft.au=Langmann%2C+Baerbel%3BHudy%2C+Alex%3BHort%2C+Matthias%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Langmann&rft.aufirst=Baerbel&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Alaska; Chile; climate effects; eruptions; Europe; Eyjafjallajokull; Iceland; igneous rocks; iron; Katmai; metals; mobilization; models; Mount Hudson; observations; pyroclastics; simulation; South America; transport; United States; volcanic ash; volcanic rocks; volcanoes; Western Europe; wind transport
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Calcification of an estuarine coccolithophore increases under increased PCO (sub 2)
AN - 1803772778; 2016-059464
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - White, M M
AU - Drapeau, D T
AU - Lubelczyk, L C
AU - Bowler, B C
AU - Balch, W M
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15174
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - photosynthesis
KW - Coccolithophoraceae
KW - Plantae
KW - experimental studies
KW - photochemistry
KW - calcification
KW - rates
KW - Pleurochrysis carterae
KW - algae
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - Emiliania
KW - acidification
KW - diurnal variations
KW - estuarine environment
KW - Emiliania huxleyi
KW - pH
KW - microfossils
KW - 09:Paleobotany
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772778?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Calcification+of+an+estuarine+coccolithophore+increases+under+increased+PCO+%28sub+2%29&rft.au=White%2C+M+M%3BDrapeau%2C+D+T%3BLubelczyk%2C+L+C%3BBowler%2C+B+C%3BBalch%2C+W+M%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=White&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidification; algae; calcification; carbon dioxide; Coccolithophoraceae; diurnal variations; Emiliania; Emiliania huxleyi; estuarine environment; experimental studies; microfossils; pH; photochemistry; photosynthesis; Plantae; Pleurochrysis carterae; rates
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Aggregation processes and phytoplankton morphology in the control of export fluxes from naturally iron-fertilised waters near the Kerguelen Plateau
AN - 1803772759; 2016-059463
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Laurenceau, Emmanuel C
AU - Trull, Tom W
AU - Davies, Diana M
AU - de la Rocha, Christina L
AU - Blain, Stephane
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14064
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - settling
KW - phytoplankton
KW - communities
KW - carbon sequestration
KW - grain size
KW - plankton
KW - Kerguelen Plateau
KW - aggregation
KW - controls
KW - marine sediments
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - velocity
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772759?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Aggregation+processes+and+phytoplankton+morphology+in+the+control+of+export+fluxes+from+naturally+iron-fertilised+waters+near+the+Kerguelen+Plateau&rft.au=Laurenceau%2C+Emmanuel+C%3BTrull%2C+Tom+W%3BDavies%2C+Diana+M%3Bde+la+Rocha%2C+Christina+L%3BBlain%2C+Stephane%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Laurenceau&rft.aufirst=Emmanuel&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aggregation; carbon; carbon sequestration; communities; controls; grain size; Indian Ocean; Kerguelen Plateau; marine sediments; phytoplankton; plankton; processes; sediments; settling; velocity
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Variations in silicon uptake kinetics and nutrient stoichiometry in three diatom species as a result of chronic iron limitation
AN - 1803772756; 2016-059528
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Meyerink, Scott W
AU - Ellwood, Michael
AU - Strzepek, Robert
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15430
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - phytoplankton
KW - communities
KW - bioavailability
KW - plankton
KW - algae
KW - silicon
KW - iron
KW - nitrogen
KW - Proboscia internis
KW - diatoms
KW - carbon
KW - physiology
KW - stoichiometry
KW - kinetics
KW - productivity
KW - Plantae
KW - experimental studies
KW - Eucampia antarctica
KW - biochemistry
KW - nutrients
KW - Antarctica
KW - metals
KW - microfossils
KW - growth
KW - 09:Paleobotany
KW - 02A:General geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772756?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Variations+in+silicon+uptake+kinetics+and+nutrient+stoichiometry+in+three+diatom+species+as+a+result+of+chronic+iron+limitation&rft.au=Meyerink%2C+Scott+W%3BEllwood%2C+Michael%3BStrzepek%2C+Robert%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Meyerink&rft.aufirst=Scott&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algae; Antarctica; bioavailability; biochemistry; carbon; communities; diatoms; Eucampia antarctica; experimental studies; growth; iron; kinetics; metals; microfossils; nitrogen; nutrients; physiology; phytoplankton; plankton; Plantae; Proboscia internis; productivity; silicon; Southern Ocean; stoichiometry
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Alkalinity release from sediments and impact on the water column CO2 system in the North Sea
AN - 1803772752; 2016-059513
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Heiko Brenner, H
AU - Braeckman, Ulrike
AU - Le Guitton, Marie
AU - Meysman, Filip
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 15762
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - shallow-water environment
KW - oxygen
KW - Europe
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - marine sediments
KW - mud
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - Central Europe
KW - sediments
KW - alkalinity
KW - Netherlands
KW - benthic environment
KW - geochemistry
KW - pH
KW - Western Europe
KW - clastic sediments
KW - hydrochemistry
KW - nutrients
KW - Belgium
KW - coastal environment
KW - North Sea
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Germany
KW - permeability
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772752?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Alkalinity+release+from+sediments+and+impact+on+the+water+column+CO2+system+in+the+North+Sea&rft.au=Heiko+Brenner%2C+H%3BBraeckman%2C+Ulrike%3BLe+Guitton%2C+Marie%3BMeysman%2C+Filip%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Heiko+Brenner&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkalinity; Atlantic Ocean; Belgium; benthic environment; carbon dioxide; Central Europe; clastic sediments; coastal environment; Europe; geochemistry; Germany; hydrochemistry; marine sediments; mud; Netherlands; North Atlantic; North Sea; nutrients; oxygen; permeability; pH; quantitative analysis; sediments; shallow-water environment; Western Europe
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sediment transport process and bedform mobility during major storms on Grand Banks
AN - 1803772732; 2016-059490
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Li, M Z
AU - Prescott, R H
AU - Wu, Y
AU - King, E L
AU - Han, G
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 13902
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - processes
KW - currents
KW - patterns
KW - sediment transport
KW - textures
KW - Grand Banks
KW - Newfoundland and Labrador
KW - ocean currents
KW - bedforms
KW - observations
KW - Newfoundland
KW - spatial distribution
KW - Canada
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - storms
KW - Eastern Canada
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772732?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Sediment+transport+process+and+bedform+mobility+during+major+storms+on+Grand+Banks&rft.au=Li%2C+M+Z%3BPrescott%2C+R+H%3BWu%2C+Y%3BKing%2C+E+L%3BHan%2C+G%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Li&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - bedforms; Canada; currents; Eastern Canada; Grand Banks; Newfoundland; Newfoundland and Labrador; observations; ocean currents; patterns; processes; sediment transport; sediments; spatial distribution; storms; textures; transport
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Study of river runoff effect on suspended sediment properties in turbid coastal waters using satellite ocean color data and model simulations
AN - 1803772719; 2016-059483
JF - Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Liu, Xiaoming
AU - Wang, Menghua
AU - Itsweire, Eric
AU - Sharp, Jonathan
AU - Briscoe, Mel
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
EP - Abstract 14254
PB - American Geophysical Union (AGU), [varies]
VL - 17
KW - United States
KW - Hangzhou Bay
KW - Chesapeake Bay
KW - Far East
KW - stream transport
KW - Hurricane Sandy
KW - stream sediments
KW - suspended materials
KW - simulation
KW - transport
KW - sediments
KW - storms
KW - algorithms
KW - Yangtze River valley
KW - Asia
KW - Susquehanna River
KW - China
KW - processes
KW - sediment transport
KW - sedimentation
KW - properties
KW - satellite methods
KW - Typhoon Haikui
KW - models
KW - optical properties
KW - Tropical Storm Andrea
KW - runoff
KW - coastal environment
KW - turbidity
KW - corrections
KW - fluvial environment
KW - remote sensing
KW - 06A:Sedimentary petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1803772719?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Study+of+river+runoff+effect+on+suspended+sediment+properties+in+turbid+coastal+waters+using+satellite+ocean+color+data+and+model+simulations&rft.au=Liu%2C+Xiaoming%3BWang%2C+Menghua%3BItsweire%2C+Eric%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan%3BBriscoe%2C+Mel&rft.aulast=Liu&rft.aufirst=Xiaoming&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 2014 ocean sciences meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-14
N1 - CODEN - #07653
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algorithms; Asia; Chesapeake Bay; China; coastal environment; corrections; Far East; fluvial environment; Hangzhou Bay; Hurricane Sandy; models; optical properties; processes; properties; remote sensing; runoff; satellite methods; sediment transport; sedimentation; sediments; simulation; storms; stream sediments; stream transport; suspended materials; Susquehanna River; transport; Tropical Storm Andrea; turbidity; Typhoon Haikui; United States; Yangtze River valley
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Bet-hedging as a complex interaction among developmental instability, environmental heterogeneity, dispersal, and life-history strategy
AN - 1712564542; PQ0001955169
AB - One potential evolutionary response to environmental heterogeneity is the production of randomly variable offspring through developmental instability, a type of bet-hedging. I used an individual-based, genetically explicit model to examine the evolution of developmental instability. The model considered both temporal and spatial heterogeneity alone and in combination, the effect of migration pattern (stepping stone vs. island), and life-history strategy. I confirmed that temporal heterogeneity alone requires a threshold amount of variation to select for a substantial amount of developmental instability. For spatial heterogeneity only, the response to selection on developmental instability depended on the life-history strategy and the form and pattern of dispersal with the greatest response for island migration when selection occurred before dispersal. Both spatial and temporal variation alone select for similar amounts of instability, but in combination resulted in substantially more instability than either alone. Local adaptation traded off against bet-hedging, but not in a simple linear fashion. I found higher-order interactions between life-history patterns, dispersal rates, dispersal patterns, and environmental heterogeneity that are not explainable by simple intuition. We need additional modeling efforts to understand these interactions and empirical tests that explicitly account for all of these factors. Bet-hedging in the form of random developmental variation is a possible evolutionary response to environmental heterogeneity. I used an individual-based, genetically explicit model to comprehensively examine the effects of both temporal and spatial heterogeneity alone and in combination, the effect of migration pattern (stepping stone vs. island), and life-history strategy. While some results confirmed previous models, other results were unexpected, and still others show very complex patterns that cannot be intuitively explained.
JF - Ecology and Evolution
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, Virginia, 22230.
PY - 2014
SP - 505
EP - 515
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 4
IS - 4
SN - 2045-7758, 2045-7758
KW - Environment Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Adaptability
KW - Life history
KW - Islands
KW - Dispersal
KW - Offspring
KW - Migration
KW - Ethnic groups
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - ENA 07:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1712564542?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.atitle=Bet-hedging+as+a+complex+interaction+among+developmental+instability%2C+environmental+heterogeneity%2C+dispersal%2C+and+life-history+strategy&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2014-02-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=505&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.issn=20457758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fece3.951
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Adaptability; Islands; Life history; Offspring; Dispersal; Migration; Ethnic groups
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.951
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Review: ultrasonic characterization of membranes
AN - 1540224203; 20141530
AB - This review describes the use of ultrasonic reflectometry (UR) for characterizing membranes and membrane processes. A growing body of literature documents the capabilities of UR as a versatile nondestructive, noninvasive, real-time, and low-cost methodology that can provide important information about a wide range of membrane-based separations. A compact but thorough explanation of the ultrasonic measurement concepts relevant for use of the methodology for membrane applications is first presented. This section is followed by a description of the many studies in which UR has been employed for characterization of membrane structure, formation, compaction, and inorganic and organic membrane fouling, the latter in both real-time and post-mortem modes. Examples of recent work that incorporates the innovative use of UR for scaling in nanofiltration and reverse osmosis applications as well as results that suggest the potential of the ultrasonic slow wave to monitor pore closure in early-stage fouling are then highlighted. UR is then compared with other techniques for fouling detection so that the advantages and limitations of UR can be placed in proper perspective. Finally, valuable future directions for the incorporation of UR in membrane research, development, and practice are considered.
JF - Desalination and Water Treatment
AU - Kujundzic, Elmira
AU - Greenberg, Alan R
AU - Peterson, Michael
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering, NSF Center for Membrane Science, Engineering and Technology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0427, USA, alan.greenberg@colorado.edu
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - February 2014
SP - 1217
EP - 1249
PB - European Desalination Society, Tosti 28 1-67100 L'Aquila Italy
VL - 52
IS - 7-9
SN - 1944-3994, 1944-3994
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Ultrasonic reflectometry
KW - Membrane characterization
KW - Membrane fouling
KW - Real-time studies
KW - Reverse osmosis
KW - Membrane Processes
KW - Compaction
KW - Water treatment
KW - Waves
KW - Innovations
KW - Fouling
KW - Membranes
KW - Reverse Osmosis
KW - Filtration
KW - Ultrasonics
KW - Reviews
KW - Scaling
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - Q5 08504:Effects on organisms
KW - SW 3060:Water treatment and distribution
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1540224203?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Fouling; Reverse osmosis; Water treatment; Ultrasonics; Compaction; Filtration; Membranes; Reviews; Scaling; Innovations; Membrane Processes; Waves; Reverse Osmosis
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19443994.2013.874132
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Investments in ceramic science, engineering and education for sustainability by the U.S.A. National Science Foundation
AN - 1512322667; 19440441
AB - In 2010 the U.S.A. National Science Foundation (NSF) started an initiative in Science, Engineering and Education for Sustainability (SEES) that is expected to continue through 2019 (according to the FY 2014 budget request). The overall mission of SEES is to advance science, engineering, and education to inform the societal actions needed for environmental and economic sustainability and sustainable human well-being. Along the way and at the conclusion of this initiative, many of the successful activities will be integrated into core NSF programs so they may continue to have impact beyond the lifetime of SEES. Predominantly, SEES has an interdisciplinary system focus, an emphasis on education and workforce development, and a motivation and plan for forming new partnerships and strengthening existing ones. Ceramics are key material components to many system solutions, particularly in the energy sector where structure and composition coupled with electrical and mechanical properties are important. As well, many areas critical to materials sustainability are of interest to ceramists, e.g., improving properties (e.g., durability), expanding the range of operational temperatures, and using safer elements that are abundant. In this paper, the NSF opportunities for funding, relevant topics of research, and examples of grants are described in more detail.
JF - Journal of Electroceramics
AU - Madsen, Lynnette D
AU - White, Ashley A
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA, LMadsen@NSF.gov
Y1 - 2014/02//
PY - 2014
DA - Feb 2014
SP - 60
EP - 65
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 32
IS - 1
SN - 1385-3449, 1385-3449
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Ceramics
KW - Education
KW - Energy
KW - Economics
KW - Grants
KW - Temperature
KW - Sustainable development
KW - Budgets
KW - Sustainability
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1512322667?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-01
N1 - Number of references - 7
N1 - Last updated - 2015-08-05
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Ceramics; Education; Energy; Grants; Economics; Temperature; Sustainable development; Budgets; Sustainability
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10832-013-9851-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of manufacturing process sequence on the corrosion resistance characteristics of coated metallic bipolar plates
AN - 1475558038; 18815358
AB - Metallic bipolar plate (BPP) with high corrosion and low contact resistance, durability, strength, low cost, volume, and weight requirements is one of the critical parts of the PEMFC. This study is dedicated to understand the effect of the process sequence (manufacturing then coating vs. coating then manufacturing) on the corrosion resistance of coated metallic bipolar plates. To this goal, three different PVD coatings (titanium nitride (TiN), chromium nitride (CrN), zirconium nitride (ZrN)), with three thicknesses, (0.1, 0.5,1 mu m) were applied on BPPs made of 316L stainless steel alloy before and after two types of manufacturing (i.e., stamping or hydroforming). Corrosion test results indicated that ZrN coating exhibited the best corrosion protection while the performance of TiN coating was the lowest among the tested coatings and thicknesses. For most of the cases tested, in which coating was applied before manufacturing, occurrence of corrosion was found to be more profound than the case where coating was applied after manufacturing. Increasing the coating thickness was found to improve the corrosion resistance. It was also revealed that hydroformed BPPs performed slightly better than stamped BPPs in terms of the corrosion behavior.
JF - Journal of Power Sources
AU - Dur, E
AU - Cora, OeN
AU - Koc, M
AD - NSF I/UCRC Center for Precision Forming (CPF), Richmond, VA, USA, koc.muammer@gmail.com
Y1 - 2014/01/15/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Jan 15
SP - 788
EP - 799
PB - Elesevier Science B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 246
SN - 0378-7753, 0378-7753
KW - Environment Abstracts
KW - Austenitic stainless steels
KW - Heat resistant steels
KW - 316L
KW - Manufacturing industry
KW - Titanium
KW - Corrosion
KW - Alloys
KW - Zirconium
KW - Tin
KW - Steel
KW - Coatings
KW - ENA 07:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1475558038?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.atitle=Effect+of+manufacturing+process+sequence+on+the+corrosion+resistance+characteristics+of+coated+metallic+bipolar+plates&rft.au=Dur%2C+E%3BCora%2C+OeN%3BKoc%2C+M&rft.aulast=Dur&rft.aufirst=E&rft.date=2014-01-15&rft.volume=246&rft.issue=&rft.spage=788&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.issn=03787753&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Manufacturing industry; Titanium; Corrosion; Alloys; Zirconium; Steel; Tin; Coatings
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Degradation behavior of Mg-based biomaterials containing different long-period stacking ordered phases.
AN - 1490699657; 24401851
AB - Long-period stacking ordered (LPSO) phases play an essential role in the development of magnesium alloys because they have a direct effect on mechanical and corrosion properties of the alloys. The LPSO structures are mostly divided to 18R and 14H. However, to date there are no consistent opinions about their degradation properties although both of them can improve mechanical properties. Herein we have successfully obtained two LPSO phases separately in the same Mg-Dy-Zn system and comparatively investigated the effect of different LPSO phases on degradation behavior in 0.9 wt.% NaCl solution. Our results demonstrate that a fine metastable 14H-LPSO phase in grain interior is more effective to improve corrosion resistance due to the presence of a homogeneous oxidation film and rapid film remediation ability. The outstanding corrosion resistant Mg-Dy-Zn based alloys with a metastable 14H-LPSO phase, coupled with low toxicity of alloying elements, are highly desirable in the design of novel Mg-based biomaterials, opening up a new avenue in the area of bio-Mg.
JF - Scientific reports
AU - Peng, Qiuming
AU - Guo, Jianxin
AU - Fu, Hui
AU - Cai, Xuecheng
AU - Wang, Yanan
AU - Liu, Baozhong
AU - Xu, Zhigang
AD - State Key Laboratory of Metastable Materials Science and Technology, Yanshan University, Qinhuangdao 066004, China. ; 1] State Key Laboratory of Metastable Materials Science and Technology, Yanshan University, Qinhuangdao 066004, China [2] School of Materials Science & Engineering, Henan Polytechnic University, Jiaozuo 454000, China. ; NSF Engineering Research Center for Revolutionizing Metallic Biomaterials, 1601 East Market Street, Greensboro, NC 27411, USA.
Y1 - 2014/01/09/
PY - 2014
DA - 2014 Jan 09
SP - 3620
VL - 4
KW - Alloys
KW - 0
KW - Biocompatible Materials
KW - Magnesium
KW - I38ZP9992A
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Microscopy, Electron, Transmission
KW - Calorimetry, Differential Scanning
KW - Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
KW - Magnesium -- chemistry
KW - Alloys -- chemistry
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2014-08-19
N1 - Date created - 2014-01-09
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
Biomaterials. 1993;14(2):97-106 [8382091]
Biomaterials. 2006 Mar;27(9):1728-34 [16246414]
Mater Sci Eng C Mater Biol Appl. 2013 Oct;33(7):3627-37 [23910258]
Acta Biomater. 2010 May;6(5):1861-8 [20035905]
Nat Mater. 2009 Nov;8(11):887-91 [19783982]
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep03620
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science & Engineering Indicators. National Science Board. NSB 14-01
AN - 1826526231; ED565774
AB - The "Science and Engineering Indicators" series was designed to provide a broad base of quantitative information about U.S. science, engineering, and technology for use by policymakers, researchers, and the general public. "Science and Engineering Indicators 2014" contains analyses of key aspects of the scope, quality, and vitality of the Nation's science and engineering enterprise in the context of global science and technology. The report presents information on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education at all levels; the scientific and engineering workforce; U.S. and international research and development performance; U.S. competitiveness in high technology; and public attitudes and understanding of science and engineering. A chapter on state-level science and engineering enables state comparisons on selected indicators. An Overview chapter (Robert Bell, Michael Reksulak), synthesizes selected key themes emerging from the report. Chapter titles and authors are presented as follows: (1) Elementary and Secondary Mathematics and Science Education (Xianglei Chen, Robin R. Henke, Susan L. Rotermund); (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering (Jaquelina C. Falkenheim); (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force (Beethika Khan); (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Comparisons (Mark Boroush, Francisco A. Moris); (5) Academic Research and Development (Michael Gibbons, Katherine Hale, Derek Hill, NCSES; Kim Hamilton); (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace (Derek Hill); (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding (John Besley); and (8) State Indicators (Nirmala Kannankutty, Christina Freyman, Paula C. Dunnigan). Each chapter consists of contents and lists of sidebars, text tables, and figures; highlights; introduction (chapter overview and chapter organization); a narrative synthesis of data and related contextual information; conclusion; notes; glossary; and references. The appendix provides the Methodology and Statistics, and a list of appendix tables. An index is also included.
Y1 - 2014
PY - 2014
DA - 2014
SP - 600
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Science Education
KW - STEM Education
KW - Scientific Attitudes
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Foreign Countries
KW - Knowledge Economy
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Sciences
KW - Innovation
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Science and Society
KW - Competition
KW - Public Opinion
KW - Global Approach
KW - Trend Analysis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1826526231?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - National Science Foundation plan to guide development of McMurdo Station
AN - 1566811500; 2014-078662
JF - Antarctic
Y1 - 2014
PY - 2014
DA - 2014
SP - 11
PB - New Zealand Antarctic Society, Christchurch
VL - 32
IS - 1
SN - 0003-5327, 0003-5327
KW - cold weather construction
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Ross Sea
KW - government agencies
KW - research
KW - construction
KW - NSF
KW - McMurdo Sound
KW - land use
KW - 22:Environmental geology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Antarctic&rft.atitle=National+Science+Foundation+plan+to+guide+development+of+McMurdo+Station&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2014-01-01&rft.volume=32&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=11&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Antarctic&rft.issn=00035327&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.antarctic.org.nz/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2014-10-02
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - cold weather construction; construction; government agencies; land use; McMurdo Sound; NSF; research; Ross Sea; Southern Ocean
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - In vitro biocompatibility and endothelialization of novel magnesium-rare Earth alloys for improved stent applications.
AN - 1535622812; 24921251
AB - Magnesium (Mg) based alloys are the most advanced cardiovascular stent materials. This new generation of stent scaffold is currently under clinical evaluation with encouraging outcomes. All these Mg alloys contain a certain amount of rare earth (RE) elements though the exact composition is not yet disclosed. RE alloying can usually enhance the mechanical strength of different metal alloys but their toxicity might be an issue for medical applications. It is still unclear how RE elements will affect the magnesium (Mg) alloys intended for stent materials as a whole. In this study, we evaluated MgZnCaY-1RE, MgZnCaY-2RE, MgYZr-1RE, and MgZnYZr-1RE alloys for cardiovascular stents applications regarding their mechanical strength, corrosion resistance, hemolysis, platelet adhesion/activation, and endothelial biocompatibility. The mechanical properties of all alloys were significantly improved. Potentiodynamic polarization showed that the corrosion resistance of four alloys was at least 3-10 times higher than that of pure Mg control. Hemolysis test revealed that all the materials were non-hemolytic while little to moderate platelet adhesion was found on all materials surface. No significant cytotoxicity was observed in human aorta endothelial cells cultured with magnesium alloy extract solution for up to seven days. Direct endothelialization test showed that all the alloys possess significantly better capability to sustain endothelial cell attachment and growth. The results demonstrated the promising potential of these alloys for stent material applications in the future.
JF - PloS one
AU - Zhao, Nan
AU - Watson, Nevija
AU - Xu, Zhigang
AU - Chen, Yongjun
AU - Waterman, Jenora
AU - Sankar, Jagannathan
AU - Zhu, Donghui
AD - Department of Chemical, Biological and Bio-Engineering, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States of America; NSF Engineering Research Center-Revolutionizing Metallic Biomaterials, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States of America. ; NSF Engineering Research Center-Revolutionizing Metallic Biomaterials, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States of America; Center for Advanced Materials and Smart Structures (CAMSS), Mechanical Engineering, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States of America. ; NSF Engineering Research Center-Revolutionizing Metallic Biomaterials, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States of America; Animal Science, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States of America.
Y1 - 2014
PY - 2014
DA - 2014
SP - 1
VL - 9
IS - 6
KW - Alloys
KW - 0
KW - Biocompatible Materials
KW - Metals, Rare Earth
KW - Magnesium
KW - I38ZP9992A
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Humans
KW - Cell Line
KW - Cell Survival
KW - Biocompatible Materials -- chemistry
KW - Endothelial Cells -- drug effects
KW - Alloys -- pharmacology
KW - Blood Platelets -- drug effects
KW - Magnesium -- analysis
KW - Biocompatible Materials -- pharmacology
KW - Stents
KW - Metals, Rare Earth -- analysis
KW - Alloys -- chemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=PloS+one&rft.atitle=In+vitro+biocompatibility+and+endothelialization+of+novel+magnesium-rare+Earth+alloys+for+improved+stent+applications.&rft.au=Zhao%2C+Nan%3BWatson%2C+Nevija%3BXu%2C+Zhigang%3BChen%2C+Yongjun%3BWaterman%2C+Jenora%3BSankar%2C+Jagannathan%3BZhu%2C+Donghui&rft.aulast=Zhao&rft.aufirst=Nan&rft.date=2014-01-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=e98674&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=PloS+one&rft.issn=1932-6203&rft_id=info:doi/10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0098674
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2015-10-26
N1 - Date created - 2014-06-13
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-14
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
Circulation. 2000 Oct 31;102(18):2262-8 [11056103]
Acta Biomater. 2013 Nov;9(10):8488-98 [23385218]
J Biomed Mater Res. 1989 Jan;23(1):105-23 [2708401]
N Engl J Med. 1991 Jan 3;324(1):13-7 [1984159]
Am J Hypertens. 1992 Oct;5(10):700-6 [1418832]
Leuk Res. 1992 Dec;16(12):1165-73 [1361210]
Mycopathologia. 1994 Dec;128(3):167-74 [7739730]
Circulation. 2005 May 3;111(17):2257-73 [15867193]
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Biomed Mater Eng. 2006;16(6):381-95 [17119277]
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N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098674
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Derivation of an Oral Reference Dose (RfD) for the Nonphthalate Alternative Plasticizer 1,2-Cyclohexane Dicarboxylic Acid, Di-Isononyl Ester (DINCH)
AN - 1516743191; 19522279
AB - 1,2-Cyclohexanedicarboxylic acid, 1,2-diisononylester (DINCH), a polyvinyl chloride plasticizer, has food, beverage, and medical device applications that may result in general population exposure. Although no apparent toxicity information in humans was identified, there is a substantial data set in lab animals to serve as the basis of hazard identification for DINCH. Target tissues associated with repeated dietary DINCH exposure in lab animals included liver, kidney, and thyroid and mammary glands. In contrast to some phthalate ester plasticizers, DINCH did not show evidence of hepatic peroxisomal proliferation, testicular toxicity, or liver tumors in rats. Liver and thyroid effects associated with DINCH exposure were attributed to compensatory thyroid stimulation secondary to prolonged metabolic enzyme induction. The toxicological significance of mammary fibroadenomas in female rats is unclear, given that this common benign and spontaneously occurring tumor type is unique to rats. The weight of evidence suggests DINCH is not genotoxic and the proposed mode of action (MOA) for thyroid gland lesions was considered to have a threshold. No adverse reproductive effects were seen in a two-generation study. An oral reference dose (RfD) of 0.7 mg/kg-d was derived from a human equivalent BMDL sub(10) of 21 mg/kg-d for thyroid hypertrophy/hyperplasia seen in adult F sub(1) rats also exposed in utero. The total uncertainty factor of 30x was comprised of intraspecies (10) and database (3) factors. An interspecies extrapolation factor was not applied since rodents are more sensitive than humans with respect to the proposed indirect MOA for thyroid gland lesions.
JF - Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part B: Critical Reviews
AU - Bhat, Virunya S
AU - Durham, Jennifer L
AU - Ball, Gwendolyn L
AU - English, JCaroline
AD - NSF International, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Y1 - 2014
PY - 2014
DA - 2014
SP - 63
EP - 94
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN United Kingdom
VL - 17
IS - 2
SN - 1093-7404, 1093-7404
KW - Environment Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts
KW - Testes
KW - Food
KW - Polyvinyl chloride
KW - Plasticizers
KW - Rats
KW - Phthalates
KW - Lesions
KW - Rodents
KW - Benign
KW - Diets
KW - phthalate esters
KW - Beverages
KW - Data processing
KW - Mammary gland
KW - Genotoxicity
KW - polyvinyl chloride
KW - Thyroid
KW - Enzymes
KW - Tumors
KW - Toxicity
KW - Esters
KW - Fibroadenoma
KW - Hyperplasia
KW - Reviews
KW - Kidney
KW - Liver
KW - H 6000:Natural Disasters/Civil Defense/Emergency Management
KW - X 24360:Metals
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1516743191?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxicologyabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Toxicology+and+Environmental+Health%2C+Part+B%3A+Critical+Reviews&rft.atitle=Derivation+of+an+Oral+Reference+Dose+%28RfD%29+for+the+Nonphthalate+Alternative+Plasticizer+1%2C2-Cyclohexane+Dicarboxylic+Acid%2C+Di-Isononyl+Ester+%28DINCH%29&rft.au=Bhat%2C+Virunya+S%3BDurham%2C+Jennifer+L%3BBall%2C+Gwendolyn+L%3BEnglish%2C+JCaroline&rft.aulast=Bhat&rft.aufirst=Virunya&rft.date=2014-01-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=63&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Toxicology+and+Environmental+Health%2C+Part+B%3A+Critical+Reviews&rft.issn=10937404&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F10937404.2013.876288
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Testes; Data processing; Beverages; phthalate esters; Mammary gland; Food; Genotoxicity; Thyroid; Plasticizers; polyvinyl chloride; Enzymes; Toxicity; Tumors; Esters; Fibroadenoma; Hyperplasia; Liver; Kidney; Benign; Diets; Polyvinyl chloride; Rats; Phthalates; Reviews; Lesions; Rodents
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10937404.2013.876288
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Last-glacial dustiness and enhanced gustiness; deciphering the record of Peoria Loess deposition at Loveland, western Iowa
AN - 1707525791; 2015-080391
AB - The Loveland Paratype Section (N41.50052 degrees , W95.88934 degrees ) in western Iowa, USA, preserves one of the thickest deposits of last-glacial (Peoria) loess in the world. As such, this site offers an ideal opportunity to test the recently proposed idea that the enhanced global 'dustiness' which is widely noted across a range of Quaternary records during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), was primarily driven by increased 'gustiness' in the form of stronger, more frequent winds (McGee et al., 2010). Twenty-two quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages taken from the Pisgah and Peoria Loess units at Loveland give ages that are stratigraphically consistent within uncertainties. Mass Accumulation Rates (MARs) calculated for the loess using both a linear accumulation rate model and also a Bayesian model of accumulation, show that the MAR varies significantly between the Pisgah and Peoria Loess. The MARs calculated for the Peoria Loess are among the highest last-glacial MARs in the world, but they are also shown to vary significantly over time within the Peoria Loess unit. The maximum Peoria Loess MARs are observed at approximately 23 ka, and they coincide with an increase in grain size identified for the middle Peoria unit by Muhs and Bettis (2000), implying a strengthening of winds at Loveland. At this time, the Laurentide Ice Sheet was at its maximum southward extent and insolation was at a minimum at high latitudes in North America, giving rise to an enhanced latitudinal temperature contrast. Such conditions, and the MAR and grain-size observations at Loveland, support the hypothesis that enhanced gustiness, generated by a steepened meridional temperature gradient, may have been a primary driver of last-glacial dustiness.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Roberts, H M
AU - Muhs, D R
AU - Bettis, E A, III
AU - Harlan, S S
AU - Paces, J B
AU - Reynolds, R L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - December 2013
SP - Abstract PP11B
EP - 1808
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2013
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1707525791?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Last-glacial+dustiness+and+enhanced+gustiness%3B+deciphering+the+record+of+Peoria+Loess+deposition+at+Loveland%2C+western+Iowa&rft.au=Roberts%2C+H+M%3BMuhs%2C+D+R%3BBettis%2C+E+A%2C+III%3BHarlan%2C+S+S%3BPaces%2C+J+B%3BReynolds%2C+R+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Roberts&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=2013&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2013 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-08-27
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Non-linear response of South-WPWP SST to greenhouse gases forcing changes during the past 360,000 years
AN - 1707519839; 2015-083170
AB - Tropical Pacific temperature plays a pivotal role in heat and moisture budget in the Earth's climate systems; its responds to greenhouse forcing is a key question in global warming research. Here we present a 360,000 years (0-360 kyrs) sea surface temperature (SST) record from the western equatorial Pacific to demonstrate the non-linear responses and threshold behavior to greenhouse gases level over the past four deglaciations. The SSTs rose drastically when equivalent CO (sub 2) (pCO (sub 2eqv.) ) exceeded a threshold value at 220 + or - 10 ppmv and lead to ultimate termination of glacial states. We speculate that the southern margin of the Western Pacific Warm Pool (WPWP) has responded as an non-linear amplifier to both of the Sub-Antarctic Mode Water formation and greenhouse gases concentration and sequentially accelerated a series of positive feedback processes in the climate system to deliver the Earth from glacial to full interglacial condition once the atmospheric CO (sub 2) concentration passes the critical thresholds. The non-linearity in the relationship between South-WPWP SST and greenhouse gas concentration is a key feature shown by the past tropical climate changes related to the Southern Hemisphere. Such non-linearity and its mechanism should be bear in mind when we deal with future global warming.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Lo, L
AU - Chang, S
AU - Wei, K
AU - Lee, S
AU - Chen, Y
AU - Chuang, C
AU - Mii, H
AU - Burr, G S
AU - Chen, M
AU - Tung, Y
AU - Shen, C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - December 2013
SP - Abstract PP33C
EP - 1936
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2013
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1707519839?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Non-linear+response+of+South-WPWP+SST+to+greenhouse+gases+forcing+changes+during+the+past+360%2C000+years&rft.au=Lo%2C+L%3BChang%2C+S%3BWei%2C+K%3BLee%2C+S%3BChen%2C+Y%3BChuang%2C+C%3BMii%2C+H%3BBurr%2C+G+S%3BChen%2C+M%3BTung%2C+Y%3BShen%2C+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Lo&rft.aufirst=L&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=2013&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2013 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-08-27
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - New radiocarbon dates on upper mid-West Proboscideans; determining date robustness
AN - 1700095757; 2015-072594
AB - With the objective of refining the picture of Megafaunal extinction patterns in the upper Midwest in the terminal Pleistocene, we have assembled for radiocarbon dating specimens from more than 80 distinct Mammut and Mammuthus remains from potentially late sites. So far, we have measurements for 65 bones, tusks and teeth, nearly double the extant number of published dates . These new specimens were all from museums rather than excavation sites, and 60% were known to be coated with a consolidant. The predominant consolidant was Butvar B-76, however shellac, Elmer's Glue, Glyptol were also noted in the conservation records, or deduced from knowledge of a particular museum's practices. Given the objective of the project is to identify extinction patterns, coupled with the wide prevalence of consolidants amongst the specimen set, it was imperative that testing be carried out to confirm that radiocarbon laboratory protocols removed the consolidants, so that ultimately the dates can be considered robust. To this end, key specimens were dated three times using different sample preparation protocols. These were 1) a solvent extraction followed by a modified Longin-plus -Base continuous flow collagen extraction method used in the NSF-Arizona AMS facility, 2) the solvent/modified Longin method plus ultrafiltration, and 3) solvent/modified Longin method plus hydroxyproline single amino acid dating. Among the specimens subjected to triplicate testing were some of the youngest late Wisconsin proboscidean specimens from the Upper Midwest Region. The data reveal general agreement between the different protocols, and suggested either limited penetration of consolidants into the specimens, or that the standard laboratory cleaning protocols were sufficient to remove traces from deep within bone, tooth or tusk tissue. The preservation of each specimen, recorded in terms of collagen content, C/N ratio and stable isotope values, indicated that most were actually well preserved, implying the application of consolidant in the first place might have been unnecessary. The implications of these measurements, in terms of elucidating megafaunal extinction patterns, will be presented in future publications.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Hodgins, G
AU - Widga, C
AU - Lengyel, S N
AU - Saunders, J
AU - Walker, J D
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - December 2013
SP - Abstract PP11A
EP - 1788
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2013
KW - 11:Vertebrate paleontology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1700095757?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=New+radiocarbon+dates+on+upper+mid-West+Proboscideans%3B+determining+date+robustness&rft.au=Hodgins%2C+G%3BWidga%2C+C%3BLengyel%2C+S+N%3BSaunders%2C+J%3BWalker%2C+J+D%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Hodgins&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=2013&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2013 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-07-30
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Using (super 81) Kr-age of groundwater in the Guarani Aquifer, Brazil, to constrain estimates of continental degassing flux of (super 4) He
AN - 1692743111; 2015-059006
AB - Continental degassing flux of helium is the dominant component of dissolved helium in deep groundwater together with that produced in-situ in the aquifer. A reliable estimate of the degassing flux is critical to the use of (super 4) He as a dating tool in groundwater studies. The degassing flux is also important for understanding fluid and heat transport in the mantle and the rust. An independent tracer of groundwater age is required in order to deconvolute the two signals of the external, degassing flux and in situ production. Estimates of degassing flux mostly have relied upon shorter-lived radionuclides such as (super 14) C and tritium and the resulting flux estimates have a significant variability (Torgersen, 2010). In the Guarani Aquifer in Brazil, an effective crustal (super 4) He degassing flux into the aquifer was estimated from (super 81) Kr ages ranging from about 70 Ka to 570 Ka. We then used the model framework of Toregesen and Ivey (1985), modified to include a diffusive reduction of originally uniform crustal helium flux from basement rocks through a thick sedimentary layer beneath the aquifer, to calculate a distribution of radiogenic (super 4) He within the aquifer. With this framework, we obtain (super 4) He ages that are consistent with ages based on (super 81) Kr and (super 14) C, and with a crustal degassing flux equivalent to that estimated from U and Th contents in the crust. The model framework for the Guarani Aquifer is also applied to data from other deep aquifers in Africa and Australia and our results suggest that the continental flux of (super 4) He may be uniform, at least in stable continental areas. Additionally, a reliable estimate of the (super 4) He degassing flux also helps to constrain the surficial discharge of deep groundwater.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Aggarwal, P K
AU - Matsumoto, T
AU - Sturchio, N C
AU - Chang, H K
AU - Gastmans, D
AU - Lu, Z
AU - Jiang, W
AU - Mueller, P
AU - Yokochi, R
AU - Han, L
AU - Klaus, P
AU - Torgersen, T
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - December 2013
SP - Abstract H13I
EP - 1489
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2013
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1692743111?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Using+%28super+81%29+Kr-age+of+groundwater+in+the+Guarani+Aquifer%2C+Brazil%2C+to+constrain+estimates+of+continental+degassing+flux+of+%28super+4%29+He&rft.au=Aggarwal%2C+P+K%3BMatsumoto%2C+T%3BSturchio%2C+N+C%3BChang%2C+H+K%3BGastmans%2C+D%3BLu%2C+Z%3BJiang%2C+W%3BMueller%2C+P%3BYokochi%2C+R%3BHan%2C+L%3BKlaus%2C+P%3BTorgersen%2C+T%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Aggarwal&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=2013&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2013 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-07-02
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A ten-year retrospective look at the NSF/GEO Opportunities for Enhancing Diversity in the Geosciences (OEDG) program
AN - 1686059303; 2015-050584
AB - The Opportunities for Enhancing Diversity in the Geosciences (OEDG) program - established in 2002 by the National Science Foundation's Directorate for Geosciences (GEO) - has been a mainstay in GEO's efforts to broaden participation of traditionally underrepresented minorities in the geosciences. The primary goal of the OEDG program has been to engage a diverse population of students in learning about - and pursuing advanced degrees and careers in - the geosciences. Raising public awareness of the importance and relevance of the geosciences among diverse audiences has been a secondary goal. During the past decade, the OEDG program has supported a variety of planning grants, proof-of-concept projects, and larger full-scale implementation efforts across the U.S. These projects have contributed a rich array of culturally-tailored resources for learning about geoscience career pathways and opportunities to participate in geoscience research experiences. OEDG has also developed networking and mentoring programs tailored for diverse student audiences, as well as the educators who work with them, and has helped to build capacity in the geosciences at minority-serving institutions. Perhaps the most important legacy of the OEDG program has been the establishment of an enthusiastic and effective community of educators, administrators, students and organizations dedicated to increasing diversity in the geosciences. Evaluation data collected for individual OEDG projects has helped to improve the impact of specific projects and increase our understanding of which approaches are more successful in achieving OEDG program goals. In addition, GEO has supported a decade-long, program-wide evaluation of the OEDG portfolio through a contract to the American Institutes for Research (AIR). Synthesis of results from both the project- and program-level evaluation activities has identified evidence-based "best practices" that are essential for achieving success in broadening participation in the geosciences. The OEDG program is slated to end in FY 2013, but GEO remains strongly committed to the program goals and is actively exploring new mechanisms for pursuing and achieving those goals. This presentation will provide a retrospective look at the OEDG portfolio and its achievements, and summarize the many insights gained regarding best practices for broadening participation in the geosciences.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Karsten, J L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - December 2013
SP - Abstract ED54A
EP - 01
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2013
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1686059303?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=A+ten-year+retrospective+look+at+the+NSF%2FGEO+Opportunities+for+Enhancing+Diversity+in+the+Geosciences+%28OEDG%29+program&rft.au=Karsten%2C+J+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Karsten&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=2013&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2013 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2015-06-05
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Following the Footsteps of the Mongol Queens: Why Mongolian Pastoral Women Should Be Empowered
AN - 1496884639; 19003313
JF - Rangelands
AU - Ulambayar, Tungalag
AU - Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria E
AD - Authors are Graduate Research Assistant, Dept of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1472, USA, (Ulambayar); and Professor, Dept of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1472, USA (Fernandez-Gimenez). This article is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under CNH Program Grant BCS-1011 "Does community-based rangeland ecosystem management increase the resilience of coupled systems to climate change in Mongolia?" Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation., tungaa@rams.colostate.edu
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - Dec 2013
SP - 29
EP - 35
PB - Society for Range Management
VL - 35
IS - 6
SN - 0190-0528, 0190-0528
KW - Ecology Abstracts
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1496884639?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Rangelands&rft.atitle=Following+the+Footsteps+of+the+Mongol+Queens%3A+Why+Mongolian+Pastoral+Women+Should+Be+Empowered&rft.au=Ulambayar%2C+Tungalag%3BFernandez-Gimenez%2C+Maria+E&rft.aulast=Ulambayar&rft.aufirst=Tungalag&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=35&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=29&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Rangelands&rft.issn=01900528&rft_id=info:doi/10.2111%2FRANGELANDS-D-13-00035.1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-02-01
N1 - Number of references - 15
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-29
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2111/RANGELANDS-D-13-00035.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Equilibrium selection, similarity judgments, and the 'nothing to gain/nothing to lose' effect
AN - 1466091783; 4510534
AB - Rubinstein and Leland have both demonstrated that many observed violations of expected and discounted utility can be explained if people employ similarity judgments to make choices. In this paper, I show that this decision process also explains which equilibria will be selected in single-shot games with multiple equilibria and implies that play in games will be associated with anomalies in risky choice. Data supporting these predictions are presented. Copyright 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Copyright John Wiley & Sons. Reproduced with permission. An electronic version of this article can be accessed via http://www.interscience.wiley.com
JF - Journal of behavioral decision making
AU - Leland, Jonathan W
AD - US National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2013/12//
PY - 2013
DA - Dec 2013
SP - 418
EP - 428
VL - 26
IS - 5
SN - 0894-3257, 0894-3257
KW - Economics
KW - Decision making
KW - Game theory
KW - Behavioural psychology
KW - Social equilibrium
KW - Judgement
KW - Risk theory
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1466091783?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+behavioral+decision+making&rft.atitle=Equilibrium+selection%2C+similarity+judgments%2C+and+the+%27nothing+to+gain%2Fnothing+to+lose%27+effect&rft.au=Leland%2C+Jonathan+W&rft.aulast=Leland&rft.aufirst=Jonathan&rft.date=2013-12-01&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=418&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+behavioral+decision+making&rft.issn=08943257&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fbdm.1772
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-12-09
N1 - Last updated - 2013-12-10
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 3322 6071 1542 11325; 11040 11035; 7007 3322 6071 1542 11325 4551; 1540 1543 10404; 5403 8010 4025; 11831 4375
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bdm.1772
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF and Support Of Sustainable Engineering Research and Education
T2 - 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2013)
AN - 1490515884; 6249503
JF - 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2013)
AU - Hamilton, Bruce
Y1 - 2013/11/03/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Nov 03
KW - Sustainable development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1490515884?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2013+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2013%29&rft.atitle=NSF+and+Support+Of+Sustainable+Engineering+Research+and+Education&rft.au=Hamilton%2C+Bruce&rft.aulast=Hamilton&rft.aufirst=Bruce&rft.date=2013-11-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2013+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2013%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2013/webprogram/meeting2013-11-03.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-30
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronology and provenance of last-glacial (Peoria) loess in western Iowa and paleoclimatic implications
AN - 1524613158; 2014-031609
AB - Geologic archives show that the Earth was dustier during the last glacial period. One model suggests that increased gustiness (stronger, more frequent winds) enhanced dustiness. We tested this at Loveland, Iowa, one of the thickest deposits of last-glacial-age (Peoria) loess in the world. Based on K/Rb and Ba/Rb, loess was derived not only from glaciogenic sources of the Missouri River, but also distal loess from non-glacial sources in Nebraska. Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages provide the first detailed chronology of Peoria Loess at Loveland. Deposition began after approximately 27 ka and continued until approximately 17 ka. OSL ages also indicate that mass accumulation rates (MARs) of loess were not constant. MARs were highest and grain size was coarsest during the time of middle Peoria Loess accretion, approximately 23 ka, when approximately 10 m of loess accumulated in no more than approximately 2000 yr and possibly much less. The timing of coarsest grain size and highest MAR, indicating strongest winds, coincides with a summer-insolation minimum at high latitudes in North America and the maximum southward extent of the Laurentide ice sheet. These observations suggest that increased dustiness during the last glacial period was driven largely by enhanced gustiness, forced by a steepened meridional temperature gradient. Abstract Copyright (2013) Elsevier, B.V.
JF - Quaternary Research
AU - Muhs, Daniel R
AU - Bettis, E Arthur, III
AU - Roberts, Helen M
AU - Harlan, Stephen S
AU - Paces, James B
AU - Reynolds, Richard L
Y1 - 2013/11//
PY - 2013
DA - November 2013
SP - 468
EP - 481
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 80
IS - 3
SN - 0033-5894, 0033-5894
KW - United States
KW - Peoria Loess
KW - Loveland Iowa
KW - relative age
KW - lithostratigraphy
KW - magnetostratigraphy
KW - Pisgah Loess
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Iowa
KW - upper Pleistocene
KW - Cenozoic
KW - optically stimulated luminescence
KW - major elements
KW - Pottawattamie County Iowa
KW - dates
KW - sediments
KW - paleosols
KW - trace elements
KW - geochemistry
KW - Quaternary
KW - clastic sediments
KW - chronostratigraphy
KW - provenance
KW - pedostratigraphy
KW - Pleistocene
KW - loess
KW - western Iowa
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
KW - 03:Geochronology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1524613158?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Quaternary+Research&rft.atitle=Chronology+and+provenance+of+last-glacial+%28Peoria%29+loess+in+western+Iowa+and+paleoclimatic+implications&rft.au=Muhs%2C+Daniel+R%3BBettis%2C+E+Arthur%2C+III%3BRoberts%2C+Helen+M%3BHarlan%2C+Stephen+S%3BPaces%2C+James+B%3BReynolds%2C+Richard+L&rft.aulast=Muhs&rft.aufirst=Daniel&rft.date=2013-11-01&rft.volume=80&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=468&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Quaternary+Research&rft.issn=00335894&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.yqres.2013.06.006
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00335894
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 71
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, geol. sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-15
N1 - CODEN - QRESAV
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cenozoic; chronostratigraphy; clastic sediments; dates; geochemistry; Iowa; lithostratigraphy; loess; Loveland Iowa; magnetostratigraphy; major elements; optically stimulated luminescence; paleoclimatology; paleosols; pedostratigraphy; Peoria Loess; Pisgah Loess; Pleistocene; Pottawattamie County Iowa; provenance; Quaternary; relative age; sediments; trace elements; United States; upper Pleistocene; western Iowa
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2013.06.006
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The impact of cross-race mentoring for 'ideal' PhD careers in sociology
AN - 1463034742; 4508585
AB - This article reports the results of a study of the impact of two kinds of mentoring, as in individual, instrumental mentoring by white male advisors versus supportive/communal, homophilous (same race/ethnicity) mentoring on the likelihood of minority scholars having an 'ideal' or 'archetypal' career trajectory when compared to two other control groups. Using unobtrusive data, we test a series of hypotheses concerning the likelihood of attaining selected aspects of an 'ideal' career including employment at a research-extensive institution, scholarly publications, tenure, grants, and disciplinary recognition. We find that having a white male instrumental advisor increases the likelihood of having an 'ideal' career for participants in the American Sociological Association's (ASA) national pre-doctoral Minority Fellowship Program (MFP) who have the advantage of having access to both types of mentoring when compared to a random group of largely white PhDs. Reprinted by permission of Taylor & Francis Ltd.
JF - Sociological spectrum
AU - Spalter-Roth, Roberta
AU - Shin, Jean H
AU - Mayorova, Olga V
AU - White, Patricia E
AD - American Sociological Association, Washington ; Higher School of Economics ; National Science Foundation, Arlington
Y1 - 2013/11//
PY - 2013
DA - Nov 2013
SP - 484
EP - 509
VL - 33
IS - 6
SN - 0273-2173, 0273-2173
KW - Sociology
KW - Comparative analysis
KW - Academic discipline
KW - Career development
KW - Ethnicity
KW - Graduates
KW - Employment
KW - U.S.A.
KW - Access to employment
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1463034742?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Sociological+spectrum&rft.atitle=The+impact+of+cross-race+mentoring+for+%27ideal%27+PhD+careers+in+sociology&rft.au=Spalter-Roth%2C+Roberta%3BShin%2C+Jean+H%3BMayorova%2C+Olga+V%3BWhite%2C+Patricia+E&rft.aulast=Spalter-Roth&rft.aufirst=Roberta&rft.date=2013-11-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=484&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Sociological+spectrum&rft.issn=02732173&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F02732173.2013.836141
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-12-02
N1 - Last updated - 2013-12-03
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 12008; 2032 6099 8864; 4435; 504; 2630 971; 4214; 515 4214; 5594; 433 293 14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02732173.2013.836141
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Efficacy trade-offs in individuals' support for climate change policies
AN - 1446270234; 4495983
AB - Using survey data, the authors developed an architecture of climate change beliefs in Norway and their correlation with support for policies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions. A strong majority of respondents believe that anthropogenic climate change is occurring and identify carbon dioxide emissions as a cause. Regression analysis shows that respondents recognize the effectiveness of direct actions that require difficult trade-offs, such as imposing a carbon tax. Yet, their voting intentions suggest a preference for policies that have at best an indirect effect on reducing climate change. Most respondents favor policy options that are generally good for the environment and cause no personal hardship. The disconnection between perceptions about the effectiveness of direct actions and support for less effective mitigation approaches may reflect the respondents' collective distancing from the problem of climate change. This could be an important consideration in the design of communication strategies that promote emission abatement policies. Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications, Inc.
JF - Environment and behavior
AU - Rosentrater, Lynn D
AU - Sælensminde, Ingrid
AU - Ekström, Frida
AU - Böhm, Gisela
AU - Bostrom, Ann
AU - Hanss, Daniel
AU - O' Connor, Robert E
AD - University of Oslo ; Western Norway Research Institute ; University of Bergen ; University of Washington, Seattle ; US National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2013/11//
PY - 2013
DA - Nov 2013
SP - 935
EP - 970
VL - 45
IS - 8
SN - 0013-9165, 0013-9165
KW - Political Science
KW - Survey data
KW - Climate change
KW - Communication
KW - Regression analysis
KW - Greenhouse effect
KW - Norway
KW - Carbon emissions
KW - Knowledge
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1446270234?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environment+and+behavior&rft.atitle=Efficacy+trade-offs+in+individuals%27+support+for+climate+change+policies&rft.au=Rosentrater%2C+Lynn+D%3BS%C3%A6lensminde%2C+Ingrid%3BEkstr%C3%B6m%2C+Frida%3BB%C3%B6hm%2C+Gisela%3BBostrom%2C+Ann%3BHanss%2C+Daniel%3BO%27+Connor%2C+Robert+E&rft.aulast=Rosentrater&rft.aufirst=Lynn&rft.date=2013-11-01&rft.volume=45&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=935&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environment+and+behavior&rft.issn=00139165&rft_id=info:doi/10.1177%2F0013916512450510
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-10-28
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 2382 2381 8560 9511 4309 4313; 7073; 12427 12429; 5625 5515 2382 2381 8560 9511 4309 4313; Carbon emissions; 10739 12228 10919; 2572; 306 302 129 370
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013916512450510
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Geoscience across Cultures and Communities: Benefits and Challenges of Diversity
T2 - 2013 Annual Meeting & Exposition of the Geological Society of America
AN - 1490519965; 6247914
JF - 2013 Annual Meeting & Exposition of the Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn
AU - Berg, Richard
AU - Semken, Steven
Y1 - 2013/10/27/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Oct 27
KW - Species diversity
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1490519965?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2013+Annual+Meeting+%26+Exposition+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Geoscience+across+Cultures+and+Communities%3A+Benefits+and+Challenges+of+Diversity&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn%3BBerg%2C+Richard%3BSemken%2C+Steven&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2013-10-27&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2013+Annual+Meeting+%26+Exposition+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-30
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Developing a Diverse Geoscience Community: Lessons Learned from a Decade of Investment in the Oedg Program
T2 - 2013 Annual Meeting & Exposition of the Geological Society of America
AN - 1490519310; 6247916
JF - 2013 Annual Meeting & Exposition of the Geological Society of America
AU - Karsten, Jill
Y1 - 2013/10/27/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Oct 27
KW - Geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1490519310?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2013+Annual+Meeting+%26+Exposition+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Developing+a+Diverse+Geoscience+Community%3A+Lessons+Learned+from+a+Decade+of+Investment+in+the+Oedg+Program&rft.au=Karsten%2C+Jill&rft.aulast=Karsten&rft.aufirst=Jill&rft.date=2013-10-27&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2013+Annual+Meeting+%26+Exposition+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-30
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Contributions to the Geosciences: GSA President Bill Bromery, Renaissance Man
T2 - 2013 Annual Meeting & Exposition of the Geological Society of America
AN - 1490511098; 6246407
JF - 2013 Annual Meeting & Exposition of the Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn
Y1 - 2013/10/27/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Oct 27
KW - Geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1490511098?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2013+Annual+Meeting+%26+Exposition+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Contributions+to+the+Geosciences%3A+GSA+President+Bill+Bromery%2C+Renaissance+Man&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2013-10-27&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2013+Annual+Meeting+%26+Exposition+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-30
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanomanufacturing and sustainability: opportunities and challenges
AN - 1464507646; 18751582
AB - New nanomanufacturing technologies, although still in research labs, present a great opportunity to drastically reduce the cost of making nanostructures on a large scale and at high-rates. Such new bottom-up directed assembly-based approaches involve adding materials selectively thereby both reducing waste and the number of required processes. Directed assembly-based processes are conducted at room pressure and temperatures which significantly reduces the cost of nanomanufacturing equipment and tools, ensuring long-term sustainability by reducing energy, consumables, and waste costs. This paradigm shift in nanomanufacturing will unleash not only a wave of creativity in sustainable nanomanufacturing but lessons learnt along the way can be used in various other sectors. Along with the exquisite technological promise that nanotechnology holds, nano-enabled products are heralded as a means for energy and resource reduction, resulting in potential manufacturing cost reductions and further, for potential improvements to environmental remediation. Sustainable nanomanufacturing will, by dramatically lowering current nanomanufacturing barriers, spur innovation, and the creation of entirely new industries by leveling the playing and ultimately leading to the democratization of nanomanufacturing.
JF - Journal of Nanoparticle Research
AU - Busnaina, Ahmed A
AU - Mead, Joey
AU - Isaacs, Jacqueline
AU - Somu, Sivasubramanian
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, 02115, USA, BUSNAINA@COE.NEU.EDU
Y1 - 2013/10//
PY - 2013
DA - Oct 2013
SP - 1
EP - 6
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 15
IS - 10
SN - 1388-0764, 1388-0764
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Bioremediation
KW - Energy
KW - Economics
KW - Temperature
KW - Sustainable development
KW - Sustainability
KW - Nanotechnology
KW - Innovations
KW - Technology
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1464507646?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Nanoparticle+Research&rft.atitle=Nanomanufacturing+and+sustainability%3A+opportunities+and+challenges&rft.au=Busnaina%2C+Ahmed+A%3BMead%2C+Joey%3BIsaacs%2C+Jacqueline%3BSomu%2C+Sivasubramanian&rft.aulast=Busnaina&rft.aufirst=Ahmed&rft.date=2013-10-01&rft.volume=15&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Nanoparticle+Research&rft.issn=13880764&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11051-013-1984-8
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-01
N1 - Number of references - 38
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Bioremediation; Energy; Economics; Temperature; Sustainable development; Sustainability; Technology; Innovations; Nanotechnology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11051-013-1984-8
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding the Behavioral intention to report unethical information technology practices: the role of Machiavellianism, gender, and computer expertise
AN - 1449955499; 4500427
AB - Although organizations can derive competitive advantage from developing and implementing information systems, they are confronted with a rising number of unethical information practices. Because end-users and computer experts are the conduit to an ethical organizational environment, their intention to report unethical IT-related practices plays a critical role in protecting intellectual property and privacy rights. Using the survey methodology, this article investigates the relationship between willingness to report intellectual property and privacy violations and Machiavellianism, gender and computer literacy in the form of programming experience. We found that gender and computer expertise interact with Machiavellianism to influence individuals' intention of reporting unethical IT practices. This study helps us to improve our understanding of the emergent ethical issues existing in the IT-enabled decision environment. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Journal of business ethics
AU - Stylianou, Antonis C
AU - Winter, Susan
AU - Niu, Yuan
AU - Giacalone, Robert A
AU - Campbell, Matt
AD - University of North Carolina, Charlotte ; US National Science Foundation ; Duke Energy ; Temple University ; University of South Alabama
Y1 - 2013/10//
PY - 2013
DA - Oct 2013
SP - 333
EP - 343
VL - 117
IS - 2
SN - 0167-4544, 0167-4544
KW - Economics
KW - Ethics
KW - Privacy
KW - Machiavellianism
KW - Information technology
KW - Intellectual property
KW - Methodology
KW - Business ethics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1449955499?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+business+ethics&rft.atitle=Understanding+the+Behavioral+intention+to+report+unethical+information+technology+practices%3A+the+role+of+Machiavellianism%2C+gender%2C+and+computer+expertise&rft.au=Stylianou%2C+Antonis+C%3BWinter%2C+Susan%3BNiu%2C+Yuan%3BGiacalone%2C+Robert+A%3BCampbell%2C+Matt&rft.aulast=Stylianou&rft.aufirst=Antonis&rft.date=2013-10-01&rft.volume=117&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=333&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+business+ethics&rft.issn=01674544&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10551-012-1521-1
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-11
N1 - Last updated - 2013-11-12
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 4408 8282 8281 6085; 6604 10339; 10183; 6538 6515 12622; 7575 9798; 1855 1841 4408 8282 8281 6085; 7994
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10551-012-1521-1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Herbarium Specimens Reveal Putative Insect Extinction on the Deforested Island of Mangareva (Gambier Archipelago, French Polynesia)
AN - 1443367523; 18636177
AB - Human activities are expected to result in extinction of many organisms in taxonomically neglected lineages; however, actually documenting these extinctions is very difficult for soft-bodied organisms that do not leave a subfossil record. Subfossil and historic records reveal that human-induced extinction has been particularly marked for gastropods and terrestrial vertebrates on Pacific islands, but whether human activities resulted in similar biodiversity loss in soft-bodied, taxonomically neglected animals (such as insects) remains unclear. However, in cases in which specialized plant-feeding insects leave diagnostic feeding damage on plants, herbarium specimens coupled with resurvey efforts may indicate potential extinctions or extirpations during historic times. Here, I report the discovery of leaf mines in herbarium specimens of the plant Phyllanthus wilderi (Phyllanthaceae: Glochidion sensu lato) from the island of Mangareva (Gambier Islands, French Polynesia). These mines were not rediscovered in recent surveys on Mangareva but are similar to those made today by leaf-mining moths (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) on many other islands in southeastern Polynesia. This is, to the best of my knowledge, the first report of a potential insect extinction from Mangareva, an island already well known for its history of anthropogenic habitat destruction and biodiversity loss. This result indicates that herbarium specimens may be used to identify potentially extinct and extirpated insect taxa. Future biodiversity surveys on Pacific islands and elsewhere should use herbarium specimens as a guide both to documenting potential extinctions and to search for rediscovery of rare taxa.
JF - Pacific Science
AU - Hembry, David H
AD - This work was supported by a U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship., hembry@ecology.kyoto-u.ac.jp
Y1 - 2013/10//
PY - 2013
DA - Oct 2013
SP - 553
EP - 560
PB - University of Hawaii Press, 2840 Kolowalu Street Honolulu HI 96822 United States
VL - 67
IS - 4
SN - 0030-8870, 0030-8870
KW - Ecology Abstracts; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Historical account
KW - Biological diversity
KW - Historic records
KW - Biodiversity
KW - Gracillariidae
KW - Lepidoptera
KW - Islands
KW - Gastropods
KW - Taxa
KW - Feeding
KW - ISE, Polynesia
KW - Extinction
KW - Gastropoda
KW - ISE, Pacific, French Polynesia
KW - Leaves
KW - Moths
KW - Mines
KW - Habitat
KW - Insects
KW - Phyllanthus
KW - I, Central Pacific, Pacific Ocean Is.
KW - Human factors
KW - ISE, French Polynesia, Gambier I.
KW - M2 551.510.42:Air Pollution (551.510.42)
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1443367523?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Pacific+Science&rft.atitle=Herbarium+Specimens+Reveal+Putative+Insect+Extinction+on+the+Deforested+Island+of+Mangareva+%28Gambier+Archipelago%2C+French+Polynesia%29&rft.au=Hembry%2C+David+H&rft.aulast=Hembry&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2013-10-01&rft.volume=67&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=553&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Pacific+Science&rft.issn=00308870&rft_id=info:doi/10.2984%2F67.4.6
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-10-01
N1 - Number of references - 49
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-02
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Feeding; Islands; Extinction; Leaves; Biodiversity; Habitat; Mines; Gastropods; Historic records; Moths; Historical account; Biological diversity; Taxa; Human factors; Insects; Phyllanthus; Gastropoda; Gracillariidae; Lepidoptera; I, Central Pacific, Pacific Ocean Is.; ISE, Polynesia; ISE, Pacific, French Polynesia; ISE, French Polynesia, Gambier I.
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2984/67.4.6
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Intra-Seasonal (March-June) Dynamics of the Mutton Snapper (Lutjanus analis) Spawning Aggregation Fishery At Gladden Spit, Belize
T2 - 143rd Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society (AFS 2013)
AN - 1412150000; 6225719
JF - 143rd Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society (AFS 2013)
AU - Granados-Dieseldorff, Pablo
AU - Heyman, William
AU - Roark, Brendan
Y1 - 2013/09/08/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Sep 08
KW - Mutton
KW - Belize
KW - Fisheries
KW - Spawning
KW - Population dynamics
KW - Belize, Stann Creek Dist., Gladden Spit
KW - Lutjanus analis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1412150000?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=143rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Fisheries+Society+%28AFS+2013%29&rft.atitle=Intra-Seasonal+%28March-June%29+Dynamics+of+the+Mutton+Snapper+%28Lutjanus+analis%29+Spawning+Aggregation+Fishery+At+Gladden+Spit%2C+Belize&rft.au=Granados-Dieseldorff%2C+Pablo%3BHeyman%2C+William%3BRoark%2C+Brendan&rft.aulast=Granados-Dieseldorff&rft.aufirst=Pablo&rft.date=2013-09-08&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=143rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Fisheries+Society+%28AFS+2013%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://afs.confex.com/afs/2013/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-30
N1 - Last updated - 2013-07-25
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Selective removal of arsenic and monovalent ions from brackish water reverse osmosis concentrate
AN - 1635024439; 21094765
AB - Concentrate disposal and management is a considerable challenge for the implementation of desalination technologies, especially for inland applications where concentrate disposal options are limited. This study has focused on selective removal of arsenic and monovalent ions from brackish groundwater reverse osmosis (RO) concentrate for beneficial use and safe environmental disposal using in situ and pre-formed hydrous ferric oxides/hydroxides adsorption, and electrodialysis (ED) with monovalent permselective membranes. Coagulation with ferric salts is highly efficient at removing arsenic from RO concentrate to meet a drinking water standard of 10 mu g/L. The chemical demand for ferric chloride however is much lower than ferric sulfate as coagulant. An alternative method using ferric sludge from surface water treatment plant is demonstrated as an efficient adsorbent to remove arsenic from RO concentrate, providing a promising low cost, "waste treat waste" approach. The monovalent permselective anion exchange membranes exhibit high selectivity in removing monovalent anions over di- and multi-valent anions. The transport of sulfate and phosphate through the anion exchange membranes was negligible over a broad range of electrical current density. However, the transport of divalent cations such as calcium and magnesium increases through monovalent permselective cation exchange membranes with increasing current density. Higher overall salt concentration reduction is achieved around limiting current density while higher normalized salt removal rate in terms of mass of salt per membrane area and applied energy is attained at lower current density because the energy unitization efficiency decreases at higher current density.
JF - Journal of Hazardous Materials
AU - Xu, Pei
AU - Capito, Marissa
AU - Cath, Tzahi Y
AD - NSF Engineering Research Center ReNUWIt, United States
Y1 - 2013/09//
PY - 2013
DA - September 2013
SP - 885
EP - 891
PB - Elsevier B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 260
SN - 0304-3894, 0304-3894
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality
KW - Desalination
KW - Electrodialysis
KW - Concentrate treatment
KW - Beneficial use
KW - Arsenic removal
KW - Ferric oxide
KW - Anions
KW - Reverse osmosis
KW - Calcium
KW - Surface water
KW - Groundwater Pollution
KW - Ferric chloride
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Ferric sulfate
KW - Ion exchange
KW - Ions
KW - Arsenic
KW - Membranes
KW - Water Pollution Treatment
KW - Coagulation
KW - Density
KW - Wastes
KW - Sludge
KW - Sulfate
KW - Salts
KW - Phosphate
KW - Energy
KW - Brackish water
KW - Magnesium
KW - Drinking water
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - SW 0810:General
KW - X 24360:Metals
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1635024439?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Hazardous+Materials&rft.atitle=Selective+removal+of+arsenic+and+monovalent+ions+from+brackish+water+reverse+osmosis+concentrate&rft.au=Xu%2C+Pei%3BCapito%2C+Marissa%3BCath%2C+Tzahi+Y&rft.aulast=Xu&rft.aufirst=Pei&rft.date=2013-09-01&rft.volume=260&rft.issue=&rft.spage=885&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Hazardous+Materials&rft.issn=03043894&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.jhazmat.2013.06.038
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-02-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Arsenic; Calcium; Drinking Water; Reverse osmosis; Anions; Wastes; Brackish water; Sludge; Ion exchange; Ions; Ferric oxide; Coagulation; Surface water; Desalination; Sulfate; Ferric chloride; Salts; Phosphate; Energy; Ferric sulfate; Drinking water; Magnesium; Membranes; Water Pollution Treatment; Density; Groundwater Pollution
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2013.06.038
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Hyporheic Zone in Urban Streams: A Review and Opportunities for Enhancing Water Quality and Improving Aquatic Habitat by Active Management
AN - 1651444168; 20295133
AB - Tremendous opportunities exist for enhancing water quality and improving aquatic habitat by actively managing urban water infrastructure to operate in conjunction with natural systems. The hyporheic zone (HZ) of streams, which is the area of active mixing between surface water and groundwater, is one such system that is overlooked by many water professionals, because the state of the science on this topic has not been transferred into practice. As a biogeochemically active zone, the HZ offers great potential to provide natural treatment of organic compounds, nutrients, and pathogens in urban streams, which are often strongly impacted by flow modifications and water pollution. Reliable treatment is most likely in streams in which the majority of flow occurs through the HZ, the flow is aerated, and sufficient residence times occur, which may be limited to specific channel morphologies and seasons. Integration of the HZ into stream management plans could also provide quality habitat in a landscape with increasingly depauperate biodiversity. Here, we review current knowledge on hydrological, chemical, and biological aspects of the HZ, with a focus on urban settings, and include a set of examples drawn from the literature of low-flow, effluent-dominated streams in which there is significant hyporheic flow and potential for contaminant attenuation. The HZ can be incorporated much more effectively into urban water management, including stream restoration efforts, by understanding the surface and subsurface features conducive to HZ flow and the water-quality and biodiversity improvements that can be gained in the HZ without posing unreasonable risk. The main barriers to implementation of HZ considerations include lack of information, absence of established metrics for evaluating success, small number of controlled HZ experiments in urban settings, and concern over risks to both public health and aquatic organisms. A combination of field studies, laboratory experiments, and model development that consider hydrological, chemical, and biological interactions in the HZ can overcome these barriers.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Lawrence, Justin E
AU - Skold, Magnus E
AU - Hussain, Fatima A
AU - Silverman, David R
AU - Resh, Vincent H
AU - Sedlak, David L
AU - Luthy, Richard G
AU - McCray, John E
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, California. jlawrence@berkeley.edu
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 480
EP - 501
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Risk
KW - Habitats
KW - Hyporheic zones
KW - Biological
KW - Hydrology
KW - Water quality
KW - Streams
KW - Urban environments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1651444168?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Hyporheic+Zone+in+Urban+Streams%3A+A+Review+and+Opportunities+for+Enhancing+Water+Quality+and+Improving+Aquatic+Habitat+by+Active+Management&rft.au=Lawrence%2C+Justin+E%3BSkold%2C+Magnus+E%3BHussain%2C+Fatima+A%3BSilverman%2C+David+R%3BResh%2C+Vincent+H%3BSedlak%2C+David+L%3BLuthy%2C+Richard+G%3BMcCray%2C+John+E&rft.aulast=Lawrence&rft.aufirst=Justin&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=480&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0235
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-05
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0235
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Renewing Urban Streams with Recycled Water for Streamflow Augmentation: Hydrologic, Water Quality, and Ecosystem Services Management
AN - 1642320158; 20295132
AB - As demands for freshwater withdrawals continue to escalate in water-stressed regions, negative consequences of alterations to natural systems will become ever more severe. Habitat restoration projects may mitigate some of these challenges, but new strategies will be needed to maintain or enhance ecosystem health while simultaneously meeting human needs. Recycled water is a reliable water source that can be used both directly and indirectly to renew degraded urban stream ecosystems. In this review, aspects of hydrology, water quality, and ecosystem services in relation to water reuse for urban stream renewal are evaluated to identify research needs and design considerations for new systems. Use of recycled water for streamflow augmentation in urban areas remains largely unexplored scientifically, despite its potential widespread applications among water and wastewater utilities. To move this innovative concept toward implementation, experimental studies in stream microcosms are needed to examine ecological response to coupled modification of both hydrology and water quality. Appropriate methods for selecting potential sites for urban stream renewal should be identified, along with ecological and economic metrics for evaluating success. Examples of projects in California, Japan, Israel, and Spain are used to identify different management scenarios. However, design criteria from both successful and unsuccessful case studies require additional review and synthesis to develop robust guidelines for recycled water use in urban stream renewal. Motivations for past stream renewal projects include regulatory requirements for water quality improvement and endangered species protection, although these motivations alone may not be enough to facilitate widespread adoption of reusing wastewater for ecosystem enhancement. Consequently, future project designs should include more detailed ecosystem service valuations to describe broader societal benefits and attract the attention of government agencies and private organizations that ultimately make the choice between environmental perturbation or enhancement.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Bischel, Heather N
AU - Lawrence, Justin E
AU - Halaburka, Brian J
AU - Plumlee, Megan H
AU - Bawazir, A Salim
AU - King, J Phillip
AU - McCray, John E
AU - Resh, Vincent H
AU - Luthy, Richard G
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 455
EP - 479
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Design engineering
KW - Recycled
KW - Hydrology
KW - Water quality
KW - Waste water
KW - Streams
KW - Augmentation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1642320158?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Renewing+Urban+Streams+with+Recycled+Water+for+Streamflow+Augmentation%3A+Hydrologic%2C+Water+Quality%2C+and+Ecosystem+Services+Management&rft.au=Bischel%2C+Heather+N%3BLawrence%2C+Justin+E%3BHalaburka%2C+Brian+J%3BPlumlee%2C+Megan+H%3BBawazir%2C+A+Salim%3BKing%2C+J+Phillip%3BMcCray%2C+John+E%3BResh%2C+Vincent+H%3BLuthy%2C+Richard+G&rft.aulast=Bischel&rft.aufirst=Heather&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=455&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0201
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-05
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0201
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Engineered Infiltration Systems for Urban Stormwater Reclamation
AN - 1642316750; 20295131
AB - Urban stormwater contains a variety of contaminants that can adversely impact receiving waters. Contaminants of greatest concern include compounds derived from paving materials and automobile tires, biocides, and pathogens. Low-impact development systems built to manage urban stormwater often utilize some form of engineered infiltration or subsurface filtration to reduce the volume of runoff leaving a developed site. Use of infiltration techniques without proper consideration of contaminants in stormwater risks further degradation of urban ecosystems and water resources. Although engineered infiltration systems also have the capacity to remove contaminants from stormwater, the potential of these systems has not yet been fully exploited or optimized. With improved designs based on known mechanisms of contaminant removal, engineered infiltration has the potential to provide reliable treatment of urban stormwater, resulting in a water resource that is safe for aquifer recharge or urban stream restoration. This article discusses chemical and biological contaminants of concern in urban stormwater and the mechanisms by which they are removed during infiltration through porous media systems, including filtration, sorption, and chemical and biological transformation. Three strategies have been identified as opportunities to more effectively optimize treatment of stormwater: (1) choice of infiltration media; (2) manipulation of system hydraulic behavior; and (3) manipulation of redox conditions. Novel techniques to apply these strategies and topics requiring further research are also discussed.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Grebel, Janel E
AU - Mohanty, Sanjay K
AU - Torkelson, Andrew A
AU - Boehm, Alexandria B
AU - Higgins, Christopher P
AU - Maxwell, Reed M
AU - Nelson, Kara L
AU - Sedlak, David L
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California.
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 437
EP - 454
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Filtration
KW - Media
KW - Strategy
KW - Biological
KW - Infiltration
KW - Water resources
KW - Contaminants
KW - Stormwater
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1642316750?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Engineered+Infiltration+Systems+for+Urban+Stormwater+Reclamation&rft.au=Grebel%2C+Janel+E%3BMohanty%2C+Sanjay+K%3BTorkelson%2C+Andrew+A%3BBoehm%2C+Alexandria+B%3BHiggins%2C+Christopher+P%3BMaxwell%2C+Reed+M%3BNelson%2C+Kara+L%3BSedlak%2C+David+L&rft.aulast=Grebel&rft.aufirst=Janel&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=437&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0312
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-04
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0312
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Introduction: Reinventing Urban Water Infrastructure
AN - 1547862477; 20295127
AB - THE ORIGINS OF THE MODEL DISCIPLINE of environmental engineering can be traced back to the need to provide an adequate supply of safe drinking water to cities that began growing quickly during the latter part of 19th century. Near the start of 20th century, major investments were made in reservoirs, canals, and drinking water treatment plants. A few decades later, resources were allocated to the construction of sewage treatment plants. By the end of the 20th century, cities in the devoloped world had built a reliable centralized system for acquiring and delivering drinking water and collecting, treating, and disposing wastewater and urban runoff that was capable of protecting public health and the environment.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Sedlak, David L
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AU - Richard, Luthy G
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California., sedlak@berkeley.edu
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 393
EP - 394
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Health & Safety Science Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Resource management
KW - Water reservoirs
KW - Sewage treatment plants
KW - Public health
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Urban runoff
KW - Cities
KW - Public Health
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Water Treatment
KW - Investment
KW - Sewage treatment
KW - Reservoirs
KW - Environmental Engineering
KW - Construction
KW - Environmental engineering
KW - Environmental protection
KW - Canals
KW - Nature conservation
KW - Construction industry wastes
KW - Urban Runoff
KW - Drinking water
KW - Wastewater Treatment
KW - Wastewater
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - H 3000:Environment and Ecology
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1547862477?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Introduction%3A+Reinventing+Urban+Water+Infrastructure&rft.au=Sedlak%2C+David+L%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg+E%3BRichard%2C+Luthy+G&rft.aulast=Sedlak&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=393&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2013.3008
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-01-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Urban runoff; Resource management; Water reservoirs; Drinking Water; Nature conservation; Sewage treatment; Environmental protection; Public health; Infrastructure; Canals; Cities; Construction industry wastes; Sewage treatment plants; Environmental engineering; Drinking water; Reservoirs; Wastewater; Environmental Engineering; Public Health; Construction; Water Treatment; Urban Runoff; Investment; Wastewater Treatment
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2013.3008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Integration of Artificial Recharge and Recovery Systems for Impaired Water Sources in Urban Settings: Overcoming Current Limitations and Engineering Challenges
AN - 1547858774; 20295129
AB - Utilization of underlying local aquifers to treat, store, and recover locally produced reclaimed water provides the potential to reduce costs, energy, and infrastructure requirements of water supplies in urban areas. However, water quality issues, limited design and operational guidance, and physical footprint requirements are impeding the implementation of artificial recharge and recovery (ARR) systems in urban water infrastructure configurations. This article reviews the current practice of ARR and proposes approaches to improve the integration into urban settings regarding (1) feasibility of a reduced physical footprint of ARR systems, while maintaining water quality benefits and maximizing yield; and (2) manipulating subsurface hydrological, geochemical, and biological conditions to increase attenuation of key contaminants. The contribution of this interdisciplinary review article is to outline ways to achieve improved design and control strategies of ARR systems that ensure cost-effective water supply and consistent water quality by leveraging current understanding and technology.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Regnery, Julia
AU - Lee, Jonghyun
AU - Kitanidis, Peter
AU - Illangasekare, Tissa
AU - Sharp, Jonathan O
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado., jdrewes@mines.edu
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 409
EP - 420
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Pollution Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Feasibility studies
KW - Aquifers
KW - Water Supply
KW - Water quality
KW - Water supplies
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Engineering
KW - Pollutants
KW - Economics
KW - Ground water
KW - Urban areas
KW - Water reclamation
KW - Geochemistry
KW - Water Quality
KW - Artificial Recharge
KW - Water supply
KW - Recovery
KW - Energy
KW - Reviews
KW - Groundwater pollution
KW - Water Requirements
KW - Groundwater
KW - Technology
KW - ENA 03:Energy
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 5040:Data acquisition
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1547858774?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Integration+of+Artificial+Recharge+and+Recovery+Systems+for+Impaired+Water+Sources+in+Urban+Settings%3A+Overcoming+Current+Limitations+and+Engineering+Challenges&rft.au=Regnery%2C+Julia%3BLee%2C+Jonghyun%3BKitanidis%2C+Peter%3BIllangasekare%2C+Tissa%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan+O%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg+E&rft.aulast=Regnery&rft.aufirst=Julia&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=409&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0186
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Recovery; Ground water; Water quality; Water supply; Aquifers; Feasibility studies; Water reclamation; Geochemistry; Water supplies; Infrastructure; Reviews; Energy; Economics; Groundwater pollution; Technology; Urban areas; Engineering; Pollutants; Water Supply; Water Quality; Water Requirements; Groundwater; Artificial Recharge
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0186
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Unit Process Wetlands for Removal of Trace Organic Contaminants and Pathogens from Municipal Wastewater Effluents
AN - 1547853321; 20295130
AB - Treatment wetlands have become an attractive option for the removal of nutrients from municipal wastewater effluents due to their low energy requirements and operational costs, as well as the ancillary benefits they provide, including creating aesthetically appealing spaces and wildlife habitats. Treatment wetlands also hold promise as a means of removing other wastewater-derived contaminants, such as trace organic contaminants and pathogens. However, concerns about variations in treatment efficacy of these pollutants, coupled with an incomplete mechanistic understanding of their removal in wetlands, hinder the widespread adoption of constructed wetlands for these two classes of contaminants. A better understanding is needed so that wetlands as a unit process can be designed for their removal, with individual wetland cells optimized for the removal of specific contaminants, and connected in series or integrated with other engineered or natural treatment processes. In this article, removal mechanisms of trace organic contaminants and pathogens are reviewed, including sorption and sedimentation, biotransformation and predation, photolysis and photoinactivation, and remaining knowledge gaps are identified. In addition, suggestions are provided for how these treatment mechanisms can be enhanced in commonly employed unit process wetland cells or how they might be harnessed in novel unit process cells. It is hoped that application of the unit process concept to a wider range of contaminants will lead to more widespread application of wetland treatment trains as components of urban water infrastructure in the United States and around the globe.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Jasper, Justin T
AU - Nguyen, Mi T
AU - Jones, Zackary L
AU - Ismail, Niveen S
AU - Sedlak, David L
AU - Sharp, Jonathan O
AU - Luthy, Richard G
AU - Horne, Alex J
AU - Nelson, Kara L
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California., nelson@ce.berkeley.edu
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 421
EP - 436
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Pollution Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Water Pollution
KW - Predation
KW - Artificial wetlands
KW - Disease control
KW - Artificial Wetlands
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Sewage disposal
KW - Pollutants
KW - Municipal wastes
KW - Wetlands
KW - Sedimentation
KW - Photolysis
KW - Sorption
KW - Wildlife
KW - Pathogens
KW - Habitat
KW - Effluents
KW - USA
KW - Municipal Wastewater
KW - Operational costs
KW - Reviews
KW - Energy
KW - Organic Compounds
KW - Contaminants
KW - Wastewater Treatment
KW - SW 1030:Use of water of impaired quality
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Unit+Process+Wetlands+for+Removal+of+Trace+Organic+Contaminants+and+Pathogens+from+Municipal+Wastewater+Effluents&rft.au=Jasper%2C+Justin+T%3BNguyen%2C+Mi+T%3BJones%2C+Zackary+L%3BIsmail%2C+Niveen+S%3BSedlak%2C+David+L%3BSharp%2C+Jonathan+O%3BLuthy%2C+Richard+G%3BHorne%2C+Alex+J%3BNelson%2C+Kara+L&rft.aulast=Jasper&rft.aufirst=Justin&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=421&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0239
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sewage disposal; Sorption; Photolysis; Operational costs; Pollutants; Disease control; Wetlands; Pathogens; Sedimentation; Artificial wetlands; Predation; Wildlife; Effluents; Habitat; Infrastructure; Energy; Reviews; Municipal wastes; Contaminants; Water Pollution; Municipal Wastewater; Organic Compounds; Artificial Wetlands; Wastewater Treatment; USA
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0239
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Critical Review of Desalination Concentrate Management, Treatment and Beneficial Use
AN - 1547850547; 20295134
AB - Desalination of seawater, brackish water, and reclaimed water is increasingly utilized worldwide to augment and diversify fresh water sources. The lack of economically and ecologically feasible concentrate management options, however, is a major barrier to widespread implementation of desalination, in particular at inland sites. This paper critically reviews strategies and technologies for concentrate management, including disposal, treatment, and beneficial use. Development of energy-efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally benign concentrate management systems is critical if desalination is to become a major part of a sustainable water future. This paper examines the limitations and advantages of a range of concentrate management tools, including emerging and novel technologies for minimization of concentrate volume, enhancement of water recovery, removal of organic contaminants, and recovery of valuable products and energy.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Xu, Pei
AU - Cath, Tzahi Y
AU - Robertson, Alexander P
AU - Reinhard, Martin
AU - Leckie, James O
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Department of Civil Engineering, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico.; Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado., pxu@nmsu.edu
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 502
EP - 514
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Pollutant removal
KW - Energy efficiency
KW - Water reclamation
KW - Seawater
KW - Management tools
KW - Desalination
KW - Sustainable development
KW - Reviews
KW - Energy
KW - Economics
KW - Brackish water
KW - Technology
KW - ENA 03:Energy
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1547850547?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=Critical+Review+of+Desalination+Concentrate+Management%2C+Treatment+and+Beneficial+Use&rft.au=Xu%2C+Pei%3BCath%2C+Tzahi+Y%3BRobertson%2C+Alexander+P%3BReinhard%2C+Martin%3BLeckie%2C+James+O%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg+E&rft.aulast=Xu&rft.aufirst=Pei&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=502&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0348
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Energy efficiency; Pollutant removal; Water reclamation; Energy; Seawater; Reviews; Management tools; Economics; Sustainable development; Brackish water; Desalination; Technology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0348
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Innovation Deficit in Urban Water: The Need for an Integrated Perspective on Institutions, Organizations, and Technology
AN - 1547847546; 20295128
AB - Interaction between institutional change and technological change poses important constraints on transitions of urban water systems to a state that can meet future needs. Research on urban water and other technologydependent systems provides insights that are valuable to technology researchers interested in assuring that their efforts will have an impact. In the context of research on institutional change, innovation is the development, application, diffusion, and utilization of new knowledge and technology. This definition is intentionally inclusive: technological innovation will play a key role in reinvention of urban water systems, but is only part of what is necessary. Innovation usually depends on context, such that major changes to infrastructure include not only the technological inventions that drive greater efficiencies and physical transformations of water treatment and delivery systems, but also the political, cultural, social, and economic factors that hinder and enable such changes. On the basis of past and present changes in urban water systems, institutional innovation will be of similar importance to technological innovation in urban water reinvention. To solve current urban water infrastructure challenges, technology-focused researchers need to recognize the intertwined nature of technologies and institutions and the social systems that control change.
JF - Environmental Engineering Science
AU - Kiparsky, Michael
AU - Sedlak, David L
AU - Thompson, Barton H, Jr
AU - Truffer, Bernhard
AD - Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), National Science Foundation, Stanford, California.; Wheeler Institute for Water Law & Policy, UC Berkeley School of Law, University of California, Berkeley, California., kiparsky@berkeley.edu
Y1 - 2013/08/14/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 14
SP - 395
EP - 408
PB - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2 Madison Ave Larchmont NY 10538 United States
VL - 30
IS - 8
SN - 1092-8758, 1092-8758
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Culture
KW - Sociological aspects
KW - Organizations
KW - Politics
KW - Socioeconomics
KW - Technological change
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Water treatment
KW - Water Treatment
KW - Diffusion
KW - Innovations
KW - Environmental Engineering
KW - Water Currents
KW - Institutions
KW - Ecosystem disturbance
KW - Inventions
KW - Technology
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - SW 3060:Water treatment and distribution
KW - Q5 08505:Prevention and control
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1547847546?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.atitle=The+Innovation+Deficit+in+Urban+Water%3A+The+Need+for+an+Integrated+Perspective+on+Institutions%2C+Organizations%2C+and+Technology&rft.au=Kiparsky%2C+Michael%3BSedlak%2C+David+L%3BThompson%2C+Barton+H%2C+Jr%3BTruffer%2C+Bernhard&rft.aulast=Kiparsky&rft.aufirst=Michael&rft.date=2013-08-14&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=395&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Engineering+Science&rft.issn=10928758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Fees.2012.0427
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sociological aspects; Water treatment; Organizations; Ecosystem disturbance; Infrastructure; Culture; Inventions; Politics; Socioeconomics; Diffusion; Technological change; Technology; Innovations; Environmental Engineering; Water Currents; Water Treatment; Institutions
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ees.2012.0427
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Using contemporary science and technology to transform how we teach ecological topics: a funding agency's perspective
T2 - 98th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2013)
AN - 1493783857; 6257152
JF - 98th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2013)
AU - Herrera, Jose
Y1 - 2013/08/04/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 04
KW - Technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1493783857?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=98th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2013%29&rft.atitle=Using+contemporary+science+and+technology+to+transform+how+we+teach+ecological+topics%3A+a+funding+agency%27s+perspective&rft.au=Herrera%2C+Jose&rft.aulast=Herrera&rft.aufirst=Jose&rft.date=2013-08-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=98th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2013%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2013/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-12-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Ecology's uneasy relationship with theory
T2 - 98th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2013)
AN - 1493783271; 6256894
JF - 98th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2013)
AU - Scheiner, Samuel
Y1 - 2013/08/04/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 04
KW - Ecology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1493783271?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=98th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2013%29&rft.atitle=Ecology%27s+uneasy+relationship+with+theory&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2013-08-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=98th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2013%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2013/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-12-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Planning great broader impacts projects
T2 - 98th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2013)
AN - 1493779570; 6256927
JF - 98th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2013)
AU - Blood, Elizabeth
AU - Gholz, Henry
Y1 - 2013/08/04/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Aug 04
KW - Ecology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1493779570?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=98th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2013%29&rft.atitle=Planning+great+broader+impacts+projects&rft.au=Blood%2C+Elizabeth%3BGholz%2C+Henry&rft.aulast=Blood&rft.aufirst=Elizabeth&rft.date=2013-08-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=98th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2013%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2013/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-12-31
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-10
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Common Guidelines for Education Research and Development
AN - 1509080985; ED544215
AB - In January 2011, a Joint Committee of representatives from the U.S. Department of Education (ED) and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) began work to establish cross-agency guidelines for improving the quality, coherence, and pace of knowledge development in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education. Although the starting place for the committee was research in STEM, ED quickly realized the broader applicability of the guidelines to other content areas in which it funds research and development. The Joint Committee examined whether the agencies' expectations for the research studies they fund could be characterized in such a way as to provide cross-agency guidance for program officers, prospective grantees, and peer reviewers. Second, the Joint Committee specified how the types of research relate to one another and described the theoretical and empirical basis needed to justify each research type. Through this document, the Joint Committee seeks to provide a broad framework that clarifies research types and provides basic guidance about the purpose, justification, design features, and expected outcomes from various research types. In that spirit, the Joint Committee intends this to be a "living document" that may be adapted by agencies or divisions within agencies in response to their needs and opportunities. Over time, the framework may be elaborated or rearranged according to agency focus and assessments of the needs of education researchers and practitioners. Two appendixes present: (1) Illustrative Research Projects Funded by the Department of Education or the National Science Foundation; and (2) Common Guidelines, by Research Type. (Contains 9 tables.)
Y1 - 2013/08//
PY - 2013
DA - August 2013
SP - 53
PB - Institute of Education Sciences. 555 New Jersey Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20208.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Program Effectiveness
KW - Learning
KW - Research Methodology
KW - Educational Objectives
KW - Intervention
KW - STEM Education
KW - Professional Development
KW - Research and Development
KW - Research Design
KW - Educational Improvement
KW - Feedback (Response)
KW - Knowledge Level
KW - Meta Analysis
KW - Educational Practices
KW - Program Implementation
KW - Theories
KW - Program Development
KW - Program Evaluation
KW - Educational Research
KW - Biology
KW - Proposal Writing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1509080985?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Guest Editor's Introduction: Early Engagements Implicating Governmentality in the North Pacific Region-Divergent Visions and Agentive Initiatives
AN - 1463015479; 201346057
AB - Introduces a group of essays in this journal that analyze ethnohistoric accounts of encounters between indigenous groups and incoming agents of European-derived actors in the north Pacific region.
JF - Ethnohistory
AU - Langdon, Steve J
AD - University of Alaska Anchorage-National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2013/07//
PY - 2013
DA - July 2013
SP - 439
EP - 449
PB - Duke University Press, Durham NC
VL - 60
IS - 3
SN - 0014-1801, 0014-1801
KW - Indigenous Populations
KW - Governmentality
KW - article
KW - 0514: culture and social structure; social anthropology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1463015479?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ethnohistory&rft.atitle=Guest+Editor%27s+Introduction%3A+Early+Engagements+Implicating+Governmentality+in+the+North+Pacific+Region-Divergent+Visions+and+Agentive+Initiatives&rft.au=Langdon%2C+Steve+J&rft.aulast=Langdon&rft.aufirst=Steve&rft.date=2013-07-01&rft.volume=60&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=439&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ethnohistory&rft.issn=00141801&rft_id=info:doi/10.1215%2F00141801-2140767
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2014-02-21
N1 - Number of references - 7
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - ETNHAR
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Indigenous Populations; Governmentality
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140767
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Unreciprocated "Reverence": "Papers," Political Recognition, and Tlingit Engagement with US Governmentality in the Late Nineteenth Century
AN - 1463012967; 201346058
AB - Writing and "papers" were first encountered by the Tlingit through contacts with European explorers and traders in the late eighteenth century. Euro-American traders subsequently developed a system of papers of introduction for high-ranking indigenous leaders. These papers became objects of great importance to the leaders, who held them closely and brought them out to show to other important Euro-American visitors. After 1867, US military officers observed that when they encountered Tlingit leaders, they were regularly shown papers from traders in exceptional condition. US military commanders adopted the system, and provided Tlingit leaders with papers recognizing their position and authority, which were likewise carefully preserved. This essay contends that papers of introduction and recognition were conceptualized by Tlingit leaders with the "reverence" accorded in traditional cultural practice to at.oow, thereby instantiating a hybrid bridge of relationship rooted in Tlingit conceptualization of reciprocal and sustained respect for the claims of others. The reverence bestowed by the Tlingit on these instruments was not reciprocated by later agents of US governmentality, notably Governor John Brady, and Tlingit efforts to sustain traditional cultural practices in regard to political leadership through mutual construction of an articulation with US governmentality were repudiated in the early 1900s. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Ethnohistory
AU - Langdon, Steve J
AD - University of Alaska Anchorage-National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2013/07//
PY - 2013
DA - July 2013
SP - 505
EP - 536
PB - Duke University Press, Durham NC
VL - 60
IS - 3
SN - 0014-1801, 0014-1801
KW - Indigenous Populations
KW - Governors
KW - Military Officers
KW - United States of America
KW - Europe
KW - Nineteenth Century
KW - Governmentality
KW - Leadership
KW - Eighteenth Century
KW - article
KW - 0514: culture and social structure; social anthropology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1463012967?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ethnohistory&rft.atitle=Unreciprocated+%22Reverence%22%3A+%22Papers%2C%22+Political+Recognition%2C+and+Tlingit+Engagement+with+US+Governmentality+in+the+Late+Nineteenth+Century&rft.au=Langdon%2C+Steve+J&rft.aulast=Langdon&rft.aufirst=Steve&rft.date=2013-07-01&rft.volume=60&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=505&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ethnohistory&rft.issn=00141801&rft_id=info:doi/10.1215%2F00141801-2140731
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2014-02-21
N1 - Number of references - 9
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - ETNHAR
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - United States of America; Governmentality; Nineteenth Century; Leadership; Indigenous Populations; Military Officers; Eighteenth Century; Governors; Europe
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140731
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Size matters; the rotation rates of small near-Earth asteroids
AN - 1442374843; 2013-079990
JF - Icarus
AU - Statler, Thoams S
AU - Cotto-Figueroa, Desiree
AU - Riethmiller, David A
AU - Sweeney, Kevin M
Y1 - 2013/07//
PY - 2013
DA - July 2013
SP - 141
EP - 155
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 225
IS - 1
SN - 0019-1035, 0019-1035
KW - near-Earth objects
KW - asteroids
KW - telescope methods
KW - near-Earth asteroids
KW - Monte Carlo analysis
KW - statistical analysis
KW - rates
KW - simulation
KW - size
KW - photometry
KW - errors
KW - dynamics
KW - rotation
KW - algorithms
KW - accuracy
KW - 04:Extraterrestrial geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1442374843?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Icarus&rft.atitle=Size+matters%3B+the+rotation+rates+of+small+near-Earth+asteroids&rft.au=Statler%2C+Thoams+S%3BCotto-Figueroa%2C+Desiree%3BRiethmiller%2C+David+A%3BSweeney%2C+Kevin+M&rft.aulast=Statler&rft.aufirst=Thoams&rft.date=2013-07-01&rft.volume=225&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=141&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Icarus&rft.issn=00191035&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.icarus.2013.03.010
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00191035
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 29
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 3 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-17
N1 - CODEN - ICRSA5
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accuracy; algorithms; asteroids; dynamics; errors; Monte Carlo analysis; near-Earth asteroids; near-Earth objects; photometry; rates; rotation; simulation; size; statistical analysis; telescope methods
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2013.03.010
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Biochemical signature assay for use in a biosensor platform to detect bacteria in drinking water biofilms
AN - 1348482683; 17847226
AB - The objective of the study was to identify the enzymatic-biochemical (enz-bio) signatures of Escherichia coli and Salmonella for rapid detection of these bacteria in drinking water biofilms. The relative potency of lipophilic, glucosidic, and proteolytic activities in biofilms containing single bacterial species and mixture of different bacterial was used to identify the enz-bio signatures of Escherichia coli and Salmonella. The enz-bio signatures identified were: Lipophilic < Glucosidic < Proteolytic (for Escherichia coli); and Glucosidic = Lipophilic < Proteolytic (for Salmonella). The enz-bio assays were performed sequentially for detecting Escherichia coli and Salmonella in pure and mixed biofilm cultures formed on the coupons incubated in a batch reactor. The results obtained were substantiated by culture-based assays indicating comparable data. The enz-bio sensing method described here is a proof of principle and the results of this study provide a platform for the fabrication of a biosensor for bacterial detection in biofilms. The detection time required for the biosensor platform versus culture methods ranged from 10 to 120 min and 24 to 48 h, respectively.
JF - Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A: Toxic/Hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering
AU - Elzein, Mohamad
AU - Alum, Absar
AU - Abbaszadegan, Morteza
AD - Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, National Science Foundation Water & Environmental Technology Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA, abbaszadegan@asu.edu
Y1 - 2013/07/01/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Jul 01
SP - 925
EP - 932
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN United Kingdom
VL - 48
IS - 8
SN - 1093-4529, 1093-4529
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Environment Abstracts
KW - Proteolysis
KW - Data processing
KW - Biochemistry
KW - Assays
KW - Lipophilic
KW - Biosensors
KW - Bioreactors
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - Biofilms
KW - Drinking water
KW - Salmonella
KW - A 01450:Environmental Pollution & Waste Treatment
KW - W 30955:Biosensors
KW - J 02320:Cell Biology
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
KW - X 24300:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1348482683?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.atitle=Biochemical+signature+assay+for+use+in+a+biosensor+platform+to+detect+bacteria+in+drinking+water+biofilms&rft.au=Elzein%2C+Mohamad%3BAlum%2C+Absar%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+Morteza&rft.aulast=Elzein&rft.aufirst=Mohamad&rft.date=2013-07-01&rft.volume=48&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=925&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.issn=10934529&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F10934529.2013.762736
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Biosensors; Proteolysis; Data processing; Bioreactors; Biofilms; Drinking water; Lipophilic; Biochemistry; Assays; Escherichia coli; Salmonella
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934529.2013.762736
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Surplus Chinese Men: Demographic Determinants of the Sex Ratio at Marriageable Ages in China
AN - 1429631934; 201337932
AB - We explore the demographic factors contributing to China's unbalanced sex ratio at marriagable ages. We develop a stable population model of the sex ratio at marriagable ages, and compare a series of population projections with alternative underlying assumptions about the key demographic inputs. The stable population model demonstrates that several demographic factors interact to influence the sex ratio at marriagable ages, including the sex ratio at birth, population growth, the age gap of marriage partners, and the sex ratio of survival from birth to marriageable age. The population projections further demonstrate that policies that seek to reduce the sex ratio at birth and the age gap at marriage and, to a lesser extent, increase fertility would be most effective at alleviating the problem. But no demographic changes are likely to occur quickly enough to balance the sex ratio at marriagable ages in the near future. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Population and Development Review
AU - Tucker, Catherine
AU - Van Hook, Jennifer
AD - National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow, Pennsylvania State University.
Y1 - 2013/06//
PY - 2013
DA - June 2013
SP - 209
EP - 229
PB - Wiley, Hoboken NJ
VL - 39
IS - 2
SN - 0098-7921, 0098-7921
KW - Asian Cultural Groups
KW - Peoples Republic of China
KW - Fertility
KW - Population Growth
KW - Males
KW - Alternative Approaches
KW - Marriage
KW - Sex Ratio
KW - Sociodemographic Factors
KW - article
KW - 1837: demography and human biology; demography (population studies)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1429631934?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Population+and+Development+Review&rft.atitle=Surplus+Chinese+Men%3A+Demographic+Determinants+of+the+Sex+Ratio+at+Marriageable+Ages+in+China&rft.au=Tucker%2C+Catherine%3BVan+Hook%2C+Jennifer&rft.aulast=Tucker&rft.aufirst=Catherine&rft.date=2013-06-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=209&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Population+and+Development+Review&rft.issn=00987921&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1728-4457.2013.00589.x
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2013-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - PDERDO
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sex Ratio; Peoples Republic of China; Sociodemographic Factors; Asian Cultural Groups; Alternative Approaches; Males; Fertility; Marriage; Population Growth
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1728-4457.2013.00589.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An interaction model for estimating in vitro estrogenic and androgenic activity of chemical mixtures.
AN - 1349401587; 23514127
AB - There is a need to better understand and predict the biological activity and interaction of chemical constituents in mixtures. Many existing methods assume that the mixture components are additive, and in the case of endocrine disruption, deviation from additivity may occur and render predictions inconclusive. In this study, an alternate index, aRP, which enables the quantification of an antagonistic interaction from analytically derived concentrations of chemical constituents within a mixture that act upon the same molecular target is described. The index is calculated by measuring the degree to which the test compound modulates the activity of a standard hormone as a function of mixture proportions. The aRP was shown to be valid for additive mixtures. It theoretically estimates the product of the relative potential and the interaction index inverse for nonadditive mixtures. The aRP values were computed for agonists and antagonists of both the estrogen and androgen receptors by using yeast-based methods (YES and YAS). The resulting aRP estimates were then validated using higher order mixtures of agonists and antagonists. The use of aRP led to improved predictions compared to estimates based on the toxicity equivalent factor (TEF) approach. The aRP model yielded estimates that were statistically indistinguishable (α = 0.01) from the measured responses in 75% of the 32 mixtures tested. By the same criteria, the TEF approach successfully predicted 34% of the mixtures. Both the aRP and TEF approach correlated well with the observed responses (Pearson R = 0.98 and 0.84, respectively); however, the TEF estimates produced higher percent errors, particularly in mixtures with higher proportions of antagonists. It is suggested that the use of the aRP index allows for a better approximation of the net activity captured by the bioassays through the use of chemically derived concentrations.
JF - Environmental science & technology
AU - Johnson, Candice M
AU - Achary, Mohan
AU - Suri, Rominder P
AD - NSF Water & Environmental Technology (WET) Center, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122, USA.
Y1 - 2013/05/07/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 May 07
SP - 4661
EP - 4669
VL - 47
IS - 9
KW - Androgens
KW - 0
KW - Complex Mixtures
KW - Estrogens
KW - Index Medicus
KW - In Vitro Techniques
KW - Estrogens -- pharmacology
KW - Androgens -- pharmacology
KW - Models, Theoretical
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1349401587?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.atitle=An+interaction+model+for+estimating+in+vitro+estrogenic+and+androgenic+activity+of+chemical+mixtures.&rft.au=Johnson%2C+Candice+M%3BAchary%2C+Mohan%3BSuri%2C+Rominder+P&rft.aulast=Johnson&rft.aufirst=Candice&rft.date=2013-05-07&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=4661&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.issn=1520-5851&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fes304939c
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2014-03-25
N1 - Date created - 2013-05-07
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es304939c
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Perspectives on Virtual Veneration
AN - 1429629318; 201336668
AB - A reconnaissance of the potential for memorializing people through online avatars was carried out by participant observation, running ancestor veneration avatars (AVAs) based on deceased members of the author's own family. First, the AVA concept is introduced in the context of the changing social status of religion in postmodern society. Then the range of possibilities is sketched through four avatars, exploring how: (1) a priest character in World of Warcraft can represent an actual deceased priest; (2) an ambivalent character in EverQuest II can represent an abstract issue about the value of religion; (3) an historically accurate gameworld like Pirates of the Burning Sea can be a good environment for commemorating a person whose life is largely unknown but took place during its historical period; and (4) a fantasy world like Lord of the Rings Online can represent a person who in life had a direct connection to that fantasy. Memorialization of one person in multiple environments illustrates that avatar-like manifestations may be created in (1) solo-player games like Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, (2) multiplayer games like Star Wars: The Old Republic, (3) a nongame virtual world like Second Life, and (4) a variety of other online environments where one is represented by something like an avatar, including Wikipedia. Adapted from the source document.
JF - The Information Society
AU - Bainbridge, William Sims
AD - Human-Centered Computing Program, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia, USA wbainbri@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2013/05//
PY - 2013
DA - May 2013
SP - 196
EP - 202
PB - Taylor & Francis, Philadelphia PA
VL - 29
IS - 3
SN - 0197-2243, 0197-2243
KW - Values
KW - Information Sources
KW - War
KW - Religions
KW - Priests
KW - Elderly
KW - Family
KW - Social Status
KW - Internet
KW - article
KW - 0828: mass phenomena; communication
KW - 1978: the family and socialization; sociology of death & dying
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LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2013-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - INSCD8
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Internet; Priests; Religions; Values; War; Family; Information Sources; Elderly; Social Status
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2013.777312
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Dynamic Modulus and Damping Ratio Measurements from Free-Free Resonance and Fixed-Free Resonant Column Procedures
AN - 1855080633; PQ0003947629
AB - Resonant Column (RC) procedures may be used to quantify a soil's shear modulus degredation and damping ratio curves along the small strain ( similar to 10-4% to similar to 10-1%) range. However, RC procedures often cannot provide measurements of very small strain (< similar to 10-4%) dynamic mechanical properties. The objective of this study is to determine if Free-Free Resonance (FFR) procedures may be used to provide complementary very small strain maximum dynamic modulus and minimum damping ratio to small strain shear modulus degredation and damping ratio curves from RC testing procedures. A plastic control specimen in six different free-free configurations was used to determine appropriate free-free boundary conditions for axial FFR procedures. Five cohesive soil specimens were then subjected to axial FFR and torsional fixed-free RC procedures to evaluate the consistency of the resulting strain-dependent modulus and damping measurements. It can be concluded that: (1) the specific free-free boundary conditions used in axial FFR testing do not significantly influence measured elastic or dissipative properties and (2) axial FFR and torsional fixed-free RC procedures can be used to generate consistent and complementary shear modulus data but cannot be used to generate consistent and complementary damping ratios, due to the inherent issues involved in approximating nonlinear, microstructural sources of energy losses with macroscopic, equivalent linear models of dissipation.
JF - Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering
AU - Schaeffer, Kevin
AU - Bearce, Richard
AU - Wang, Judith
AD - National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates Research Assistant; Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines; 1600 Illinois Street, Golden, CO 80401; kschaeff[at]mines.edu
Y1 - 2013/04/10/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Apr 10
PB - American Society of Civil Engineers, 345 E. 47th St. New York NY 10017-2398 United States
SN - 1090-0241, 1090-0241
KW - Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources
KW - Testing Procedures
KW - Boundary Conditions
KW - Cohesive Soils
KW - Strains
KW - Strain
KW - Boundary conditions
KW - Energy sources
KW - Soil
KW - Engineering
KW - Resonance
KW - Soils
KW - Energy Loss
KW - Plastics
KW - Shear modulus
KW - Damping
KW - Mechanical properties
KW - Modelling
KW - ENA 03:Energy
KW - SW 5010:Network design
KW - Q2 09282:Materials technology, corrosion, fouling and boring
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Resonance; Soils; Strains; Shear modulus; Modelling; Mechanical properties; Damping; Soil; Energy sources; Boundary conditions; Testing Procedures; Engineering; Boundary Conditions; Cohesive Soils; Energy Loss; Plastics; Strain
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)GT.1943-5606.0000945
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The U. P. Mammoth Site, Carbon County, Wyoming, USA; more questions than answers
AN - 1442373384; 2013-079670
AB - In the summer of 1960, mammoth bones were discovered by a dragline operator in southern Wyoming at the Union Pacific (U.P.) Mammoth site. Although subsequent archaeological work during 1960 and 1961 identified artifacts in association with the mammoth remains, many authors have since questioned the nature of that association. Also, little has been published about the site other than a brief article in National Geographic Magazine in 1962. In this paper, we present additional information on the U.P. Mammoth site including stratigraphic profiles from the first author's geoarchaeological work in 1961, stratigraphic and spatial location of bones and artifacts derived from the original field notes, and new radiocarbon dates. Although the precise stratigraphic provenance for many artifacts and skeletal elements remains unclear, a compelling argument can be made for spatial and stratigraphic association of the mammoth remains with the artifact assemblage suggesting some kind of human interaction with the animal. Abstract Copyright (2013), Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
JF - Geoarchaeology
AU - Haynes, C Vance, Jr
AU - Surovell, Todd A
AU - Hodgins, Gregory W L
Y1 - 2013/03//
PY - 2013
DA - March 2013
SP - 99
EP - 111
PB - Wiley Interscience, New York, NY
VL - 28
IS - 2
SN - 0883-6353, 0883-6353
KW - United States
KW - isotopes
KW - erosion
KW - artifacts
KW - upper Pleistocene
KW - Elephantoidea
KW - Cenozoic
KW - upper Weichselian
KW - Theria
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - Weichselian
KW - transport
KW - dates
KW - carbon
KW - bones
KW - Elephantidae
KW - paleosols
KW - Younger Dryas
KW - Mammuthus
KW - interpretation
KW - Eutheria
KW - Archaic
KW - paleoindian
KW - stratigraphy
KW - scour
KW - excavation
KW - Chordata
KW - archaeology
KW - soil profiles
KW - Quaternary
KW - assemblages
KW - human activity
KW - Mammalia
KW - Proboscidea
KW - Wyoming
KW - water table
KW - habitat
KW - fluctuations
KW - archaeological sites
KW - Clovis drought
KW - Carbon County Wyoming
KW - Pleistocene
KW - fossils
KW - C-14
KW - Vertebrata
KW - Union Pacific Mammoth Site
KW - Tetrapoda
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1442373384?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geoarchaeology&rft.atitle=The+U.+P.+Mammoth+Site%2C+Carbon+County%2C+Wyoming%2C+USA%3B+more+questions+than+answers&rft.au=Haynes%2C+C+Vance%2C+Jr%3BSurovell%2C+Todd+A%3BHodgins%2C+Gregory+W+L&rft.aulast=Haynes&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2013-03-01&rft.volume=28&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=99&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geoarchaeology&rft.issn=08836353&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fgea.21433
L2 - http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/36011/home
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, United Kingdom
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 22
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 5 tables, sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - archaeological sites; archaeology; Archaic; artifacts; assemblages; bones; C-14; carbon; Carbon County Wyoming; Cenozoic; Chordata; Clovis drought; dates; Elephantidae; Elephantoidea; erosion; Eutheria; excavation; fluctuations; fossils; habitat; human activity; interpretation; isotopes; Mammalia; Mammuthus; paleoindian; paleosols; Pleistocene; Proboscidea; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; scour; soil profiles; stratigraphy; Tetrapoda; Theria; transport; Union Pacific Mammoth Site; United States; upper Pleistocene; upper Weichselian; Vertebrata; water table; Weichselian; Wyoming; Younger Dryas
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gea.21433
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Microbial siderophores: a mini review
AN - 1439229040; 18492712
AB - Iron is one of the major limiting factors and essential nutrients of microbial life. Since in nature it is not readily available in the preferred form, microorganisms produce small high affinity chelating molecules called siderophores for its acquisition. Microorganisms produce a wide variety of siderophores controlled at the molecular level by different genes to accumulate, mobilize and transport iron for metabolism. Siderophores also play a critical role in the expression of virulence and development of biofilms by different microbes. Apart from maintaining microbial life, siderophores can be harnessed for the sustainability of human, animals and plants. With the advent of modern molecular tools, a major breakthrough is taking place in the understanding of the multifaceted role of siderophores in nature. This mini review is intended to provide a general overview on siderophore along with its role and applications.
JF - Journal of Basic Microbiology
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Saha, Nabaneeta
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AU - Bestervelt, Lorelle L
AD - Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, NSF International, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Y1 - 2013/03//
PY - 2013
DA - Mar 2013
SP - 303
EP - 317
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 53
IS - 4
SN - 0233-111X, 0233-111X
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology
KW - Virulence
KW - Reviews
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Nutrients
KW - Biofilms
KW - Limiting factors
KW - Iron
KW - Metabolism
KW - Siderophores
KW - A 01360:Plant Diseases
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologya&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Basic+Microbiology&rft.atitle=Microbial+siderophores%3A+a+mini+review&rft.au=Saha%2C+Ratul%3BSaha%2C+Nabaneeta%3BDonofrio%2C+Robert+S%3BBestervelt%2C+Lorelle+L&rft.aulast=Saha&rft.aufirst=Ratul&rft.date=2013-03-01&rft.volume=53&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=303&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Basic+Microbiology&rft.issn=0233111X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjobm.201100552
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-04
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Virulence; Reviews; Microorganisms; Nutrients; Limiting factors; Biofilms; Iron; Metabolism; Siderophores
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jobm.201100552
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Emergency Do Not Consume/Do Not Use concentrations for potassium permanganate in drinking water
AN - 1323810723; 17823141
AB - Over the past decade, regulatory authorities and water purveyors have become increasingly concerned with accidental or intentional adulteration of municipal drinking water. Emergency response guidelines, such as the 'Do Not Consume' or use concentration limits derived herein, can be used to notify the public in such cases. Potassium permanganate (KMnO4) is used to control iron concentrations and to reduce the levels of nuisance materials that affect odor or taste of finished drinking water. Manganese (Mn) is recognized an essential nutrient, permanganate (MnO4-) and manganous (Mn+2) ions are caustic, and the acute toxicity of KMnO4 is defined by its oxidant/irritant properties and by the toxicity of Mn. Ingestion of small amounts (4-20 mg/kg) of aqueous KMnO4 solutions that are above 200 mg/L causes gastrointestinal distress, while bolus ingestion has caused respiratory arrest following coagulative necrosis and hemorrhage in the esophagus, stomach, or liver. Dilute KMnO4 solutions (1-100 mg/L) are used as a topical antiseptics and astringents, but >1:5000 (200 mg/L) dilutions can irritate or discolor sensitive mucous membranes and direct skin or ocular contact with concentrated KMnO4 can perforate tissues. Based on clinical experience with 200 mg/L KMnO4, a Do Not Consume concentration of 7 mg/L KMnO4 (equivalent to 2 mg Mn/L) is recommended. Recognizing limited empirical data from which to calculate an ocular reference value, a skin contact 'Do Not Use' concentration of 30 mg Mn/L is recommended based on the skin irritation in some patients after a 10-min contact with 100 mg KMnO4/L.
JF - Human & Experimental Toxicology
AU - Willhite, C C
AU - Bhat, V S
AU - Ball, G L
AU - McLellan, C J
Y1 - 2013/03//
PY - 2013
DA - Mar 2013
SP - 275
EP - 298
PB - Sage Publications Ltd., 6 Bonhill St. London EC2A 4PU United Kingdom
VL - 32
IS - 3
SN - 0960-3271, 0960-3271
KW - Pollution Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Acute toxicity
KW - Toxicity
KW - Manganese
KW - P 0000:AIR POLLUTION
KW - H 1000:Occupational Safety and Health
KW - X 24360:Metals
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-04-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Manganese; Toxicity
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0960327112456316
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Service Life of HDPE Geomembranes Subjected to Elevated Temperatures
AN - 1855079467; PQ0003945635
AB - Subtitle D landfills may experience elevated temperatures for a variety of reasons such as hydration of combustion ash, waste biodegradation with and without leachate recirculation, aluminum production waste and combustion ash reactions, and wastes received with elevated temperature. Elevated temperatures can reduce service life and/or effectiveness of HDPE geomembranes by accelerating antioxidant depletion of geomembranes and polymer degradation. A case history is presented to illustrate the potential effect(s) of elevated temperatures and time-temperature history on a HDPE geomembrane and the associated reduction in service life and/or effectiveness. The geomembrane service life was influenced by the peak temperature Tp, e.g., 60-80 degree C, the duration of peak temperatures (time-temperature history), and the time to complete antioxidant depletion. This paper also discusses possible criteria for assessing the service life of geomembranes, such as, applicable engineering properties, locations for service life assessments, definitions for geomembrane service life, and measures that could be adopted if service life is reduced significantly.
JF - Journal of Hazardous, Toxic, and Radioactive Waste
AU - Jafari, Navid H
AU - Stark, Timothy D
AU - Rowe, RKerry
AD - NSF Graduate Research Fellow, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Univ. of Illinois, 205 N. Mathews Ave., Urbana, IL 61801-2352., njafari2@illinois.edu
Y1 - 2013/02/09/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Feb 09
PB - American Society of Civil Engineers, 345 E. 47th St. New York NY 10017-2398 United States
SN - 2153-5493, 2153-5493
KW - Toxicology Abstracts
KW - Temperature effects
KW - Hydration
KW - Antioxidants
KW - Biodegradation
KW - Landfills
KW - Aluminum
KW - Radioactive wastes
KW - Leachates
KW - Combustion
KW - X 24390:Radioactive Materials
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1855079467?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Hydration; Temperature effects; Biodegradation; Antioxidants; Landfills; Aluminum; Radioactive wastes; Leachates; Combustion
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)HZ.2153-5515.0000188
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Climatology of surface chlorophyll a, autumn-winter and spring blooms in the Southwest Pacific Ocean
AN - 1420516004; 2013-065624
AB - Ocean color data from the 13 year Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor mission are used to examine the distribution of surface chlorophyll a in the southwest Pacific Ocean. The mean surface chlorophyll field is similar to that found by previous workers, with elevated levels in the Subtropical Front and around the subantarctic islands that have an associated shelf. The annual cycle in surface chlorophyll shows a ubiquitous summer bloom in subantarctic water, with autumn, winter, and spring blooms variously in subtropical water and across the Subtropical Front. The autumn blooms progress equatorward with time at the same rate as wind stress. This supports the idea that the autumn bloom develops in response to increased wind stress, with a likely mechanism for the bloom being mixing to the surface of the deep chlorophyll maximum, and/or increased production due to entrainment of nutrients. The spring bloom progresses poleward with time. It starts after the mixed layer reaches its deepest, and its timing appears to be linked to the reduction in wind stress in spring. Under the assumption that all tracers are well mixed to the seasonal thermocline in autumn and winter, we conclude that vertically integrated chlorophyll increases at all latitudes in subtropical water during autumn and winter. Unfortunately, carbon-to-chlorophyll ratios are not known well enough to determine whether the same is true for vertically integrated carbon biomass. Individual spring blooms show significant spatial structure and are different from year to year. This leads to low spatial coherence for the temporal variability in surface chlorophyll. Abstract Copyright (2013), American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
AU - Chiswell, Stephen M
AU - Bradford-Grieve, Janet
AU - Hadfield, Mark G
AU - Kennan, Sean C
Y1 - 2013/02//
PY - 2013
DA - February 2013
SP - 1003
EP - 1018
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 118
IS - 2
SN - 0148-0227, 0148-0227
KW - Plantae
KW - Southwest Pacific
KW - pigments
KW - South Pacific
KW - algae
KW - climate change
KW - West Pacific
KW - chlorophyll
KW - nutrients
KW - organic compounds
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - ecology
KW - seasonal variations
KW - porphyrins
KW - winds
KW - productivity
KW - algal blooms
KW - 07:Oceanography
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.atitle=Climatology+of+surface+chlorophyll+a%2C+autumn-winter+and+spring+blooms+in+the+Southwest+Pacific+Ocean&rft.au=Chiswell%2C+Stephen+M%3BBradford-Grieve%2C+Janet%3BHadfield%2C+Mark+G%3BKennan%2C+Sean+C&rft.aulast=Chiswell&rft.aufirst=Stephen&rft.date=2013-02-01&rft.volume=118&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1003&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.issn=01480227&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjgrc.20088
L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/jgr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, United Kingdom
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 40
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algae; algal blooms; chlorophyll; climate change; ecology; nutrients; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; pigments; Plantae; porphyrins; productivity; seasonal variations; South Pacific; Southwest Pacific; West Pacific; winds
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jgrc.20088
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The mechanisms of earthquakes and faulting in the southern Gulf of California
AN - 1312837022; 2013-023680
AB - Accurate earthquake locations and their focal mechanisms can illuminate the distribution and mode of deformation at rifted continental margins. The Pacific-North America (Pa-NA) plate boundary within the Gulf of California (GoC) provides an excellent opportunity to explore the evolution and kinematics of rifting, as continental extension in the north transitions to seafloor spreading in the south. From October 2005 to October 2006, an array of eight four-component ocean-bottom seismographs deployed in the GoC recorded seismicity as part of the Sea of Cortez Ocean-Bottom Array (SCOOBA) experiment. By combining the data with those from the onshore Network of Autonomously Recording Seismographs (NARS)-Baja array, we detect and locate approximately 700 earthquakes (M (sub w) 2.2-6.6) mainly along the northwest-southeast-striking transform faults that delineate the plate boundary. For 36 events (M (sub w) 3.5-6.6) with high signal-to-noise ratio in a long-period (10-20 s) band, we determine deviatoric moment tensors and associated double-couple focal mechanisms by regional waveform inversion. Many focal mechanisms are consistent with right-lateral strike-slip faulting along the Pa-NA transform fault system, which suggests that the transform faults primarily accommodate seismic deformation within the gulf. In addition, we capture a swarm of events on Baja California along the right-lateral northwest-southeast-striking Las Viboras-El Azufre fault, which may be related to ongoing geothermal activity and volcanic deformation within the peninsula. The combination of high-resolution earthquake locations and focal mechanisms improves our understanding of the distribution of seismic deformation within the greater extensional zone in the southern GoC.
JF - Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
AU - Sumy, Danielle F
AU - Gaherty, James B
AU - Kim, Won-Young
AU - Diehl, Tobias
AU - Collins, John A
Y1 - 2013/02//
PY - 2013
DA - February 2013
SP - 487
EP - 506
PB - Seismological Society of America, Berkeley, CA
VL - 103
IS - 1
SN - 0037-1106, 0037-1106
KW - East Pacific
KW - focal mechanism
KW - continental margin
KW - technology
KW - Northeast Pacific
KW - plate boundaries
KW - magnitude
KW - strike-slip faults
KW - seismographs
KW - Gulf of California
KW - southern Gulf of California
KW - transform faults
KW - plate tectonics
KW - detection
KW - seismicity
KW - North Pacific
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - tectonics
KW - bathymetry
KW - earthquakes
KW - seismotectonics
KW - instruments
KW - faults
KW - 19:Seismology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bulletin+of+the+Seismological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=The+mechanisms+of+earthquakes+and+faulting+in+the+southern+Gulf+of+California&rft.au=Sumy%2C+Danielle+F%3BGaherty%2C+James+B%3BKim%2C+Won-Young%3BDiehl%2C+Tobias%3BCollins%2C+John+A&rft.aulast=Sumy&rft.aufirst=Danielle&rft.date=2013-02-01&rft.volume=103&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=487&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bulletin+of+the+Seismological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00371106&rft_id=info:doi/10.1785%2F0120120080
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Seismological Society of America | Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 80
N1 - PubXState - CA
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, geol. sketch maps
N1 - SuppNotes - Includes appendices
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - bathymetry; continental margin; detection; earthquakes; East Pacific; faults; focal mechanism; Gulf of California; instruments; magnitude; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Pacific Ocean; plate boundaries; plate tectonics; seismicity; seismographs; seismotectonics; southern Gulf of California; strike-slip faults; technology; tectonics; transform faults
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1785/0120120080
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Space Weather at NSF: Results, Priorities and Plans
T2 - 93rd American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2013)
AN - 1369228712; 6215100
JF - 93rd American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting (AMS 2013)
AU - Behnke, Richard
Y1 - 2013/01/06/
PY - 2013
DA - 2013 Jan 06
KW - Weather
KW - Priorities
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L2 - https://ams.confex.com/ams/93Annual/webprogram/meeting.html#
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-05-31
N1 - Last updated - 2013-06-19
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The genetics of phenotypic plasticity. XII. Temporal and spatial heterogeneity
AN - 1712566414; PQ0001954634
AB - To understand empirical patterns of phenotypic plasticity, we need to explore the complexities of environmental heterogeneity and how it interacts with cue reliability. I consider both temporal and spatial variation separately and in combination, the timing of temporal variation relative to development, the timing of movement relative to selection, and two different patterns of movement: stepping-stone and island. Among-generation temporal heterogeneity favors plasticity, while within-generation heterogeneity can result in cue unreliability. In general, spatial variation more strongly favors plasticity than temporal variation, and island migration more strongly favors plasticity than stepping-stone migration. Negative correlations among environments between the time of development and selection can result in seemingly maladaptive reaction norms. The effects of higher dispersal rates depend on the life history stage when dispersal occurs and the pattern of environmental heterogeneity. Thus, patterns of environmental heterogeneity can be complex and can interact in unforeseen ways to affect cue reliability. Proper interpretation of patterns of trait plasticity requires consideration of the ecology and biology of the organism. More information on actual cue reliability and the ecological and developmental context of trait plasticity is needed. To understand why adaptive plasticity is less common than we would expect, we need to explore the complexities of environmental heterogeneity and how it interacts with cue reliability. I consider both temporal and spatial variation separately and in combination, the timing of temporal variation relative to development, the timing of movement relative to selection, and two different patterns of movement: stepping-stone and island. In general, spatial variation more strongly selects for plasticity than temporal variation, and island migration more strongly selects for plasticity than stepping-stone migration.
JF - Ecology and Evolution
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, VA 22230.
PY - 2013
SP - 4596
EP - 4609
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 3
IS - 13
SN - 2045-7758, 2045-7758
KW - Genetics Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Plasticity (developmental)
KW - Spatial distribution
KW - Temporal variations
KW - phenotypic plasticity
KW - Migration
KW - Ecology
KW - Genetics
KW - spatial variations
KW - Islands
KW - Life history
KW - Spatial heterogeneity
KW - Dispersal
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - G 07730:Development & Cell Cycle
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.atitle=The+genetics+of+phenotypic+plasticity.+XII.+Temporal+and+spatial+heterogeneity&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=3&rft.issue=13&rft.spage=4596&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.issn=20457758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fece3.792
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Plasticity (developmental); spatial variations; Life history; Islands; Temporal variations; phenotypic plasticity; Spatial heterogeneity; Dispersal; Migration; Ecology; Genetics; Spatial distribution
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.792
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Global Opportunities
AN - 1654694450; 21312634
AB - LAST YEAR, I SHARED with you that I felt that globalization was the key trend impacting manufacturers and dealers. A year later, I continue to see this issue as the most impactful on our industry.
JF - Water Quality Products
AU - Andrew, Rick
AD - Drinking Water Treatment Unit Program NSF Intl., andrew@nsf.org
Y1 - 2013/01//
PY - 2013
DA - January 2013
SP - 8
PB - Scranton Gillette Communications, Inc.
SN - 1092-0978, 1092-0978
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Water Quality
KW - Water quality
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 5010:Network design
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1654694450?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Quality+Products&rft.atitle=Global+Opportunities&rft.au=Andrew%2C+Rick&rft.aulast=Andrew&rft.aufirst=Rick&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=8&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Quality+Products&rft.issn=10920978&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-02-04
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Water quality; Water Quality
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geoscience across cultures and communities; benefits and challenges of diversity
AN - 1535201250; 2014-041873
AB - In June 2010, The Geological Society of America (GSA) approved (June 2010) a Position Paper on Diversity and established a Task Force to develop a plan for effective implementation, as appropriate. "GSA affirms the value of diverse scientific ideas, and the connection between diverse scientific ideas and a diverse group of contributors of those ideas, including those who comment and criticize". This step reflects growth in understanding and appreciating the importance of embracing diversity in the workforce and practices of our profession. It is an action that reflects a long organizational history of incremental progress, but progress nonetheless. GSA has demonstrated its growing appreciation of diversity through numerous efforts, such as programs that recognize diverse individuals who have made significant achievement in geoscience and support to students who are just beginning their careers. Such awareness is important not only because of the role of diversity in establishing a talented workforce, but also because of the importance of diverse scientific ideas, especially as we work to unravel puzzles or solve thorny problems. Our connections to the Earth are part of human nature and therefore are also part of our practice of science. As geoscientists, we focus on local and regional environments and synthesize different ways of knowing them. We leverage that sense of place in our scientific understanding of a given place (Semken and Freeman, 2008). Further, human cultures are sometimes defined by their relationships with the Earth in a specific locale.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Berg, Richard C
AU - Semken, Steven
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013
PY - 2013
DA - 2013
SP - 660
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 45
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1535201250?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Paper223367.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2013 annual meeting & exposition
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2014-06-13
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An Alternative Approach to Water Regulations for Public Health Protection at Bathing Beaches
AN - 1508757975; 19389010
AB - New approaches should be considered as the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) moves rapidly to develop new beach monitoring guidelines by the end of 2012, as these guidelines serve as the basis by which states and territories with coasts along the oceans and Great Lakes can then develop and implement monitoring programs for recreational waters. We describe and illustrate one possible approach to beach regulation termed as the "Comprehensive Toolbox within an Approval Process (CTBAP)." The CTBAP consists of three components. The first is a "toolbox" consisting of an inventory of guidelines on monitoring targets, a series of measurement techniques, and guidance to improve water quality through source identification and prevention methods. The second two components are principles of implementation. These include first, "flexibility" to encourage and develop an individualized beach management plan tailored to local conditions and second, "consistency" of this management plan to ensure a consistent national level of public health protection. The results of this approach are illustrated through a case study at a well-studied South Florida recreational marine beach. This case study explores different monitoring targets based on two different health endpoints (skin versus gastrointestinal illness) and recommends a beach regulation program for the study beach that focuses predominately on source prevention.
JF - Journal of Environmental and Public Health
AU - Abdelzaher, Amir M
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Phillips, Matthew C
AU - Elmir, Samir M
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AD - NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33149, USA, hmsolo@miami.edu
Y1 - 2013/01//
PY - 2013
DA - Jan 2013
PB - Hindawi Publishing Corporation, P.O. Box 3079 Cuyahoga Falls OH 44223 United States
VL - 2013
SN - 1687-9805, 1687-9805
KW - Pollution Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Oceanic Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts
KW - Pollution monitoring
KW - Bathing
KW - Management plans
KW - Territory
KW - Water quality
KW - Public health
KW - Lakes
KW - Case studies
KW - Coastal morphology
KW - Recreational waters
KW - ASW, USA, Florida
KW - Beaches
KW - Skin
KW - Guidelines
KW - Illustrations
KW - Identification
KW - Coastal zone management
KW - EPA
KW - Coastal zone
KW - Prevention
KW - Recreation areas
KW - Oceans
KW - North America, Great Lakes
KW - Environment management
KW - O 4090:Conservation and Environmental Protection
KW - P 1000:MARINE POLLUTION
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - H 12000:Epidemiology and Public Health
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-12-11
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pollution monitoring; Coastal morphology; Illustrations; Bathing; Recreational waters; Identification; Environment management; Coastal zone management; Public health; Beaches; Skin; Guidelines; Management plans; Territory; Water quality; EPA; Prevention; Lakes; Coastal zone; Case studies; Recreation areas; Oceans; ASW, USA, Florida; North America, Great Lakes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/138521
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Radiation recoil effects on the dynamical evolution of asteroids
AN - 1502298424; 2014-012235
JF - Abstracts of Papers Submitted to the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference
AU - Cotto-Figueroa, D
AU - Statler, T S
AU - Richardson, D C
AU - Tanga, P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2013
PY - 2013
DA - 2013
EP - Abstract 2945
PB - Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, Houston, TX
VL - 44
KW - radiation recoil
KW - aggregate
KW - topography
KW - obliquity of the ecliptic
KW - numerical models
KW - asteroids
KW - rotation
KW - dynamic properties
KW - 04:Extraterrestrial geology
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L2 - http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2013/pdf/2945.pdf
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 44th lunar and planetary science conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 4
N1 - PubXState - TX
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-27
N1 - CODEN - #02179
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aggregate; asteroids; dynamic properties; numerical models; obliquity of the ecliptic; radiation recoil; rotation; topography
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Should Bilingual Children Learn Reading in Two Languages at the Same Time or in Sequence?
AN - 1495898432; 201400257
AB - Is it best to learn reading in two languages simultaneously or sequentially? We observed second- and third-grade children in two-way dual-language learning contexts: (a) 50:50 or Simultaneous dual-language (two languages within same developmental period) and (b) 90:10 or Sequential dual-language (one language, followed gradually by the other). They were compared to matched monolingual English-only children in single-language English schools. Bilinguals (home language was Spanish only, English-only, or Spanish and English in dual-language schools), were tested in both languages, and monolingual children were tested in English using standardized reading and language tasks. Bilinguals in 50:50 programs performed better than bilinguals in 90:10 programs on English Irregular Words and Passage Comprehension tasks, suggesting language and reading facilitation for underlying grammatical class and linguistic structure analyses. By contrast, bilinguals in 90:10 programs performed better than bilinguals in the 50:50 programs on English Phonological Awareness and Reading Decoding tasks, suggesting language and reading facilitation for surface phonological regularity analysis. Notably, children from English-only homes in dual-language learning contexts performed equally well, or better than, children from monolingual English-only homes in single-language learning contexts. Overall, the findings provide tantalizing evidence that dual-language learning during the same developmental period may provide bilingual reading advantages. Adapted from the source document
JF - Bilingual Research Journal
AU - Berens, Melody S
AU - Kovelman, Ioulia
AU - Petitto, Laura-Ann
AD - National Science Foundation, Science of Learning Center, "Visual Language and Visual Learning. VL2," Gallaudet University, 800 Florida Avenue N.E., Washington, DC 20002 Laura-Ann.Petitto@Gallaudet.edu
Y1 - 2013///0,
PY - 2013
DA - 0, 2013
SP - 35
EP - 60
VL - 36
IS - 1
SN - 1523-5882, 1523-5882
KW - Elementary School Students (21520)
KW - Bilingualism (08850)
KW - Second Language Reading (75930)
KW - English (21900)
KW - Reading Acquisition (70650)
KW - Spanish (81800)
KW - Bilingual Education (08750)
KW - Learning Environment (45880)
KW - Children (11850)
KW - article
KW - 4122: applied linguistics; bilingualism, multilingualism, bilingual education
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Allba&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bilingual+Research+Journal&rft.atitle=Should+Bilingual+Children+Learn+Reading+in+Two+Languages+at+the+Same+Time+or+in+Sequence%3F&rft.au=Berens%2C+Melody+S%3BKovelman%2C+Ioulia%3BPetitto%2C+Laura-Ann&rft.aulast=Berens&rft.aufirst=Melody&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=36&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=35&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bilingual+Research+Journal&rft.issn=15235882&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - CODEN - BREJED
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - English (21900); Bilingualism (08850); Children (11850); Elementary School Students (21520); Learning Environment (45880); Spanish (81800); Reading Acquisition (70650); Second Language Reading (75930); Bilingual Education (08750)
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Giant suppression of photobleaching for single molecule detection via the Purcell effect.
AN - 1467635719; 24245957
AB - We report giant suppression of photobleaching and a prolonged lifespan of single fluorescent molecules via the Purcell effect in plasmonic nanostructures. The plasmonic structures enhance the spontaneous emission of excited fluorescent molecules, reduce the probability of activating photochemical reactions that destroy the molecules, and hence suppress the bleaching. Experimentally, we observe up to a 1000-fold increase in the total number of photons that we can harvest from a single fluorescent molecule before it bleaches. This approach demonstrates the potential of using the Purcell effect to manipulate photochemical reactions at the subwavelength scale.
JF - Nano letters
AU - Cang, Hu
AU - Liu, Yongmin
AU - Wang, Yuan
AU - Yin, Xiaobo
AU - Zhang, Xiang
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC) , 3112 Etcheverry Hall, University of California , Berkeley, California 94720, United States.
Y1 - 2013
PY - 2013
DA - 2013
SP - 5949
EP - 5953
VL - 13
IS - 12
KW - Carbocyanines
KW - 0
KW - Fluorescent Dyes
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Photons
KW - Carbocyanines -- chemistry
KW - Photobleaching
KW - Fluorescent Dyes -- chemistry
KW - Nanotechnology
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2014-09-04
N1 - Date created - 2013-12-11
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-19
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl403047m
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular Docking Study of Beta-Glucosidase with Cellobiose, Cellotetraose and Cellotetriose
AN - 1448212758; 18734417
AB - Beta-glucosidase (3.2.1.21) plays an essential role in the removal of non-reducing terminal glucosyl residues from glycosides. Recently, beta-glucosidase has been of interest for biomass conversion that acts in synergy with two other enzymes, endo-glucanase and exo-glucanase. However, there is not much information available on the catalytic interactions of beta-glucosidase with its substrates. Thus, this study reports on the binding modes between beta-glucosidase from glycoside hydrolase family 1 namely BglB with cellobiose, cellotetraose and cellotetriose via molecular docking simulation. From the results, the binding affinities of BglB-cellobiose, BglB-cellotetraose, and BglB-cellotetriose complexes were reported to be -6.2kJ/mol, -5.68 kj/mol and -5.63 kj/mol, respectively. The detail interactions were also been investigated that revealed the key residues involved in forming hydrogen bonds (h-bond) with the substrates. These findings may provide valuable insigths in designing beta-glucosidase with higher cellobiose-hydrolyzing efficiency.
JF - Bioinformation
AU - Khairudin, NBA
AU - Mazlan, NSF
AD - Malaysia Japan International Institute of Technology, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, nurulbahiyah@ic.utm.my
A2 - Kangueane, P (ed)
Y1 - 2013
PY - 2013
DA - 2013
SP - 813
EP - 817
VL - 9
IS - 16
SN - 0973-2063, 0973-2063
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - cellobiose
KW - Hydrogen bonding
KW - glycosides
KW - Enzymes
KW - glycoside hydrolase
KW - Biomass
KW - W 30945:Fermentation & Cell Culture
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bioinformation&rft.atitle=Molecular+Docking+Study+of+Beta-Glucosidase+with+Cellobiose%2C+Cellotetraose+and+Cellotetriose&rft.au=Khairudin%2C+NBA%3BMazlan%2C+NSF&rft.aulast=Khairudin&rft.aufirst=NBA&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=16&rft.spage=813&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bioinformation&rft.issn=09732063&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-11-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - cellobiose; Hydrogen bonding; glycosides; glycoside hydrolase; Enzymes; Biomass
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Recent advances in laser tweezers Raman spectroscopy (LTRS) for label-free analysis of single cells
AN - 1434025301; 18491036
AB - Laser tweezers Raman spectroscopy (LTRS), a technique that integrates optical tweezers with confocal Raman spectroscopy, is a variation of micro-Raman spectroscopy that enables the manipulation and biochemical analysis of single biological particles in suspension. This article provides an overview of the LTRS method, with an emphasis on highlighting recent advances over the past several years in the development of the technology and several new biological and biomedical applications that have been demonstrated. A perspective on the future developments of this powerful cytometric technology will also be presented. ([copy 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
JF - Journal of Biophotonics
AU - Chan, James W
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA., jwjchan@ucdavis.edu
Y1 - 2013/01//
PY - 2013
DA - Jan 2013
SP - 36
EP - 48
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 6
IS - 1
SN - 1864-063X, 1864-063X
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Raman spectroscopy
KW - laser tweezers
KW - optical trapping
KW - cytometry
KW - label-free
KW - Reviews
KW - Biochemical analysis
KW - Lasers
KW - Spectroscopy
KW - W 30900:Methods
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.atitle=Recent+advances+in+laser+tweezers+Raman+spectroscopy+%28LTRS%29+for+label-free+analysis+of+single+cells&rft.au=Chan%2C+James+W&rft.aulast=Chan&rft.aufirst=James&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=36&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.issn=1864063X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjbio.201200143
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Raman spectroscopy; Reviews; Biochemical analysis; Lasers; Spectroscopy
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbio.201200143
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Klebsiella michiganensis sp. nov., A New Bacterium Isolated from a Tooth Brush Holder
AN - 1315618619; 17666861
AB - Isolate W14 super(T) recovered from a household tooth brush holder was found to be gram-negative, a facultative anaerobic, non-motile, capsulated, and a non-endospore-forming straight rod. Based on phylogenetic analysis with 16S rRNA gene sequence, isolate W14 super(T) was affiliated to the genus Klebsiella. The closest phylogenetic relative was K. oxytoca with 99 % similarity in the 16S rRNA gene sequence. The major whole-cell fatty acids were C sub(16:0) (31.23 %), C sub(18:1 omega 6c)/C sub(18:1 omega 7c) (21.10 %), and C sub(16:1 omega 7c)/C sub(16:1 omega 6c) (19.05 %). The sequence similarities of isolate W14 super(T) based on rpoB, gyrA, and gyrB were 97, 98, and 98 % with K. oxytoca, and 97, 93, and 90 % with K. mobilis (=Enterobacter aerogenes), respectively. The ribotyping pattern showed a 0.46 similarity with K. oxytoca ATCC 13182 super(T) and 0.24 with K. mobilis ATCC 13048 super(T). The DNA G+C content of isolate W14 super(T) was 54.6 mol%. The DNA-DNA relatedness was 55.7 % with K. oxytoca ATCC 13182 super(T). Using the identification technology of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, the top matches for this isolate were K. oxytoca ATCC 13182 super(T) (Match Factor Score 1.998) and K. mobilis (Score 1.797). On the basis of phenotypic, biochemical, chemotaxonomic, and molecular studies, isolate W14 super(T) could be differentiated from other members of the genus Klebsiella including K. mobilis. Therefore, it is proposed that isolate W14 super(T) (=ATCC BAA-2403 super(T)=DSM 25444 super(T)) should be classified as the type strain of a novel species of the genus Klebsiella, K. michiganensis sp. nov.
JF - Current Microbiology
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Farrance, Christine E
AU - Verghese, Bindhu
AU - Hong, Sunhee
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AD - Microbiology Division, NSF International, 789 Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI, 48105, USA, rsaha@nsf.org
Y1 - 2013/01//
PY - 2013
DA - Jan 2013
SP - 72
EP - 78
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 66
IS - 1
SN - 0343-8651, 0343-8651
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - Teeth
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Klebsiella
KW - Ribotyping
KW - Fatty acids
KW - DNA topoisomerase
KW - DNA
KW - rRNA 16S
KW - Mass spectroscopy
KW - RpoB protein
KW - New species
KW - J 02310:Genetics & Taxonomy
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Current+Microbiology&rft.atitle=Klebsiella+michiganensis+sp.+nov.%2C+A+New+Bacterium+Isolated+from+a+Tooth+Brush+Holder&rft.au=Saha%2C+Ratul%3BFarrance%2C+Christine+E%3BVerghese%2C+Bindhu%3BHong%2C+Sunhee%3BDonofrio%2C+Robert+S&rft.aulast=Saha&rft.aufirst=Ratul&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=66&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=72&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Current+Microbiology&rft.issn=03438651&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00284-012-0245-x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-03-01
N1 - Number of references - 21
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Phylogeny; Teeth; Ribotyping; DNA; DNA topoisomerase; Fatty acids; rRNA 16S; RpoB protein; Mass spectroscopy; New species; Klebsiella
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00284-012-0245-x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Reducing the ecological impact of field research
AN - 1282828429; 4393881
AB - Researchers and students at biological field stations, especially in remote areas, are subject to leaving 'footprints,' as we conduct research, work, and live in sensitive ecosystems. These footprints include travel, personal trash and waste, and field equipment (e.g. flagging, tree markers, plot markers, trail markers, monitoring devices, etc.). In this commentary, we argue that the field of primatology's commitment to minimum impact research should be more explicitly and visibly integrated into our ethical protocols with regard to field research and instruction in sensitive environments. We review current ethical codes and potential solutions to reducing our 'researcher footprints' while conducting fieldwork. Using Costa Rica as an example, we address how sustainable fieldwork differs among varying cultural contexts and argue that researchers should be made responsible and accountable for how our presence, research, and teaching might impact the environment. We conclude by recommending a set of guidelines to be added to ethical protocols regarding research design, station policies, and the conduct of research and teaching in the field. Am. J. Primatol. 75:1-9, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Copyright John Wiley & Sons. Reproduced with permission. An electronic version of this article is available online at http://www.interscience.wiley.com
JF - American journal of primatology
AU - Bezanson, Michelle
AU - Stowe, Rochelle
AU - Watts, Sean M
AD - Santa Clara University ; National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2013/01//
PY - 2013
DA - Jan 2013
SP - 1
EP - 9
VL - 75
IS - 1
SN - 0275-2565, 0275-2565
KW - Anthropology
KW - Field work
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Primatology
KW - Costa Rica
KW - Ecological analysis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1282828429?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+journal+of+primatology&rft.atitle=Reducing+the+ecological+impact+of+field+research&rft.au=Bezanson%2C+Michelle%3BStowe%2C+Rochelle%3BWatts%2C+Sean+M&rft.aulast=Bezanson&rft.aufirst=Michelle&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=75&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+journal+of+primatology&rft.issn=02752565&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fajp.22086
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 10149; 4893 10919; 4044 3858 8560 9511 4309; 3851 971; 99 84 14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajp.22086
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The legacy of Andrew Isserman at the US National Science Foundation
AN - 1282038975; 4390913
AB - Andrew Isserman received support from the US National Science Foundation (NSF), and he contributed to the agency's work by evaluating proposals. His most significant contribution to NSF was his proposition that cumulative knowledge associated with successive projects undertaken in a specific line of inquiry, which could be expressed as a logistic function taking the form of a sigmoid curve. This articulation has been used for more than two decades to assess when projects no longer yield the same levels of new knowledge as previous work in a line of inquiry. More recently, the Isserman Curve has become a part of the NSF Geography and Spatial Science Program's strategic efforts to identify and support potentially transformative research and research that may have especially significant longer-term value. Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications, Inc.
JF - International regional science review
AU - Baerwald, Thomas J
AD - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2013/01//
PY - 2013
DA - Jan 2013
SP - 29
EP - 35
VL - 36
IS - 1
SN - 0160-0176, 0160-0176
KW - Economics
KW - Isserman, Andrew
KW - Research foundations
KW - History
KW - U.S.A.
KW - Geography
KW - Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1282038975?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+regional+science+review&rft.atitle=The+legacy+of+Andrew+Isserman+at+the+US+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Baerwald%2C+Thomas+J&rft.aulast=Baerwald&rft.aufirst=Thomas&rft.date=2013-01-01&rft.volume=36&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=29&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+regional+science+review&rft.issn=01600176&rft_id=info:doi/10.1177%2F0160017612441202
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 5889; 10913 10902; 11325; 5475; 433 293 14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0160017612441202
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Single Investigator or Group Projects? Which is the More Successful Model for a REU Site?
T2 - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AN - 1313123503; 6181376
JF - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AU - Boush, Lisa
AU - Myrbo, Amy
AU - Berman, Mary
AU - Gnivecki, Perry
AU - Michelson, Andrew
AU - Brady, Kristina
Y1 - 2012/12/03/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Dec 03
KW - Models
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313123503?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting+%28AGU+2012%29&rft.atitle=Single+Investigator+or+Group+Projects%3F+Which+is+the+More+Successful+Model+for+a+REU+Site%3F&rft.au=Boush%2C+Lisa%3BMyrbo%2C+Amy%3BBerman%2C+Mary%3BGnivecki%2C+Perry%3BMichelson%2C+Andrew%3BBrady%2C+Kristina&rft.aulast=Boush&rft.aufirst=Lisa&rft.date=2012-12-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting+%28AGU+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2012/scientific-program/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Belmont Forum International Opportunities Fund IDEAS RALLY - Data & e-Infrastructures
T2 - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AN - 1313114683; 6194457
JF - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AU - Uhle, Maria
AU - Gurney, R
AU - Impey, Andrew
Y1 - 2012/12/03/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Dec 03
KW - Funds
KW - Data processing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313114683?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting+%28AGU+2012%29&rft.atitle=Belmont+Forum+International+Opportunities+Fund+IDEAS+RALLY+-+Data+%26amp%3B+e-Infrastructures&rft.au=Uhle%2C+Maria%3BGurney%2C+R%3BImpey%2C+Andrew&rft.aulast=Uhle&rft.aufirst=Maria&rft.date=2012-12-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting+%28AGU+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2012/scientific-program/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - BIG DATA-Related Challenges and Opportunities in Earth System Modeling
T2 - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AN - 1313096003; 6193566
JF - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AU - Bamzai, Anjuli
Y1 - 2012/12/03/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Dec 03
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313096003?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting+%28AGU+2012%29&rft.atitle=BIG+DATA-Related+Challenges+and+Opportunities+in+Earth+System+Modeling&rft.au=Bamzai%2C+Anjuli&rft.aulast=Bamzai&rft.aufirst=Anjuli&rft.date=2012-12-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting+%28AGU+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2012/scientific-program/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Update on EarthCube: Past, Present, and Future
T2 - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AN - 1313095099; 6192480
JF - 2012 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2012)
AU - Jacobs, Clifford
AU - Zanzerkia, Eva
Y1 - 2012/12/03/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Dec 03
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313095099?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2012/scientific-program/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Halogen chemistry and stable Cl isotope composition of thermal springs in the Cascade Arc
AN - 1612263380; 2014-080564
AB - The Cascade volcanic arc is located above a young ( approximately 6 Ma) and slowly subducting ( approximately 4 cm/y) Juan de Fuca plate. Because of the high temperatures in the subduction slab, dehydration reactions are thought to occur at shallow depth to the west of the Cascade volcanic front. Spatial devolatization trends may be observed at the surface by examining geochemical trends from along and across the volcanic front. We have measured the concentration of halogens (F, Cl, Br, I) and the stable Cl isotope compositions of thermal spring waters and primitive basalts along and across the Cascade arc in order to further quantify the extent of halogen cycling through the Cascadia subduction system. Thermal springs from 13 localities, between north-central Washington to Lassen, Northern California with Cl concentrations ranging from 250 to 180,000 ppm (Bergfeld et al., 2008, Hurwitz et al., 2005) were analyzed for their Cl isotope composition. The delta 37Cl values range from -2.1 to +1.3 ppm (n=17), and show no correlation with Cl concentrations and sample location along the arc. The majority of samples are characterized by slightly positive values, whereas only three have negative values (-0.9ppm, -1.6ppm, -2.1ppm). Given the upper mantle has a delta 37Cl value near 0ppm, the variation in the Cl isotope data suggests either that the chloride isotope compositions of these spring waters were modified upon ascent to the surface by the interaction of underlying sediment and/or contain a subducted slab derived component. Nine well characterized basalt samples from across the southern Washington Cascades, (Leeman et al., 2005) were analyzed for their bulk halogen concentrations. Cl concentrations are highest at the volcanic front (140-157 ppm Mt. St. Helens and Mt. Adams) compared to the forearc (17-82 ppm) and in the backarc (19-65 ppm). Br shows a similar trend to Cl with the highest concentrations at the volcanic front (0.22-0.31 ppm) compared to the forearc (0.08-0.13 ppm) and in the backarc (<0.06 ppm). In contrast, F and I show decreasing concentrations from the forearc to the backarc. F concentrations are highest in the forearc (144-600 ppm) decreasing to 120-197 ppm at the volcanic front and 75-164 ppm in the backarc. Iodine concentrations are highest in the forearc (0.09 to 0.10 ppm) to <0.03 ppm in the volcanic front and backarc. Like F and I, B concentrations decrease steadily toward the backarc (Leeman et al., 2004).
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Cullen, J
AU - Barnes, J
AU - Hurwitz, S
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2012/12//
PY - 2012
DA - December 2012
SP - Abstract T23E
EP - 2734
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2012
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1612263380?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=Halogen+chemistry+and+stable+Cl+isotope+composition+of+thermal+springs+in+the+Cascade+Arc&rft.au=Cullen%2C+J%3BBarnes%2C+J%3BHurwitz%2C+S%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Cullen&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2012-12-01&rft.volume=2012&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2012 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-10-16
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An analysis of NSF geosciences research experience for undergraduate site programs from 2009 to 2012
AN - 1612263344; 2014-080049
AB - The Research Experience for Undergraduate (REU) Program at the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) provides undergraduate students from across the nation the opportunity to conduct research at a different institution and in an area that may not be available at their home campus. REU Sites funded by the Directorate of Geosciences provide student research opportunities in earth, ocean, atmospheric and geospace research. This paper provides an overview of the Geosciences REU Site programs run from 2009 to 2012. Information was gathered from over 45 REU sites each year on recruitment methods, student demographics, enrichment activities, and fields of research. The internet is the most widely used mechanism to recruit participants. The admissions rate for REU Sites in Geosciences varies by discipline but averages between 6% to 18% each year, with the majority of participants being rising seniors and juniors. A few Sites include rising sophomores and freshmen. Most students attend PhD granting institutions. Among the participants, gender distribution depends on discipline, with atmospheric and geospace sciences having more male than female participants, but ocean and earth sciences having a majority of female participants. Regarding ethnic diversity, the REU Sites reflect the difficulty of attracting diverse students into Geosciences as a discipline; a large majority of the participants are Caucasian or Asian students. Furthermore, participants from minority-serving institutions or community colleges constitute a small percentage of those taking part in these research experiences. The enrichment activities are very similar across the REU Sites, and mimic well activities common to the scientific community, including intellectual exchange of ideas (lab meetings, seminars, and professional meetings), networking and social activities. Results from this study will be used to examine strengths in the REU Sites in the Geosciences and opportunities for improvement in the program. The data provided here also represent an excellent benchmark by which to measure future changes in student participation and program design that may result from 2012 changes in the REU program solicitation. For example, one important change is that REU programs are now required to include greater participation of students who are attending non-research institutions.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Rom, E L
AU - Patino, L C
AU - Gonzales, J
AU - Weiler, C S
AU - Antell, L
AU - Colon, Y
AU - Sanchez, S C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2012/12//
PY - 2012
DA - December 2012
SP - Abstract ED43C
EP - 0733
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2012
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1612263344?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=An+analysis+of+NSF+geosciences+research+experience+for+undergraduate+site+programs+from+2009+to+2012&rft.au=Rom%2C+E+L%3BPatino%2C+L+C%3BGonzales%2C+J%3BWeiler%2C+C+S%3BAntell%2C+L%3BColon%2C+Y%3BSanchez%2C+S+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Rom&rft.aufirst=E&rft.date=2012-12-01&rft.volume=2012&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2012 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-10-16
N1 - CODEN - #07548
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Doctorate Recipients from U.S. Universities: 2011. NSF 13-301
AN - 1347461105; ED541295
AB - The survey of earned doctorates, the data source for this report, is an annual census of individuals who receive research doctoral degrees from accredited U.S. academic institutions. The survey is sponsored by six federal agencies: the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation (NSF), U.S. Department of Agriculture, and U.S. Department of Education. These data are reported in several NSF publications, the most comprehensive and widely cited of which is this report, "Doctorate Recipients from U.S. Universities." This report calls attention to important trends in doctoral education, organized into five themes. Each theme highlights an important question about doctorate recipients. Online, the reader is invited to explore trends in greater depth through detailed data tables and interactive graphics (www.nsf.gov/statistics/sed/). This paper also includes: (1) Glossary; (2) Data Source; (3) Further Reading; and (4) Online Resources.
Y1 - 2012/12//
PY - 2012
DA - December 2012
SP - 24
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Intellectual Disciplines
KW - Graduate Students
KW - Minority Group Students
KW - Student Characteristics
KW - STEM Education
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Federal Programs
KW - Graduate Surveys
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Gender Differences
KW - Glossaries
KW - Racial Differences
KW - Career Choice
KW - Time to Degree
KW - Student Financial Aid
KW - Foreign Students
KW - Public Agencies
KW - Foreign Countries
KW - Paying for College
KW - Bibliographies
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Social Sciences
KW - Labor Market
KW - Humanities
KW - Internet
KW - Resources
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1347461105?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of concentration polarization, temperature and pressure on ultrasound detection of inorganic fouling and cleaning in a spiral-wound membrane module
AN - 1291608677; 17692547
AB - Ultrasonic time-domain reflectometry (UTDR) involves passing an acoustic wave through a medium and analyzing the reflected waveform. In this study, UTDR is used to track the waveform peaks reflected from the outer and inner membranes in the outermost feed channel in a Koch 2521 spiral-wound module. The UTDR amplitude is shown to be more sensitive to fouling than the transit (arrival) time. The local (point) measurement provided by UTDR is shown to be advantageous since its location can be optimized for early fouling detection. Concentration polarization is shown not to compromise UTDR. This is an advantage relative to flux decline that responds to both fouling and concentration polarization. The UTDR amplitude is found to increase with increasing temperature and decreasing pressure. This is explained by the effect these parameters have on the crystallization rate that changes the fouling layer morphology and thereby the reflected UTDR waveform. This study underscores the importance of establishing a UTDR reference surface suitable for unambiguous detection of fouling. It also emphasizes the necessity for good temperature and pressure control during UTDR measurements as well as a more comprehensive understanding of the effects of operating condition changes on the ultrasound waveforms.
JF - Desalination and Water Treatment
AU - Chai, G Y
AU - Cao, B
AU - Zhao, G Y
AU - Greenberg, A R
AU - Krantz, W B
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering, NSF Center for Membrane Science, Engineering and Technology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0427, USA, alan.greenberg@colorado.edu
Y1 - 2012/12//
PY - 2012
DA - December 2012
SP - 411
EP - 422
PB - European Desalination Society, Tosti 28 1-67100 L'Aquila Italy
VL - 50
IS - 1-3
SN - 1944-3994, 1944-3994
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Sound waves
KW - Water treatment
KW - Inner membranes
KW - Waves
KW - Pressure
KW - Ultrasound
KW - Abiotic factors
KW - Fouling
KW - Temperature effects
KW - Crystallization
KW - Membranes
KW - Acoustics
KW - Temperature
KW - Wave reflection
KW - Polarization
KW - Cleaning
KW - Channels
KW - Ultrasonics
KW - Fluctuations
KW - Feeds
KW - SW 5010:Network design
KW - W 30910:Imaging
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1291608677?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Desalination+and+Water+Treatment&rft.atitle=Effects+of+concentration+polarization%2C+temperature+and+pressure+on+ultrasound+detection+of+inorganic+fouling+and+cleaning+in+a+spiral-wound+membrane+module&rft.au=Chai%2C+G+Y%3BCao%2C+B%3BZhao%2C+G+Y%3BGreenberg%2C+A+R%3BKrantz%2C+W+B&rft.aulast=Chai&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2012-12-01&rft.volume=50&rft.issue=1-3&rft.spage=411&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Desalination+and+Water+Treatment&rft.issn=19443994&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F19443994.2012.744718
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Crystallization; Temperature effects; Fouling; Ultrasonics; Sound waves; Wave reflection; Polarization; Cleaning; Abiotic factors; Water treatment; Acoustics; Inner membranes; Waves; Pressure; Ultrasound; Membranes; Temperature; Feeds; Channels; Fluctuations
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19443994.2012.744718
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Can a Rheological Experiment Distinguish Between a Gel and a Soft Glass?
T2 - 2012 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition
AN - 1313018761; 6171945
JF - 2012 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition
AU - Winter, H
Y1 - 2012/11/09/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Nov 09
KW - Mechanical engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313018761?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+ASME+International+Mechanical+Engineering+Congress+%26+Exposition&rft.atitle=Can+a+Rheological+Experiment+Distinguish+Between+a+Gel+and+a+Soft+Glass%3F&rft.au=Winter%2C+H&rft.aulast=Winter&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2012-11-09&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+ASME+International+Mechanical+Engineering+Congress+%26+Exposition&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.asmeconferences.org/Congress2012/ConferenceSchedule.cfm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Information Needs of the U.S. Public on Climate and Global Change: A Strategy for Communication, Education, and Engagement
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America
AN - 1313038265; 6175686
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn
AU - Wood, Karen
AU - Wei, Ming-Ying
Y1 - 2012/11/04/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Nov 04
KW - USA
KW - Communication
KW - Education
KW - Climatic changes
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313038265?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Information+Needs+of+the+U.S.+Public+on+Climate+and+Global+Change%3A+A+Strategy+for+Communication%2C+Education%2C+and+Engagement&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn%3BWood%2C+Karen%3BWei%2C+Ming-Ying&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2012-11-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2012AM/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chlorophyll a in Antarctic sea ice from historical ice core data
AN - 1542646022; 2014-048206
AB - Sea ice core chlorophyll a data are used to describe the seasonal, regional and vertical distribution of algal biomass in Southern Ocean pack ice. The Antarctic Sea Ice Processes and Climate-Biology (ASPeCt-Bio) circumpolar dataset consists of 1300 ice cores collected during 32 cruises over a period of 25 years. The analyses show that integrated sea ice chlorophyll a peaks in early spring and late austral summer, which is consistent with theories on light and nutrient limitation. The results indicate that on a circum-Antarctic scale, surface, internal and bottom sea ice layers contribute equally to integrated biomass, but vertical distribution shows distinct differences among six regions around the continent. The vertical distribution of sea ice algal biomass depends on sea ice thickness, with surface communities most commonly associated with thin ice (<0.4 m), and ice of moderate thickness (0.4-1.0 m) having the highest probability of forming bottom communities. Abstract Copyright (2012), American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
AU - Meiners, Klaus M
AU - Vancoppenolle, M
AU - Thanassekos, S
AU - Dieckmann, G S
AU - Thomas, D N
AU - Tison, J L
AU - Arrigo, K R
AU - Garrison, D L
AU - McMinn, A
AU - Lannuzel, D
AU - van der Merwe, P
AU - Swadling, K M
AU - Smith, W O, Jr
AU - Melnikov, I
AU - Raymond, B
Y1 - 2012/11//
PY - 2012
DA - November 2012
EP - L21602
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 39
IS - 21
SN - 0094-8276, 0094-8276
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Plantae
KW - ice cores
KW - Quaternary
KW - ice cover thickness
KW - biomass
KW - pigments
KW - sea ice
KW - ice cover
KW - algae
KW - chlorophyll
KW - Cenozoic
KW - organic compounds
KW - paleoenvironment
KW - Antarctica
KW - ice
KW - ecology
KW - porphyrins
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1542646022?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.atitle=Chlorophyll+a+in+Antarctic+sea+ice+from+historical+ice+core+data&rft.au=Meiners%2C+Klaus+M%3BVancoppenolle%2C+M%3BThanassekos%2C+S%3BDieckmann%2C+G+S%3BThomas%2C+D+N%3BTison%2C+J+L%3BArrigo%2C+K+R%3BGarrison%2C+D+L%3BMcMinn%2C+A%3BLannuzel%2C+D%3Bvan+der+Merwe%2C+P%3BSwadling%2C+K+M%3BSmith%2C+W+O%2C+Jr%3BMelnikov%2C+I%3BRaymond%2C+B&rft.aulast=Meiners&rft.aufirst=Klaus&rft.date=2012-11-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=21&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.issn=00948276&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2012GL053478
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/%28ISSN%291944-8007/issues
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, United Kingdom
N1 - Date revised - 2014-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 33
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2014-07-04
N1 - CODEN - GPRLAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algae; Antarctica; biomass; Cenozoic; chlorophyll; ecology; ice; ice cores; ice cover; ice cover thickness; organic compounds; paleoenvironment; pigments; Plantae; porphyrins; Quaternary; sea ice; Southern Ocean
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2012GL053478
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Measuring and maximizing the impact of a federally-funded climate education portfolio via strategic partnerships and collaborations
AN - 1447102364; 2013-084591
AB - NASA Innovations in Climate Education (NICE) at Langley Research Center has funded 71 climate education initiatives since 2008. A key component of NICE's program model is a commitment to fostering and facilitating a community among our awardees. Recently, we have prioritized the growth of a parallel community of NICE project evaluators. Face-to-face meetings, dedicated webspace for sharing evaluation-related resources, and quarterly webinars allow project evaluators to leverage prior work and incorporate common or useful instruments and tools. We aim to maximize the impact of the funded portfolio through this community of practice, and further through a tri-agency collaboration with sister initiatives at NOAA and NSF. Along with the benefits this community provides to the funded educational and evaluation activities, these efforts also reflect the commitment of NICE and the tri-agency collaboration to government-wide alignment of STEM education activities and evaluations across Federal agencies (e.g., the recommendations of the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) Committee on STEM Education). Through the formation of a Tri-Agency Common Evaluation Framework working group, these three agencies are involved in coordination of evaluation across the tri-agency portfolio. In April 2012, the working group, comprising representatives of these agencies, the funded projects, and their evaluators, met in Arlington, VA to take early steps in the development of a framework for the common evaluation of this diverse portfolio. The common framework and nascent draft logic model have taken into consideration common evaluation-related needs, the articulation of common goals and desired impacts, and available or needed instruments and/or methodologies in this field. In late October 2012, this framework and the next steps will be discussed in detail by the environmental evaluation community during the American Evaluation Association annual meeting. This talk will describe NICE's efforts to assemble, synthesize, and share climate literacy-focused evaluation instruments, tools, and resources. We'll also report on updates to the efforts of the tri-agency collaboration to establish a common evaluation framework, and on the feedback received from members of the American Evaluation Association.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Martin, Ann M
AU - Chambers, Lin H
AU - Pippin, Margaret R
AU - Geyer, Andrea
AU - Karsten, Jill
AU - Baek, John
AU - Yue, Sarah
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2012/11//
PY - 2012
DA - November 2012
SP - 468
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 44
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - public awareness
KW - education
KW - climate change
KW - evaluation
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1447102364?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Measuring+and+maximizing+the+impact+of+a+federally-funded+climate+education+portfolio+via+strategic+partnerships+and+collaborations&rft.au=Martin%2C+Ann+M%3BChambers%2C+Lin+H%3BPippin%2C+Margaret+R%3BGeyer%2C+Andrea%3BKarsten%2C+Jill%3BBaek%2C+John%3BYue%2C+Sarah%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Martin&rft.aufirst=Ann&rft.date=2012-11-01&rft.volume=44&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=468&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2012 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-31
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - climate change; education; evaluation; public awareness
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Information needs of the U.S. public on climate and global change; a strategy for communication, education, and engagement
AN - 1447100886; 2013-084604
AB - Climate science is a complex and challenging area. Yet, it is increasingly important for the public to have a sound scientific understanding of climate and global change decision-making, including uncertainty. Understanding uncertainty is a critical thinking skill and is an element of improved understanding of science. It is important for citizens to consider the limitations of science such that outcomes may have limited predictability. Engaging climate education and communication is a primary role of the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), a congressionally mandated consortium of 13 Federal agencies that works to build a sound scientific foundation for global change knowledge, skill, and decision making. The USGCRP strategy for communication, education, and engagement efforts addresses the need for broadening public awareness and understanding of global change through better understanding of citizens' existing knowledge and information needs. The communication and education objectives complement efforts described in other USGCRP strategic goals such as advancing scientific knowledge of the integrated components of the Earth system.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Wood, Karen
AU - Wei, Ming-Ying
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2012/11//
PY - 2012
DA - November 2012
SP - 471
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 44
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - U. S. Global Change Research Program
KW - public awareness
KW - communication
KW - global change
KW - education
KW - climate change
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1447100886?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Information+needs+of+the+U.S.+public+on+climate+and+global+change%3B+a+strategy+for+communication%2C+education%2C+and+engagement&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn+J%3BWood%2C+Karen%3BWei%2C+Ming-Ying%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2012-11-01&rft.volume=44&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=471&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2012 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-31
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - climate change; communication; education; global change; public awareness; U. S. Global Change Research Program; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Seed Governance at the Intersection of Multiple Global and Nation-State Priorities: Modernizing Seeds in Turkey
AN - 1417522960; 201323259
AB - Given their value for both agriculture and biodiversity, seeds are the target of controversial efforts to establish intellectual property rights and variety protections that regulate sale, exchange, and breeding of genetic resources. This article examines seed governance in Turkey, a country in which many farmers continue to rely on 'traditional' wheat varieties. It analyzes the tensions and ambiguities in seed governance that arise at the intersection of Turkey's goals of development and diverse priorities imposed by international frameworks. Seed governance is the product of an open-ended process of strategic elaboration among constituencies involved in trade, agriculture, development, and conservation. Although contradictions among international regulations present an array of choices, many countries including Turkey adopt laws that favor commercialization and privatization. This convergence results not simply from imposition of regulation from above, but also from developing countries' adoption of dominant global perspectives on the 'modern' seed and agricultural progress. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Global Environmental Politics
AU - Atalan-Helicke, Nurcan
AU - Mansfield, Becky
AD - Nurcan Atalan-Helicke is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at Skidmore College. She has research interests in the politics of development and conservation, the political economy of agriculture, the European Union, and Turkey. She was the recipient of a National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant in 2008
Y1 - 2012/11//
PY - 2012
DA - November 2012
SP - 125
EP - 146
PB - MIT Press, Cambridge MA
VL - 12
IS - 4
SN - 1526-3800, 1526-3800
KW - Agriculture
KW - Genetics
KW - Privatization
KW - Turkey
KW - Developing Countries
KW - Regulation
KW - Modernization
KW - Governance
KW - Contradictions
KW - article
KW - 9063: international relations; international relations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1417522960?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Global+Environmental+Politics&rft.atitle=Seed+Governance+at+the+Intersection+of+Multiple+Global+and+Nation-State+Priorities%3A+Modernizing+Seeds+in+Turkey&rft.au=Atalan-Helicke%2C+Nurcan%3BMansfield%2C+Becky&rft.aulast=Atalan-Helicke&rft.aufirst=Nurcan&rft.date=2012-11-01&rft.volume=12&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=125&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Global+Environmental+Politics&rft.issn=15263800&rft_id=info:doi/10.1162%2FGLEP_a_00290
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2013-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Governance; Turkey; Regulation; Agriculture; Contradictions; Genetics; Developing Countries; Modernization; Privatization
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/GLEP_a_00290
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Negotiating Adaptation: Norm Selection and Hybridization in International Climate Negotiations
AN - 1417522906; 201323587
AB - Adaptation to the adverse impacts of climate change is a rapidly developing area of policy and the subject of active negotiation at the international level under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). This article applies theories of norm evolution to the adaptation negotiations. It proposes that the history of these negotiations can best be understood as a contest between two proposed framings that can be roughly characterized as 'adaptation as development' and 'adaptation as restitution.' These two framings have some similar and some contradictory implications for policy. The article shows that the major areas of consensus and controversy around adaptation in the UNFCCC negotiations map closely to these areas of similarity and contradiction, respectively. Though the 'adaptation as restitution' norm is relatively disadvantaged on many measures of norm-fitness suggested by previous authors, it nevertheless appears to help explain the development of adaptation institutions both within and outside the UNFCCC. A hybridized norm that can be described roughly as 'like development but different' is coming to characterize international adaptation institutions. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Global Environmental Politics
AU - Moore, Frances C
AD - Frances C. Moore is a PhD student in the Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources at Stanford University, studying agricultural adaptation to climate change. She holds an MA in environmental science from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, and a BA summa cum laude in Earth and Planetary Science from Harvard University. She is a National Science Foundation Graduate Research fellow, and a former Switzer Foundation fellow
Y1 - 2012/11//
PY - 2012
DA - November 2012
SP - 30
EP - 48
PB - MIT Press, Cambridge MA
VL - 12
IS - 4
SN - 1526-3800, 1526-3800
KW - Climate Change
KW - Disadvantaged
KW - Disputes
KW - Congresses and Conventions
KW - United Nations
KW - Reparations
KW - Evolution
KW - Contradictions
KW - Negotiation
KW - article
KW - 9063: international relations; international relations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1417522906?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Global+Environmental+Politics&rft.atitle=Negotiating+Adaptation%3A+Norm+Selection+and+Hybridization+in+International+Climate+Negotiations&rft.au=Moore%2C+Frances+C&rft.aulast=Moore&rft.aufirst=Frances&rft.date=2012-11-01&rft.volume=12&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=30&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Global+Environmental+Politics&rft.issn=15263800&rft_id=info:doi/10.1162%2FGLEP_a_00138
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2013-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Negotiation; Reparations; Climate Change; Contradictions; United Nations; Evolution; Congresses and Conventions; Disadvantaged; Disputes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/GLEP_a_00138
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Establishing a total allowable concentration of o-toluidine in drinking water incorporating early lifestage exposure and susceptibility
AN - 1171893533; 17359610
AB - o-Toluidine is a monocyclic aromatic amine present in the formulation of some materials that contact drinking water. NSF/ANSI 61 Annex A (2011) and US EPA (2005a) risk assessment guidelines were used to determine an acceptable drinking water level. Occupational exposure to o-toluidine is associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer but human disease rates could not be used to establish risk values due to inadequate exposure data and coexposures in the epidemiology cohorts. Chronic dietary exposure to o-toluidine hydrochloride was associated with benign and malignant tumors in both sexes of F344 rats and B6C3F1 mice. o-Toluidine is genotoxic in vitro and in vivo. A 10 super(-5) cancer risk level was extrapolated from the human equivalent BMDL sub(10) of 13 mg/kg-day for the combined incidence of papillomas and carcinomas of the bladder transitional epithelium in female rats. Considering varying susceptibility to tumor development at different life stages, the unit risk was modified to incorporate potency adjustments for early-life exposures. A framework for lifestage adjustment is presented that makes assumptions evident. For this assessment, the lifetime unit risk derived was similar to 2-fold greater than the unadjusted adult lifetime unit risk, and the resulting Total Allowable Concentration in drinking water is 20 mu g/L.
JF - Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology
AU - Caroline English, J
AU - Bhat, Virunya S
AU - Ball, Gwendolyn L
AU - McLellan, Clifton J
AD - NSF International, 789 N. Dixboro Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48105, United States, jenglish@nsf.org
Y1 - 2012/11//
PY - 2012
DA - Nov 2012
SP - 269
EP - 284
PB - Elsevier B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 64
IS - 2
SN - 0273-2300, 0273-2300
KW - Health & Safety Science Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Rats
KW - amines
KW - Epithelium
KW - Papilloma
KW - Occupational exposure
KW - Sex
KW - Benign
KW - Diets
KW - Data processing
KW - Urinary bladder
KW - Guidelines
KW - Genotoxicity
KW - Developmental stages
KW - o-toluidine
KW - Tumors
KW - Cancer
KW - Carcinoma
KW - EPA
KW - Epidemiology
KW - Drinking water
KW - Aromatics
KW - X 24310:Pharmaceuticals
KW - H 1000:Occupational Safety and Health
KW - P 6000:TOXICOLOGY AND HEALTH
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1171893533?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxicologyabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Regulatory+Toxicology+and+Pharmacology&rft.atitle=Establishing+a+total+allowable+concentration+of+o-toluidine+in+drinking+water+incorporating+early+lifestage+exposure+and+susceptibility&rft.au=Caroline+English%2C+J%3BBhat%2C+Virunya+S%3BBall%2C+Gwendolyn+L%3BMcLellan%2C+Clifton+J&rft.aulast=Caroline+English&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2012-11-01&rft.volume=64&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=269&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Regulatory+Toxicology+and+Pharmacology&rft.issn=02732300&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.yrtph.2012.08.011
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Risk assessment; Data processing; Urinary bladder; Genotoxicity; o-toluidine; Developmental stages; Tumors; Cancer; Carcinoma; amines; Epidemiology; Epithelium; Drinking water; Papilloma; Occupational exposure; Aromatics; Benign; Sex; Diets; Rats; EPA; Guidelines
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yrtph.2012.08.011
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Energy for Sustainability
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313123090; 6169824
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Gupta, Ram
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Sustainability
KW - Resource management
KW - Energy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313123090?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.atitle=Energy+for+Sustainability&rft.au=Gupta%2C+Ram&rft.aulast=Gupta&rft.aufirst=Ram&rft.date=2012-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Funding Agencies Update
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313107595; 6168503
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Peterson, Thomas
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Financing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313107595?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.atitle=Funding+Agencies+Update&rft.au=Peterson%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Peterson&rft.aufirst=Thomas&rft.date=2012-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Comparative Dynamics of Soft Colloidal Glass, Low Molecular Glass Former, and High Molecular Glass Former
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313102317; 6168585
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Winter, H
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Chemical engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313102317?accountid=14244
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L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Nanotechnology Aiding Sustainability
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313082999; 6168973
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Karn, Barbara
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Nanotechnology
KW - Sustainability
KW - Resource management
KW - nanotechnology
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L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Interactive Question and Answer Session with NSF Program Directors
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313067720; 6167070
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Wellek, Robert
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Chemical engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313067720?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.atitle=Interactive+Question+and+Answer+Session+with+NSF+Program+Directors&rft.au=Wellek%2C+Robert&rft.aulast=Wellek&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2012-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Highlights of CBET Cluster On Environmental Engineering & Sustainability
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313067682; 6167069
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Gupta, Ram
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Environmental engineering
KW - Sustainability
KW - Resource management
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313067682?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.atitle=Highlights+of+CBET+Cluster+On+Environmental+Engineering+%26amp%3B+Sustainability&rft.au=Gupta%2C+Ram&rft.aulast=Gupta&rft.aufirst=Ram&rft.date=2012-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Highlights of CBET Cluster On Transport and Thermal Fluid Phenomena
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313067642; 6167068
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Sangani, Ashok
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Chemical engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313067642?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.atitle=Highlights+of+CBET+Cluster+On+Transport+and+Thermal+Fluid+Phenomena&rft.au=Sangani%2C+Ashok&rft.aulast=Sangani&rft.aufirst=Ashok&rft.date=2012-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Highlights of CBET Cluster On Chemical, Biochemical & Biotechnology Systems
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313021743; 6167067
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Antos, George
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Biotechnology
KW - Biochemistry
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L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Highlights of CBET Cluster On Biomedical Engineering and Engineering Healthcare
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AN - 1313021674; 6167066
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Chemical Engineering (AIChE 2012)
AU - Wellek, Robert
Y1 - 2012/10/28/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 28
KW - Health care
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313021674?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.atitle=Highlights+of+CBET+Cluster+On+Biomedical+Engineering+and+Engineering+Healthcare&rft.au=Wellek%2C+Robert&rft.aulast=Wellek&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2012-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Institute+for+Chemical+Engineering+%28AIChE+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://aiche.confex.com/aiche/2012/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Removal of trace organic chemicals in onsite wastewater soil treatment units: A laboratory experiment
AN - 1651407056; 17150543
AB - Onsite wastewater treatment is used by 20% of residences in the United States. The ability of these systems, specifically soil treatment units (STUs), to attenuate trace organic chemicals (TOrCs) is not well understood. TOrCs released by STUs pose a potential risk to downstream groundwater and hydraulically-connected surface water that may be used as a drinking water source. A series of bench-scale experiments were conducted using sand columns to represent STUs and to evaluate the efficacy of TOrC attenuation as a function of hydraulic loading rate (1, 4, 8, 12, and 30 cm/day). Each hydraulic loading rate was examined using triplicate experimental columns. Columns were initially seeded with raw wastewater to establish a microbial community, after which they were fed with synthetic wastewater and spiked with 17 TOrCs, in four equal doses per day, to provide a consistent influent water quality. After an initial start-up phase, effluent from all columns consistently demonstrated >90% reductions in dissolved organic carbon and nearly complete (>85%) oxidation of ammonia to nitrate, comparable to the performance of field STUs. The results of this study suggest STUs are capable of attenuating many TOrCs present in domestic wastewater, but attenuation is compound-specific. A subset of TOrCs exhibited an inverse relationship with hydraulic loading rate and attenuation efficiency. Atenolol, cimetidine, and TCPP were more effectively attenuated over time in each experiment, suggesting that the microbial community evolved to a stage where these TOrCs were more effectively biotransformed. Aerobic conditions as compared to anaerobic conditions resulted in more efficient attenuation of acetaminophen and cimetidine. Graphical abstract
JF - Water Research
AU - Teerlink, Jennifer
AU - Martinez-Hernandez, Virtudes
AU - Higgins, Christopher P
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - NSF Engineering Research Center ReNUWIt, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401-1887, USA
Y1 - 2012/10/15/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Oct 15
SP - 5174
EP - 5184
PB - Elsevier B.V., The Boulevard Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB United Kingdom
VL - 46
IS - 16
SN - 0043-1354, 0043-1354
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Hydraulics
KW - Sand
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Fluid dynamics
KW - Attenuation
KW - Loading rate
KW - Waste water
KW - Fluid flow
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1651407056?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Research&rft.atitle=Removal+of+trace+organic+chemicals+in+onsite+wastewater+soil+treatment+units%3A+A+laboratory+experiment&rft.au=Teerlink%2C+Jennifer%3BMartinez-Hernandez%2C+Virtudes%3BHiggins%2C+Christopher+P%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg+E&rft.aulast=Teerlink&rft.aufirst=Jennifer&rft.date=2012-10-15&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=16&rft.spage=5174&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Research&rft.issn=00431354&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.watres.2012.06.024
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-11-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - Last updated - 2015-02-05
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2012.06.024
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Managed aquifer recharge with reclaimed water in urban settings: Improving the removal of trace organic contaminants
T2 - 2012 International Association of Hydrologists Congress (IAH 2012)
AN - 1313045544; 6177679
JF - 2012 International Association of Hydrologists Congress (IAH 2012)
AU - Regnery, Julia
AU - Wing, Alexandre
AU - Drewes, Jorg
Y1 - 2012/09/16/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Sep 16
KW - Urban areas
KW - Water reclamation
KW - Aquifers
KW - Groundwater pollution
KW - Aquifer
KW - Water management
KW - Contaminants
KW - Reclaimed water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313045544?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+International+Association+of+Hydrologists+Congress+%28IAH+2012%29&rft.atitle=Managed+aquifer+recharge+with+reclaimed+water+in+urban+settings%3A+Improving+the+removal+of+trace+organic+contaminants&rft.au=Regnery%2C+Julia%3BWing%2C+Alexandre%3BDrewes%2C+Jorg&rft.aulast=Regnery&rft.aufirst=Julia&rft.date=2012-09-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+International+Association+of+Hydrologists+Congress+%28IAH+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.xcdtech.com/iah2012/iah2012/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Understanding the Dynamics of Managed Aquifer Recharge: New Insights through Metagenomics into the Attenuation of Emerging Trace Organic Chemicals
T2 - 2012 International Association of Hydrologists Congress (IAH 2012)
AN - 1313045500; 6177678
JF - 2012 International Association of Hydrologists Congress (IAH 2012)
AU - Drewes, J
AU - Li, D.
AU - Alidina, M
AU - Ouf, M
AU - Regnery, J
AU - Hoppe-Jones, C
Y1 - 2012/09/16/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Sep 16
KW - Aquifers
KW - Chemicals
KW - Aquifer
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313045500?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+International+Association+of+Hydrologists+Congress+%28IAH+2012%29&rft.atitle=Understanding+the+Dynamics+of+Managed+Aquifer+Recharge%3A+New+Insights+through+Metagenomics+into+the+Attenuation+of+Emerging+Trace+Organic+Chemicals&rft.au=Drewes%2C+J%3BLi%2C+D.%3BAlidina%2C+M%3BOuf%2C+M%3BRegnery%2C+J%3BHoppe-Jones%2C+C&rft.aulast=Drewes&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2012-09-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+International+Association+of+Hydrologists+Congress+%28IAH+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.xcdtech.com/iah2012/iah2012/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Seepage-Induced Streambank Erosion and Instability: In-Situ Constant-Head Experiments
AN - 1855084310; PQ0003944604
AB - The effects of seepage on streambank erosion and failure are less understood compared to fluvial processes, especially the linkage between surface water and groundwater mechanisms. Field data is needed to validate laboratory seepage erosion and instability conclusions and to understand how engineering tools and methods may be applied to field conditions. An innovative trench injection system was utilized to provide a constant head on a near-streambank groundwater system when filled with stream water. This research was performed on a streambank of Dry Creek, a deeply incised stream with near vertical banks located in Mississippi. Experiments included installing a trench (2.8 m from the bank and 2 m below ground surface) and a network of tensiometers and observation wells to measure soil-water pressures and water table elevations. Bank stratigraphy consisted of a sloping, conductive loamy sand layer between cohesive streambank layers. Groundwater conditions were monitored during a series of induced seepage experiments. The bank face was outfitted with a seepage collection device to measure seep flow rates and sediment concentrations. Seepage flow rates (as high as 0.4 L/min) and corresponding erosion rates (as high as 0.86 kg/min) were proportional to estimated hydraulic gradients in the near-streambank region and followed an excess flow rate equation. However, flow paths and hydraulic gradients were largely non-uniform due to local variability in streambank stratigraphy, suggesting difficulty when attempting to apply engineering analyses of bank erosion and stability for seepage processes without accounting for this heterogeneity. Seepage flow and erosion became restricted when small-scale bank failures due to undercutting blocked flow pathways and limited particle mobilization, termed temporary self-healing. Seepage erosion was shown to be an important mechanism of streambank failure, especially when acting in concert with fluvial erosion processes that prevent permanent self-healing of seeps.
JF - Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
AU - Midgley, T L
AU - Fox, G A
AU - Wilson, G V
AU - Heeren, D M
AU - Langendoen, E J
AU - Simon, A
AD - National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Fellow, Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078; , taber.midgley@okstate.edu
Y1 - 2012/08/06/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Aug 06
PB - American Society of Civil Engineers, 345 E. 47th St. New York NY 10017-2398 United States
SN - 1084-0699, 1084-0699
KW - ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Flow
KW - Tensometers
KW - Failures
KW - Water table
KW - Soil erosion
KW - Seepage
KW - Streams
KW - Engineering
KW - Flow Rates
KW - Banks
KW - Seepages
KW - Hydraulic Gradient
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Stratigraphy
KW - Creek
KW - Erosion
KW - Stream
KW - Groundwater
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - Q2 09102:Institutes and organizations
KW - SW 5040:Data acquisition
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1855084310?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Hydrologic+Engineering&rft.atitle=Seepage-Induced+Streambank+Erosion+and+Instability%3A+In-Situ+Constant-Head+Experiments&rft.au=Midgley%2C+T+L%3BFox%2C+G+A%3BWilson%2C+G+V%3BHeeren%2C+D+M%3BLangendoen%2C+E+J%3BSimon%2C+A&rft.aulast=Midgley&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2012-08-06&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Hydrologic+Engineering&rft.issn=10840699&rft_id=info:doi/10.1061%2F%28ASCE%29HE.1943-5584.0000685
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Tensometers; Mathematical models; Stream; Stratigraphy; Failures; Water table; Soil erosion; Creek; Seepages; Hydraulic Gradient; Flow; Engineering; Erosion; Flow Rates; Banks; Groundwater; Seepage; Streams
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0000685
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Current and future impacts of climate and global change on biodiversity and the structure and functioning of ecosystems
T2 - 97th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2012)
AN - 1313117852; 6152630
JF - 97th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2012)
AU - Grimm, Nancy
AU - Chapin, F
AU - Carter, Shawn
AU - Groffman, Peter
AU - Staudinger, Michelle
AU - Staudt, Amanda
Y1 - 2012/08/05/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Aug 05
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Biological diversity
KW - Climatic changes
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313117852?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=97th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2012%29&rft.atitle=Current+and+future+impacts+of+climate+and+global+change+on+biodiversity+and+the+structure+and+functioning+of+ecosystems&rft.au=Grimm%2C+Nancy%3BChapin%2C+F%3BCarter%2C+Shawn%3BGroffman%2C+Peter%3BStaudinger%2C+Michelle%3BStaudt%2C+Amanda&rft.aulast=Grimm&rft.aufirst=Nancy&rft.date=2012-08-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=97th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2012/webprogrampreliminary/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - A metric of biodiversity that integrates abundance, phylogeny, and function
T2 - 97th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2012)
AN - 1313032160; 6153083
JF - 97th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2012)
AU - Scheiner, Samuel
Y1 - 2012/08/05/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Aug 05
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Biological diversity
KW - Abundance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313032160?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=97th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2012%29&rft.atitle=A+metric+of+biodiversity+that+integrates+abundance%2C+phylogeny%2C+and+function&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2012-08-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=97th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2012/webprogrampreliminary/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - International funding cooperation
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Phytopathological Society (APS 2012)
AN - 1313060533; 6145301
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Phytopathological Society (APS 2012)
AU - Beck, D
Y1 - 2012/08/04/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Aug 04
KW - Cooperation
KW - Financing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313060533?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Phytopathological+Society+%28APS+2012%29&rft.atitle=International+funding+cooperation&rft.au=Beck%2C+D&rft.aulast=Beck&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2012-08-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Phytopathological+Society+%28APS+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.apsnet.org/meetings/annual/program/Documents/2012_APSProgramResourceBook.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The genetics of phenotypic plasticity. XI. Joint evolution of plasticity and dispersal rate
AN - 1712566737; PQ0001954526
AB - In a spatially heterogeneous environment, the rate at which individuals move among habitats affects whether selection favors phenotypic plasticity or genetic differentiation, with high dispersal rates favoring trait plasticity. Until now, in theoretical explorations of plasticity evolution, dispersal rate has been treated as a fixed, albeit probabilistic, characteristic of a population, raising the question of what happens when the propensity to disperse and trait plasticity are allowed to evolve jointly. We examined the effects of their joint evolution on selection for plasticity using an individual-based computer simulation model. In the model, the environment consisted of a linear gradient of 50 demes with dispersal occurring either before or after selection. Individuals consisted of loci whose phenotypic expression either are affected by the environment (plastic) or are not affected (nonplastic), plus a locus determining the propensity to disperse. When dispersal rate and trait plasticity evolve jointly, the system tends to dichotomous outcomes of either high trait plasticity and high dispersal, or low trait plasticity and low dispersal. The outcome strongly depended on starting conditions, with high trait plasticity and dispersal favored when the system started at high values for either trait plasticity or dispersal rate (or both). Adding a cost of plasticity tended to drive the system to genetic differentiation, although this effect also depended on initial conditions. Genetic linkage between trait plasticity loci and dispersal loci further enhanced this strong dichotomy in evolutionary outcomes. All of these effects depended on organismal life history pattern, and in particular whether selection occurred before or after dispersal. These results can explain why adaptive trait plasticity is less common than might be expected. In a spatially heterogeneous environment, the rate at which individuals move among habitats affects whether selection favors phenotypic plasticity or genetic differentiation, with high dispersal rates favoring trait plasticity. We examined the effects of their joint evolution on selection for plasticity using an individual-based computer simulation model. When dispersal rate and trait plasticity evolve jointly, the system tends to dichotomous outcomes of either high trait plasticity and high dispersal, or low trait plasticity and low dispersal.
JF - Ecology and Evolution
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AU - Barfield, Michael
AU - Holt, Robert D
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, 22230.
PY - 2012
SP - 2027
EP - 2039
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 2
IS - 8
SN - 2045-7758, 2045-7758
KW - Genetics Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Mathematical models
KW - phenotypic plasticity
KW - Simulation
KW - Habitat
KW - Plasticity
KW - Models
KW - Differentiation
KW - Life history
KW - Exploration
KW - Dispersal
KW - Evolution
KW - G 07740:Evolution
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1712566737?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.atitle=The+genetics+of+phenotypic+plasticity.+XI.+Joint+evolution+of+plasticity+and+dispersal+rate&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M%3BBarfield%2C+Michael%3BHolt%2C+Robert+D&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2012-08-01&rft.volume=2&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=2027&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.issn=20457758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fece3.327
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Differentiation; Life history; Mathematical models; phenotypic plasticity; Exploration; Dispersal; Plasticity; Habitat; Evolution; Models; Simulation
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.327
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Characteristics of Recent Science and Engineering Graduates: 2008. Detailed Statistical Tables. NSF 12-328
AN - 1140134708; ED535417
AB - This report presents data from the 2008 National Survey of Recent College Graduates (NSRCG) on the characteristics of men and women who received bachelor's or master's degrees in science, engineering, or health fields from U.S. institutions during the two academic years 2006 and 2007. The data reflect the employment, educational, and demographic status of individuals as of the survey reference week of 1 October 2008. The data presented in this report measure the number of individuals with recently acquired science, engineering, and health degrees and do not necessarily coincide with the data on degree completions from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). IPEDS is conducted by the U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. The IPEDS completions data file represents a count of degrees that graduates were awarded, whereas the NSRCG data represent estimates of graduates (persons). The data tables present information on the number and median salaries of recent graduates by field of major, occupation, and various demographic characteristics. Tables are presented separately for bachelor's and master's degree recipients. Complementary tables for the two degree levels are numbered sequentially so that odd-numbered tables are for bachelor's degree recipients and even-numbered tables are for master's degree recipients. Appended are: (1) Technical Notes; (2) Codes Used in Major Degree, Occupation, and Sampling Field; and (3) Survey Questionnaire. (Contains 54 tables.)
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - August 2012
SP - 165
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Sciences
KW - Bachelors Degrees
KW - Masters Degrees
KW - College Graduates
KW - Tables (Data)
KW - Health Occupations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1140134708?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Factors affecting the vulnerability of female slum youth to HIV/AIDS in Delhi and Hyderabad, India
AN - 1112140887; 4348903
AB - This paper builds upon the theoretical framework advanced by the growing literature on vulnerability. The paper explores how vulnerability to HIV/AIDS applies to young women living in the slum areas of New Delhi and Hyderabad. This circumscription of scope is based on a study on AIDS awareness levels in these two Indian cities conducted during summer of 2006. Using a qualitative approach, the paper offers insightful narratives from a sample of 26 women about their cultural and socio-economic circumstances with reference to HIV/AIDS. The excerpts from these women give a poignant view of their precarious circumstances with reference to lack of female autonomy, economic vulnerability, low AIDS awareness, and lack of access to pertinent information about HIV. The female youth were highly susceptible to the double bind of age and gender based hierarchies present in the patriarchal Indian social system. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Geojournal
AU - Wadhwa, Vandana
AU - Ghosh, Jayati
AU - Kalipeni, Ezekiel
AD - Boston University ; University of California ; National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - Aug 2012
SP - 475
EP - 488
VL - 77
IS - 4
SN - 0343-2521, 0343-2521
KW - Sociology
KW - Hyderabad
KW - Consciousness
KW - Socioeconomic status
KW - AIDS
KW - Social systems
KW - Slums
KW - Delhi
KW - Females
KW - HIV
KW - India
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1112140887?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geojournal&rft.atitle=Factors+affecting+the+vulnerability+of+female+slum+youth+to+HIV%2FAIDS+in+Delhi+and+Hyderabad%2C+India&rft.au=Wadhwa%2C+Vandana%3BGhosh%2C+Jayati%3BKalipeni%2C+Ezekiel&rft.aulast=Wadhwa&rft.aufirst=Vandana&rft.date=2012-08-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=475&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geojournal&rft.issn=03432521&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10708-010-9359-5
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 11988 4011 3974 9390 11932 2328 11935 5837 2360 2688 2449 10404 11936; 11942; 4865 11538; 482 3617 6220; 2724; 11734 6045 5706; 5703 3617 6220; 107 175 387 30; 175 387 30
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-010-9359-5
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - HIV and AIDS in Africa: a geographic analysis at multiple spatial scales
AN - 1112140884; 4348902
AB - This study offers an alternative method rooted in GIS techniques and spatial analysis to estimate HIV/AIDS prevalence over space from an incomplete surveillance data set and explain the variation of those estimates. The results clearly show that the HIV/AIDS epidemic is complex and that it is interconnected with other geographic, historical, economic and cultural phenomena which help explain its spatial spread and variation. The regression models which were developed in this paper illustrated that variables which measure the historical context of colonialism such as resource exploitation and labor migration, gender, culture, contemporary global forces, poverty and disease burden have all contributed variously to the rapid spread of this disease both in space and time. The policy implication is that concentrating on behavior change or therapy alone may not turn the epidemic around. The attack needs to be multifaceted and interdisciplinary taking into consideration the context and the economic and social realities at multiple spatial scales. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Geojournal
AU - Kalipeni, Ezekiel
AU - Zulu, Leo C
AD - National Science Foundation ; Michigan State University
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - Aug 2012
SP - 505
EP - 523
VL - 77
IS - 4
SN - 0343-2521, 0343-2521
KW - Sociology
KW - Labour migration
KW - Colonialism
KW - Gender
KW - Spatial analysis
KW - AIDS
KW - Africa
KW - HIV
KW - Panel data
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1112140884?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geojournal&rft.atitle=HIV+and+AIDS+in+Africa%3A+a+geographic+analysis+at+multiple+spatial+scales&rft.au=Kalipeni%2C+Ezekiel%3BZulu%2C+Leo+C&rft.aulast=Kalipeni&rft.aufirst=Ezekiel&rft.date=2012-08-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=505&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geojournal&rft.issn=03432521&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10708-010-9358-6
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 5703 3617 6220; 482 3617 6220; 9144 8160 8163; 12102 971; 7163 8040; 5421 6091; 2502 9713 6203 9796; 2
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-010-9358-6
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An analysis of gender-based reversal in life expectancy in Southern Africa
AN - 1112140879; 4348901
AB - This paper uses a geographic perspective in discussing the social inequalities in health between men and women in southern Africa. Keeping in mind the reality of data scarcity that show male and female differences in mortality, this paper uses life expectancy data to illustrate the widening gender inequalities in access to health. The analysis in the paper addresses two main objectives. First, the paper reviews the literature on the underlying factors behind the presence of drastic differences between male and female life expectancies. Secondly, the paper examines in greater detail the trends and geographical patterns in life expectancy in southern African countries, particularly the reversal of life expectancy in favor of men during the past 30_years or so. The results of the analysis show a worrisome trend in life expectancies with regard to gender. The advantage in life expectancy that females had over men before 1980 has all but disappeared during the past 25_years. To make matters worse, life expectancy declined dramatically for both males and females, and in some cases the declines were more than 10_years. Women experienced greater declines in life expectancy lowering them to below those of men, a condition contrary to what existed before the 1980s. The upsurge in HIV infections and the attendant high female mortality rates as well as other factors have combined to result in the unequal gender realities in as far as life expectancies are concerned in the countries of southern Africa. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Geojournal
AU - Jusrut, Poonam
AU - Kalipeni, Ezekiel
AD - University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign ; National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - Aug 2012
SP - 541
EP - 554
VL - 77
IS - 4
SN - 0343-2521, 0343-2521
KW - Sociology
KW - Social inequality
KW - Mortality
KW - Southern Africa
KW - Gender
KW - Health
KW - HIV
KW - Life expectancy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1112140879?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geojournal&rft.atitle=An+analysis+of+gender-based+reversal+in+life+expectancy+in+Southern+Africa&rft.au=Jusrut%2C+Poonam%3BKalipeni%2C+Ezekiel&rft.aulast=Jusrut&rft.aufirst=Poonam&rft.date=2012-08-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=541&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geojournal&rft.issn=03432521&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10708-010-9357-7
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 7397 8291 3409 6306; 5421 6091; 11853 6489; 5772; 8291 3409 6306; 5703 3617 6220; 395 2
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-010-9357-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Applications of geospatial analysis to surveillance data: a spatial examination of HIV/AIDS prevalence in Zambia
AN - 1112140850; 4348896
AB - Techniques of spatial statistics and GIS are applied to socio-economic, demographic and HIV sentinel data to characterize the geographical distribution of HIV prevalence in Zambia and to estimate current prevalence rates. Maps of the 4_years under study (i.e. 1994, 1998, 2002 and 2004) reveal a spatial variation in HIV prevalence with urban and provincial districts having higher prevalence than rural areas. However, there was an overall trend of decrease in HIV prevalence across the country. The year 2004 exhibited the most reduction, coinciding with protective sexual behavior campaigns operating in the country. Risk factors for HIV prevalence included literacy rates, unemployment, poverty and urban residency. Analysis of regression residual maps indicated high spatial autocorrelation: Moran's I value was 0.28 ( z _=_4.12 and p _ _<_0.00000) suggestive of contagious and hierarchic spatial diffusion processes. High HIV prevalence rates among interdependent districts and locational similarity patterns suggest that HIV control programs in the country would require an integrated approach combining HIV prevention messages as well as an understanding of social and cultural interactions between interdependent districts that produce behavioral diffusion of HIV prevalence rates. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Geojournal
AU - Moise, Imelda K
AU - Kalipeni, Ezekiel
AD - University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign ; National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - Aug 2012
SP - 525
EP - 540
VL - 77
IS - 4
SN - 0343-2521, 0343-2521
KW - Sociology
KW - Zambia
KW - Health care
KW - Social control
KW - Socioeconomic status
KW - Spatial analysis
KW - HIV
KW - Rural areas
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1112140850?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geojournal&rft.atitle=Applications+of+geospatial+analysis+to+surveillance+data%3A+a+spatial+examination+of+HIV%2FAIDS+prevalence+in+Zambia&rft.au=Moise%2C+Imelda+K%3BKalipeni%2C+Ezekiel&rft.aulast=Moise&rft.aufirst=Imelda&rft.date=2012-08-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=525&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geojournal&rft.issn=03432521&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10708-010-9349-7
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 11988 4011 3974 9390 11932 2328 11935 5837 2360 2688 2449 10404 11936; 5703 3617 6220; 11156 1247; 11803; 5775 13521; 12102 971; 471 395 2
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-010-9349-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Introduction to special issue on international geographies of HIV/AIDS
AN - 1082143498; 4342647
AB - There has been a systematic imbalance between the treatment and prevention responses to the AIDS pandemic (Horton and Das, 2008). One of the consequences has been a dramatic rise in the number of people receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa (3 million), but at the same time there will be 2.5 million new infections this year (Horton and Das, 2008). Approximately two-thirds of people living with HIV live in Sub-Saharan Africa, though only 10% of the worlds population lives in this region (Global Health Council, 2009). This startling imbalance, coupled with the continuing rising prevalence in HIV, suggests that HIV prevention efforts have failed. There are a number of reasons for this, but one is that preventive efforts must begin to focus on social, economic, and cultural factors, in addition to individual risk factors. The aim of this chapter is to provide an analysis of some of the intersections between HIV/AIDS, nutrition, agriculture and the school as a platform for the delivery of interventions. This is a huge area, and we will not attempt a comprehensive review but rather argue that a structural focus on the intersections combined with a gendered poverty relief programme promises a long-term and more sustainable approach to the prevention of HIV/AIDS. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Geojournal
AU - Pope, Cynthia K
AU - Kalipeni, Ezekiel
AD - Central Connecticut State University ; National Science Foundation, USA
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - Aug 2012
SP - 445
EP - 448
VL - 77
IS - 4
SN - 0343-2521, 0343-2521
KW - Sociology
KW - Human geography
KW - Prevention
KW - AIDS
KW - Population
KW - South Africa
KW - HIV
KW - Cultural factors
KW - Sub-Saharan Africa
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1082143498?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geojournal&rft.atitle=Introduction+to+special+issue+on+international+geographies+of+HIV%2FAIDS&rft.au=Pope%2C+Cynthia+K%3BKalipeni%2C+Ezekiel&rft.aulast=Pope&rft.aufirst=Cynthia&rft.date=2012-08-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=445&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geojournal&rft.issn=03432521&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10708-010-9346-x
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 482 3617 6220; 3141 3198; 5703 3617 6220; 10072; 9846; 6082 5475; 385 395 2; 401 2
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-010-9346-x
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Collaboration in Academic R&D: A Decade of Growth in Pass-Through Funding. InfoBrief. NSF 12-325
AN - 1037907490; ED534120
AB - Research collaboration involving multiple institutions is a growing trend. Contributing to this growth are federal initiatives as well as practical considerations, such as technological advances that facilitate communication and opportunities for division of labor, risk sharing, and increased research credibility. One measure of this research collaboration is the amount of total expenditures for research and development that universities pass through to others, including both academic institutions and other entities. These pass-through funds represented 7% of total academic R&D expenditures in FY 2009, compared with 5% in FY 2000, according to the National Science Foundation's (NSF's) annual Survey of R&D Expenditures at Universities and Colleges (Academic R&D Expenditures Survey). Between FY 2000 and FY 2009 the federal government provided about 60% of the nation's total academic R&D funds and a substantially higher percentage (about 85%) of the academic R&D funds that universities passed through to others. The nation's major research universities spent the large majority of pass-through funds throughout the decade. (Contains 2 tables, 4 figures and 7 notes.)
AU - Hale, Katherine
Y1 - 2012/08//
PY - 2012
DA - August 2012
SP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Expenditures
KW - Research Universities
KW - Cooperation
KW - Surveys
KW - Federal Government
KW - Research and Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1037907490?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Differential toxicity of drinking water disinfected with combinations of ultraviolet radiation and chlorine.
AN - 1026866330; 22703385
AB - Alternative technologies to disinfect drinking water such as ultraviolet (UV) disinfection are becoming more widespread. The benefits of UV disinfection include reduced risk of microbial pathogens such as Cryptosporidium and reduced production of regulated drinking water disinfection byproducts (DBPs). The objective of this research was to determine if mammalian cell cytotoxicity and genotoxicity varied in response to different chlorination protocols with and without polychromatic medium pressure UV (MPUV) and monochromatic low pressure UV (LPUV) disinfection technologies. The specific aims were to analyze the mammalian cell cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of concentrated organic fractions from source water before and after chlorination and to determine the cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of the concentrated organic fractions from water samples treated with UV alone or UV before or after chlorination. Exposure of granular activated carbon-filtered Ohio River water to UV alone resulted in the lowest levels of mammalian cell cytotoxicity and genotoxicity. With combinations of UV and chlorine, the lowest levels of cytotoxicity and genotoxicity were observed with MPUV radiation. The best combined UV plus chlorine methodology that generated the lowest cytotoxicity and genotoxicity employed chlorination first followed by MPUV radiation. These data may prove important in the development of multibarrier methods of pathogen inactivation of drinking water, while limiting unintended toxic consequences.
JF - Environmental science & technology
AU - Plewa, Michael J
AU - Wagner, Elizabeth D
AU - Metz, Deborah H
AU - Kashinkunti, Ramesh
AU - Jamriska, Katherine J
AU - Meyer, Maria
AD - College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences, Department of Crop Sciences, and the NSF WaterCAMPWS Center, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States. mplewa@illinois.edu
Y1 - 2012/07/17/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jul 17
SP - 7811
EP - 7817
VL - 46
IS - 14
KW - Disinfectants
KW - 0
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Ion Exchange Resins
KW - Mutagens
KW - Chlorine
KW - 4R7X1O2820
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Comet Assay
KW - Animals
KW - Water Quality
KW - Mutagens -- toxicity
KW - CHO Cells
KW - Pilot Projects
KW - Ion Exchange Resins -- chemistry
KW - Cell Death -- drug effects
KW - Rivers -- chemistry
KW - Ohio
KW - Cricetinae
KW - Chlorine -- toxicity
KW - Ultraviolet Rays
KW - Disinfection -- methods
KW - Drinking Water -- chemistry
KW - Toxicity Tests -- methods
KW - Disinfectants -- toxicity
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.atitle=Differential+toxicity+of+drinking+water+disinfected+with+combinations+of+ultraviolet+radiation+and+chlorine.&rft.au=Plewa%2C+Michael+J%3BWagner%2C+Elizabeth+D%3BMetz%2C+Deborah+H%3BKashinkunti%2C+Ramesh%3BJamriska%2C+Katherine+J%3BMeyer%2C+Maria&rft.aulast=Plewa&rft.aufirst=Michael&rft.date=2012-07-17&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=14&rft.spage=7811&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.issn=1520-5851&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fes300859t
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2012-11-19
N1 - Date created - 2012-07-17
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es300859t
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluation of relative importance of ultrasound reactor parameters for the removal of estrogen hormones in water.
AN - 926156402; 22227173
AB - The growing interest in sonochemistry as a tool for environmental remediation leads to the need for process optimization. Sonochemistry is a complex process, which depends on physical parameters and also on the process conditions. Physical parameters are interrelated and therefore a systematic approach has to be taken to optimize the process. The effect of physical parameters on the destruction of seven estrogen hormones (17α-estradiol, 17β-estradiol, estriol, 17α-ethinylestradiol, 17α-dihydroequilin, estrone and equilin) is reported in this study. Artificial neural networks (ANN) was used as a tool to identify the correlations between these process parameters. ANN enabled the establishment of relationship between sonication parameters such as power density, power intensity, ultrasound amplitude, as well as the reactor design parameters. The major significance was attributed to the area-specific power density and the volume-specific power intensity. The results of this work provide a sound basis to design pilot and full-scale ultrasound treatment systems. Process optimization lead to a 5-fold decrease in energy consumption as compared to the commercially available reactors, thereby making the process attractive for field applications.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
JF - Ultrasonics sonochemistry
AU - Andaluri, Gangadhar
AU - Rokhina, Ekaterina V
AU - Suri, Rominder P S
AD - NSF Water and Environmental Technology (WET) Center, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA.
Y1 - 2012/07//
PY - 2012
DA - July 2012
SP - 953
EP - 958
VL - 19
IS - 4
KW - Estrogens
KW - 0
KW - Water
KW - 059QF0KO0R
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Neural Networks (Computer)
KW - Sonication -- methods
KW - Sonication -- instrumentation
KW - Water -- chemistry
KW - Estrogens -- isolation & purification
KW - Estrogens -- chemistry
KW - Sonication -- standards
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2012-06-25
N1 - Date created - 2012-03-02
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultsonch.2011.12.005
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Structure and evolution of the Gulf of Lions; the Sardinia seismic experiment and the GOLD (Gulf of Lions Drilling) project
AN - 1033532229; 2012-073303
AB - The study of the deep structure and evolution of passive continental margins is important for the understanding of rifting processes and the formation of associated sedimentary basins. Since the classical models of McKenzie (1978) and Wernicke (1985), understanding how passive continental margins form, that is to say mainly the way that continental lithosphere is thinned leading to subsidence, remains one of the main challenges in the Earth sciences. Many recent observations and discoveries have modified our basic views of margin formation. The conservational models paradigm (i.e., simple shear, pure shear, or polyphase models), which exclude exchanges between lower continental crust and upper mantle and which are usually proposed to explain lithospheric stretching and consequent crustal thinning of passive continental margins, fail to completely explain all these observations. Furthermore, these models imply a large amount of horizontal movement, movements not observed in the field. In consequence, new concepts need to be built and tested.
JF - Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK)
AU - Aslanian, D
AU - Moulin, M
AU - Schnurle, P
AU - Klingelhoefer, F
AU - Leroux, E
AU - Rabineau, M
AU - Gailler, A
AU - Bache, F
AU - Gorini, C
AU - Kuroda, J
AU - Eguchi, N
AU - Droxler, A
AU - Alain, K
AU - Roure, F
AU - Haq, B
Y1 - 2012/07//
PY - 2012
DA - July 2012
SP - 786
EP - 792
PB - Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK
VL - 31
IS - 7
SN - 1070-485X, 1070-485X
KW - continental margin
KW - seismic profiles
KW - Western Europe
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - geophysical methods
KW - Europe
KW - basin analysis
KW - seismic methods
KW - France
KW - Cenozoic
KW - vertical seismic profiles
KW - deep drilling
KW - velocity structure
KW - marine drilling
KW - surveys
KW - geophysical profiles
KW - tectonics
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - drilling
KW - Gulf of Lion
KW - West Mediterranean
KW - crust
KW - 16:Structural geology
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Leading+Edge+%28Tulsa%2C+OK%29&rft.atitle=Structure+and+evolution+of+the+Gulf+of+Lions%3B+the+Sardinia+seismic+experiment+and+the+GOLD+%28Gulf+of+Lions+Drilling%29+project&rft.au=Aslanian%2C+D%3BMoulin%2C+M%3BSchnurle%2C+P%3BKlingelhoefer%2C+F%3BLeroux%2C+E%3BRabineau%2C+M%3BGailler%2C+A%3BBache%2C+F%3BGorini%2C+C%3BKuroda%2C+J%3BEguchi%2C+N%3BDroxler%2C+A%3BAlain%2C+K%3BRoure%2C+F%3BHaq%2C+B&rft.aulast=Aslanian&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2012-07-01&rft.volume=31&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=786&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Leading+Edge+%28Tulsa%2C+OK%29&rft.issn=1070485X&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1745-6592
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States | Reference includes data supplied by Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 7
N1 - PubXState - OK
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sects., sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-25
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basin analysis; Cenozoic; continental margin; crust; deep drilling; drilling; Europe; France; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; Gulf of Lion; marine drilling; Mediterranean Sea; seismic methods; seismic profiles; surveys; tectonics; velocity structure; vertical seismic profiles; West Mediterranean; Western Europe
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Variability of trace organic chemical concentrations in raw wastewater at three distinct sewershed scales
AN - 1020856825; 16794355
AB - The site-specific daily fluctuations and scale-dependent variability of influent water quality, particularly concentrations of trace organic chemicals (TOrCs), have not yet been well described. In this study, raw wastewater from three distinct sewershed scales was sampled including a centralized wastewater treatment facility in Boulder, Colorado (population similar to 125,000) and two decentralized wastewater catchments in Golden, Colorado (clustered system population 400, and septic system population 32). Each site was sampled hourly for 26 h and samples were subsequently analyzed in triplicate for 32 TOrCs using liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry and stable isotope dilution. Detection frequency (DF) of the various TOrCs was positively correlated with sewershed size with the greatest DF of the targeted TOrCs at the Boulder site and with decreasing DF with decreasing sewershed size. Site-specific fluctuations were both scale and compound-specific. The 11 TOrCs detected greater than 75% of the time across all three sites were used to further investigate and quantify variability and to develop a statistical model to investigate the flow-dependence and time-dependence of TOrC variability. Sewershed scale was inversely correlated to variability with coefficients of variation ranging from 0.24 to 0.96, 0.39 to 2.22, and 0.32 to 3.93 for the Boulder, cluster, and septic sites, respectively. A significant linear relationship was observed between concentration and flow and concentration and the concentration at prior time points for most TOrCs at the Boulder site. This suggests less variable influent concentrations result from dispersion and mixing in the conveyance system and a larger number of discrete inputs. A notable exception was the chlorinated flame retardant TCPP, which is likely associated with a high concentration, low-flow industrial input. A significant linear relationship between flow and concentration and sequential time points was not common at the decentralized sites. Scientists and engineers developing decentralized treatment systems must consider a larger range of influent qualities, particularly with respect to TOrCs.
JF - Water Research
AU - Teerlink, Jennifer
AU - Hering, Amanda S
AU - Higgins, Christopher P
AU - Drewes, Jorg E
AD - NSF Engineering Research Center ReNUWIt, Department of Civil and Environmental and Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401, USA, jdrewes@mines.edu
Y1 - 2012/06/15/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jun 15
SP - 3261
EP - 3271
PB - Elsevier B.V., The Boulevard Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB United Kingdom
VL - 46
IS - 10
SN - 0043-1354, 0043-1354
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Catchment area
KW - Mass Spectrometry
KW - Variability
KW - Isotopes
KW - Chromatographic techniques
KW - Mass spectrometry
KW - Water quality
KW - Mixing
KW - Septic tanks
KW - Wastewater treatment
KW - Isotope dilution
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Catchment Areas
KW - Statistical models
KW - Influents
KW - Raw Wastewater
KW - USA, Colorado
KW - Influent Water
KW - Stable Isotopes
KW - Liquid chromatography
KW - Wastewater Disposal
KW - Fire retardants
KW - Fluctuations
KW - Wastewater
KW - Dispersion
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - SW 3040:Wastewater treatment processes
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - ENA 19:Water Pollution
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Catchment area; Chromatographic techniques; Statistical models; Water quality; Influents; Isotope dilution; Wastewater treatment; Dispersion; Isotopes; Mathematical models; Liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry; Fire retardants; Septic tanks; Wastewater; Mass Spectrometry; Influent Water; Variability; Stable Isotopes; Catchment Areas; Wastewater Disposal; Mixing; Fluctuations; Raw Wastewater; USA, Colorado
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2012.03.018
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - How the USEPA ETV Protocol Clarifies Aspects of UVDGM and Facilitates Advances in UV Validation
T2 - 131st Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE12)
AN - 1313022679; 6120150
JF - 131st Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE12)
AU - Bartley, Clayton
Y1 - 2012/06/10/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jun 10
KW - U.V. radiation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313022679?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=131st+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE12%29&rft.atitle=How+the+USEPA+ETV+Protocol+Clarifies+Aspects+of+UVDGM+and+Facilitates+Advances+in+UV+Validation&rft.au=Bartley%2C+Clayton&rft.aulast=Bartley&rft.aufirst=Clayton&rft.date=2012-06-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=131st+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE12%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://apps.awwa.org/ebusmain/default.aspx?tabid=265&viewer=dates&meetingid=A12
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Review of New Lead Standards for Drinking Water Products
T2 - 131st Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE12)
AN - 1312985819; 6120035
JF - 131st Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE12)
AU - Purkiss, David
Y1 - 2012/06/10/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jun 10
KW - Lead
KW - Reviews
KW - Drinking water
KW - Drinking Water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312985819?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=131st+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE12%29&rft.atitle=Review+of+New+Lead+Standards+for+Drinking+Water+Products&rft.au=Purkiss%2C+David&rft.aulast=Purkiss&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2012-06-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=131st+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE12%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://apps.awwa.org/ebusmain/default.aspx?tabid=265&viewer=dates&meetingid=A12
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Developing International Research Collaborations among Postdoctoral Fellows: Key Findings from the Evaluation of NSF's International Research Fellowship Program. GS-10F-0086K
AN - 1697503826; ED554559
AB - Over a decade ago, the National Science Board (NSB) highlighted the importance of international collaboration in its call for increased government commitment to promoting international science and engineering (S&E) research and education. The NSB also identified the National Science Foundation (NSF) as having an important leadership role in international S&E research and education activities. Among NSF's postdoctoral programs, the International Research Fellowship Program (IRFP) is unique in its emphasis on providing postdoctoral fellows with international research experiences. Established in 1992, IRFP provides financial support to postdoctoral scientists for a research experience abroad lasting from 9 to 24 months; there is no restriction on the geographical location of the hosting institution. NSF contracted with Abt Associates to conduct an evaluation of IRFP, to gather evidence about whether the IRFP program has achieved its goal of furthering the collaborative activities and international partnerships of early career STEM researchers. The evaluation found evidence that the IRFP program is meeting its goals. This report summarizes the findings from the evaluation of the International Research Fellowship Program (IRFP), which was designed to investigate the characteristics of IRFP applicants and their motivations for participation, the host researchers' motivations for participating in the program, participants' experiences in and perceptions of the program, and outcomes of the program. Findings from the evaluation of IRFP revealed important benefits of the program, on both an individual and a collective basis.
AU - Martinez, Alina
AU - Epstein, Carter
AU - Parsad, Amanda
AU - Whittaker, Karla
Y1 - 2012/06/05/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jun 05
SP - 11
PB - Abt Associates. 4550 Montgomery Avenue Suite 800 North, Bethesda, MD 20814.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Financial Support
KW - Program Effectiveness
KW - International Programs
KW - Cooperation
KW - STEM Education
KW - Study Abroad
KW - Fellowships
KW - Engineering
KW - Public Agencies
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Researchers
KW - Goal Orientation
KW - Program Evaluation
KW - Postdoctoral Education
KW - Global Approach
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1697503826?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - One Culture. Computationally Intensive Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences
AN - 1315875972; 2011-384158
AB - This report culminates two years of work by CLIR staff involving extensive interviews and site visits with scholars engaged in international research collaborations involving computational analysis of large data corpora. These scholars were the first recipients of grants through the Digging into Data program, led by the NEH, who partnered with JISC in the UK, SSHRC in Canada, and the NSF to fund the first eight initiatives. The report introduces the eight projects and discusses the importance of these cases as models for the future of research in the academy. Tables, Figures, References.
JF - Council on Library and Information Resources, Jun 2012, 44 pp.
AU - Friedlander, Amy
AU - Henry, Charles
AU - Williford, Christa
Y1 - 2012/06//
PY - 2012
DA - June 2012
PB - Council on Library and Information Resources
SN - 9781932326406
KW - Science and technology policy - Computer science and information technology
KW - Education and education policy - Libraries
KW - Culture and religion - Culture and civilization
KW - Social conditions and policy - Social sciences and social scientists
KW - Education and education policy - Curriculum
KW - Culture
KW - Canada
KW - Libraries
KW - Information technology
KW - Humanities
KW - Social sciences
KW - United Kingdom
KW - book
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1315875972?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.clir.org/pubs/reports/pub151/pub151.pdf
LA - English
DB - PAIS Index
N1 - Date revised - 2013-03-01
N1 - Publication note - Council on Library and Information Resources, 2012
N1 - SuppNotes - CLIR Pub 151
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Constitution, diversification and normalization of a health problem: organizing the fight against AIDS in Switzerland (1984-2005)
AN - 1315598888; 201308884
AB - The article traces the formation, diversification and normalization of the AIDS cause in Switzerland. Particular emphasis is placed on interactions between the medical field, public authorities and associative space, the latter being understood as the place where individual and collective actors compete to define the cause. The authors argue that the major phases in the structuring of the struggle, the pace of state intervention and the creation of a multi-organizational field, can only be understood if one adopts a 'configurational perspective' attentive to the manner in which, in a given context and under the effect of particular constraints, key actors strategically interact and contribute to transforming their environment and their chances of reaching their goals. This approach takes into account the changing socio-biological characteristics of those who have committed themselves to the cause. In turn, internal movement divisions about how to respond to the epidemic as well as the changing perceptions of the disease have modified the opportunities for commitment, encouraging certain individual kinds of people and excluding others. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Contemporary Politics
AU - Voegtli, Michael
AU - Fillieule, Olivier
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City, Mexico
Y1 - 2012/06//
PY - 2012
DA - June 2012
SP - 200
EP - 212
PB - Carfax/Taylor & Francis, Abingdon UK
VL - 18
IS - 2
SN - 1356-9775, 1356-9775
KW - State Intervention
KW - Norms
KW - Interaction
KW - Epidemics
KW - Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
KW - Diseases
KW - Collectives
KW - Constitutions
KW - Switzerland
KW - article
KW - 9105: politics; national-level politics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1315598888?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Contemporary+Politics&rft.atitle=Constitution%2C+diversification+and+normalization+of+a+health+problem%3A+organizing+the+fight+against+AIDS+in+Switzerland+%281984-2005%29&rft.au=Voegtli%2C+Michael%3BFillieule%2C+Olivier&rft.aulast=Voegtli&rft.aufirst=Michael&rft.date=2012-06-01&rft.volume=18&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=200&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Contemporary+Politics&rft.issn=13569775&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F13569775.2012.674341
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2013-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Switzerland; Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome; Constitutions; Norms; Interaction; Epidemics; Collectives; State Intervention; Diseases
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13569775.2012.674341
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The microbiology of metalworking fluids
AN - 1017977680; 16750757
AB - Metalworking fluids (MWFs) are complex mixtures of chemicals and are indispensable materials in industry. They are used as cooling and lubricating agents in different machining process such as grinding, milling, and cutting. The quality of MWFs is affected by physical, chemical, and microbial contaminates. In particular, MWFs are highly vulnerable to microbial contamination, which may act both as potential pathogens and deteriorgens. Microbial contamination is of major concern due to potential health hazards such as skin dermatitis and hypersensitivity pneumonitis. The contaminated MWFs can exhibit high degrees of microbial loading, ranging from 10 super(4) to 10 super(10) colony-forming units (CFU)/ml. Wide varieties of microorganisms are reported to colonize MWFs. Traditional culturing techniques are not only laborious and time consuming but also underestimate the actual distribution of the microorganisms present in the contaminated MWFs. Therefore, rapid molecular methods such as real-time PCR and fluorescent in situ hybridization are implemented to monitor the microbial load. In industry, biocides are presently used to control microbial contamination. However, it has its own disadvantages and therefore, in recent years, alternative methods such as UV irradiation were evaluated to reduce microbial contamination in MWFs. Microbes inhabiting the MWF are also capable of forming biofilm which is detrimental to the MWF system. Biofilm is resistant to common disinfectant methods, and thus further research and development is required to effectively control its formation within MWF systems. This review is intended to discuss the overall microbiological aspects of MWF.
JF - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AD - Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, NSF International, 789 N Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI, 48105, USA, rsaha@nsf.org
PY - 2012
SP - 1119
EP - 1130
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 94
IS - 5
SN - 0175-7598, 0175-7598
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Contamination
KW - Disinfectants
KW - U.V. radiation
KW - Varieties
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Biocides
KW - Biofilms
KW - Fluorescence in situ hybridization
KW - Dermatitis
KW - Skin
KW - Pathogens
KW - Cooling
KW - Reviews
KW - Colony-forming cells
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Biotechnology
KW - Alveolitis
KW - SW 3050:Ultimate disposal of wastes
KW - W 30950:Waste Treatment & Pollution Clean-up
KW - A 01450:Environmental Pollution & Waste Treatment
KW - AQ 00002:Water Quality
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1017977680?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Microbiology+and+Biotechnology&rft.atitle=The+microbiology+of+metalworking+fluids&rft.au=Saha%2C+Ratul%3BDonofrio%2C+Robert+S&rft.aulast=Saha&rft.aufirst=Ratul&rft.date=2012-06-01&rft.volume=94&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=1119&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Microbiology+and+Biotechnology&rft.issn=01757598&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00253-012-4055-7
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-06
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Skin; Contamination; Pathogens; Disinfectants; U.V. radiation; Colony-forming cells; Microorganisms; Polymerase chain reaction; Biofilms; Biocides; Alveolitis; Dermatitis; Fluorescence in situ hybridization; Reviews; Varieties; Cooling; Biotechnology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-012-4055-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Advancing the science of mHealth
AN - 1272078470; 4386012
AB - Mobile health (mHealth) technologies have the potential to greatly impact health research, health care, and health outcomes, but the exponential growth of the technology has outpaced the science. This article outlines two initiatives designed to enhance the science of mHealth. The mHealth Evidence Workshop used an expert panel to identify optimal methodological approaches for mHealth research. The NIH mHealth Training Institutes address the silos among the many academic and technology areas in mHealth research and is an effort to build the interdisciplinary research capacity of the field. Both address the growing need for high quality mobile health research both in the United States and internationally. mHealth requires a solid, interdisciplinary scientific approach that pairs the rapid change associated with technological progress with a rigorous evaluation approach. The mHealth Evidence Workshop and the NIH mHealth Training Institutes were both designed to address and further develop this scientific approach to mHealth. Reprinted by permission of Taylor & Francis Ltd.
JF - Journal of health communication
AU - Nilsen, Wendy
AU - Kumar, Santosh
AU - Shar, Albert
AU - Varoquiers, Carrie
AU - Wiley, Tisha
AU - Riley, William T
AU - Pavel, Misha
AU - Atienza, Audie A
AD - National Institutes of Health ; University of Memphis ; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ; McKesson Foundation ; National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2012/05//
PY - 2012
DA - May 2012
SP - 5
EP - 10
VL - 17
IS - Supp.1
SN - 1081-0730, 1081-0730
KW - Sociology
KW - Evaluation
KW - Information
KW - Interdisciplinary research
KW - Medical research
KW - Health
KW - Mobile phones
KW - Technological change
KW - Information and communication technologies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1272078470?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+health+communication&rft.atitle=Advancing+the+science+of+mHealth&rft.au=Nilsen%2C+Wendy%3BKumar%2C+Santosh%3BShar%2C+Albert%3BVaroquiers%2C+Carrie%3BWiley%2C+Tisha%3BRiley%2C+William+T%3BPavel%2C+Misha%3BAtienza%2C+Audie+A&rft.aulast=Nilsen&rft.aufirst=Wendy&rft.date=2012-05-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=Supp.1&rft.spage=5&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+health+communication&rft.issn=10810730&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 8154 12647 12641 2572; 6518; 5772; 6515; 7886 10902; 12616 12622; 4551; 6631 10902
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Graduate Enrollment in Science and Engineering Grew Substantially in the Past Decade but Slowed in 2010. InfoBrief. NSF 12-317
AN - 1031153583; ED533187
AB - Approximately 632,700 graduate students were enrolled in science, engineering, and health (SEH) programs in the United States as of fall 2010, a 30% increase from approximately 493,300 students in 2000, according to the National Science Foundation's (NSF's) Survey of Graduate Students and Postdoctorates in Science and Engineering (GSS). The growth in first-time, full-time (FTFT) graduate student enrollment in science and engineering (S&E) programs over this time was even greater, with a 50% increase from approximately 78,400 students in 2000 to approximately 118,500 students in 2010 (figure 1). Continuing the decade-long trend, overall graduate enrollment in S&E reached a new peak in 2010, with 407,291 students in science fields and 149,241 students in engineering fields (table 1). However, rates of growth in these fields slowed considerably between 2009 and 2010 from the two previous years--particularly in FTFT enrollment, which had only a 1.7% gain in science programs and 4.0% gain in engineering programs. Annual increases in 2007-08 and 2008-09 for FTFT graduate enrollment were 7.6% and 6.4% in science and 8.2% and 6.2% in engineering, respectively (figure 1). Enrollment in biomedical engineering, which increased by 7.5% between 2009 and 2010, continues to be one of the fastest growing S&E fields and has experienced the most rapid growth over the last decade (165%), from approximately 3,200 graduate students in 2000 to 8,500 students in 2010 (table 1). These and other findings in this InfoBrief are from the fall 2010 GSS, cosponsored by NSF and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The GSS is an annual survey of all academic institutions in the United States that grant research-based master's degrees or doctorates in SEH fields. The GSS collects data on the number and characteristics of graduate students, postdoctoral appointees (postdocs), and other doctorate-holding non-faculty researchers in SEH fields. This InfoBrief focuses on the graduate students and postdocs within S&E fields. (Contains 1 figure, 3 tables and 3 notes.)
AU - Kang, Kelly
Y1 - 2012/05//
PY - 2012
DA - May 2012
SP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Science Programs
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Graduate Students
KW - College Freshmen
KW - Student Characteristics
KW - National Surveys
KW - Longitudinal Studies
KW - Annual Reports
KW - Enrollment Rate
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Enrollment Trends
KW - Full Time Students
KW - Statistical Surveys
KW - Statistical Distributions
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1031153583?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Rapid detection of rRNA group I pseudomonads in contaminated metalworking fluids and biofilm formation by fluorescent in situ hybridization
AN - 1008846952; 16516001
AB - Metalworking fluids (MWFs), used in different machining operations, are highly prone to microbial degradation. Microbial communities present in MWFs lead to biofilm formation in the MWF systems, which act as a continuous source of contamination. Species of rRNA group I Pseudomonas dominate in contaminated MWFs. However, their actual distribution is typically underestimated when using standard culturing techniques as most fail to grow on the commonly used Pseudomonas Isolation Agar. To overcome this, fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) was used to study their abundance along with biofilm formation by two species recovered from MWFs, Pseudomonas fluorescens MWF-1 and the newly described Pseudomonas oleovorans subsp. lubricantis. Based on 16S rRNA sequences, a unique fluorescent molecular probe (Pseudo120) was designed targeting a conserved signature sequence common to all rRNA group I Pseudomonas. The specificity of the probe was evaluated using hybridization experiments with whole cells of different Pseudomonas species. The probe's sensitivity was determined to be 10 super(3) cells/ml. It successfully detected and enumerated the abundance and distribution of Pseudomonas indicating levels between 3.2 ( plus or minus 1.1)10 super(6) and 5.0 ( plus or minus 2.3)10 super(6) cells/ml in four different industrial MWF samples collected from three different locations. Biofilm formation was visualized under stagnant conditions using high and low concentrations of cells for both P. fluorescens MWF-1 and P. oleovorans subsp. lubricantis stained with methylene blue and Pseudo120. On the basis of these observations, this molecular probe can be successfully be used in the management of MWF systems to monitor the levels and biofilm formation of rRNA group I pseudomonads.
JF - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AU - Goeres, Darla M
AU - Bagley, Susan T
AD - Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, NSF International, 789 N Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI, 48105, USA, rsaha@nsf.org
PY - 2012
SP - 799
EP - 808
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 94
IS - 3
SN - 0175-7598, 0175-7598
KW - Pollution Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; ASFA Aquaculture Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Agar
KW - Degradation
KW - Contamination
KW - Heavy metals
KW - Nucleotide sequence
KW - Abundance
KW - Probes
KW - Pseudomonas
KW - Hybridization
KW - Pseudomonas fluorescens
KW - rRNA
KW - Methylene blue
KW - Fluorescent indicators
KW - Conserved sequence
KW - Biofilms
KW - Pseudomonas oleovorans
KW - Fish culture
KW - Fluorescence in situ hybridization
KW - Sensitivity
KW - Quantitative distribution
KW - Microbial activity
KW - Microbiology
KW - metal-working fluids
KW - rRNA 16S
KW - Biotechnology
KW - W 30950:Waste Treatment & Pollution Clean-up
KW - P 9999:GENERAL POLLUTION
KW - A 01320:Microbial Degradation
KW - Q1 08182:Methods and instruments
KW - Q3 08585:Plant culture
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Microbiology+and+Biotechnology&rft.atitle=Rapid+detection+of+rRNA+group+I+pseudomonads+in+contaminated+metalworking+fluids+and+biofilm+formation+by+fluorescent+in+situ+hybridization&rft.au=Saha%2C+Ratul%3BDonofrio%2C+Robert+S%3BGoeres%2C+Darla+M%3BBagley%2C+Susan+T&rft.aulast=Saha&rft.aufirst=Ratul&rft.date=2012-05-01&rft.volume=94&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=799&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Microbiology+and+Biotechnology&rft.issn=01757598&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00253-011-3647-y
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-06
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Contamination; Quantitative distribution; Heavy metals; Nucleotide sequence; Microbiology; Biofilms; Hybridization; Fish culture; Biotechnology; Agar; rRNA; Abundance; Methylene blue; Probes; Conserved sequence; Fluorescent indicators; rRNA 16S; Fluorescence in situ hybridization; Sensitivity; Degradation; metal-working fluids; Microbial activity; Pseudomonas fluorescens; Pseudomonas; Pseudomonas oleovorans
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-011-3647-y
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Total allowable concentrations of monomeric inorganic aluminum and hydrated aluminum silicates in drinking water.
AN - 1008825152; 22512666
AB - Maximum contaminant levels are used to control potential health hazards posed by chemicals in drinking water, but no primary national or international limits for aluminum (Al) have been adopted. Given the differences in toxicological profiles, the present evaluation derives total allowable concentrations for certain water-soluble inorganic Al compounds (including chloride, hydroxide, oxide, phosphate and sulfate) and for the hydrated Al silicates (including attapulgite, bentonite/montmorillonite, illite, kaolinite) in drinking water. The chemistry, toxicology and clinical experience with Al materials are extensive and depend upon the particular physical and chemical form. In general, the water solubility of the monomeric Al materials depends on pH and their water solubility and gastrointestinal bioavailability are much greater than that of the hydrated Al silicates. Other than Al-containing antacids and buffered aspirin, food is the primary source of Al exposure for most healthy people. Systemic uptake of Al after ingestion of the monomeric salts is somewhat greater from drinking water (0.28%) than from food (0.1%). Once absorbed, Al accumulates in bone, brain, liver and kidney, with bone as the major site for Al deposition in humans. Oral Al hydroxide is used routinely to bind phosphate salts in the gut to control hyperphosphatemia in people with compromised renal function. Signs of chronic Al toxicity in the musculoskeletal system include a vitamin D-resistant osteomalacia (deranged membranous bone formation characterized by accumulation of the osteoid matrix and reduced mineralization, reduced numbers of osteoblasts and osteoclasts, decreased lamellar and osteoid bands with elevated Al concentrations) presenting as bone pain and proximal myopathy. Aluminum-induced bone disease can progress to stress fractures of the ribs, femur, vertebrae, humerus and metatarsals. Serum Al ≥100 µg/L has a 75-88% positive predictive value for Al bone disease. Chronic Al toxicity is also manifest in the hematopoietic system as an erythropoietin-resistant microcytic hypochromic anemia. Signs of Al toxicity in the central nervous system (speech difficulty to total mutism to facial grimacing to multifacial seizures and dyspraxia) are related to Al accumulation in the brain and these symptoms can progress to frank encephalopathy. There are four groups of people at elevated risk of systemic Al intoxication after repeated ingestion of monomeric Al salts: the preterm infant, the infant with congenital uremia and children and adults with kidney disease. There is a dose-dependent increase in serum and urinary Al in people with compromised renal function, and restoration of renal function permits normal handling of systemically absorbed Al and resolution of Al bone disease. Clinical experience with 960 mg/day of Al(OH)(3) (~5 mg Al/kg-day) given by mouth over 3 months to men and women with compromised renal function found subclinical reductions in hemoglobin, hematocrit and serum ferritin. Following adult males and females with reduced kidney function found that ingestion of Al(OH)(3) at 2.85 g/day (~40 mg/kg-day Al) over 7 years increased bone Al, but failed to elicit significant bone toxicity. There was one report of DNA damage in cultured lymphocytes after high AlCl(3) exposure, but there is no evidence that ingestion of common inorganic Al compounds presents an increased carcinogenic risk or increases the risk for adverse reproductive or developmental outcomes. A number of studies of Al exposure in relation to memory in rodents have been published, but the results are inconsistent. At present, there is no evidence to substantiate the hypothesis that the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's Disease is caused by Al found in food and drinking water at the levels consumed by people living in North America and Western Europe. Attapulgite (palygorskite) has been used for decades at oral doses (recommended not to exceed two consecutive days) of 2,100 mg/day in children of 3-6 years, 4,200 mg/day in children of 6-12 years, and 9,000 mg/day in adults. Chronic ingestion of insoluble hydrated Al silicates (in kg) can result in disturbances in iron and potassium status, primarily as a result of clay binding to intestinal contents and enhanced fecal iron and zinc elimination. Sufficiently high doses of ingested Al silicates (≥50 g/day) over prolonged periods of time can elicit a deficiency anemia that can be corrected with oral Fe supplements. There is essentially no systemic Al uptake after ingestion of the hydrated Al silicates. Rats fed up to 20,000 ppm Ca montmorillonite (equivalent to 1,860 ppm total Al as the hydrated Al silicate) for 28 weeks failed to develop any adverse signs. The results of dietary Phase I and II clinical trials conducted in healthy adult volunteers over 14 days and 90 days with montmorillonite found no adverse effects after feeding up to 40 mg/kg-day as Al. Since the Al associated with ingestion of hydrated Al silicates is not absorbed into the systemic circulation, the hydrated Al silicates seldom cause medical problems unless the daily doses consumed are substantially greater than those used clinically or as dietary supplements. A no-observable-adverse-effect-level (NOAEL) of 13 mg/kg-day as total Al can be identified based on histologic osteomalacia seen in adult hemodialysis patients given Al hydroxide for up to 7 years as a phosphate binder. Following U.S. EPA methods for calculation of an oral reference dose (RfD), an intraspecies uncertainty factor of 10x was applied to that value results in a chronic oral reference dose (RfD) of 1.3 mg Al/kg-day; assuming a 70-kg adult consumes 2 L of drinking water per day and adjusting for a default 20% relative source contribution that value corresponds to a drinking water maximum concentration of 9 mg/L measured as total Al. A chronic NOAEL for montmorillonite as representative of the hydrated Al silicates was identified from the highest dietary concentration (20,000 ppm) fed in a 28-week bioassay with male and female Sprague-Dawley rats. Since young rats consume standard laboratory chow at ~23 g/day, this concentration corresponds to 56 mg Al/kg-day. Application of 3x interspecies uncertainty factor and a 3x factor to account for study duration results in a chronic oral RfD of 6 mg Al/kg-day. Of note, this RfD is 5-10 fold less than oral doses of Al silicates consumed by people who practice clay geophagy and it corresponds to a maximum drinking water concentration of 40 mg Al/L. To utilize the values derived here, the risk manager must recognize the particular product (e.g., alum) or source (e.g., groundwater, river water, clay or cement pipe) of the Al found in tap water, apply the appropriate analytical methods (atomic absorption, energy dispersive X-ray diffraction, infrared spectral analysis and/or scanning transmission electron microscopy) and compare the results to the most relevant standard. The drinking water concentrations derived here are greater than the U.S. EPA secondary maximum contaminant level (MCL) for total Al of 0.05-0.2 mg/L [40 CFR 143.3]. As such, domestic use of water with these concentrations is likely self-limiting given that its cloudy appearance will be greater than the maximum permitted (0.5-5.0 nephalometric turbidity units; 40 CFR Parts 141 and 142). Therefore, the organoleptic properties of Al materials in water determine public acceptance of potable water as contrast to any potential health hazard at the concentrations ordinarily present in municipal drinking water.
JF - Critical reviews in toxicology
AU - Willhite, Calvin C
AU - Ball, Gwendolyn L
AU - McLellan, Clifton J
AD - NSF International Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. calvinwillhite@hotmail.com
Y1 - 2012/05//
PY - 2012
DA - May 2012
SP - 358
EP - 442
VL - 42
IS - 5
KW - Aluminum Compounds
KW - 0
KW - Aluminum Silicates
KW - Magnesium Compounds
KW - Silicates
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical
KW - aluminum magnesium silicate
KW - 6M3P64V0NC
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Rats
KW - Animals
KW - Maximum Allowable Concentration
KW - Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
KW - Humans
KW - Adult
KW - Toxicity Tests
KW - Child
KW - Male
KW - Female
KW - Child, Preschool
KW - Biological Availability
KW - Aluminum Compounds -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Aluminum Compounds -- analysis
KW - Silicates -- analysis
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical -- analysis
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical -- toxicity
KW - Magnesium Compounds -- toxicity
KW - Aluminum Silicates -- analysis
KW - Silicates -- toxicity
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Magnesium Compounds -- analysis
KW - Water Supply -- analysis
KW - Aluminum Silicates -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Aluminum Silicates -- toxicity
KW - Water Supply -- standards
KW - Magnesium Compounds -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Environmental Exposure
KW - Aluminum Compounds -- toxicity
KW - Silicates -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Environmental Monitoring -- methods
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2012-08-07
N1 - Date created - 2012-04-19
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10408444.2012.674101
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Evaluation of the East Asia and Pacific Summer Institutes Program: Final Report. Revised Draft. GS-10F-0086K
AN - 1697500822; ED554575
AB - Students in science and engineering (S&E) are preparing for careers in fields where international partnerships are increasingly important to advancing knowledge and discoveries. It has been over a decade since the National Science Board (NSB) highlighted the importance of international collaboration and called for increased government commitment to promoting international S&E research and education. The National Science Foundation (NSF) contracted with Abt Associates to conduct an evaluation of the East Asia and Pacific Summer Institutes (EAPSI) program to investigate whether it was meeting its goal of providing U.S. graduate students with international experiences that will enable future collaboration with foreign peers. This report presents the findings from this evaluation. The evaluation found evidence that the EAPSI program is meeting its goals to: (1) introduce U.S. graduate students to East Asia and Pacific science and engineering in the context of a research setting; and (2) help students initiate scientific relationships that will better enable future collaboration with foreign counterparts. The following are appended: (1) NSF-Generated EAPSI Descriptions; (2) Non-Response Bias Study; (3) Detailed Description of Impact Analysis; (4) Detailed Description of Benchmarking Analysis; (5) Surveys; and (6) Benchmark of Applicants to National Data.
AU - Martinez, Alina
AU - Neishi, Kristen
AU - Parsad, Amanda
AU - Whittaker, Karla
AU - Epstein, Carter
Y1 - 2012/04/23/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Apr 23
SP - 251
PB - Abt Associates. 4550 Montgomery Avenue Suite 800 North, Bethesda, MD 20814.
KW - Asia Pacific Region
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Probability
KW - Program Effectiveness
KW - Sensitivity Training
KW - Graduate Students
KW - International Educational Exchange
KW - Benchmarking
KW - Global Education
KW - Fellowships
KW - Educational Cooperation
KW - Partnerships in Education
KW - Scientists
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Foreign Countries
KW - Student Exchange Programs
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Researchers
KW - Program Evaluation
KW - Interviews
KW - Quasiexperimental Design
KW - Interpersonal Relationship
KW - Participant Characteristics
KW - Graduate Surveys
KW - Science Course Improvement Projects
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1697500822?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - CONSTRAINTS ON THE FORMATION OF THE GALACTIC BULGE FROM Na, Al, AND HEAVY-ELEMENT ABUNDANCES IN PLAUT's FIELD
AN - 1680447638; PQ0001472000
AB - We report chemical abundances of Na, Al, Zr, La, Nd, and Eu for 39 red giant branch (RGB) stars and 23 potential inner disk red clump stars located in Plaut's low-extinction window. We also measure lithium for a super Li-rich RGB star. The abundances were determined by spectrum synthesis of high-resolution (R [approx =] 25,000), high signal-to-noise (S/N ~ 50-100 pixel super(-1)) spectra obtained with the Blanco 4 m telescope and Hydra multifiber spectrograph. For the bulge RGB stars, we find a general increase in the [Na/Fe] and [Na/Al] ratios with increasing metallicity, and a similar decrease in [La/Fe] and [Nd/Fe]. Additionally, the [Al/Fe] and [Eu/Fe] abundance trends almost identically follow those of the alpha -elements, and the [Zr/Fe] ratios exhibit relatively little change with [Fe/H]. The consistently low [La/Eu] ratios of the RGB stars indicate that at least a majority of bulge stars formed rapidly ([<, ~]1 Gyr) and before the main s-process could become a significant pollution source. In contrast, we find that the potential inner disk clump stars exhibit abundance patterns more similar to those of the thin and thick disks. Comparisons between the abundance trends at different bulge locations suggest that the inner and outer bulges formed on similar timescales. However, we find evidence of some abundance differences between the most metal-poor and metal-rich stars in various bulge fields. The data also indicate that the halo may have had a more significant impact on the outer bulge initial composition than the inner bulge composition. The [Na/Fe], and to a lesser extent [La/Fe], abundances further indicate that the metal-poor bulge, at least at ~1 kpc from the Galactic center, and thick disk may not share an identical chemistry.
JF - Astrophysical Journal
AU - Johnson, Christian I
AU - Rich, R Michael
AU - Kobayashi, Chiaki
AU - Fulbright, Jon P
AD - Department of Physics and Astronomy, UCLA, 430 Portola Plaza, Box 951547, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1547, USA; National Science Foundation Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellow, cijohnson@astro.ucla.edu
Y1 - 2012/04/20/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Apr 20
SP - 1
EP - 26
PB - IOP Publishing, The Public Ledger Building, Suite 929 Philadelphia PA 19106 United States
VL - 749
IS - 2
SN - 0004-637X, 0004-637X
KW - Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts
KW - Galaxy: bulge
KW - stars: abundances
KW - stars: Population II
KW - Metallicity
KW - Halos
KW - Galactic formation
KW - Telescopes
KW - Hydra
KW - Abundance
KW - Disk galaxies
KW - Galaxies
KW - Stellar investigations
KW - Lithium
KW - P 9999:GENERAL POLLUTION
KW - M2 524:Stars, Universe (524)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1680447638?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Astrophysical+Journal&rft.atitle=CONSTRAINTS+ON+THE+FORMATION+OF+THE+GALACTIC+BULGE+FROM+Na%2C+Al%2C+AND+HEAVY-ELEMENT+ABUNDANCES+IN+PLAUT%27s+FIELD&rft.au=Johnson%2C+Christian+I%3BRich%2C+R+Michael%3BKobayashi%2C+Chiaki%3BFulbright%2C+Jon+P&rft.aulast=Johnson&rft.aufirst=Christian&rft.date=2012-04-20&rft.volume=749&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Astrophysical+Journal&rft.issn=0004637X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1088%2F0004-637X%2F749%2F2%2F175
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-11-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Metallicity; Telescopes; Galactic formation; Halos; Disk galaxies; Galaxies; Stellar investigations; Abundance; Lithium; Hydra
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/749/2/175
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The genetics of phenotypic plasticity. X. Variation versus uncertainty
AN - 1712564835; PQ0001954443
AB - Despite the apparent advantages of adaptive plasticity, it is not common. We examined the effects of variation and uncertainty on selection for plasticity using an individual-based computer simulation model. In the model, the environment consisted of a linear gradient of 50 demes with dispersal occurring either before or after selection. Individuals consisted of multiple loci whose phenotypic expression either are affected (plastic) or are not affected (nonplastic) by the environment. Typically, evolution occurred first as genetic differentiation, which was then replaced by the evolution of adaptive plasticity, opposite to the evolutionary trend that is often assumed. Increasing dispersal rates selected for plasticity, if selection occurred before dispersal. If selection occurred after dispersal, the highest plasticity was at intermediate dispersal rates. Temporal variation in the environment occurring after development, but before selection, favored the evolution of plasticity. With dispersal before selection, such temporal variation resulted in hyperplasticity, with a reaction norm much steeper than the optimum. This effect was enhanced with negative temporal autocorrelation and can be interpreted as representing a form of bet hedging. As the number of nonplastic loci increased, plasticity was disfavored due to an increase in the uncertainty of the genomic environment. This effect was reversed with temporal variation. Thus, variation and uncertainty affect whether or not plasticity is favored with different sources of variation-arising from the amount and timing of dispersal, from temporal variation, and even from the genetic architecture underlying the phenotype-having contrasting, interacting, and at times unexpected effects. We examined the effects of variation and uncertainty on selection for plasticity using an individual-based computer simulation model. Variation and uncertainty affect whether or not plasticity is favored; different sources of variation - arising from the amount and timing of dispersal, from temporal variation, and even from the genetic architecture underlying the phenotype - having contrasting, interacting, and at times unexpected effects.
JF - Ecology and Evolution
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AU - Holt, Robert D
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230.
PY - 2012
SP - 751
EP - 767
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc.
VL - 2
IS - 4
SN - 2045-7758, 2045-7758
KW - Genetics Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Data processing
KW - Temporal variations
KW - phenotypic plasticity
KW - Simulation
KW - Hedging
KW - Plasticity
KW - Models
KW - Differentiation
KW - Dispersal
KW - genomics
KW - Evolution
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - G 07730:Development & Cell Cycle
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1712564835?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.atitle=The+genetics+of+phenotypic+plasticity.+X.+Variation+versus+uncertainty&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M%3BHolt%2C+Robert+D&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2012-04-01&rft.volume=2&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=751&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology+and+Evolution&rft.issn=20457758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fece3.217
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-01-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Differentiation; Data processing; Mathematical models; Temporal variations; phenotypic plasticity; genomics; Dispersal; Plasticity; Evolution; Models; Simulation; Hedging
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.217
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Surprising metal binding properties of phytochelatin-like peptides prepared by protease-catalysis
AN - 1034821052; 17020765
AB - Phytochelatins (PCs) consist of alternating glutamic acid and cysteine residues ([ gamma Glu-Cys]-Xaa) and are responsible for binding to heavy metals for cellular metal homeostasis and detoxification. This paper describes the papain-catalyzed synthesis of cysteine-rich peptides as potential PC mimics. By adjusting the feed ratio of l-cysteine ethyl ester (l-Et-Cys) and l-glutamic acid diethyl ester (l-(Et) sub(2)-Glu) followed by de-esterification, alpha -linked oligo(l-Glu-co-47%l-Cys) was prepared that closely matches the 1 : 1 l-Glu-to-l-Cys molar ratio of PC peptides. Plots of absorbance difference as a function of total metal-to-peptide ([M] sub(total)-[P] sub(total)) molar ratio were constructed for titrations with Zn(ii), Cd(ii), Co(ii) and Ni(ii). A series of equations were generated to evaluate dissociation constants and the number of metal ions per peptide molecule in metal-peptide complexes. All of the four complexes have on average two oligo(l-Glu-co-47%l-Cys) molecules per divalent cation. The binding of metals to oligo(l-Glu-co-47%l-Cys) weakens in the order of Cd(ii) > Zn(ii) > Ni(ii) > Co(ii), the same trend observed for [( gamma Glu-Cys) sub(4)]-Gly. The peptide quantity required to sequester a given amount of Zn(ii) and Cd(ii) when using oligo(l-Glu-co-47%l-Cys) is only about twice as much as the quantity for perfect sequence peptide ( gamma Glu-Cys) sub(2)-Gly. Furthermore, when [M] sub(total) is low, random oligo(l-Glu-co-47%l-Cys) sequesters much higher fractions of Co(ii) and Ni(ii) than does ( gamma Glu-Cys) sub(2)-Gly. Results from this work provide the first evidence that, in some cases, uniform peptides synthesized by tedious solid or liquid phase peptide synthetic methods, can be replaced with peptide mixtures prepared by facile protease-catalyzed peptide synthetic methods without substantial loss in product performance.
JF - Green Chemistry
AU - Viswanathan, Kodandaraman
AU - Schofield, Mark H
AU - Teraoka, Iwao
AU - Gross, Richard A
AD - Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences; NSF I/UCRC for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules; Polytechnic Institute of NYU; Six Metrotech Center; Brooklyn; NY 11201,; USA; , rgross@poly.edu
Y1 - 2012/04//
PY - 2012
DA - Apr 2012
SP - 1020
EP - 1029
PB - Royal Society of Chemistry, c/o Springer-Verlag New York Inc. Secaucus New Jersey 07096 2485 United States
VL - 14
IS - 4
SN - 1463-9262, 1463-9262
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Cations
KW - Metals
KW - M3:1010
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1034821052?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Green+Chemistry&rft.atitle=Surprising+metal+binding+properties+of+phytochelatin-like+peptides+prepared+by+protease-catalysis&rft.au=Viswanathan%2C+Kodandaraman%3BSchofield%2C+Mark+H%3BTeraoka%2C+Iwao%3BGross%2C+Richard+A&rft.aulast=Viswanathan&rft.aufirst=Kodandaraman&rft.date=2012-04-01&rft.volume=14&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=1020&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Green+Chemistry&rft.issn=14639262&rft_id=info:doi/10.1039%2Fc2gc16063c
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-08-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Metals
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c2gc16063c
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Gradient Energy, Interfacial Energy and Interface Width: an Example from Ni-Base gamma / gamma ' Alloys
AN - 1372607963; 18026697
AB - A method is presented for calculating the gradient energy, iota , and interface width, delta , from concentration profiles across precipitate-matrix interfaces. This is accomplished provided the interfacial free energy, delta , is known. The relationship between these quantities is s = 2 iota Delta X(2)/3d, where Delta X is the difference between the solute concentrations in the precipitate and matrix phases. Interfaces between gamma and gamma ' phases from 2 sources are examined. One originates from Monte Carlo simulations of a planar gamma / gamma ' interface in binary Ni-Al alloys and the other from experimental APT measurements across gamma / gamma ' precipitate interfaces in a ternary Ni-Al-Cr alloy. The analysis involves fitting the concentration profiles using the sigmoid function. Meaningful values of iota and delta are obtained even for incomplete profiles, and the magnitudes of iota , (typically 10(-8) to 10(-10) J/m) compare favorably to those used in phase-field simulations. Free energy is not needed in the analysis.
JF - AIP Conference Proceedings
AU - Ardell, Alan
AD - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2012/03/15/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Mar 15
PB - American Institute of Physics, Ste. 1NO1 Melville NY 11747-4502 United States
SN - 0094-243X, 0094-243X
KW - Environment Abstracts
KW - Intermetallic compounds
KW - NiAl
KW - Monte Carlo simulation
KW - Conferences
KW - Alloys
KW - Simulation
KW - Technology
KW - ENA 03:Energy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1372607963?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=AIP+Conference+Proceedings&rft.atitle=Gradient+Energy%2C+Interfacial+Energy+and+Interface+Width%3A+an+Example+from+Ni-Base+gamma+%2F+gamma+%27+Alloys&rft.au=Ardell%2C+Alan&rft.aulast=Ardell&rft.aufirst=Alan&rft.date=2012-03-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=AIP+Conference+Proceedings&rft.issn=0094243X&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2014-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Monte Carlo simulation; Conferences; Simulation; Alloys; Technology
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Questions without Borders: Why Future Research Will Be Interdisciplinary and How We Can Foster It
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG 2012)
AN - 1412154654; 6220663
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG 2012)
AU - Gutmann, Myron
Y1 - 2012/02/24/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Feb 24
KW - Geography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1412154654?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Association+of+American+Geographers+%28AAG+2012%29&rft.atitle=Questions+without+Borders%3A+Why+Future+Research+Will+Be+Interdisciplinary+and+How+We+Can+Foster+It&rft.au=Gutmann%2C+Myron&rft.aulast=Gutmann&rft.aufirst=Myron&rft.date=2012-02-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Association+of+American+Geographers+%28AAG+2012%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/index.cfm?mtgID=57
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-30
N1 - Last updated - 2013-07-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Challenging the "One Best System": Homeschooling Litigation in the U.S., 1972-2007
T2 - 2012 Annual Meeting of the Eastern Sociological Society
AN - 1354784482; 6211972
JF - 2012 Annual Meeting of the Eastern Sociological Society
AU - Werum, Regina
Y1 - 2012/02/23/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Feb 23
KW - USA
KW - Litigation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1354784482?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Eastern+Sociological+Society&rft.atitle=Challenging+the+%22One+Best+System%22%3A+Homeschooling+Litigation+in+the+U.S.%2C+1972-2007&rft.au=Werum%2C+Regina&rft.aulast=Werum&rft.aufirst=Regina&rft.date=2012-02-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2012+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Eastern+Sociological+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.essnet.org/FinalPrograms/2012_Final_Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-04-30
N1 - Last updated - 2013-05-24
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Development and Validation of a Real-Time TaqMan Assay for the Detection and Enumeration of Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 13525 Used as a Challenge Organism in Testing of Food Equipments
AN - 1038303023; 16886320
AB - Abstract:Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 13525 is used as the challenge organism to evaluate the efficacy of the clean-in-place (CIP) process of food equipment (automatic ice-maker) as per NSF/ANSI Standard 12. Traditional culturing methodology is presently used to determine the concentration of the challenge organism, which takes 48 h to confirm the cell density. Storage of the challenge preparation in the refrigerator might alter the cell density as P. fluorescens is capable of growing at 4 degree C. Also, background organism can grow on the Pseudomonas F agar (PFA) used for the recovery of P. fluorescens thus affecting the results of the test. Real-time TaqMan assay targeting the cpn60 gene was developed for the enumeration and the identification of P. fluorescens because of its specificity, accuracy, and shorter turnaround time. The TaqMan primer-probe pair developed using the Allele ID registered 7.0 probe design software was highly specific and sensitive for the target organism. The sensitivity of the assay was 10 colony forming units (CFU)/mL. The assay was also successful in determining the concentration of the challenge preparation within 2 h. Based on these observations, TaqMan assay targeting the cpn60 gene can be efficiently used for strain level identification and enumeration of bacteria. Practical Application:Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 13525 is used as a challenge organism in the efficacy testing of clean-in-place process of food equipments. Currently, culturing technique is used for its identification and estimation, which is not only time-consuming but also prone to error. Real-time TaqMan assay is more specific, sensitive, and accurate along with a shorter turnaround time compared to culturing techniques, thereby increasing the overall quality of the testing methodology to evaluate the clean-in-place process critical for the food industry to protect public health and safety.
JF - Journal of Food Science
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Bestervelt, Lorelle L
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AD - Authors are with Dept. of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, NSF Intl., 789 N Dixboro Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48105, U.S.A. Direct inquiries to author Saha, rsaha@nsf.org
Y1 - 2012/02//
PY - 2012
DA - Feb 2012
SP - M150
EP - M155
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 77
IS - 2
SN - 0022-1147, 0022-1147
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Health & Safety Science Abstracts
KW - Food processing
KW - Sensitivity
KW - Agar
KW - Food industry
KW - Food
KW - Cell density
KW - Probes
KW - Assays
KW - Pseudomonas
KW - Public health
KW - Pseudomonas fluorescens
KW - Storage
KW - Computer programs
KW - Colonies
KW - software
KW - Safety engineering
KW - Colony-forming cells
KW - Food quality
KW - J 02310:Genetics & Taxonomy
KW - H 0500:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1038303023?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Food+Science&rft.atitle=Development+and+Validation+of+a+Real-Time+TaqMan+Assay+for+the+Detection+and+Enumeration+of+Pseudomonas+fluorescens+ATCC+13525+Used+as+a+Challenge+Organism+in+Testing+of+Food+Equipments&rft.au=Saha%2C+Ratul%3BBestervelt%2C+Lorelle+L%3BDonofrio%2C+Robert+S&rft.aulast=Saha&rft.aufirst=Ratul&rft.date=2012-02-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=M150&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Food+Science&rft.issn=00221147&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1750-3841.2011.02547.x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-09-01
N1 - Document feature - figure 5
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Food processing; Agar; Computer programs; software; Colonies; Food industry; Food; Colony-forming cells; Cell density; Probes; Food quality; Public health; Storage; Sensitivity; Safety engineering; Assays; Pseudomonas fluorescens; Pseudomonas
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1750-3841.2011.02547.x
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - A Report on Earth Cube: Towards a National Knowledge System for Earth System Science
T2 - 15th Conference of Atmospheric Science Librarians International (ASLI 2011)
AN - 1313096914; 6102629
JF - 15th Conference of Atmospheric Science Librarians International (ASLI 2011)
AU - Jacobs, Clifford
Y1 - 2012/01/22/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jan 22
KW - Environmental engineering
KW - Atmospheric sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313096914?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=15th+Conference+of+Atmospheric+Science+Librarians+International+%28ASLI+2011%29&rft.atitle=A+Report+on+Earth+Cube%3A+Towards+a+National+Knowledge+System+for+Earth+System+Science&rft.au=Jacobs%2C+Clifford&rft.aulast=Jacobs&rft.aufirst=Clifford&rft.date=2012-01-22&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=15th+Conference+of+Atmospheric+Science+Librarians+International+%28ASLI+2011%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://aslionline.org/wp/conference/programs/2012-conference-program/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Superresolution imaging for spatial light interference microscopy
T2 - VI Conference on Biomedical Applications of Light Scattering
AN - 1313111547; 6120623
JF - VI Conference on Biomedical Applications of Light Scattering
AU - Chu, Kaiqin
Y1 - 2012/01/21/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jan 21
KW - Microscopy
KW - Imaging techniques
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313111547?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=VI+Conference+on+Biomedical+Applications+of+Light+Scattering&rft.atitle=Superresolution+imaging+for+spatial+light+interference+microscopy&rft.au=Chu%2C+Kaiqin&rft.aulast=Chu&rft.aufirst=Kaiqin&rft.date=2012-01-21&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=VI+Conference+on+Biomedical+Applications+of+Light+Scattering&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/PW12-Final-lr.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Image-based analysis of cell death by metabolic stress-induced autophagy
T2 - Imaging, Manipulation, and Analysis of Biomolecules, Cells, and Tissues X
AN - 1313075837; 6119570
JF - Imaging, Manipulation, and Analysis of Biomolecules, Cells, and Tissues X
AU - Chuang, Frank
AU - Changou, Austin
AU - Kung, Hsing-Jien
Y1 - 2012/01/21/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jan 21
KW - Mortality
KW - Cell death
KW - Phagocytosis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313075837?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=Imaging%2C+Manipulation%2C+and+Analysis+of+Biomolecules%2C+Cells%2C+and+Tissues+X&rft.atitle=Image-based+analysis+of+cell+death+by+metabolic+stress-induced+autophagy&rft.au=Chuang%2C+Frank%3BChangou%2C+Austin%3BKung%2C+Hsing-Jien&rft.aulast=Chuang&rft.aufirst=Frank&rft.date=2012-01-21&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Imaging%2C+Manipulation%2C+and+Analysis+of+Biomolecules%2C+Cells%2C+and+Tissues+X&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/PW12-Final-lr.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Funding Opportunities Through the Plant Genome Research Program
T2 - International Plant & Animal Genome XX (PAG XX)
AN - 1312975660; 6130694
JF - International Plant & Animal Genome XX (PAG XX)
AU - Okamuro, Diane
Y1 - 2012/01/14/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jan 14
KW - Research programs
KW - Genomes
KW - Financing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312975660?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=International+Plant+%26+Animal+Genome+XX+%28PAG+XX%29&rft.atitle=Funding+Opportunities+Through+the+Plant+Genome+Research+Program&rft.au=Okamuro%2C+Diane&rft.aulast=Okamuro&rft.aufirst=Diane&rft.date=2012-01-14&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Plant+%26+Animal+Genome+XX+%28PAG+XX%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://pag.confex.com/pag/xx/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF's Science Across Virtual Institutes (SAVI) and Partnerships for Enhanced Engagements in Research (PEER) Programs
T2 - International Plant & Animal Genome XX (PAG XX)
AN - 1312975633; 6130693
JF - International Plant & Animal Genome XX (PAG XX)
AU - Lapitan, Nora
Y1 - 2012/01/14/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jan 14
KW - Plants
KW - Animals
KW - Genetics
KW - Genomes
KW - Paleontology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312975633?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=International+Plant+%26+Animal+Genome+XX+%28PAG+XX%29&rft.atitle=NSF%27s+Science+Across+Virtual+Institutes+%28SAVI%29+and+Partnerships+for+Enhanced+Engagements+in+Research+%28PEER%29+Programs&rft.au=Lapitan%2C+Nora&rft.aulast=Lapitan&rft.aufirst=Nora&rft.date=2012-01-14&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Plant+%26+Animal+Genome+XX+%28PAG+XX%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://pag.confex.com/pag/xx/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A focus on science, engineering, and education for sustainability
AN - 1356357530; 2013-042013
AB - In a sustainable world, human needs would be met without chronic harm to the environment and without sacrificing the ability of future generations to meet their needs. Addressing the grand challenge of sustainability, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has developed a coordinated research and education framework, called the Science, Engineering, and Education for Sustainability (SEES) portfolio (http://www.nsf.gov/sees). The growing family of SEES activities, currently consisting of 11 programs, represents a major interdisciplinary investment by NSF that reflects the following topical themes: environment, energy and materials, and resilience. The SEES research and education program portfolio emphasizes the use of systems-based approaches to address critical challenges at the nexus of environmental, energy and materials, and economic systems, including social and behavioral dynamics and questions of human resilience and vulnerability.
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Killeen, Tim
AU - van der Pluijm, Ben
AU - Cavanaugh, Marge
Y1 - 2012/01/03/
PY - 2012
DA - 2012 Jan 03
SP - 1
EP - 3
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 93
IS - 1
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - programs
KW - sustainable development
KW - education
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1356357530?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=A+focus+on+science%2C+engineering%2C+and+education+for+sustainability&rft.au=Killeen%2C+Tim%3Bvan+der+Pluijm%2C+Ben%3BCavanaugh%2C+Marge&rft.aulast=Killeen&rft.aufirst=Tim&rft.date=2012-01-03&rft.volume=93&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2012EO010002
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/%28ISSN%292324-9250
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2013-05-30
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - education; programs; sustainable development
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2012EO010002
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators: Digest 2012. NSB 12-02
AN - 964196020; ED528690
AB - The United States holds a preeminent position in science and engineering (S&E) in the world, derived in large part from its long history of public and private investment in S&E research and development (R&D) and education. Investment in R&D, science, technology, and education correlate strongly with economic growth, as well the development of a safe, healthy, and well-educated society. Many other nations, recognizing the economic and social benefits of such investment, have increased their R&D and education spending. These trends are by now well-established and will challenge the world leadership role of the United States. The National Science Board has selected 30 S&E indicators for inclusion in this digest. These indicators have been grouped into seven topical areas. Although each stands alone, collectively these seven themes are a snapshot of U.S. R&D capacity and outputs in the context of global trends affecting them. Exploration of areas that indicate capacity for innovation is a thread common to many of the themes presented here. As economies worldwide grow increasingly knowledge-intensive and interdependent, capacity for innovation becomes ever more critical. This digest of major S&E indicators draws from the Board's Science and Engineering Indicators 2012, the 20th volume of this biennial series. The digest serves to draw attention to important trends and data points from across SEI 2012 and to introduce readers to the data resources available in the report. Readers are invited to explore each of the major indicators presented here in more detail in the full report. To that end, each indicator presented in this digest is matched with the SEI 2012 chapter or chapters from which it was drawn. [For the full report "Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. NSB 12-01", see ED528688 and for the "Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. Appendix Tables. NSB 12-01A", see ED528689.]
Y1 - 2012/01//
PY - 2012
DA - January 2012
SP - 28
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Economic Progress
KW - Educational Indicators
KW - Educational Finance
KW - STEM Education
KW - Labor Force
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Federal Government
KW - Research and Development
KW - Intellectual Property
KW - Engineering
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Innovation
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Geography
KW - Science and Society
KW - Tables (Data)
KW - Global Approach
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - Leadership
KW - Industry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/964196020?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. Appendix Tables. NSB 12-01A
AN - 964196015; ED528689
AB - This document contains a list of appendix tables for the "Science and Engineering Indicators 2012" report. The tables are presented according to these chapters: (1) Elementary and Secondary Mathematics and Science Education; (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering; (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force; (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Comparisons; (5) Academic Research and Development; (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace; (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding; and (8) State Indicators. (Contains 328 tables.) [For the full report, "Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. NSB 12-01", see ED528688. For "Science and Engineering Indicators: Digest 2012. NSB 12-02", see ED528690.]
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - 809
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Science Education
KW - Educational Indicators
KW - Labor Force
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Research and Development
KW - Cross Cultural Studies
KW - Engineering
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Science and Society
KW - Tables (Data)
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - International Trade
KW - Industry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/964196015?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. NSB 12-01
AN - 964180152; ED528688
AB - Science and Engineering Indicators (SEI) is first and foremost a volume of record comprising the major high-quality quantitative data on the U.S. and international science and engineering enterprise. SEI is factual and policy neutral. It does not offer policy options, and it does not make policy recommendations. SEI employs a variety of presentation styles--tables, figures, narrative text, bulleted text, Web-based links, highlights, introductions, conclusions, reference lists--to make the data accessible to readers with different information needs and different information-processing preferences. SEI includes an overview, seven chapters that follow a generally consistent pattern, and an eighth chapter, on state indicators, presented in a unique format. The chapter titles are: (1) Elementary and Secondary Mathematics and Science Education; (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering; (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force; (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Comparisons; (5) Academic Research and Development; (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace; (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding; and (8) State Indicators. An appendix volume contains detailed data tables keyed to each of the eight chapters. SEI includes a list of abbreviations/acronyms and an index. Each chapter contains tables and figures. [For the "Science and Engineering Indicators: Digest 2012. NSB 12-02", see ED528690 and for the "Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. Appendix Tables. NSB 12-01A", see ED528689.]
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - 589
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Science Education
KW - Educational Indicators
KW - Labor Force
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Research and Development
KW - Cross Cultural Studies
KW - Engineering
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Science and Society
KW - Tables (Data)
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - International Trade
KW - Industry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/964180152?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Occurrence of estrogen hormones in biosolids, animal manure and mushroom compost
AN - 926882350; 16367112
AB - The presence of natural estrogen hormones as trace concentrations in the environment has been reported by many researchers and is of growing concern due to its possible adverse effects on the ecosystem. In this study, municipal biosolids, poultry manure (PM) and cow manure (CM), and spent mushroom compost (SMC) were analyzed for the presence of seven estrogen hormones. 17 alpha -estradiol, 17 beta -estradiol, 17 alpha -dihydroequilin, and estrone were detected in the sampled biosolids and manures at concentrations ranging from 6 to 462 ng/g of dry solids. 17 alpha -estradiol, 17 beta -estradiol, and estrone were also detected in SMC at concentrations ranging from 4 to 28 ng/g of dry solids. Desorption experiments were simulated in the laboratory using deionized water (milli-Q), and the aqueous phase was examined for the presence of estrogen hormones to determine their desorption potential. Very low desorption of 0.4% and 0.2% estrogen hormones was observed from municipal biosolids and SMC, respectively. An estimate of total estrogen contribution from different solid waste sources is reported. Animal manures (PM and CM) contribute to a significant load of estrogen hormones in the natural environment.
JF - Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
AU - Andaluri, Gangadhar
AU - Suri, Rominder PS
AU - Kumar, Kuldip
AD - NSF Water and Environmental Technology (WET) Center, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, 19122, USA, rominder.suri@temple.edu
Y1 - 2012/01//
PY - 2012
DA - Jan 2012
SP - 1197
EP - 1205
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 184
IS - 2
SN - 0167-6369, 0167-6369
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Environment Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts
KW - 17 beta -Estradiol
KW - Estrogens
KW - estrogens
KW - K:03410
KW - ENA 17:Waste Management-Solid
KW - P 4000:WASTE MANAGEMENT
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/926882350?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Monitoring+and+Assessment&rft.atitle=Occurrence+of+estrogen+hormones+in+biosolids%2C+animal+manure+and+mushroom+compost&rft.au=Andaluri%2C+Gangadhar%3BSuri%2C+Rominder+PS%3BKumar%2C+Kuldip&rft.aulast=Andaluri&rft.aufirst=Gangadhar&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=184&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1197&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Monitoring+and+Assessment&rft.issn=01676369&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10661-011-2032-8
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Estrogens; estrogens
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-011-2032-8
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Toxicological review and oral risk assessment of terephthalic acid (TPA) and its esters: A category approach.
AN - 912806475; 22050403
AB - Polyethylene terephthalate, a copolymer of terephthalic acid (TPA) or dimethyl terephthalate (DMT) with ethylene glycol, has food, beverage, and drinking water contact applications. Di-2-ethylhexyl terephthalate (DEHT) is a plasticizer in food and drinking water contact materials. Oral reference doses (RfDs) and total allowable concentrations (TACs) in drinking water were derived for TPA, DMT, and DEHT. Category RfD and TAC levels were also established for nine C(1)-C(8) terephthalate esters. The mode of action of TPA, and of DMT, which is metabolized to TPA, involves urinary acidosis, altered electrolyte elimination and hypercalciuria, urinary supersaturation with calcium terephthalate or calcium hydrogen terephthalate, and crystallization into bladder calculi. Weanling rats were more sensitive to calculus formation than dams. Calculi-induced irritation led to bladder hyperplasia and tumors in rats fed 1000 mg/kg-day TPA. The lack of effects at 142 mg/kg-day supports a threshold for urine saturation with calcium terephthalate, a key event for calculus formation. Chronic dietary DMT exposure in rodents caused kidney inflammation, but not calculi. Chronic dietary DEHT exposure caused general toxicity unrelated to calculi, although urine pH was reduced suggesting the TPA metabolite was biologically-active, but of insufficient concentration to induce calculi. Respective oral reference doses of 0.5, 0.5, and 0.2 mg/kg-day and total allowable drinking water concentrations of 3, 3, and 1 mg/L were derived for TPA, DMT, and DEHT. An oral RfD of 0.2 mg/kg-day for the terephthalate category chemicals corresponded to a drinking water TAC of 1 mg/L.
JF - Critical reviews in toxicology
AU - Ball, Gwendolyn L
AU - McLellan, Clifton J
AU - Bhat, Virunya S
AD - Toxicology Services, NSF International, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Y1 - 2012/01//
PY - 2012
DA - January 2012
SP - 28
EP - 67
VL - 42
IS - 1
KW - Environmental Pollutants
KW - 0
KW - Esters
KW - Phthalic Acids
KW - terephthalic acid
KW - 6S7NKZ40BQ
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Molecular Structure
KW - Administration, Oral
KW - Animals
KW - Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
KW - Humans
KW - Absorption
KW - Metabolic Clearance Rate
KW - Tissue Distribution
KW - Species Specificity
KW - Risk Assessment
KW - Phthalic Acids -- pharmacokinetics
KW - Phthalic Acids -- chemistry
KW - Environmental Pollutants -- toxicity
KW - Toxicity Tests
KW - Environmental Pollutants -- chemistry
KW - Phthalic Acids -- toxicity
KW - Environmental Pollutants -- pharmacokinetics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Critical+reviews+in+toxicology&rft.atitle=Toxicological+review+and+oral+risk+assessment+of+terephthalic+acid+%28TPA%29+and+its+esters%3A+A+category+approach.&rft.au=Ball%2C+Gwendolyn+L%3BMcLellan%2C+Clifton+J%3BBhat%2C+Virunya+S&rft.aulast=Ball&rft.aufirst=Gwendolyn&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=42&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=28&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Critical+reviews+in+toxicology&rft.issn=1547-6898&rft_id=info:doi/10.3109%2F10408444.2011.623149
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2012-05-14
N1 - Date created - 2011-12-26
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10408444.2011.623149
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A vision for, and progress towards EarthCube
AN - 1815669457; 2016-073180
JF - Geophysical Research Abstracts
AU - Jacobs, C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - Abstract EGU2012
EP - 1227
PB - Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU), Katlenburg-Lindau
VL - 14
SN - 1029-7006, 1029-7006
KW - geology
KW - EarthCube
KW - progress report
KW - college-level education
KW - geoscience
KW - report
KW - government agencies
KW - education
KW - research
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1815669457?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.atitle=A+vision+for%2C+and+progress+towards+EarthCube&rft.au=Jacobs%2C+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Jacobs&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=14&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.issn=10297006&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2012/EGU2012-1227.pdf http://www.copernicus.org/EGU/gra/gra.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - European Geosciences Union general assembly 2012
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; EarthCube; education; geology; geoscience; government agencies; NSF; progress report; report; research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geoscience workforce for 21st century challenges
AN - 1807509388; 2016-067125
AB - Difficult decisions lie ahead for our society--decisions that require geoscientists to have the ability to solve complex, multi-disciplinary problems. Academic institutions and other partners in the geoscience community are relied on to prepare a workforce that is able to meet energy and environmental challenges. Many are implementing changes in curricula to prepare teachers and researchers for the cross-disciplinary demands resulting from global change in Earth's climate. The impacts of these changes are assessed by social sciences--economics, business, finance, urban planning, and/or political science--and natural and physical sciences. Resulting needs for 21st century workers have been established by resource industries and by professional geosciences societies, among others. In this paper we present models for developing a diverse workforce that is competent in addressing complex, multi-disciplinary problems associated with global change.
JF - Transactions - Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Patino, Lina C
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - 623
EP - 628
PB - Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies, New Orleans, LA
VL - 62
SN - 0533-6562, 0533-6562
KW - careers
KW - graduate-level education
KW - college-level education
KW - employment
KW - geoscience
KW - education
KW - teacher education
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1807509388?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Transactions+-+Gulf+Coast+Association+of+Geological+Societies&rft.atitle=Geoscience+workforce+for+21st+century+challenges&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn+J%3BPatino%2C+Lina+C&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=62&rft.issue=&rft.spage=623&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Transactions+-+Gulf+Coast+Association+of+Geological+Societies&rft.issn=05336562&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 62nd annual convention of the Gulf Coast Association of Petroleum Geologists sectional meeting and the 59th annual meeting of the Gulf Coast Section of the Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 11
N1 - PubXState - LA
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-29
N1 - CODEN - TGCGA9
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - careers; college-level education; education; employment; geoscience; graduate-level education; teacher education
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Blood Falls; a novel management approach for a subglacial feature of outstanding scientific importance
AN - 1469622522; 2013-099689
JF - Geophysical Research Abstracts
AU - Carr, J R
AU - Penhale, P A
AU - Dahood, A
AU - Biletnikoff, N
AU - Harris, C M
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - Abstract EGU2012
EP - 1080
PB - Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU), Katlenburg-Lindau
VL - 14
SN - 1029-7006, 1029-7006
KW - subglacial environment
KW - ablation
KW - Taylor Glacier
KW - subglacial processes
KW - lakes
KW - ecosystems
KW - glacial features
KW - Taylor Valley
KW - Blood Falls
KW - environmental management
KW - Antarctica
KW - brines
KW - McMurdo dry valleys
KW - Victoria Land
KW - ecology
KW - discharge
KW - geochemistry
KW - subglacial lakes
KW - microorganisms
KW - 23:Geomorphology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1469622522?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.atitle=Blood+Falls%3B+a+novel+management+approach+for+a+subglacial+feature+of+outstanding+scientific+importance&rft.au=Carr%2C+J+R%3BPenhale%2C+P+A%3BDahood%2C+A%3BBiletnikoff%2C+N%3BHarris%2C+C+M%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Carr&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=14&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.issn=10297006&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2012/EGU2012-1080.pdf http://www.copernicus.org/EGU/gra/gra.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - European Geosciences Union general assembly 2012
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-12-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - ablation; Antarctica; Blood Falls; brines; discharge; ecology; ecosystems; environmental management; geochemistry; glacial features; lakes; McMurdo dry valleys; microorganisms; subglacial environment; subglacial lakes; subglacial processes; Taylor Glacier; Taylor Valley; Victoria Land
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanoscience to nanotechnology to manufacturing transition
AN - 1349429944; 17408773
AB - The primary focus of this review is on the transition of nanoscience to nanotechnology to manufacturing, specifically related to nanostructuring of materials for next-generation systems having superior performance. We start with the discussion of intrinsic advantages of nanoscale materials and systematic approach for transition into systems. As the feature (grain) size of solid-state materials decreases, the defect content reduces and below a critical size material can be defect-free. Since these critical sizes for most materials lie in 5-100 nm, there is a fundamental advantage and an unprecedented opportunity to realise the property of a perfect material. Along with this opportunity, there is a major challenge with respect to the large fraction of atoms at the interfaces, which must be engineered to realise the advantages of nanotechnology-based systems. We specifically address nanosystems based upon nanodots and nanolayered materials synthesised by thin film deposition techniques, where recurring themes include nanostructuring of materials to improve performance; thin film epitaxy across the misfit scale for orientation controls; control of defects, interfaces and strains; and integration of nanoscale devices with (100) silicon based microelectronics and nanoelectronics. The systems of interest are based upon strong novel structural materials, nanomagnetics for information storage, nanostructured or Nano Pocket LEDs, variety of smart structures based upon vanadium oxide and novel perovskites integrated with Si(100), and nanotechnology based solutions to enhance fuel efficiency and reduce environmental pollution.
JF - International Journal of Nanotechnology
AU - Narayan, Jagdish
AD - NSF Center for Advanced Materials and Smart Structures, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, EB I, Suite 3030, Centennial Campus, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7907, USA
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - 914
EP - 941
PB - Inderscience Publishers Ltd., PO Box 735 Olney Bucks MK46 5WB United Kingdom
VL - 9
IS - 10-11-12
SN - 1475-7435, 1475-7435
KW - Pollution Abstracts
KW - SCIENCE, ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY
KW - Materials and Manufacturing
KW - Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
KW - Storage
KW - Vanadium
KW - Particle size
KW - Silicon
KW - Reviews
KW - Fuels
KW - Nanotechnology
KW - P 9999:GENERAL POLLUTION
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1349429944?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+Journal+of+Nanotechnology&rft.atitle=Nanoscience+to+nanotechnology+to+manufacturing+transition&rft.au=Narayan%2C+Jagdish&rft.aulast=Narayan&rft.aufirst=Jagdish&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=10-11-12&rft.spage=914&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Journal+of+Nanotechnology&rft.issn=14757435&rft_id=info:doi/10.1504%2FIJNT.2012.049456
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-09
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Particle size; Vanadium; Storage; Silicon; Fuels; Reviews; Nanotechnology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/IJNT.2012.049456
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Diminishing Funding and Rising Expectations: Trends and Challenges for Public Research Universities. A Companion to Science and Engineering Indicators 2012. NSB-12-45
AN - 1238187139; ED536125
AB - Research universities, both public and private alike, are the leading producers of science and engineering (S&E) bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. They are contributors to economic development at the local, state, and national levels, performing over half of the Nation's total basic research in 2009, and they educate and train our Nation's next generation of scientists and engineers. The S&E talent and knowledge produced by academic research form crucial building blocks to innovation that improve the quality of life for our Nation's citizens, create jobs and in some cases even new industries, and are vital to maintaining U.S. global leadership in S&E. The focus of this companion report to "Science and Engineering Indicators 2012" ("Indicators") is public research universities, which are subject to greater financial and legislative pressure than private counterparts. The purpose of this companion is two-fold: (1) to highlight the importance of these universities to states and the Nation and describe the challenges posed by recent trends in student population growth and university revenue and costs, and (2) to preface the Board's intent to gather and synthesize trend data on higher education institutions, particularly public research universities, by presenting consistent and well-defined data in future editions of "Indicators" that will facilitate comparisons over time. The Board seeks to provide a factual basis for sound policy deliberations and support existing and future national initiatives. (Contains 8 figures, 1 table, and 132 endnotes.)
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - 34
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Financial Support
KW - Science Education
KW - Federal Aid
KW - Research Universities
KW - Educational Finance
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Public Colleges
KW - Research and Development
KW - Tuition
KW - State Aid
KW - Income
KW - Expenditures
KW - Student Financial Aid
KW - Fees
KW - Institutional Mission
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Innovation
KW - Enrollment
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1238187139?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Coordinating humanitarian information: the problem of organizational and technical trajectories
AN - 1074667852; 4340523
AB - Purpose : This paper seeks to examine two humanitarian information coordination bodies. The goals of both coordination bodies are the same, to find mechanisms for multiple organizations, engaged in humanitarian relief, to coordinate efforts around information technology and management. Despite the similarity in goals, each coordination body has taken a different path, one toward defining the problem and solution in a more technical sense and the other as defining the problem and solution as more organizational in nature. Design/methodology/approach : The paper develops case studies of two coordinating bodies using qualitative methodologies. Findings : The data suggest that coordination bodies which pursue problems requiring low levels of organizational change are more likely to have visible successes. Coordination bodies that pursue a more challenging agenda, one that aims for information management or management of information technology in ways that require organizational change, are likely to face greater challenges and experience more failures. Research limitations/implications : The paper only examines two coordination bodies at one point in time thus claims can not be made about all coordination bodies and all information coordination efforts. Originality/value : In a time where coordination bodies are seen as an answer to the problem of information sharing during disasters, it is essential to gain understanding concerning the success of these efforts.
JF - Information technology and people
AU - Tapia, Andrea H
AU - Maldonado, Edgar
AU - Tchouakeu, Louis-Marie Ngamassi
AU - Maitland, Carleen F
AD - Pennsylvania State University ; Regis University ; California University of Pennsylvania ; National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2012
PY - 2012
DA - 2012
SP - 240
EP - 258
VL - 25
IS - 3
SN - 0959-3845, 0959-3845
KW - Political Science
KW - Knowledge management
KW - Non-governmental organizations
KW - Cooperation
KW - Organizational change
KW - Methodology
KW - Information systems
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1074667852?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Information+technology+and+people&rft.atitle=Coordinating+humanitarian+information%3A+the+problem+of+organizational+and+technical+trajectories&rft.au=Tapia%2C+Andrea+H%3BMaldonado%2C+Edgar%3BTchouakeu%2C+Louis-Marie+Ngamassi%3BMaitland%2C+Carleen+F&rft.aulast=Tapia&rft.aufirst=Andrea&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=25&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=240&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Information+technology+and+people&rft.issn=09593845&rft_id=info:doi/10.1108%2F09593841211254312
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 2859; 8708 9030; 6537 6515; 7994; 7074 7073; 9016 6585 6590
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09593841211254312
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular cloning of Brevundimonas diminuta for efficacy assessment of reverse osmosis devices
AN - 1069200451; 17116441
AB - Brevundimonas diminuta is the test organism specified in the United States Environmental Protection Agency's (USEPA) reverse osmosis (RO) treatment device verification protocol. As non-selective growth medium is employed, enumeration of B. diminuta may be impaired due to interference by indigenous heterotrophic bacteria. Thus the microbial removal capability of the filtration system may be incorrectly assessed. As these treatment devices are used in emergency situations, the health of the public could be compromised. The objective of this study was to develop selective approaches for enumerating viable B. diminuta in test water. Two molecular approaches were investigated: expression of a kanamycin resistance gene and expression of a fluorescent protein gene. The USEPA protocol specifies a 0.3 is a subset of m cell size, so the expression of the selective markers were assessed following growth on media designed to induce this small cell diameter. The kanR strain was demonstrated to be equivalent to the wild type in cell dimension and survival following exposure to the test water. The kanR strain showed equivalent performance to the wild type in the RO protocol indicating that it is a viable alternative surrogate. By utilizing this strain, a more accurate validation of the RO system can be achieved.
JF - Journal of Water and Health
AU - Donofrio, Robert
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Bestervelt, Lori
AU - Bagley, Susan
AD - Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, NSF International, 789 Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105, USA, donofrio@nsf.org
Y1 - 2012///0,
PY - 2012
DA - 0, 2012
SP - 278
EP - 287
PB - IWA Publishing, Alliance House London SW1H 0QS United Kingdom
VL - 10
IS - 2
SN - 1477-8920, 1477-8920
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Heterotrophic Bacteria
KW - Reverse osmosis
KW - Survival
KW - Strain
KW - Public health
KW - Growth
KW - Assessments
KW - Growth Media
KW - Testing Procedures
KW - Growth rate
KW - Brevundimonas diminuta
KW - Test organisms
KW - Cloning
KW - Environmental Protection
KW - Reverse Osmosis
KW - Environmental protection
KW - EPA
KW - USA
KW - Filtration
KW - Proteins
KW - Heterotrophic bacteria
KW - Emergencies
KW - SW 5010:Network design
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1069200451?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Water+and+Health&rft.atitle=Molecular+cloning+of+Brevundimonas+diminuta+for+efficacy+assessment+of+reverse+osmosis+devices&rft.au=Donofrio%2C+Robert%3BSaha%2C+Ratul%3BBestervelt%2C+Lori%3BBagley%2C+Susan&rft.aulast=Donofrio&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=278&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Water+and+Health&rft.issn=14778920&rft_id=info:doi/10.2166%2Fwh.2012.146
L2 - http://www.iwaponline.com/jwh/010/jwh0100278.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-26
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Growth rate; Growth; Filtration; Reverse osmosis; Test organisms; Emergencies; Environmental protection; Public health; EPA; Cloning; Heterotrophic bacteria; Proteins; Survival; Testing Procedures; Heterotrophic Bacteria; Assessments; Environmental Protection; Growth Media; Reverse Osmosis; Strain; Brevundimonas diminuta; USA
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wh.2012.146
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Relationships between sand and water quality at recreational beaches
AN - 911159494; 16077666
AB - Enterococci are used to assess the risk of negative human health impacts from recreational waters. Studies have shown sustained populations of enterococci within sediments of beaches but comprehensive surveys of multiple tidal zones on beaches in a regional area and their relationship to beach management decisions are limited. We sampled three tidal zones on eight South Florida beaches in Miami-Dade and Broward counties and found that enterococci were ubiquitous within South Florida beach sands although their levels varied greatly both among the beaches and between the supratidal, intertidal and subtidal zones. The supratidal sands consistently had significantly higher (p < 0.003) levels of enterococci (average 40 CFU/g dry sand) than the other two zones. Levels of enterococci within the subtidal sand correlated with the average level of enterococci in the water (CFU/100mL) for the season during which samples were collected (rs = 0.73). The average sand enterococci content over all the zones on each beach correlated with the average water enterococci levels of the year prior to sand samplings (rs = 0.64) as well as the average water enterococci levels for the month after sand samplings (rs = 0.54). Results indicate a connection between levels of enterococci in beach water and sands throughout South Florida's beaches and suggest that the sands are one of the predominant reservoirs of enterococci impacting beach water quality. As a result, beaches with lower levels of enterococci in the sand had fewer exceedences relative to beaches with higher levels of sand enterococci. More research should focus on evaluating beach sand quality as a means to predict and regulate marine recreational water quality.
JF - Water Research
AU - Phillips, Matthew C
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Piggot, Alan M
AU - Klaus, James S
AU - Zhang, Yifan
AD - University of Miami, NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Miami, FL 33149, USA, hmsolo@miami.edu
Y1 - 2011/12/15/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Dec 15
SP - 6763
EP - 6769
PB - Elsevier B.V., The Boulevard Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB United Kingdom
VL - 45
IS - 20
SN - 0043-1354, 0043-1354
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Environment Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - water quality
KW - Water reservoirs
KW - Water quality
KW - Public health
KW - Sand
KW - Recreational waters
KW - Sampling
KW - Reservoirs
KW - ASW, USA, Florida
KW - Beaches
KW - Water Quality
KW - Surveys
KW - Sediments
KW - Coastal zone management
KW - Risk
KW - Recreation areas
KW - Water wells
KW - ASW, USA, Florida, Broward Cty.
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - ENA 13:Population Planning & Control
KW - SW 3010:Identification of pollutants
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/911159494?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Research&rft.atitle=Relationships+between+sand+and+water+quality+at+recreational+beaches&rft.au=Phillips%2C+Matthew+C%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BPiggot%2C+Alan+M%3BKlaus%2C+James+S%3BZhang%2C+Yifan&rft.aulast=Phillips&rft.aufirst=Matthew&rft.date=2011-12-15&rft.volume=45&rft.issue=20&rft.spage=6763&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Research&rft.issn=00431354&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.watres.2011.10.028
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Beaches; Water reservoirs; Recreational waters; Water quality; Public health; Coastal zone management; water quality; Recreation areas; Sand; Water wells; Reservoirs; Sediments; Risk; Water Quality; Surveys; Sampling; ASW, USA, Florida; ASW, USA, Florida, Broward Cty.
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2011.10.028
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Targeted Delivery of MicroRNA-29b by Nanoparticles Provides Antileukemic Activity and Increases Sensitivity to the Hypomethylating Agent Decitabine (DAC) in Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)
T2 - 53rd Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH 2011)
AN - 1313041467; 6123011
JF - 53rd Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH 2011)
AU - Huang, Xiaomeng
AU - Schwind, Sebastian
Y1 - 2011/12/10/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Dec 10
KW - Acute myeloid leukemia
KW - Sensitivity
KW - miRNA
KW - nanoparticles
KW - 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1313041467?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=53rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+of+Hematology+%28ASH+2011%29&rft.atitle=Targeted+Delivery+of+MicroRNA-29b+by+Nanoparticles+Provides+Antileukemic+Activity+and+Increases+Sensitivity+to+the+Hypomethylating+Agent+Decitabine+%28DAC%29+in+Acute+Myeloid+Leukemia+%28AML%29&rft.au=Huang%2C+Xiaomeng%3BSchwind%2C+Sebastian&rft.aulast=Huang&rft.aufirst=Xiaomeng&rft.date=2011-12-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=53rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+of+Hematology+%28ASH+2011%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ash.confex.com/ash/2011/webprogram/meeting.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An analysis of NSF geosciences research experience for undergraduate site programs from 2009 through 2011
AN - 1765874460; 2016-010920
AB - The Research Experience for Undergraduate (REU) Program at the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) provides U.S. undergraduate students from any college or university the opportunity to conduct research at a different institution and gain a better understanding of research career pathways. The Geosciences REU Sites foster research opportunities in areas closely aligned with geoscience programs, particularly those related to earth, atmospheric and ocean sciences. The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the Geosciences REU Site programs run in 2009 through 2011. A survey requesting information on recruitment methods, student demographics, enrichment activities, and fields of research was sent to the Principal Investigators of each of the active REU Sites. Over 70% of the surveys were returned with the requested information from about 50 to 60 sites each year. The internet is the most widely used mechanism to recruit participants, with personal communication as the second most important recruiting tool. The admissions rate for REU Sites in Geosciences varies from less than 10% to 50%, with the majority of participants being rising seniors and juniors. Many of the participants come from non-PhD granting institutions. Among the participants, gender distribution varies by discipline, with ocean sciences having a large majority of women and earth sciences having a majority of men. Regarding ethnic diversity, the REU Sites reflect the difficulty of attracting diverse students into Geosciences as a discipline; a large majority of participants are Caucasian and Asian students. Furthermore, participants from minority-serving institutions and community colleges constitute a small percentage of those taking part in these research experiences. The enrichment activities are very similar across the REU Sites, and mimic activities common to the scientific community, including intellectual exchange of ideas (lab meetings, seminars, and professional meetings), networking and social activities. The results from this survey will be used to examine strengths in the REU Sites in the Geosciences, opportunities that may be under utilized, and community needs to enhance this NSF wide program.
JF - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
AU - Rom, E L
AU - Patino, L C
AU - Weiler, S
AU - Sanchez, S C
AU - Colon, Y
AU - Antell, Lalyn
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2011/12//
PY - 2011
DA - December 2011
SP - Abstract OS53C
EP - 1794
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 2011
KW - programs
KW - college-level education
KW - geoscience
KW - government agencies
KW - education
KW - research
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1765874460?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.atitle=An+analysis+of+NSF+geosciences+research+experience+for+undergraduate+site+programs+from+2009+through+2011&rft.au=Rom%2C+E+L%3BPatino%2C+L+C%3BWeiler%2C+S%3BSanchez%2C+S+C%3BColon%2C+Y%3BAntell%2C+Lalyn%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Rom&rft.aufirst=E&rft.date=2011-12-01&rft.volume=2011&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Geophysical+Union+Fall+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2011 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2016-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-02-18
N1 - CODEN - #07548
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; education; geoscience; government agencies; NSF; programs; research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Pore water transport of enterococci out of beach sediments
AN - 911154153; 15937003
AB - Enterococci are used to evaluate the safety of beach waters and studies have identified beach sands as a source of these bacteria. In order to study and quantify the release of microbes from beach sediments, flow column systems were built to evaluate flow of pore water out of beach sediments. Results show a peak in enterococci (average of 10% of the total microbes in core) released from the sand core within one pore water volume followed by a marked decline to below detection. These results indicate that few enterococci are easily removed and that factors other than simple pore water flow control the release of the majority of enterococci within beach sediments. A significantly larger quantity and release of enterococci were observed in cores collected after a significant rain event suggesting the influx of fresh water can alter the release pattern as compared to cores with no antecedent rainfall.
JF - Marine Pollution Bulletin
AU - Phillips, Matthew C
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Reniers, AJHM
AU - Wang, John D
AU - Kiger, Russell T
AU - Abdel-Mottaleb, Noha
AD - University of Miami, NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Miami, FL 33149, USA, hmsolo@miami.edu
Y1 - 2011/11//
PY - 2011
DA - Nov 2011
SP - 2293
EP - 2298
PB - Elsevier B.V., P.O. Box 800 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1DX United Kingdom
VL - 62
IS - 11
SN - 0025-326X, 0025-326X
KW - ASFA Marine Biotechnology Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Environment Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts
KW - Water Pollution
KW - Pore water
KW - Sediment gravity flows
KW - Rainfall
KW - Cores
KW - Sand
KW - Sediment Transport
KW - Marine
KW - Beaches
KW - Freshwater environments
KW - Interstitial Water
KW - Sediments
KW - Marine pollution
KW - Rain
KW - Flow Control
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 3040:Wastewater treatment processes
KW - Q4 27750:Environmental
KW - O 4080:Pollution - Control and Prevention
KW - P 1000:MARINE POLLUTION
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - J 02450:Ecology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/911154153?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+Pollution+Bulletin&rft.atitle=Pore+water+transport+of+enterococci+out+of+beach+sediments&rft.au=Phillips%2C+Matthew+C%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BReniers%2C+AJHM%3BWang%2C+John+D%3BKiger%2C+Russell+T%3BAbdel-Mottaleb%2C+Noha&rft.aulast=Phillips&rft.aufirst=Matthew&rft.date=2011-11-01&rft.volume=62&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=2293&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+Pollution+Bulletin&rft.issn=0025326X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.marpolbul.2011.08.049
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pore water; Beaches; Sediment gravity flows; Marine pollution; Sediments; Freshwater environments; Sand; Rainfall; Rain; Sediment Transport; Water Pollution; Cores; Interstitial Water; Flow Control; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2011.08.049
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chromium as reactant for solar thermochemical synthesis of ammonia from steam, nitrogen, and biomass at atmospheric pressure
AN - 902378273; 15910052
AB - Ammonia for fertilization plays a crucial role in agriculture. It is an important commodity chemical, and it can serve as a fuel for combustion engines or as a carrier molecule for hydrogen. Global NH sub(3) production of over 100 million metric tons per year relies almost entirely on natural gas for energy and hydrogen. About 2% of the world's energy budget is spent to produce NH sub(3). Experiments towards a solar thermochemical cycle for NH sub(3) synthesis at near atmospheric pressure using a transition metal reactant and a Fresnel-lens solar furnace are reported here: reacting Cr metal powder with gaseous N sub(2) to Cr nitride, hydrolyzing Cr nitride powder with steam to NH sub(3) and Cr sub(2)O sub(3), and finally reducing Cr sub(2)O sub(3) powder back to Cr with mixtures of H sub(2), CO, and N sub(2). At about 1000 degree C it was found that Cr readily fixes N sub(2) from the gas phase as Cr nitride (4.13 x 10 super(-2) mol N sub(2)/mol Cr/min, 85 +/- 4 mol% of hexagonal Cr sub(2)N after 5.6 min). Cr sub(2)N converts over time to a cubic CrN phase. Corrosion of Cr nitride with steam at 1000 degree C and about 1 bar forms Cr sub(2)O sub(3) and CrO while liberating 53 +/- 11 mol% of the nitrogen contained in the solid Cr nitride in 60 min. Of the N liberated, 0.28 +/- 0.07 mol% forms the desired NH sub(3). This results in a yield of 0.15 +/- 0.02 mol% NH sub(3) relative to the N in the nitride (1.07 x 10 super(-4) mol NH sub(3)/mol Cr/min). Addition of CaO/Ca(OH) sub(2) powder or quartz wool to provide more reactive sites and promote protonation of N increased the yield of NH sub(3) only slightly (0.24 +/- 0.01 or 0.39 +/- 0.03 mol% NH sub(3) relative to the N in the nitride respectively). The thermochemical cycle is closed by heating Cr sub(2)O sub(3) to 1200-1600 degree C with a reduction yield near the surface of the particles of approximately 82.85 mol% (40 min at 1600 degree C) in a gas stream of H sub(2) and CO (2.7 x 10 super(-3) mol Cr/mol Cr sub(2)O sub(3)/min). An unreacted core model was applied to estimate the activation energy of Cr sub(2)O sub(3) reduction with 128 +/- 4 kJ/mol. Cr appears promising to promote nitridation and oxide reduction as a basis for a future custom-designed reactant with high specific surface area enabling sustainable and more scalable NH sub(3) production from N sub(2) and H sub(2)O at ambient pressure without natural gas consumption.
JF - Solar Energy
AU - Michalsky, Ronald
AU - Pfromm, Peter H
AD - NSF IGERT Associate in Biorefining, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA, pfromm@ksu.edu
Y1 - 2011/11//
PY - 2011
DA - Nov 2011
SP - 2642
EP - 2654
PB - Elsevier B.V., P.O. Box 800 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1DX United Kingdom
VL - 85
IS - 11
SN - 0038-092X, 0038-092X
KW - Environment Abstracts; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts
KW - Ammonia
KW - Solar thermochemical cycle
KW - Chromium nitride
KW - Nitridation
KW - Hydrolysis
KW - Corrosion
KW - Agriculture
KW - Metals
KW - Ammonia content of atmosphere
KW - Solar cycle
KW - Hydrogen
KW - Natural gas
KW - Energy budget
KW - Combustion
KW - Furnaces
KW - atmospheric pressure
KW - Solar energy
KW - Nitrogen
KW - M2 551.521.2/.3:Absorption Emissions Scattering (551.521.2/.3)
KW - ENA 01:Air Pollution
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/902378273?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Solar+Energy&rft.atitle=Chromium+as+reactant+for+solar+thermochemical+synthesis+of+ammonia+from+steam%2C+nitrogen%2C+and+biomass+at+atmospheric+pressure&rft.au=Michalsky%2C+Ronald%3BPfromm%2C+Peter+H&rft.aulast=Michalsky&rft.aufirst=Ronald&rft.date=2011-11-01&rft.volume=85&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=2642&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Solar+Energy&rft.issn=0038092X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.solener.2011.08.005
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Agriculture; Corrosion; Ammonia content of atmosphere; Solar cycle; Hydrogen; Solar energy; Energy budget; Metals; Furnaces; Ammonia; atmospheric pressure; Natural gas; Combustion; Nitrogen
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.solener.2011.08.005
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A European voice in the Arab world: France, the superpowers and the Middle East, 1970-74
AN - 1081859196; 201224748
AB - This article investigates France's policy towards the Arab world and the Middle East at a critical juncture: the first oil crisis. Based on largely untapped archival records, it demonstrates that concerns over declining power spurred Georges Pompidou's government to Europeanise this policy, taking advantage of the anxieties unleashed by the Arab use of oil as a political weapon. It also sheds light on the intricate links between the transatlantic relationship, relations between the superpowers, the Middle East conflict and Franco-/Euro-Arab ties. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Cold War History
AU - Gfeller, Aurelie Elisa
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation/Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, European University Institute, Florence
Y1 - 2011/11//
PY - 2011
DA - November 2011
SP - 659
EP - 676
PB - Taylor & Francis, Abingdon UK
VL - 11
IS - 4
SN - 1468-2745, 1468-2745
KW - France
KW - Weapons
KW - Anxiety
KW - Petroleum
KW - Conflict
KW - Political Power
KW - Arab Countries
KW - Superpowers
KW - Middle East
KW - article
KW - 9001: history and theory; political history/historiography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1081859196?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Cold+War+History&rft.atitle=A+European+voice+in+the+Arab+world%3A+France%2C+the+superpowers+and+the+Middle+East%2C+1970-74&rft.au=Gfeller%2C+Aurelie+Elisa&rft.aulast=Gfeller&rft.aufirst=Aurelie&rft.date=2011-11-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=659&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Cold+War+History&rft.issn=14682745&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F14682745.2010.504207
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2012-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Middle East; Petroleum; France; Superpowers; Arab Countries; Conflict; Weapons; Anxiety; Political Power
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14682745.2010.504207
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Joint Science Education Project (JSEP); a mechanism to engage scientists and students to design and conduct outreach activities
AN - 1356359216; 2013-043653
AB - The Joint Science Education Project (JSEP) developed out of International Polar Year (IPY) and has become an international collaborative polar science education effort between Greenland, Denmark, and the U.S. to inspire the next generation of STEM innovators in polar science. Students and teachers from the three participating countries attended lectures, visited researcher field-sites (primarily in the Kangerlussuaq, Greenland area, but also Summit Station and NEEM on the Greenland ice sheet), and conducted independent field research projects. In addition to the program participants, 34 scientists, graduate student researchers, science technicians, and other professionals from over 11 universities/research facilities/national agencies actively participated in JSEP by conducting field-site outreach events in Greenland with the JSEP high school student and teacher participants. After the on-site events, student and teacher participants created and implemented written, oral, and online outreach events in their schools and communities. A variety of best practices and lessons learned from JSEP will be discussed, which can be scaled up or applied to other individual or program geoscience outreach efforts.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Lukes, Laura A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2011/10//
PY - 2011
DA - October 2011
SP - 482
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 43
IS - 5
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - programs
KW - International Polar Year 2007-08
KW - Joint Science Education Project
KW - outreach
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1356359216?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Joint+Science+Education+Project+%28JSEP%29%3B+a+mechanism+to+engage+scientists+and+students+to+design+and+conduct+outreach+activities&rft.au=Lukes%2C+Laura+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Lukes&rft.aufirst=Laura&rft.date=2011-10-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=482&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2011 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-17
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - geology; International Polar Year 2007-08; Joint Science Education Project; outreach; programs
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Workforce development in undergraduate STEM education programs
AN - 1328502515; 2013-032816
AB - NSF's agency-wide commitment to enhancing the quality and excellence of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and research through broadening participation by underrepresented groups and institutions is engaged by numerous programs and activities. Guided by the Strategic Plan, NSF established a performance area focused on broadening participation, as well as developing a report "A Framework for Action" (www.nsf.gov/od/broadeningparticipation/framework_report.jsp) that outlines this approach. The HRD Division's programs aim to increase the participation and advancement of historically underrepresented populations (including persons with disabilities) and minority-serving institutions. The goal is to ensure that the technical workforce and scientists and engineers have the skills and opportunities needed to flourish in a global knowledge economy (NSF 11-047). From the recently completed program evaluation of an HRD program, we have learned more about grantee strategies that seem to support student retention to degree, student transition to graduate STEM programs, and/or student engagement in STEM workforce. The grants evaluated were five-year awards that are intended to provide support for "comprehensive institutional efforts to increase the numbers of students and the quality of their preparation by strengthening STEM education and research" (NSF 11-519). Institutional strategies contributing to success tended to focus on building institutional infrastructure, such as curricular and instructional reforms, faculty professional development, academic support services for students, collaborative relationships with other institutions, and laboratory and classroom improvements. The core of these strategies included curricular and instructional reforms, faculty professional development, and student support through summer "bridge" programs. Students matriculating at institutions using all of the core strategies were more likely to stay in the education pipeline, and to earn a graduate degree. Graduates of this program outperformed national comparison samples in achieving the baccalaureate degree in STEM and in participating in the STEM workforce with a graduate degree.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2011/10//
PY - 2011
DA - October 2011
SP - 350
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 43
IS - 5
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - programs
KW - college-level education
KW - curricula
KW - education
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1328502515?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Workforce+development+in+undergraduate+STEM+education+programs&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2011-10-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=350&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2011 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2013-04-19
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; curricula; education; programs
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Reality check; perspective of a community college adjunct faculty member in geology
AN - 1011394027; 2012-045287
AB - Increasingly, universities and colleges are relying on teaching assistants and adjunct faculty to teach their introductory geoscience courses. For example, adjunct faculty account for 74.9% of the faculty employed at Maricopa Community Colleges in Arizona (super 1) . Adjunct faculty face challenges unique to their nontenurable position. Challenges such as hiring process/qualifications, access to teaching materials, scheduling, department inclusion, student contact hours, faculty collaboration, and professional development will be addressed. Lessons learned, best practices, policy recommendations, and strategies for surviving these challenges in both in-person and online venues will also be presented. (super 1) Maricopa community colleges demographics. (2011). Retrieved from http://www.maricopa.edu/about/?demographics
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Lukes, Laura A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2011/10//
PY - 2011
DA - October 2011
SP - 192
EP - 193
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 43
IS - 5
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - geology
KW - Maricopa County Arizona
KW - college-level education
KW - employment
KW - geoscience
KW - Arizona
KW - curricula
KW - education
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1011394027?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Reality+check%3B+perspective+of+a+community+college+adjunct+faculty+member+in+geology&rft.au=Lukes%2C+Laura+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Lukes&rft.aufirst=Laura&rft.date=2011-10-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=192&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2011AM/finalprogram/abstract_197337.htm
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2011 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Arizona; college-level education; curricula; education; employment; geology; geoscience; Maricopa County Arizona; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - New initiatives in data-enabled science at the National Science Foundation
AN - 1011392092; 2012-045249
AB - Research data--its access, integrity, curation, exponential growth, and preservation--are important priorities for the National Science Foundation (NSF) and throughout the government. NSF is responding to a need to invest in research into geoinformatics to enable a new generation of transformative science, and to clarify its data management policy through changes in the guidelines for proposal submission. Data-enabled science is one of several themes embodied in Cyberinfrastructure for the 21 (super st) century (CIF21), an important new research thrust for NSF. Additional themes of CIF21 are new computational infrastructure, community research networks, and access and connections to cyberinfrastructure facilities. In an effort to make significant advances within the context of CIF21, the Office of Cyberinfrastructure and the Geosciences Directorate have launched Earth Cube, a new program to transform the conduct of research in geosciences by supporting community created cyberinfrastructure that integrates knowledge management across the geosciences. At the community level, NSF will continue to support development and implementation of databases, database interoperability, data integration, visualization tools, software development, and data-intensive and new computing methodologies that support the enhancement of geosciences research and education activities. The NSF expects funded investigators to share their research results with other investigators, including data resulting from the funded activities. To further clarify this long-standing policy, NSF modified its instructions to proposers. In October 2010, a new NSF data policy became effective and electronic enforcement began in January 2011. All proposals must describe plans for data management and sharing of the products of research or assert the absence of a need for such plans. The required plan should be appropriate to the specific technical, disciplinary, and scientific contexts of the project as determined by peer review panels and cognizant NSF programs. Modifications are underway to the format of NSF annual final reports to reflect data management and sharing activities under the award. Context for, and details of, the new requirements will be discussed.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Detrick, Robert
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2011/10//
PY - 2011
DA - October 2011
SP - 185
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 43
IS - 5
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - geology
KW - geoscience
KW - government agencies
KW - data processing
KW - information systems
KW - research
KW - information management
KW - NSF
KW - data management
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=New+initiatives+in+data-enabled+science+at+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Detrick%2C+Robert%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Detrick&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2011-10-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=185&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2011AM/finalprogram/abstract_195567.htm
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2011 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - data management; data processing; geology; geoscience; government agencies; information management; information systems; NSF; research; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluation of molecular techniques for identification and enumeration of Raoultella terrigena ATCC 33257 in water purifier efficacy testing
AN - 899157343; 15605444
AB - Raoultella terrigena ATCC 33257, a representative of the coliform group, is commonly used as a challenge organism in water purifier efficacy testing. In addition to being time consuming, traditional culturing techniques and metabolic identification systems (including automated systems) also fail to accurately differentiate this organism from its closely related neighbors belonging to the Enterobacteriaceae group. Molecular-based techniques, such as real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus (ERIC)-PCR fingerprinting, are preferred methods of detection because of their accuracy, reproducibility, specificity, and sensitivity, along with shorter turnaround time. ERIC-PCR performed with the 1R primer set demonstrated stable unique banding patterns (~800, ~300 bp) for R. terrigena ATCC 33257 different from patterns observed for R. planticola and R. ornithinolytica. The primer pair developed from gyraseA (gyrA) sequence of R. terrigena for the SYBR Green qPCR assay using the AlleleID super( registered ) 7.0 primer probe design software was highly specific and sensitive for the target organism. The sensitivity of the assay was 10 super(1) colony forming units (CFU)/ml for whole cells and 4.7 fg with genomic DNA. The primer pair was successful in determining the concentration (5.5 +/- 0.3 10 super(6) CFU/ml) of R. terrigena from water samples spiked with equal concentration of Escherichia coli and R. terrigena. Based on these results from the ERIC-PCR and the SYBR Green qPCR assay, these molecular techniques can be efficiently used for rapid identification and quantification of R. terrigena during water purifier testing.
JF - Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Bechanko, Robin
AU - Bestervelt, Lorelle L
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AD - NSF International, Microbiology Division, 789 Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI, 48105, USA, rsaha@nsf.org
Y1 - 2011/09//
PY - 2011
DA - Sep 2011
SP - 1337
EP - 1344
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 38
IS - 9
SN - 1367-5435, 1367-5435
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology
KW - Coliforms
KW - DNA probes
KW - Computer programs
KW - Fingerprinting
KW - Colonies
KW - software
KW - Colony-forming cells
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Primers
KW - genomics
KW - Banding
KW - Raoultella terrigena
KW - Enterobacteriaceae
KW - W 30960:Bioinformatics & Computer Applications
KW - A 01300:Methods
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Industrial+Microbiology+%26+Biotechnology&rft.atitle=Evaluation+of+molecular+techniques+for+identification+and+enumeration+of+Raoultella+terrigena+ATCC+33257+in+water+purifier+efficacy+testing&rft.au=Saha%2C+Ratul%3BBechanko%2C+Robin%3BBestervelt%2C+Lorelle+L%3BDonofrio%2C+Robert+S&rft.aulast=Saha&rft.aufirst=Ratul&rft.date=2011-09-01&rft.volume=38&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=1337&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Industrial+Microbiology+%26+Biotechnology&rft.issn=13675435&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10295-010-0917-0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-12-04
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer programs; Coliforms; software; Colonies; Fingerprinting; DNA probes; Colony-forming cells; Polymerase chain reaction; Primers; Banding; genomics; Escherichia coli; Raoultella terrigena; Enterobacteriaceae
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10295-010-0917-0
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Lost jobs and health insurance: an analysis of the impact of employment volatility on firm-provided health insurance
AN - 884120599; 4222775
AB - It is an established fact that there are high levels of employment volatility in the US. Despite the importance of employer-provided benefits in the US health insurance system the impact of prior job instability on one's future ability to obtain insurance coverage is not well understood. This article finds a negative relationship between the volatility of a worker's employment and her likelihood of receiving firm-provided health insurance. Previous employment volatility reduces each of the four factors necessary to receive such insurance: a worker's subsequent chances of getting a job, her chances of getting a job in a firm that offers coverage, her chances of staying with the firm long enough to become eligible for coverage and her ability to take up insurance if offered. The most important impact is on the last: her ability to take up insurance if offered. Lack of employment is not the only, and not even the largest, barrier to individual coverage under this system. This finding has important policy implications, particularly given the recent tendency of employers to shift the cost of insurance premiums onto their employees. Reprinted by permission of Routledge, Taylor and Francis Ltd.
JF - Applied economics
AU - Andersson, Fredrik
AU - Bolvig, Iben
AU - Freedman, Matthew
AU - Lane, Julia
AD - US Department of Treasury ; Aarhus University ; Cornell University ; National Science Foundation, Washington DC
Y1 - 2011/09//
PY - 2011
DA - Sep 2011
SP - 3051
EP - 3073
VL - 43
IS - 23
SN - 0003-6846, 0003-6846
KW - Economics
KW - Probability
KW - Unemployment
KW - Social security
KW - Cost analysis
KW - Health insurance
KW - Job security
KW - U.S.A.
KW - Volatility
KW - Employment opportunities
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884120599?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+economics&rft.atitle=Lost+jobs+and+health+insurance%3A+an+analysis+of+the+impact+of+employment+volatility+on+firm-provided+health+insurance&rft.au=Andersson%2C+Fredrik%3BBolvig%2C+Iben%3BFreedman%2C+Matthew%3BLane%2C+Julia&rft.aulast=Andersson&rft.aufirst=Fredrik&rft.date=2011-09-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=23&rft.spage=3051&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+economics&rft.issn=00036846&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F00036840903427232
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 5784 6592 4957 11923 11949 13521; 13092; 13349 13078; 6981; 10214 12224 971; 4221 4214; 11923 11949 13521; 2920 971 2934 3883; 433 293 14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00036840903427232
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Native and exotic plants of fragments of sagebrush steppe produced by geomorphic processes versus land use
AN - 883041243; 15403600
AB - Habitat fragmentation and invasion by exotic species are regarded as major threats to the biodiversity of many ecosystems. We surveyed the plant communities of two types of remnant sagebrush-steppe fragments from nearby areas on the Snake River Plain of southeastern Idaho, USA. One type resulted from land use (conversion to dryland agriculture; hereafter AG Islands) and the other from geomorphic processes (Holocene volcanism; hereafter kipukas). We assessed two predictions for the variation in native plant species richness of these fragments, using structural equation models (SEM). First, we predicted that the species richness of native plants would follow the MacArthur-Wilson (M-W) hypothesis of island biogeography, as often is expected for the communities of habitat fragments. Second, we predicted a negative relationship between native and exotic plants, as would be expected if exotic plants are decreasing the diversity of native plants. Finally, we assessed whether exotic species were more strongly associated with the fragments embedded in the agricultural landscape, as would be expected if agriculture had facilitated the introduction and naturalization of non-native species, and whether the communities of the two types of fragments were distinct. Species richness of native plants was not strongly correlated with M-W characteristics for either the AG Islands or the **kipukas. The AG Islands had more species and higher cover of exotics than the kipukas, and exotic plants were good predictors of native plant species richness. Our results support the hypothesis that proximity to agriculture can increase the diversity and abundance of exotic plants in native habitat. In combination with other information, the results also suggest that agriculture and exotic species have caused loss of native diversity and reorganization of the sagebrush-steppe plant community.
JF - Plant Ecology
AU - Huntly, Nancy
AU - Bangert, Randy
AU - Hanser, Steven E
AD - Department of Biological Sciences, Center for Ecological Research and Education, Idaho State University, Pocatello, ID, 83209-8007, USA, nhuntly@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2011/09//
PY - 2011
DA - Sep 2011
SP - 1549
EP - 1561
PB - Springer Science+Business Media, Van Godewijckstraat 30 Dordrecht 3311 GX Netherlands
VL - 212
IS - 9
SN - 1385-0237, 1385-0237
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Abundance
KW - Agriculture
KW - Biodiversity
KW - Habitat
KW - Habitat fragmentation
KW - Introduced species
KW - Island biogeography
KW - Islands
KW - Land use
KW - Landscape
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Plant communities
KW - Rivers
KW - Species richness
KW - Steppes
KW - agriculture
KW - invasions
KW - plains
KW - plant communities
KW - species richness
KW - steppes
KW - USA, Southeast
KW - USA, Idaho, Sawtooth Valley, Snake R.
KW - USA, Idaho
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/883041243?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Plant+Ecology&rft.atitle=Native+and+exotic+plants+of+fragments+of+sagebrush+steppe+produced+by+geomorphic+processes+versus+land+use&rft.au=Huntly%2C+Nancy%3BBangert%2C+Randy%3BHanser%2C+Steven+E&rft.aulast=Huntly&rft.aufirst=Nancy&rft.date=2011-09-01&rft.volume=212&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=1549&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Plant+Ecology&rft.issn=13850237&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11258-011-9930-2
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-24
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Agriculture; Rivers; Mathematical models; Abundance; Landscape; Biodiversity; Habitat; Island biogeography; Habitat fragmentation; Land use; Steppes; Islands; Plant communities; Introduced species; Species richness; steppes; species richness; plant communities; agriculture; invasions; plains; USA, Idaho, Sawtooth Valley, Snake R.; USA, Idaho; USA, Southeast
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11258-011-9930-2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Transformation of a close-packed Au nanoparticle/polymer monolayer into a large area array of oriented Au nanowires via E-beam promoted uniaxial deformation and room temperature sintering.
AN - 879679746; 21711045
AB - Transformation of 2D Au nanoparticle (NP) arrays into large scale, ordered, and oriented nanorod/nanowire arrays supported on a transferrable polymer film has been accomplished. E-beam irradiation followed by room temperature aging of a suspended Au NP/polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) polymer close packed monolayer results in one-dimensional nanoparticle aggregation, reorientation, and sintering into a high density array of oriented Au nanowires with coherent single-crystal-like interfaces. Molecular dynamics simulations of alkane-thiol capped Au NPs, interacting through the Vincent potential and undergoing 2D Poisson compression, account semiquantitatively for the qualitative features of the transformation. This fabrication approach should be extendable to directing 1D aggregation of highly anisotropic nanostructures in arbitrary NP systems.
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
AU - Xiong, Shisheng
AU - Molecke, Ryan
AU - Bosch, Matthew
AU - Schunk, P Randall
AU - Brinker, C Jeffrey
AD - NSF/UNM Center for Micro-Engineered Materials, Department of Chemical and Nuclear Engineering, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131, USA.
Y1 - 2011/08/03/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Aug 03
SP - 11410
EP - 11413
VL - 133
IS - 30
KW - Gold
KW - 7440-57-5
KW - Polymethyl Methacrylate
KW - 9011-14-7
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Particle Size
KW - Molecular Dynamics Simulation
KW - Surface Properties
KW - Metal Nanoparticles -- chemistry
KW - Temperature
KW - Polymethyl Methacrylate -- chemistry
KW - Gold -- chemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Transformation+of+a+close-packed+Au+nanoparticle%2Fpolymer+monolayer+into+a+large+area+array+of+oriented+Au+nanowires+via+E-beam+promoted+uniaxial+deformation+and+room+temperature+sintering.&rft.au=Xiong%2C+Shisheng%3BMolecke%2C+Ryan%3BBosch%2C+Matthew%3BSchunk%2C+P+Randall%3BBrinker%2C+C+Jeffrey&rft.aulast=Xiong&rft.aufirst=Shisheng&rft.date=2011-08-03&rft.volume=133&rft.issue=30&rft.spage=11410&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=1520-5126&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fja202446t
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2011-12-16
N1 - Date created - 2011-07-27
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja202446t
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Polymers from Fatty Acids: Poly( Delta *w-hydroxyl tetradecanoic acid) Synthesis and Physico-Mechanical Studies
AN - 911161349; 16063984
AB - This Article describes the synthesis and physicomechanical properties of bioplastics prepared from methyl Delta *w-hydroxytetradecanoic acid (Me- Delta *w-OHC14), a new monomer available by a fermentation process using an engineered Candida tropicalis strain. Melt-condensation experiments were conducted using titanium tetraisopropoxide (Ti[OiPr]4) as a catalyst in a two-stage polymerization (2 h at 200 ?C under N2, 4 h at 220 ?C under 0.1 mmHg). Poly( Delta *w-hydroxytetradecanoate), P( Delta *w-OHC14), Mw, determined by SEC-MALLS, increased from 53K to 110K as the Ti(OiPr)4 concentration increased from 50 to 300 ppm. By varying the polymerization conditions (catalyst concentration, reaction time, second-stage reaction temperature) a series of P( Delta *w-OHC14) samples were prepared with Mw values from 53K to 140K. The synthesized polyesters with Mw ranging from 53K to 140K were subjected to characterization by DSC, TGA, DMTA, and tensile testing. Influences of P( Delta *w-OHC14) molecular weight, melting point, and enthalpies of melting/crystallization on material tensile properties were explored. Cold-drawing tensile tests at room temperature for P( Delta *w-OHC14) with Mw 53K--78K showed a brittle-to-ductile transition. In contrast, P( Delta *w-OHC14) with Mw 53K undergoes brittle fracture. Increasing P( Delta *w-OHC14) Mw above 78K resulted in a strain-hardening phenomena and tough properties with elongation at break 700% and true tensile strength of 50 MPa. Comparisons between high density polyethylene and P( Delta *w-OHC14) mechanical and thermal properties as a function of their respective molecular weights are discussed.
JF - Biomacromolecules
AU - Liu, Chen
AU - Liu, Fei
AU - Cai, Jiali
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Long, Timothy E
AU - Turner, S Richard
AU - Lyons?, Alan
AU - Gross, Richard A
AD - NSF I/UCRC for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences, Polytechnic Institute of NYU, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201, United States
Y1 - 2011/07/28/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Jul 28
SP - 3291
EP - 3298
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 United States
VL - 12
IS - 9
SN - 1525-7797, 1525-7797
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Crystallization
KW - Temperature effects
KW - polyesters
KW - Titanium
KW - Enthalpy
KW - Polymerization
KW - Fermentation
KW - Tensile properties
KW - Polyethylene
KW - Fractures
KW - Monomers
KW - Melting
KW - Elongation
KW - Molecular weight
KW - Fatty acids
KW - Tensile strength
KW - Candida tropicalis
KW - Catalysts
KW - W 30935:Food Biotechnology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/911161349?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomacromolecules&rft.atitle=Polymers+from+Fatty+Acids%3A+Poly%28+Delta+*w-hydroxyl+tetradecanoic+acid%29+Synthesis+and+Physico-Mechanical+Studies&rft.au=Liu%2C+Chen%3BLiu%2C+Fei%3BCai%2C+Jiali%3BXie%2C+Wenchun%3BLong%2C+Timothy+E%3BTurner%2C+S+Richard%3BLyons%3F%2C+Alan%3BGross%2C+Richard+A&rft.aulast=Liu&rft.aufirst=Chen&rft.date=2011-07-28&rft.volume=12&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=3291&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomacromolecules&rft.issn=15257797&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbm2007554
L2 - http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bm2007554
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Temperature effects; Crystallization; Enthalpy; Titanium; polyesters; Polymerization; Tensile properties; Fermentation; Polyethylene; Fractures; Melting; Monomers; Elongation; Molecular weight; Fatty acids; Tensile strength; Catalysts; Candida tropicalis
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bm2007554
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Surprising Potency of Implicit Egotism: A Reply to Simonsohn
AN - 925714282; 201204063
AB - This article addresses Simonsohn's (2011) critique of field studies of implicit egotism. We argue that Simonsohn provides no compelling theoretical reason to believe that implicit egotism should be valid only in the laboratory. In addition, we argue that a careful analysis of most of Simonsohn's studies of implicit egotism shows that they provide little or no power to reveal real effects of implicit egotism. We conclude that it is more constructive to try to identify theoretically derived moderators of implicit egotism than to try to document that it is always spurious in the field. [Copyright The American Psychological Association.]
JF - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
AU - Pelham, Brett
AU - Carvallo, Mauricio
AD - Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences/Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences, National Science Foundation, Virginia, USA bpelham@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2011/07//
PY - 2011
DA - July 2011
SP - 25
EP - 30
PB - American Psychological Association, Washington DC
VL - 101
IS - 1
SN - 0022-3514, 0022-3514
KW - implicit egotism
KW - unconscious
KW - name-letter effect
KW - decision making
KW - Self Esteem
KW - Self Concept
KW - Decision Making
KW - article
KW - 0394: social psychology; life cycle & biography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/925714282?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Personality+and+Social+Psychology&rft.atitle=The+Surprising+Potency+of+Implicit+Egotism%3A+A+Reply+to+Simonsohn&rft.au=Pelham%2C+Brett%3BCarvallo%2C+Mauricio&rft.aulast=Pelham&rft.aufirst=Brett&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=101&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=25&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Personality+and+Social+Psychology&rft.issn=00223514&rft_id=info:doi/10.1037%2Fa0023526
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2012-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - JPSPB2
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Self Esteem; Self Concept; Decision Making
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0023526
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Home Energy-Efficiency Retrofits
AN - 920802428; 16210176
JF - Environmental Health Perspectives
AU - Stephens, Brent
AU - Carter, Ellison M
AU - Gall, Elliott T
AU - Earnest, CMatt
AU - Walsh, Elizabeth A
AU - Hun, Diana E
AU - Jackson, Mark C
AD - National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) Program in Indoor Environmental Science and Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas
Y1 - 2011/07/01/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Jul 01
SP - a283
EP - a284
PB - US Government Printing Office, Superintendent of Documents, P.O. Box 371954 Pittsburgh PA 15250-7954 United States
VL - 119
IS - 7
SN - 0091-6765, 0091-6765
KW - Environment Abstracts
KW - Energy efficiency
KW - Housing
KW - ENA 07:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/920802428?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Health+Perspectives&rft.atitle=Home+Energy-Efficiency+Retrofits&rft.au=Stephens%2C+Brent%3BCarter%2C+Ellison+M%3BGall%2C+Elliott+T%3BEarnest%2C+CMatt%3BWalsh%2C+Elizabeth+A%3BHun%2C+Diana+E%3BJackson%2C+Mark+C&rft.aulast=Stephens&rft.aufirst=Brent&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=119&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=a283&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Health+Perspectives&rft.issn=00916765&rft_id=info:doi/10.1289%2Fehp.1103621
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-05-13
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Energy efficiency; Housing
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1103621
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 2 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410552; 14963-3_0002
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 2
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410552?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 1 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410528; 14963-3_0001
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 1
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410528?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 9 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410177; 14963-3_0009
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 9
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410177?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 8 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410171; 14963-3_0008
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 8
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410171?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 7 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410162; 14963-3_0007
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 7
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410162?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 6 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410149; 14963-3_0006
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 6
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410149?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 5 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410146; 14963-3_0005
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 5
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410146?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 4 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410140; 14963-3_0004
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 4
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410140?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 3 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884410132; 14963-3_0003
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 3
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/884410132?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 11 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884409733; 14963-3_0011
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 11
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 10 of 11]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 884409730; 14963-3_0010
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
VL - 10
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaporative heat and mass transfer from the free surface of a liquid wicked into a bed of spheres
AN - 880674513; 14902292
AB - Evaporation of ethanol from square packed arrays of 3.95 mm diameter copper spheres in a transparent, enclosed chamber is investigated. The enclosure ensures that relatively saturated vapor conditions exist near the free surface. The desired heat flux is imposed on the copper substrate upon which the copper spheres are mounted, and the liquid level in the bed is maintained by wicking from a continuous supply of liquid provided by a syringe pump. Transparent windows in the enclosure allow for visualization of the evaporating liquid meniscus shape, which is recorded for different liquid feeding rates and heat fluxes. Experimentally measured meniscus profiles are compared to analytical results based on surface-energy minimization. A meniscus microregion is defined from the contact line to the length where the liquid thickness reaches 10 [micro]m. An approximate kinetic theory-based analysis estimates that up to [inline image]55% of the total meniscus mass transfer occurs in this microregion.
JF - International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
AU - Migliaccio, Christopher P
AU - Garimella, Suresh V
AD - Cooling Technologies Research Center, an NSF I/UCRC, School of Mechanical Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2088, USA, sureshg@purdue.edu
Y1 - 2011/07//
PY - 2011
DA - Jul 2011
SP - 3440
EP - 3447
PB - Elsevier Science Ltd., The Boulevard Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK
VL - 54
IS - 15-16
SN - 0017-9310, 0017-9310
KW - Environment Abstracts
KW - Phase change
KW - Evaporation
KW - Thin film
KW - Liquid-vapor interface
KW - Heat pipe
KW - Sintered material
KW - Vapors
KW - Kinetics
KW - feeding
KW - Copper
KW - Ethanol
KW - ENA 08:International
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/880674513?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+Journal+of+Heat+and+Mass+Transfer&rft.atitle=Evaporative+heat+and+mass+transfer+from+the+free+surface+of+a+liquid+wicked+into+a+bed+of+spheres&rft.au=Migliaccio%2C+Christopher+P%3BGarimella%2C+Suresh+V&rft.aulast=Migliaccio&rft.aufirst=Christopher&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=54&rft.issue=15-16&rft.spage=3440&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Journal+of+Heat+and+Mass+Transfer&rft.issn=00179310&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.ijheatmasstransfer.2011.03.042
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Vapors; Evaporation; Kinetics; feeding; Copper; Ethanol
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2011.03.042
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (FINAL PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 879466246; 14963
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments of the potential impact of the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA) are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the world's oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and could be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles off the coast, and would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters, but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this final EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source. The impact analysis presented in this final programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 representative areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the world's oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian manatees could occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.). PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 10-0577D, Volume 34, Number 2.
JF - EPA number: 110203, 981 pages, July 1, 2011
PY - 2011
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/879466246?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Digests&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.title=MARINE+SEISMIC+RESEARCH+FUNDED+BY+THE+NATIONAL+SCIENCE+FOUNDATION+OR+CONDUCTED+BY+THE+U.S.+GEOLOGICAL+SURVEY+%28FINAL+PROGRAMMATIC+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%2FOVERSEAS+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 1, 2011
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Biological mechanism for the toxicity of haloacetic acid drinking water disinfection byproducts.
AN - 874298778; 21671678
AB - The halogenated acetic acids are a major class of drinking water disinfection byproducts (DBPs) with five haloacetic acids regulated by the U.S. EPA. These agents are cytotoxic, genotoxic, mutagenic, and teratogenic. The decreasing toxicity rank order of the monohalogenated acetic acids (monoHAAs) is iodo- > bromo- >> chloroacetic acid. We present data that the monoHAAs inhibit glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) activity in a concentration-dependent manner with the same rank order as above. The rate of inhibition of GAPDH and the toxic potency of the monoHAAs are highly correlated with their alkylating potential and the propensity of the halogen leaving group. This strong association between GAPDH inhibition and the monoHAA toxic potency supports a comprehensive mechanism for the adverse biological effects by this widely occurring class of regulated DBPs.
JF - Environmental science & technology
AU - Pals, Justin A
AU - Ang, Justin K
AU - Wagner, Elizabeth D
AU - Plewa, Michael J
AD - College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences, Department of Crop Sciences, and the NSF WaterCAMPWS Center, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States.
Y1 - 2011/07/01/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Jul 01
SP - 5791
EP - 5797
VL - 45
IS - 13
KW - Acetates
KW - 0
KW - Disinfectants
KW - Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenases
KW - EC 1.2.1.-
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Molecular Structure
KW - Animals
KW - Electrophoresis
KW - Halogenation
KW - Cricetulus
KW - Kinetics
KW - Toxicity Tests -- methods
KW - CHO Cells
KW - Models, Biological
KW - Cricetinae
KW - Glycolysis -- drug effects
KW - Water Supply -- standards
KW - DNA Damage
KW - Disinfectants -- metabolism
KW - Acetates -- metabolism
KW - Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenases -- antagonists & inhibitors
KW - Disinfectants -- toxicity
KW - Acetates -- toxicity
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.atitle=Biological+mechanism+for+the+toxicity+of+haloacetic+acid+drinking+water+disinfection+byproducts.&rft.au=Pals%2C+Justin+A%3BAng%2C+Justin+K%3BWagner%2C+Elizabeth+D%3BPlewa%2C+Michael+J&rft.aulast=Pals&rft.aufirst=Justin&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=45&rft.issue=13&rft.spage=5791&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.issn=1520-5851&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fes2008159
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2011-11-08
N1 - Date created - 2011-06-29
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es2008159
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Two Decades of Increasing Diversity More than Doubled the Number of Minority Graduate Students in Science and Engineering. InfoBrief. NSF 11-319
AN - 1031154604; ED533188
AB - From 1989 through 2009 the number of minority U.S. citizens and permanent residents enrolled in graduate science and engineering (S&E) programs more than doubled, growing from approximately 37,700 in 1989 to 92,700 in 2009. Increases in Hispanic, black, and Asian/Pacific Islander S&E graduate students were similar over this period (approximately 17,800, 18,200, and 17,200, respectively); however, these gains almost tripled the number of Hispanic graduate students (approximately 190% growth) and more than doubled the number of blacks (approximately 155% growth) and Asians/Pacific Islanders (approximately 110% growth). Enrollment among American Indians/Alaska Natives also nearly tripled, increasing from approximately 900 in 1989 to approximately 2,600 in 2009 (approximately 195% growth). Minority enrollment among U.S. citizens and permanent residents enrolled in graduate S&E programs grew from approximately 13% in 1989 to approximately 24% in 2009 (figure 1). Due to extra variability of the methodological changes in the 2007 Survey of Graduate Students and Postdoctorates in Science and Engineering (GSS), all growth rate calculations comparing pre- and post-2007 counts are rounded to the nearest 5% and counts are rounded to the nearest 100; see "Data Limitations and Availability" for more information. Despite these substantial gains, black and Hispanic U.S. citizens and permanent residents remain underrepresented within the S&E graduate student population when compared with the adult U.S. citizen population. In 2009, 7.8% of the U.S. citizens and permanent residents pursuing graduate S&E degrees were black and 7.1% were Hispanic. In 2009, 13.8% of U.S. citizens 21 to 45 years of age were black and 11.9% were Hispanic. In contrast, the percentage of American Indians/Alaska Natives in the 2009 S&E graduate student population was very similar to that of the adult U.S. citizen population (0.7% vs. 0.8%), and the percentage of Asians/Pacific Islanders pursuing S&E graduate degrees was more than twice that of the U.S. citizen population aged 21 to 45 years (8.6% vs. 3.8%). These and other findings in this InfoBrief are from the fall 2009 GSS, cosponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The GSS is an annual survey of all academic institutions in the U.S. that grant research-based master's degrees or doctorates in science, engineering, or selected health (SEH) fields. The GSS collects data on the number and characteristics of graduate students, postdoctoral appointees (postdocs), and other doctorate-holding nonfaculty researchers in SEH fields. (Contains 2 figures, 4 tables and 5 notes.
AU - Einaudi, Peter
Y1 - 2011/07//
PY - 2011
DA - July 2011
SP - 10
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - Alaska
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Graduate Students
KW - Minority Group Students
KW - STEM Education
KW - American Indians
KW - Engineering
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Enrollment Trends
KW - Enrollment
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - African American Students
KW - Hispanic American Students
KW - Pacific Islanders
KW - Disproportionate Representation
KW - Alaska Natives
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1031154604?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - In defense of diligence: a rejoinder to Pelham and Carvallo (2011)
AN - 1010645226; 4290512
AB - In Simonsohn (2011) I reported the results from 14 studies that suggest all existing evidence of implicit egotism in marriage, job, and location decisions is spurious. Lack of diligence by Pelham and colleagues explains in great part why the confounds behind their findings were not addressed in time. They almost never included controls, were dismissive of blatant alternative explanations, and on occasion misreported factual information that made confounds appear less important. Their rebuttal is similarly lacking in diligence. The specific empirical concerns it raised are contradicted by evidence, logic, or both. It reported misleading examples and inaccurate facts (some regarding the authors' own data). In this rejoinder I address all specific issues they raised about the empirics of my article. I then provide perhaps the most striking example of lack of diligence in their earlier work. I close on a constructive note, providing 2 concrete suggestions on how to analyze data in future implicit egotism studies. [Copyright The American Psychological Association.] Reprinted by permission of the American Psychological Association
JF - Journal of personality and social psychology
AU - Simonsohn, Uri
AU - , National Science Foundation
AD - University of Pennsylvania
Y1 - 2011/07//
PY - 2011
DA - Jul 2011
SP - 31
EP - 33
VL - 101
IS - 1
SN - 0022-3514, 0022-3514
KW - Sociology
KW - Pelham, Brett
KW - Carvallo, Mauricio
KW - Marriage
KW - Empirical research
KW - Evidence
KW - Narcissism
KW - Ego
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1010645226?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+personality+and+social+psychology&rft.atitle=In+defense+of+diligence%3A+a+rejoinder+to+Pelham+and+Carvallo+%282011%29&rft.au=Simonsohn%2C+Uri%3B%2C+National+Science+Foundation&rft.aulast=Simonsohn&rft.aufirst=Uri&rft.date=2011-07-01&rft.volume=101&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=31&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+personality+and+social+psychology&rft.issn=00223514&rft_id=info:doi/10.1037%2Fa0023232
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 7748 6823; 4115; 8465 11442 6191; 4200 10902; 4560
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0023232
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Creating Bigger Problems: Grand Challenges as Boundary Objects and the Legitimacy of the Information Systems Field
AN - 907923654; 201109658
AB - The impact of a discipline's research is constrained by its ability to articulate compelling problems. Well-crafted problems are the foundation for mobilizing the effort, resources, and attention essential to scientific progress and broader impact. We argue that Information Systems (IS) scholars, individually and collectively, must develop the practice of articulating and engaging large-scale, broad scope problems -- or grand challenges. To support this position, we examine the role and value of grand challenge efforts in science and engineering based on a theory of grand challenges as socially constructed boundary objects. Conceptualizing grand challenges in these terms implies strategies and approaches for magnifying the impact of IS research by engaging these types of problems. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Journal of Information Technology
AU - Winter, Susan J
AU - Butler, Brian S
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Room 1145, Arlington, VA 22230, USA swinter@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - June 2011
SP - 99
EP - 108
PB - Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., Basingstoke, Hampshire UK
VL - 26
IS - 2
SN - 0268-3962, 0268-3962
KW - Grand challenges, boundary objects, information systems, legitimacy
KW - Subject fields
KW - Theories
KW - Research
KW - Information systems
KW - article
KW - 14.0: COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/907923654?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Information+Technology&rft.atitle=Creating+Bigger+Problems%3A+Grand+Challenges+as+Boundary+Objects+and+the+Legitimacy+of+the+Information+Systems+Field&rft.au=Winter%2C+Susan+J%3BButler%2C+Brian+S&rft.aulast=Winter&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=99&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Information+Technology&rft.issn=02683962&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2011-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Information systems; Research; Theories; Subject fields
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Applying Molecular Dynamics Simulations to Identify Rarely Sampled Ligand-bound Conformational States of Undecaprenyl Pyrophosphate Synthase, an Antibacterial Target
AN - 907156688; 14887590
AB - Undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase is a cis-prenyltransferase enzyme, which is required for cell wall biosynthesis in bacteria. Undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase is an attractive target for antimicrobial therapy. We performed long molecular dynamics simulations and docking studies on undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase to investigate its dynamic behavior and the influence of protein flexibility on the design of undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase inhibitors. We also describe the first X-ray crystallographic structure of Escherichia coli apo-undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase. The molecular dynamics simulations indicate that undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase is a highly flexible protein, with mobile binding pockets in the active site. By carrying out docking studies with experimentally validated undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase inhibitors using high- and low-populated conformational states extracted from the molecular dynamics simulations, we show that structurally dissimilar compounds can bind preferentially to different and rarely sampled conformational states. By performing structural analyses on the newly obtained apo-undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase and other crystal structures previously published, we show that the changes observed during the molecular dynamics simulation are very similar to those seen in the crystal structures obtained in the presence or absence of ligands. We believe that this is the first time that a rare 'expanded pocket' state, key to drug design and verified by crystallography, has been extracted from a molecular dynamics simulation. Crystallography, molecular dynamics simulations, and structural analysis reveal a rare "expanded pocket" state key to drug design for undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase, an attractive target for anti-microbial therapy
JF - Chemical Biology & Drug Design
AU - Sinko, William
AU - de Oliveira, Cesar
AU - Williams, Sarah
AU - Van Wynsberghe, Adam
AU - Durrant, Jacob D
AU - Cao, Rong
AU - Oldfield, Eric
AU - McCammon, JAndrew
AD - Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, and NSF Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0365, USA
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - Jun 2011
SP - 412
EP - 420
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 USA
VL - 77
IS - 6
SN - 1747-0277, 1747-0277
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - Antimicrobial agents
KW - Cell walls
KW - Crystal structure
KW - Crystallography
KW - Drug development
KW - Enzymes
KW - Ionizing radiation
KW - Molecular dynamics
KW - Protein structure
KW - pyrophosphates
KW - undecaprenyl pyrophosphate
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - J 02340:Antibiotics & Antimicrobials
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/907156688?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Chemical+Biology+%26+Drug+Design&rft.atitle=Applying+Molecular+Dynamics+Simulations+to+Identify+Rarely+Sampled+Ligand-bound+Conformational+States+of+Undecaprenyl+Pyrophosphate+Synthase%2C+an+Antibacterial+Target&rft.au=Sinko%2C+William%3Bde+Oliveira%2C+Cesar%3BWilliams%2C+Sarah%3BVan+Wynsberghe%2C+Adam%3BDurrant%2C+Jacob+D%3BCao%2C+Rong%3BOldfield%2C+Eric%3BMcCammon%2C+JAndrew&rft.aulast=Sinko&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=412&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Chemical+Biology+%26+Drug+Design&rft.issn=17470277&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1747-0285.2011.01101.x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-11-01
N1 - Document feature - figure 7
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Protein structure; Ionizing radiation; undecaprenyl pyrophosphate; Crystal structure; Enzymes; Crystallography; Molecular dynamics; Drug development; pyrophosphates; Antimicrobial agents; Cell walls; Escherichia coli
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-0285.2011.01101.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Religion in Global Perspective: SSSR Presidential Panel
AN - 896165247; 201120972
AB - Global processes present a challenge for scholarly work on religion, necessitating new concepts, theoretical and analytical models, intellectual sensitivity, and imagination. This calls for focusing on (1) cross-border interpenetration of religious organizations, beliefs, and practices; (2) variations in the potential for religious beliefs and institutions to be transported; and (3) the use of multiple frames of reference to examine the dispersion of religious cultures and communities. A presidential panel presents the need for generating new research questions, improving measurement tools, and updating methodological techniques so that social scientists of religion accurately and authentically portray the nature and expression of religion in the 21st century. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
AU - Meyer, Katherine
AU - Barker, Eileen
AU - Ebaugh, Helen Rose
AU - Juergensmeyer, Mark
AD - President, SSSR; Program Director in Sociology National Science Foundation; Professor Emeritus of Sociology The Ohio State University
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - June 2011
SP - 240
EP - 251
PB - Blackwell Publishers, Malden MA
VL - 50
IS - 2
SN - 0021-8294, 0021-8294
KW - Borders
KW - Imagination
KW - Social Scientists
KW - Social Science Research
KW - Twenty First Century
KW - Religions
KW - Religious Beliefs
KW - article
KW - 1535: sociology of religion; sociology of religion
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/896165247?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+for+the+Scientific+Study+of+Religion&rft.atitle=Religion+in+Global+Perspective%3A+SSSR+Presidential+Panel&rft.au=Meyer%2C+Katherine%3BBarker%2C+Eileen%3BEbaugh%2C+Helen+Rose%3BJuergensmeyer%2C+Mark&rft.aulast=Meyer&rft.aufirst=Katherine&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=50&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=240&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+for+the+Scientific+Study+of+Religion&rft.issn=00218294&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1468-5906.2011.01565.x
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2011-10-03
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - JSSRBT
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Religions; Social Science Research; Twenty First Century; Borders; Social Scientists; Religious Beliefs; Imagination
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5906.2011.01565.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Value of Wildland Habitat for Supplying Pollination Services to Californian Agriculture
AN - 893318569; 15156887
JF - Rangelands
AU - Chaplin-Kramer, Rebecca
AU - Tuxen-Bettman, Karin
AU - Kremen, Claire
AD - Authors are Postdoctoral Researcher, California Institute for Energy & Environment, University of California--Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA, rchaplinerkeley.edu (Chaplin-Kramer; with Department of Environmental Science, Policy & Management, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA, while work was conducted); GIS Specialist, Google Earth Outreach, Mountain View, CA 94043, USA (Tuxen-Bettman; with Department of Environmental Science, Policy & Management, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA, while work was conducted); and Associate Professor, Department of Environmental Science, Policy & Management, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA (Kremen). The UC Berkeley Chancellor's Partnership Fund provided partial support for the GIS analyses. RCK was supported by a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation.
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - Jun 2011
SP - 33
EP - 41
PB - Society for Range Management
VL - 33
IS - 3
SN - 0190-0528, 0190-0528
KW - Ecology Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Habitat
KW - Rangelands
KW - agriculture
KW - pollination
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/893318569?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Rangelands&rft.atitle=Value+of+Wildland+Habitat+for+Supplying+Pollination+Services+to+Californian+Agriculture&rft.au=Chaplin-Kramer%2C+Rebecca%3BTuxen-Bettman%2C+Karin%3BKremen%2C+Claire&rft.aulast=Chaplin-Kramer&rft.aufirst=Rebecca&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=33&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Rangelands&rft.issn=01900528&rft_id=info:doi/10.2111%2F1551-501X-33.3.33
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-05-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Rangelands; agriculture; Habitat; pollination
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2111/1551-501X-33.3.33
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Indicator microbes correlate with pathogenic bacteria, yeasts and helminthes in sand at a subtropical recreational beach site
AN - 876226180; 14888603
AB - Aims: Research into the relationship between pathogens, faecal indicator microbes and environmental factors in beach sand has been limited, yet vital to the understanding of the microbial relationship between sand and the water column and to the improvement of criteria for better human health protection at beaches. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the presence and distribution of pathogens in various zones of beach sand (subtidal, intertidal and supratidal) and to assess their relationship with environmental parameters and indicator microbes at a non-point source subtropical marine beach. Methods and Results: In this exploratory study in subtropical Miami (Florida, USA), beach sand samples were collected and analysed over the course of 6days for several pathogens, microbial source tracking markers and indicator microbes. An inverse correlation between moisture content and most indicator microbes was found. Significant associations were identified between some indicator microbes and pathogens (such as nematode larvae and yeasts in the genus Candida), which are from classes of microbes that are rarely evaluated in the context of recreational beach use. Conclusions: Results indicate that indicator microbes may predict the presence of some of the pathogens, in particular helminthes, yeasts and the bacterial pathogen Staphylococcus aureus including methicillin-resistant forms. Indicator microbes may thus be useful for monitoring beach sand and water quality at non-point source beaches. Significance and Impact of the Study: The presence of both indicator microbes and pathogens in beach sand provides one possible explanation for human health effects reported at non-point sources beaches.
JF - Journal of Applied Microbiology
AU - Shah, AH
AU - Abdelzaher, A M
AU - Phillips, M
AU - Hernandez, R
AU - Solo-Gabriele, H M
AU - Kish, J
AU - Scorzetti, G
AU - Fell, J W
AU - Diaz, M R
AU - Scott, T M
AU - Lukasik, J
AU - Harwood, V J
AU - McQuaig, S
AU - Sinigalliano, C D
AU - Gidley, M L
AU - Wanless, D
AU - Ager, A
AU - Lui, J
AU - Stewart, J R
AU - Plano, LRW
AU - Fleming, LE
AD - University of Miami, NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Miami, FL, USA
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - June 2011
SP - 1571
EP - 1583
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 USA
VL - 110
IS - 6
SN - 1364-5072, 1364-5072
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology
KW - Beaches
KW - Sand
KW - Drug resistance
KW - Helminthes
KW - Candida
KW - Pathogens
KW - Staphylococcus aureus
KW - Water quality
KW - Environmental factors
KW - Nematoda
KW - Water column
KW - A 01340:Antibiotics & Antimicrobials
KW - K 03450:Ecology
KW - J 02450:Ecology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/876226180?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Applied+Microbiology&rft.atitle=Indicator+microbes+correlate+with+pathogenic+bacteria%2C+yeasts+and+helminthes+in+sand+at+a+subtropical+recreational+beach+site&rft.au=Shah%2C+AH%3BAbdelzaher%2C+A+M%3BPhillips%2C+M%3BHernandez%2C+R%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+H+M%3BKish%2C+J%3BScorzetti%2C+G%3BFell%2C+J+W%3BDiaz%2C+M+R%3BScott%2C+T+M%3BLukasik%2C+J%3BHarwood%2C+V+J%3BMcQuaig%2C+S%3BSinigalliano%2C+C+D%3BGidley%2C+M+L%3BWanless%2C+D%3BAger%2C+A%3BLui%2C+J%3BStewart%2C+J+R%3BPlano%2C+LRW%3BFleming%2C+LE&rft.aulast=Shah&rft.aufirst=AH&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=110&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=1571&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Applied+Microbiology&rft.issn=13645072&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1365-2672.2011.05013.x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-07-01
N1 - Document feature - figure 1
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Beaches; Sand; Drug resistance; Pathogens; Water quality; Environmental factors; Water column; Helminthes; Candida; Staphylococcus aureus; Nematoda
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2672.2011.05013.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - An integrated thermal and mechanical investigation of molten-salt thermocline energy storage
AN - 864438068; 14439676
AB - Thermal ratcheting is a critical phenomenon associated with the cyclic operation of dual-medium thermocline tanks in solar energy applications. Although thermal ratcheting poses a serious impediment to thermocline operation, this failure mode in dual-medium thermocline tanks is not yet well understood. To study the potential for the occurrence of ratcheting, a comprehensive model of a thermocline tank that includes both the heterogeneous filler region as well as the composite tank wall is formulated. The filler region consists of a rock bed with interstitial molten salt, while the tank wall is composed of a steel shell with two layers of insulation (firebrick and ceramic). The model accounts separately for the rock and molten-salt regions in view of their different thermal properties. Various heat loss conditions are applied at the external tank surface to evaluate the effect of energy losses to the surroundings. Hoop stresses, which are governed by the magnitude of temperature fluctuations, are determined through both a detailed finite-element analysis and simple strain relations. The two methods are found to yield almost identical results. Temperature fluctuations are damped by heat losses to the surroundings, leading to a reduction in hoop stresses with increased heat losses. Failure is prevented when the peak hoop stress is less than the material yield strength of the steel shell. To avoid ratcheting without incurring excessive energy loss, insulation between the steel shell and the filler region should be maximized.
JF - Applied Energy
AU - Flueckiger, Scott
AU - Yang, Zhen
AU - Garimella, Suresh V
AD - School of Mechanical Engineering, Cooling Technologies Research Center, an NSF IUCRC, 585 Purdue Mall, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2088, USA, sureshg@purdue.edu
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - Jun 2011
SP - 2098
EP - 2105
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK
VL - 88
IS - 6
SN - 0306-2619, 0306-2619
KW - Environment Abstracts
KW - Solar thermal energy
KW - Thermal energy storage
KW - Molten-salt thermocline
KW - Thermal ratcheting
KW - Ceramics
KW - Storage
KW - Salts
KW - thermocline
KW - composite materials
KW - Temperature
KW - Stress
KW - Steel
KW - Solar energy
KW - ENA 03:Energy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/864438068?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Energy&rft.atitle=An+integrated+thermal+and+mechanical+investigation+of+molten-salt+thermocline+energy+storage&rft.au=Flueckiger%2C+Scott%3BYang%2C+Zhen%3BGarimella%2C+Suresh+V&rft.aulast=Flueckiger&rft.aufirst=Scott&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=2098&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Energy&rft.issn=03062619&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.apenergy.2010.12.031
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-09
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Storage; Ceramics; Salts; composite materials; thermocline; Temperature; Stress; Steel; Solar energy
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2010.12.031
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Triagency collaboration for the advancement of climate change education
AN - 1712566108; PQ0001955765
AB - Second Annual NASA, NOAA, and NSF Climate Change Education Principal Investigators Meeting; Fairfax, Virginia, 28 February to 2 March 2011; In 2009 the Obama administration identified climate change research and education as a presidential priority. Embracing the spirit of the America COMPETES Act, which encourages coordination of federal science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education activities and programs, NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the National Science Foundation (NSF) have been working together to increase funding opportunities for projects focused on global climate literacy and education in formal and informal learning environments and have fostered collaborations among awardees that create a strong national network for effectively presenting climate science to diverse audiences.
JF - EOS, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Wilson, Carolyn E
AU - Chambers, Lin H
AU - Schoedinger, Sarah
AD - National Science Foundation,Arlington, Va, USA.
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - June 2011
SP - 204
PB - Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., 1105 N Market St Wilmington DE 19801
VL - 92
IS - 24
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Global climate
KW - Education
KW - Climate change research
KW - Climate
KW - Climate change
KW - Priorities
KW - American Geophysical Union
KW - ANW, USA, Virginia
KW - Technology
KW - M2 551.583:Variations (551.583)
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1712566108?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=EOS%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Triagency+collaboration+for+the+advancement+of+climate+change+education&rft.au=Wilson%2C+Carolyn+E%3BChambers%2C+Lin+H%3BSchoedinger%2C+Sarah&rft.aulast=Wilson&rft.aufirst=Carolyn&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=92&rft.issue=24&rft.spage=204&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=EOS%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2011EO240005
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2015-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Global climate; Climate change research; Climate change; American Geophysical Union; Education; Climate; Priorities; Technology; ANW, USA, Virginia
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2011EO240005
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Label-free imaging and analysis of the effects of lipolysis products on primary hepatocytes
AN - 1017973167; 16718408
AB - The increased accumulation of intracellular lipid droplets within hepatocytes is a pathologic hallmark of liver injury of various etiologies, especially non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The dynamics, subcellular origin, and chemical composition of lipid droplets under various pathophysiologic conditions, however, remain poorly understood. We used coherent Raman microscopy and spontaneous Raman spectroscopy to monitor and analyze the formation of lipid droplets in living primary rat hepatocytes exposed to triglyceride-rich lipoprotein (TGRL) lipolysis products. After exposure to the complex fatty acid mixture released during the lipolysis process for 30 minutes, new lipid droplets rapidly appeared within hepatocytes and increased in size and number over the total observation period of 205 minutes. Raman spectroscopic analysis of individual intracellular lipid droplets before and after exposure to lipolysis products reveals that the major components of these droplets are esterified unsaturated fatty acids. We find that the fatty acid unsaturation ratio increases with droplet size. Control experiments with defined fatty acid mixtures reveal the complexity of the cellular response to assault by combinations of lipids. (? 2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
JF - Journal of Biophotonics
AU - Schie, Iwan W
AU - Wu, Jian
AU - Weeks, Tyler
AU - Zern, Mark A
AU - Rutledge, John C
AU - Huser, Thomas
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA, trhuser@ucdavis.edu
Y1 - 2011/06//
PY - 2011
DA - Jun 2011
SP - 425
EP - 434
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 4
IS - 6
SN - 1864-0648, 1864-0648
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Raman spectroscopy
KW - Etiology
KW - Injuries
KW - Hepatocytes
KW - Lipids
KW - Microscopy
KW - Lipoproteins
KW - Fatty acids
KW - Liver
KW - Lipolysis
KW - imaging
KW - W 30910:Imaging
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1017973167?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.atitle=Label-free+imaging+and+analysis+of+the+effects+of+lipolysis+products+on+primary+hepatocytes&rft.au=Schie%2C+Iwan+W%3BWu%2C+Jian%3BWeeks%2C+Tyler%3BZern%2C+Mark+A%3BRutledge%2C+John+C%3BHuser%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Schie&rft.aufirst=Iwan&rft.date=2011-06-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=425&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.issn=18640648&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjbio.201000086
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbio.201000086/abstract
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Raman spectroscopy; Etiology; Injuries; Hepatocytes; Lipids; Lipoproteins; Microscopy; Liver; Fatty acids; Lipolysis; imaging
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbio.201000086
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Inside the radar: select elements in nanomaterials and sustainable nanotechnologyt
AN - 883033204; 15356747
AB - Rare earth elements and several metals formerly uncommon in commerce are being introduced into new products, particularly as nanoscaled materials. Until recently, little attention has been paid to their sustainability issues. This perspective addresses these elements, their commercial uses, health and environment issues, sustainability, and suggests a path forward.
JF - Journal of Environmental Monitoring
AU - Karan, B
AD - US EPA, Office of Research and Development, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC, 20460, USA, bkarn@nsf.gov
A2 - Sadik, WA (ed)
Y1 - 2011/05//
PY - 2011
DA - May 2011
SP - 1184
EP - 1189
VL - 13
IS - 5
SN - 1464-0325, 1464-0325
KW - Pollution Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Metals
KW - rare earth elements
KW - Radar
KW - Sustainable development
KW - sustainability
KW - nanotechnology
KW - P 9000:ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - ENA 07:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/883033204?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Environmental+Monitoring&rft.atitle=Inside+the+radar%3A+select+elements+in+nanomaterials+and+sustainable+nanotechnologyt&rft.au=Karan%2C+B&rft.aulast=Karan&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2011-05-01&rft.volume=13&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=1184&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Environmental+Monitoring&rft.issn=14640325&rft_id=info:doi/10.1039%2Fc1em10049a
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Metals; rare earth elements; Radar; Sustainable development; sustainability; nanotechnology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c1em10049a
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Water and other volatile systematics of olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the Yellowstone Hot Spot track
AN - 904459919; 2011-099185
AB - Major oxide, trace element and volatile (H (sub 2) O, CO (sub 2) , S, F, and Cl) compositions have been analyzed for olivine-hosted melt inclusions in eight basalt samples from Yellowstone National Park and the Snake River Plain (SRP) to identify the least differentiated melt compositions and assess the volatile budget of the Yellowstone hotspot. Melt-inclusion chemistry was evaluated to understand potential overprinting effects in the shallow mantle and crust of magmas derived from deeper levels. Maximum water concentrations of 3.3 wt% and CO (sub 2) up to 1,677 ppm have been observed in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the Gerritt Basalts at Mesa Falls, Idaho (SRP region), which is significantly higher than the maximum concentrations measured in lavas from other hotspots such as Hawaii ( nearly equal 0.8-0.9 wt%). Maximum water concentrations were generally observed in the least differentiated melt inclusions in terms of incompatible major oxide concentrations, indicating that high water concentrations are characteristic of the mantle or perhaps lower crust rather than resulting from differentiation enhancement within the shallow crust, even taking into account the fact that water behaves as an incompatible element during crystal fractionation. Enrichment in Ba coupled with depletion in Th in many of the melt inclusions and their host rocks is a characteristic of many arc lavas and may indicate that volatiles in Yellowstone-Snake River Plain basalts could have a subduction zone origin. Copyright 2010 Springer-Verlag
JF - Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
AU - Stefano, C J
AU - Mukasa, S B
AU - Andronikov, A
AU - Leeman, W P
Y1 - 2011/04//
PY - 2011
DA - April 2011
SP - 615
EP - 633
PB - Springer International, Heidelberg - New York
VL - 161
IS - 4
SN - 0010-7999, 0010-7999
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - Gerritt Basalts
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - subduction zones
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mass spectra
KW - olivine group
KW - infrared spectra
KW - electron probe data
KW - Cenozoic
KW - FTIR spectra
KW - volcanic features
KW - major elements
KW - water-rock interaction
KW - Mesa Falls
KW - volcanism
KW - olivine
KW - inclusions
KW - basalts
KW - Yellowstone National Park
KW - orthosilicates
KW - X-ray fluorescence spectra
KW - oxides
KW - water content
KW - spectra
KW - trace elements
KW - chemical composition
KW - geochemistry
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - Columbia River Basalt Group
KW - Miocene
KW - nesosilicates
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - calderas
KW - volatiles
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - fluid inclusions
KW - trace metals
KW - crystal chemistry
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
KW - 02A:General geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/904459919?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Contributions+to+Mineralogy+and+Petrology&rft.atitle=Water+and+other+volatile+systematics+of+olivine-hosted+melt+inclusions+from+the+Yellowstone+Hot+Spot+track&rft.au=Stefano%2C+C+J%3BMukasa%2C+S+B%3BAndronikov%2C+A%3BLeeman%2C+W+P&rft.aulast=Stefano&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2011-04-01&rft.volume=161&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=615&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Contributions+to+Mineralogy+and+Petrology&rft.issn=00107999&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00410-010-0553-8
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(zmx2wiu4y01pcgigj5i3jxf5)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100406,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by Springer Verlag, Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 55
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - CMPEAP
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; calderas; Cenozoic; chemical composition; Columbia River Basalt Group; crystal chemistry; electron probe data; fluid inclusions; FTIR spectra; geochemistry; Gerritt Basalts; hot spots; ICP mass spectra; Idaho; igneous rocks; inclusions; infrared spectra; major elements; mass spectra; Mesa Falls; Miocene; Neogene; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; oxides; silicates; Snake River plain; spectra; subduction zones; Tertiary; trace elements; trace metals; United States; volatiles; volcanic features; volcanic rocks; volcanism; water content; water-rock interaction; X-ray fluorescence spectra; Yellowstone Hot Spot; Yellowstone National Park
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00410-010-0553-8
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Secular variations in magmatism during a continental arc to post-arc transition; Plio-Pleistocene volcanism in the Lake Tahoe/Truckee area, northern Sierra Nevada, California
AN - 872121134; 2011-052013
AB - In the Lake Tahoe-Truckee River area of northeastern California, a suite of latest Pliocene to Pleistocene volcanic rocks, termed the Tahoe-Truckee volcanic field (TTVF), overlies Miocene to Pliocene volcanic rocks of the Ancestral Cascades arc. The lavas post-date the passage of the south edge of the subducting Juan de Fuca plate, and represent a secular transition from continental arc to post-arc volcanism associated with a slab window. Compared to the older arc volcanic rocks, TTVF lavas are small in volume, non-porphyritic, and mildly alkaline. TTVF lavas have a subduction signature in primitive mantle-normalized plots but, compared to the older arc rocks, are enriched in the light rare earth elements, Nb, and Ta, and depleted in the large ion lithophile elements. Isotopically, TTVF rocks overlap with Ancestral Cascade arc lavas, although most TTVF rocks fall at the high (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr-low (super 143) Nd/ (super 144) Nd end of the range of Ancestral Cascade compositions. Pb and oxygen isotope ratios overlap completely. Although the incompatible element systematics are consistent with increased importance of a within-plate mantle source component in the TTVF, the more radiogenic Sr and less radiogenic Nd isotopic compositions are not and require a source that is old. We propose that, like the Ancestral Cascades arc in this region, the post-arc lavas are primarily tapping a lithospheric mantle source, but for the TTVF, melting is triggered by asthenospheric upwelling around the south edge of the Juan de Fuca slab. TTVF lavas include a much lower proportion of melts from the (now, ex-) mantle wedge, since slab fluids are no longer supplied to the mantle beneath this region. The lithospheric mantle source in the TTVF may be similar chemically and mineralogically to that of the Big Pine volcanic field and Long Valley caldera in the Western Great Basin. This example of slab window volcanism is unusual in that the lavas are not melts of a mantle source that is more depleted in incompatible elements than the arc source.
JF - Lithos (Oslo)
AU - Cousens, Brian L
AU - Henry, Christopher D
AU - Harvey, Bradley J
AU - Brownrigg, Tim
AU - Prytulak, Julie
AU - Allan, James F
A2 - Murphy, J. Brendan
A2 - Dostal, Jaroslav
Y1 - 2011/04//
PY - 2011
DA - April 2011
SP - 225
EP - 242
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 123
IS - 1-4
SN - 0024-4937, 0024-4937
KW - Sierra Nevada
KW - Juan de Fuca Plate
KW - lead
KW - continental crust
KW - California
KW - absolute age
KW - stratigraphic units
KW - Northern California
KW - Truckee River
KW - upper mantle
KW - Quaternary
KW - lithosphere
KW - magmatism
KW - volcanic fields
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - Tertiary
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Carson Range
KW - island arcs
KW - Pleistocene
KW - crystal chemistry
KW - strontium
KW - Lake Tahoe
KW - crust
KW - United States
KW - lithostratigraphy
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - metasomatism
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - seismicity
KW - dates
KW - volcanism
KW - tuff
KW - rare earths
KW - Boca Ridge
KW - geochemistry
KW - Ar/Ar
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - petrology
KW - secular variations
KW - isotope ratios
KW - subduction
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - Nd-144/Nd-143
KW - pyroclastics
KW - Neogene
KW - metals
KW - Pliocene
KW - neodymium
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/872121134?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Lithos+%28Oslo%29&rft.atitle=Secular+variations+in+magmatism+during+a+continental+arc+to+post-arc+transition%3B+Plio-Pleistocene+volcanism+in+the+Lake+Tahoe%2FTruckee+area%2C+northern+Sierra+Nevada%2C+California&rft.au=Cousens%2C+Brian+L%3BHenry%2C+Christopher+D%3BHarvey%2C+Bradley+J%3BBrownrigg%2C+Tim%3BPrytulak%2C+Julie%3BAllan%2C+James+F&rft.aulast=Cousens&rft.aufirst=Brian&rft.date=2011-04-01&rft.volume=123&rft.issue=1-4&rft.spage=225&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Lithos+%28Oslo%29&rft.issn=00244937&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.lithos.2010.09.009
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00244937
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Mineralogical Association of Canada meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 81
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - LITHAN
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - absolute age; alkaline earth metals; Ar/Ar; Boca Ridge; California; Carson Range; Cenozoic; continental crust; crust; crystal chemistry; dates; geochemistry; igneous rocks; island arcs; isotope ratios; isotopes; Juan de Fuca Plate; Lake Tahoe; lead; lithosphere; lithostratigraphy; magmatism; mantle; metals; metasomatism; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; Neogene; Northern California; O-18/O-16; oxygen; petrology; plate tectonics; Pleistocene; Pliocene; pyroclastics; Quaternary; rare earths; secular variations; seismicity; Sierra Nevada; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; stratigraphic units; strontium; subduction; Tertiary; Truckee River; tuff; United States; upper mantle; volcanic fields; volcanic rocks; volcanism
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2010.09.009
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sustainable development and energy geotechnology - Potential roles for geotechnical engineering
AN - 1439235841; 18525452
AB - The world is facing unprecedented challenges related to energy resources, global climate change, material use, and waste generation. Failure to address these challenges will inhibit the growth of the developing world and will negatively impact the standard of living and security of future generations in all nations. The solutions to these challenges will require multidisciplinary research across the social and physical sciences and engineering. Although perhaps not always recognized, geotechnical engineering expertise is critical to the solution of many energy and sustainability-related problems. Hence, geotechnical engineers and academicians have opportunity and responsibility to contribute to the solution of these worldwide problems. Research will need to be extended to non-standard issues such as thermal properties of soils; sediment and rock response to extreme conditions and at very long time scales; coupled hydro-chemo-thermo-bio-mechanical processes; positive feedback systems; the development of discontinuities; biological modification of soil properties; spatial variability; and emergent phenomena. Clearly, the challenges facing geotechnical engineering in the future will require a much broader knowledge base than our traditional educational programs provide. The geotechnical engineering curricula, from undergraduate education through continuing professional education, must address the changing needs of a profession that will increasingly be engaged in alternative/renewable energy production; energy efficiency; sustainable design, enhanced and more efficient use of natural resources, waste management, and underground utilization.
JF - KSCE Journal of Civil Engineering
AU - Fragaszy, R J
AU - Santamarina, J C
AU - Amekudzi, A
AU - Assimaki, D
AU - Bachus, R
AU - Burns, SE
AU - Cha, M
AU - Cho, G C
AU - Cortes, D D
AU - Dai, S
AU - Espinoza, D N
AU - Garrow, L
AU - Huang, H
AU - Jang, J
AU - Jung, J W
AU - Kim, S
AU - Kurtis, K
AU - Lee, C
AU - Pasten, C
AU - Phadnis, H
AU - Rix, G
AU - Shin, H S
AU - Torres, M C
AU - Tsouris, C
AD - Civil, Mechanical, and Manufacturing Innovation Division, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA, rfragasz@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2011/04//
PY - 2011
DA - April 2011
SP - 611
EP - 621
PB - Springer-Verlag (Heidelberg), Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany
VL - 15
IS - 4
SN - 1226-7988, 1226-7988
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Security
KW - Education
KW - Energy
KW - Natural resources
KW - Standard of living
KW - Soil properties
KW - Climate change
KW - Sustainable development
KW - Waste management
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1439235841?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=KSCE+Journal+of+Civil+Engineering&rft.atitle=Sustainable+development+and+energy+geotechnology+-+Potential+roles+for+geotechnical+engineering&rft.au=Fragaszy%2C+R+J%3BSantamarina%2C+J+C%3BAmekudzi%2C+A%3BAssimaki%2C+D%3BBachus%2C+R%3BBurns%2C+SE%3BCha%2C+M%3BCho%2C+G+C%3BCortes%2C+D+D%3BDai%2C+S%3BEspinoza%2C+D+N%3BGarrow%2C+L%3BHuang%2C+H%3BJang%2C+J%3BJung%2C+J+W%3BKim%2C+S%3BKurtis%2C+K%3BLee%2C+C%3BPasten%2C+C%3BPhadnis%2C+H%3BRix%2C+G%3BShin%2C+H+S%3BTorres%2C+M+C%3BTsouris%2C+C&rft.aulast=Fragaszy&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2011-04-01&rft.volume=15&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=611&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=KSCE+Journal+of+Civil+Engineering&rft.issn=12267988&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs12205-011-0102-7
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-07-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Security; Education; Standard of living; Natural resources; Energy; Climate change; Soil properties; Sustainable development; Waste management
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12205-011-0102-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Paired measurements of foraminiferal delta (super 18) O and Mg/Ca ratios of Indian monsoons reconstructed from Holocene to last glacial record
AN - 1270185223; 664598-20
AB - ?The effect of seasonally reversing monsoons in the northern Indian Ocean is to impart significant changes in surface salinity (SS). Here, we report SS changes during the last 32 kyr in the Lakshadweep Sea (southeastern Arabian Sea) estimated from paired measurements of d (super 18) O and sea surface temperature (SST) using Globigerinoides sacculifer, an upper mixed layer dwelling foraminifera. The heaviest d (super 18) OG. sacculifer (?.07+ or -0.08per mill) is recorded between 23 and 15 ka, which could be defined as the last glacial maximum (LGM). The d (super 18) OG. sacculifer shift between the LGM and Holocene is 2.07per mill. The SST shows an overall warming of 2 degrees C from the LGM to Holocene (28 degrees C to 30 degrees C). However, coldest SSTs are observed prior to LGM, i.e., -27 ka. The SS was higher (-38 psu) throughout most of the recorded last glacial period (32.5?5 ka). This high salinity together with generally lower SSTs suggests a period of sustained weaker summer or stronger winter monsoons. The deglacial warming is associated with rapid reorganization of monsoons and is reflected in decreased salinity to a modern level of -36.5 psu, within a period of -5 kyr. This indicates intensification of summer monsoons during cold to warm climate transitions.
JF - Acta Geologica Sinica (English Edition)
AU - Mahesh, Badanal
AU - Banakar, Virupaxa
AU - Burr, George
Y1 - 2011/04//
PY - 2011
DA - April 2011
SP - 950
EP - 956
PB - Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Geological Society of China, Beijing
VL - 85
IS - 4
SN - 1000-9515, 1000-9515
KW - calcium
KW - magnesium
KW - last glacial maximum
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Holocene
KW - stable isotopes
KW - geochemical indicators
KW - Foraminifera
KW - Cenozoic
KW - monsoons
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Invertebrata
KW - geochemistry
KW - chemical ratios
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Protista
KW - Quaternary
KW - isotope ratios
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - Arabian Sea
KW - metals
KW - reconstruction
KW - microfossils
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef in Process, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. After editing and indexing, this record will be added to Georef.
N1 - Number of references - 41
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-24
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Arabian Sea; calcium; Cenozoic; chemical ratios; Foraminifera; geochemical indicators; geochemistry; Holocene; Indian Ocean; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; last glacial maximum; magnesium; metals; microfossils; monsoons; O-18/O-16; oxygen; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; Protista; Quaternary; reconstruction; stable isotopes
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of processing parameters on the electrophoretic deposition of carbon black nanoparticles in moderately viscous systems.
AN - 1499135521; 21280596
AB - Polymer-melt-based manufacturing processes for nanostructures offer high-rate, environmentally friendly, and commercially viable alternatives to solution-based methods. In this work, electrophoresis of a model carbon black and polystyrene system with moderate viscosity was used to investigate the viability of adapting nanoassembly processes to the high viscosity environment of polymer melts. The presence of polystyrene did not prevent deposition of carbon black, but deposition rates decreased at shorter deposition times; deposition was not linear with increasing applied voltage; and greater solution concentrations reduced the critical voltages (i.e., the voltage at which the rate of deposition changed). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) results and comparison of experimental data with Hamaker's model showed that about 1.6% of the available polystyrene was initially deposited with the carbon black. At voltages above the critical voltage, the deposited mass was less than the Hamaker prediction, indicating the formation of electrically insulating layers on the electrodes. The overall behavior suggests that polymer melt-based processes could be employed for high-rate fabrication of nano-optical devices, biochemical sensors, and nanoelectronics.
JF - Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids
AU - Modi, Satyam
AU - Wei, Ming
AU - Mead, Joey L
AU - Barry, Carol M F
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing, University of Massachusetts Lowell , Lowell, Massachusetts 01854, United States.
Y1 - 2011/03/15/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Mar 15
SP - 3166
EP - 3173
VL - 27
IS - 6
KW - Polystyrenes
KW - 0
KW - Carbon
KW - 7440-44-0
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Viscosity
KW - Electrophoresis
KW - Polystyrenes -- chemistry
KW - Carbon -- chemistry
KW - Nanoparticles -- chemistry
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2014-10-21
N1 - Date created - 2014-02-04
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la1043359
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Emergency Do Not Consume/Do Not Use Public Notifications for Direct Drinking Water Additives
T2 - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AN - 1312968889; 6046971
JF - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AU - McLellan, C
AU - Willhite, C
AU - Bhat, V
AU - Ballard, G
Y1 - 2011/03/06/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Mar 06
KW - Additives
KW - Drinking water
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Emergencies
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L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/PUB/Toxicologist11.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - When Is Exposure Not Exposure? Defining the Dose-Response Region between "Effect" and "Adverse Effect" Implications for Human Health Risk Assessment.
T2 - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AN - 1312905619; 6047150
JF - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AU - English, C
Y1 - 2011/03/06/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Mar 06
KW - Dose-response effects
KW - Side effects
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Public health
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L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/PUB/Toxicologist11.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Health Risk Assessment for Hydrogen Peroxide to Determine Acceptable Drinking Water Levels
T2 - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AN - 1312899858; 6046967
JF - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AU - Ball, G
AU - English, J
AU - McLellan, C
Y1 - 2011/03/06/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Mar 06
KW - hydrogen peroxide
KW - Drinking water
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Hydrogen peroxide
KW - Drinking Water
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L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/PUB/Toxicologist11.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Risk Assessment for Ethyl Tertiar
T2 - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AN - 1312899828; 6046966
JF - 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2011)
AU - Bhat, V
AU - Ball, G
AU - McLellan, C
Y1 - 2011/03/06/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Mar 06
KW - Risk assessment
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312899828?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/AI/PUB/Toxicologist11.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Eclogite as a seismic marker in subduction channels; seismic velocities, anisotropy, and petrofabric of Cabo Ortegal eclogite tectonites (Spain)
AN - 853215875; 2011-022470
AB - High-pressure, sheath-like fold-nappes made of normal-mid ocean ridge basalt (N-MORB) eclogites, high-pressure volcanic-arc granulites, arc-root lithospheric mantle peridotites, and shallow crustal volcanosedimentary gneisses were amalgamated at deep realms of an Eohercynian orogenic channel and currently crop out in the Cabo Ortegal Complex. Compressional seismic-wave velocity measurements determined in eclogite at confining pressures of 600 MPa range from 8.4 to 7.3 km/s, whereas anisotropy varies between 0.7% and 3.2%. Shear-wave velocities range from 4.8 to 4.2 km/s, and the respective anisotropies vary between 0.1% and 3.4%. The Poisson's ratios are low (0.25-0.265), independent of the degree of retrogression or deformation. Seismic velocities and anisotropy are related to the fabric of omphacite, and calculated eclogite anisotropy is not symmetrical with respect to the tectonic fabrics. Calculated seismic-reflection coefficients induced by lithological, structural, and rock petrofabric variations of eclogites show that these can be identified as reflectors imprinting a particular, penetrative, and dipping fabric to discrete seismic-profile segments of paleosubduction settings.
JF - Geological Society of America Bulletin
AU - Abalos, Benito
AU - Fountain, D M
AU - Gil Ibarguchi, J I
AU - Puelles, P
Y1 - 2011/03//
PY - 2011
DA - March 2011
SP - 439
EP - 456, 1 sheet
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 123
IS - 3-4
SN - 0016-7606, 0016-7606
KW - Type: colored geologic map
KW - oceanic crust
KW - allochthons
KW - Poisson's ratio
KW - paleoseismicity
KW - subduction zones
KW - amalgamation
KW - Spain
KW - Cabo Ortegal Complex
KW - eclogite facies
KW - geologic maps
KW - Europe
KW - Iberian Peninsula
KW - elastic constants
KW - granulites
KW - nappes
KW - Southern Europe
KW - rock mechanics
KW - laboratory studies
KW - rheology
KW - metamorphic rocks
KW - fabric
KW - geochemistry
KW - experimental studies
KW - channels
KW - lattice preferred orientation
KW - maps
KW - tectonite
KW - Galicia Spain
KW - crust
KW - anisotropy
KW - facies
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.gsajournals.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States | Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 106
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. block diag., sects., 5 tables, geol. sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - BUGMAF
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - allochthons; amalgamation; anisotropy; Cabo Ortegal Complex; channels; crust; eclogite facies; elastic constants; Europe; experimental studies; fabric; facies; Galicia Spain; geochemistry; geologic maps; granulites; Iberian Peninsula; laboratory studies; lattice preferred orientation; maps; metamorphic rocks; nappes; oceanic crust; paleoseismicity; Poisson's ratio; rheology; rock mechanics; Southern Europe; Spain; subduction zones; tectonite
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30226.1
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Foundations and Government: New Partners in Development
T2 - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AN - 1312993328; 6045316
JF - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AU - Silverthorne, Jane
Y1 - 2011/02/17/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Feb 17
KW - foundations
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L2 - http://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2011/webprogram/start.html#srch=method|and|pge|1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Science of Science Assessment
T2 - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AN - 1312992954; 6045236
JF - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AU - Lane, Julia
AU - Bertuzzi, Stefano
Y1 - 2011/02/17/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Feb 17
KW - Education
KW - Technology
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L2 - http://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2011/webprogram/start.html#srch=method|and|pge|1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Crowds and Clouds
T2 - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AN - 1312987813; 6044819
JF - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AU - Wing, Jeannette
Y1 - 2011/02/17/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Feb 17
KW - Clouds
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312987813?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2011/webprogram/start.html#srch=method|and|pge|1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The U.S. Research Infrastructures Program for Environmental Research
T2 - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AN - 1312962584; 6045409
JF - 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2011)
AU - Killeen, Timothy
Y1 - 2011/02/17/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Feb 17
KW - USA
KW - infrastructure
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312962584?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://aaas.confex.com/aaas/2011/webprogram/start.html#srch=method|and|pge|1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Food Digestibility by Microbes in Wild Ruminants: The Effect of Host Species and Dietary Substrate
AN - 954618831; 14431125
JF - Rangelands
AU - Naya, Daniel E
AU - Karasov, William H
AD - Authors are Assistant Professor, Departamento de Ecologiia y Evolucioon, Facultad de Ciencias and Centro Universitario de la Regional Este, Universidad de la Repuublica, Montevideo 11400, Uruguay, and Research Associate, Center for Advanced Studies in Ecology and Biodiversity, Santiago de Chile 6513677, Chile, (Naya); and Professor, Dept of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA (Karasov). Research was funded by Comision Sectorial de Investigacioon Cientifica (Uruguay) and FONDAP 1501-0001 Program 1 (Conicyt, Chile) to DEN, and US National Science Foundation (IOB-0615678) to WHK.
Y1 - 2011/02//
PY - 2011
DA - Feb 2011
SP - 31
EP - 34
PB - Society for Range Management
VL - 33
IS - 1
SN - 0190-0528, 0190-0528
KW - Ecology Abstracts
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/954618831?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Rangelands&rft.atitle=Food+Digestibility+by+Microbes+in+Wild+Ruminants%3A+The+Effect+of+Host+Species+and+Dietary+Substrate&rft.au=Naya%2C+Daniel+E%3BKarasov%2C+William+H&rft.aulast=Naya&rft.aufirst=Daniel&rft.date=2011-02-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=31&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Rangelands&rft.issn=01900528&rft_id=info:doi/10.2111%2FRANGELANDS-D-10-00072.1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-30
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2111/RANGELANDS-D-10-00072.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Vegetation Maps at the Passage of the Taylor Grazing Act (1934): A Baseline to Evaluate Rangeland Change After a Regime Shift
AN - 954608908; 14431121
JF - Rangelands
AU - Skaggs, Rhonda
AU - Edwards, Zach
AU - Bestelmeyer, Brandon T
AU - Wright, John B
AU - Williamson, Jeb
AU - Smith, Phil
AD - Authors are Professor, Agricultural Economics and Agricultural Business, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA, (Skaggs); Geographic Information Systems Coordinator, Spatial Applications and Research Center, Dept of Geography, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA (Edwards); Research Ecologist, USDA--Agricultural Research Service Jornada Experimental Range, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA (Bestelmeyer); Professor, Dept of Geography, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA (Wright); Geographic Information Systems Specialist, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA (Williamson); and US Bureau of Land Management, Las Cruces District Office, Las Cruces, NM 88005, USA (Smith). This work was supported by the New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station, the USDA--Agricultural Research Service Jornada Experimental Range with funding by the USDA, and the National Science Foundation grant DEB-0618210
Y1 - 2011/02//
PY - 2011
DA - Feb 2011
SP - 13
EP - 19
PB - Society for Range Management
VL - 33
IS - 1
SN - 0190-0528, 0190-0528
KW - Ecology Abstracts
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/954608908?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Rangelands&rft.atitle=Vegetation+Maps+at+the+Passage+of+the+Taylor+Grazing+Act+%281934%29%3A+A+Baseline+to+Evaluate+Rangeland+Change+After+a+Regime+Shift&rft.au=Skaggs%2C+Rhonda%3BEdwards%2C+Zach%3BBestelmeyer%2C+Brandon+T%3BWright%2C+John+B%3BWilliamson%2C+Jeb%3BSmith%2C+Phil&rft.aulast=Skaggs&rft.aufirst=Rhonda&rft.date=2011-02-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=13&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Rangelands&rft.issn=01900528&rft_id=info:doi/10.2111%2FRANGELANDS-D-10-00031.1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-30
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2111/RANGELANDS-D-10-00031.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Helium measurements of pore fluids obtained from the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD, USA) drill cores
AN - 881451176; 2011-062612
AB - (super 4) He accumulated in fluids is a well established geochemical tracer used to study crustal fluid dynamics. Direct fluid samples are not always collectable; therefore, a method to extract rare gases from matrix fluids of whole rocks by diffusion has been adapted. Helium was measured on matrix fluids extracted from sandstones and mudstones recovered during the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD) drilling in California, USA. Samples were typically collected as subcores or from drillcore fragments. Helium concentration and isotope ratios were measured 4-6 times on each sample, and indicate a bulk (super 4) He diffusion coefficient of 3.5+ or -1.3X10 (super -8) cm (super 2) s (super -1) at 21 degrees C, compared to previously published diffusion coefficients of 1.2X10 (super -18) cm (super 2) s (super -1) (21 degrees C) to 3.0X10 (super -15) cm (super 2) s (super -1) (150 degrees C) in the sands and clays. Correcting the diffusion coefficient of (super 4) He (sub water) for matrix porosity ( approximately 3%) and tortuosity ( approximately 6-13) produces effective diffusion coefficients of 1X10 (super -8) cm (super 2) s (super -1) (21 degrees C) and 1X10 (super -7) (120 degrees C), effectively isolating pore fluid (super 4) He from the (super 4) He contained in the rock matrix. Model calculations indicate that <6% of helium initially dissolved in pore fluids was lost during the sampling process. Complete and quantitative extraction of the pore fluids provide minimum in situ porosity values for sandstones 2.8+ or -0.4% (SD, n=4) and mudstones 3.1+ or -0.8% (SD, n=4). Copyright 2010 Springer-Verlag
JF - Hydrogeology Journal
AU - Ali, S
AU - Stute, M
AU - Torgersen, T
AU - Winckler, G
AU - Kennedy, B M
A2 - Sanford, Ward E.
A2 - Aeschbach-Hertig, Werner
A2 - Herczeg, Andrew L.
Y1 - 2011/02//
PY - 2011
DA - February 2011
SP - 237
EP - 247
PB - Springer, Berlin - Heidelberg
VL - 19
IS - 1
SN - 1431-2174, 1431-2174
KW - United States
KW - isotopes
KW - sandstone
KW - He-4
KW - fluid dynamics
KW - stable isotopes
KW - cores
KW - ground water
KW - California
KW - sedimentary rocks
KW - transport
KW - sampling
KW - noble gases
KW - Monterey County California
KW - tracers
KW - Parkfield California
KW - helium
KW - diffusivity
KW - concentration
KW - matrix
KW - tortuosity
KW - San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth
KW - porosity
KW - aquifers
KW - San Andreas Fault
KW - clastic rocks
KW - pore water
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Hydrogeology+Journal&rft.atitle=Helium+measurements+of+pore+fluids+obtained+from+the+San+Andreas+Fault+Observatory+at+Depth+%28SAFOD%2C+USA%29+drill+cores&rft.au=Ali%2C+S%3BStute%2C+M%3BTorgersen%2C+T%3BWinckler%2C+G%3BKennedy%2C+B+M&rft.aulast=Ali&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2011-02-01&rft.volume=19&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=237&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Hydrogeology+Journal&rft.issn=14312174&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10040-010-0645-6
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/content/102028/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by Springer Verlag, Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 35
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aquifers; California; clastic rocks; concentration; cores; diffusivity; fluid dynamics; ground water; He-4; helium; isotopes; matrix; Monterey County California; noble gases; Parkfield California; pore water; porosity; sampling; San Andreas Fault; San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth; sandstone; sedimentary rocks; stable isotopes; tortuosity; tracers; transport; United States
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10040-010-0645-6
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - When deaf signers read English: Do written words activate their sign translations
AN - 870997780; 201106477
AB - Deaf bilinguals for whom American Sign Language (ASL) is the first language and English is the second language judged the semantic relatedness of word pairs in English. Critically, a subset of both the semantically related and unrelated word pairs were selected such that the translations of the two English words also had related forms in ASL. Word pairs that were semantically related were judged more quickly when the form of the ASL translation was also similar whereas word pairs that were semantically unrelated were judged more slowly when the form of the ASL translation was similar. A control group of hearing bilinguals without any knowledge of ASL produced an entirely different pattern of results. Taken together, these results constitute the first demonstration that deaf readers activate the ASL translations of written words under conditions in which the translation is neither present perceptually nor required to perform the task. [Copyright Elsevier B.V.]
JF - Cognition
AU - Morford, Jill P
AU - Wilkinson, Erin
AU - Villwock, Agnes
AU - Pinar, Pilar
AU - Kroll, Judith F
AD - NSF Science of Learning Center on Visual Language and Visual Learning (VL2), Gallaudet University, Washington, DC, United States morford@unm.edu
Y1 - 2011/02//
PY - 2011
DA - February 2011
SP - 286
EP - 292
VL - 118
IS - 2
SN - 0010-0277, 0010-0277
KW - Bilingualism (08850)
KW - English (21900)
KW - Semantic Relations (76780)
KW - English as a Second Language (22100)
KW - American Sign Language (02350)
KW - Word Recognition (98200)
KW - Deafness (17420)
KW - article
KW - 4026: psycholinguistics; bilingual language processing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/870997780?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Allba&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Cognition&rft.atitle=When+deaf+signers+read+English%3A+Do+written+words+activate+their+sign+translations&rft.au=Morford%2C+Jill+P%3BWilkinson%2C+Erin%3BVillwock%2C+Agnes%3BPinar%2C+Pilar%3BKroll%2C+Judith+F&rft.aulast=Morford&rft.aufirst=Jill&rft.date=2011-02-01&rft.volume=118&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=286&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Cognition&rft.issn=00100277&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
N1 - Date revised - 2011-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - CODEN - CGTNAU
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - American Sign Language (02350); Word Recognition (98200); English (21900); English as a Second Language (22100); Bilingualism (08850); Semantic Relations (76780); Deafness (17420)
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of manufacturing conditions on the corrosion resistance behavior of metallic bipolar plates in proton exchange membrane fuel cells
AN - 1777167026; 13934170
AB - Metallic bipolar plates are one of the promising alternatives to the graphite bipolar plates in proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) systems. In this study, stainless steel (SS304, SS316L, and SS430), nickel (Ni 270), and titanium (Grade 2 Ti) plates with an initial thickness of 51 km were experimented as bipolar plate substrate materials in corrosion resistance tests. In addition to unformed blanks, SS316L plates were formed with stamping and hydroforming processes to obtain bipolar plates under different process conditions (stamping force, hydroforming pressure, stamping speed, hydroforming pressure rate). These bipolar plates, then, were subjected to corrosion tests, and the results were presented and discussed in detail. Potentiodynamic polarizations were performed to observe corrosion resistance of metallic bipolar plates by simulating the anodic and cathodic environments in the PEMFC. In order to determine the statistical significance of the corrosion resistance differences between different manufacturing conditions, analysis of variance (ANOVA) technique was used on the corrosion current density (I sub(corr), kA cm super(-2)) values obtained from experiments. ANOVA for the unformed substrate materials indicated that SS430 and Ni have less corrosion resistance than the other substrate materials tested. There was a significant difference between blank (unformed) and stamped SS316L plates only in the anodic environment. Although there was no noteworthy difference between unformed and hydroformed specimens for SS316L material, neither of these materials meet the Department of Energy's (DOE) target corrosion rate of <=1 kA cm super(-2) by 2015 without coating. Finally, stamping parameters (i.e. speed and force levels) and hydroforming parameters (i.e. the pressure and pressure rate) significantly affected the corrosion behavior of bipolar plates.
JF - Journal of Power Sources
AU - Dur, Ender
AU - Cora, Oemer Necati
AU - Koc, Muammer
AD - NSF I/UCRC Center for Precision Forming (CPF), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA
Y1 - 2011/02/01/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Feb 01
SP - 1235
EP - 1241
PB - Elesevier Science B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 196
IS - 3
SN - 0378-7753, 0378-7753
KW - Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts (MT); Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); Electronics and Communications Abstracts (EA); Corrosion Abstracts (CO); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE); Aerospace & High Technology Database (AH)
KW - Metallic bipolar plate
KW - Corrosion
KW - Hydroforming
KW - Stamping
KW - Stainless steel
KW - ANOVA
KW - Proton exchange membrane fuel cells
KW - Titanium
KW - Plates
KW - Nickel
KW - Corrosion resistance
KW - Blanks
KW - Analysis of variance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1777167026?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.atitle=Effect+of+manufacturing+conditions+on+the+corrosion+resistance+behavior+of+metallic+bipolar+plates+in+proton+exchange+membrane+fuel+cells&rft.au=Dur%2C+Ender%3BCora%2C+Oemer+Necati%3BKoc%2C+Muammer&rft.aulast=Dur&rft.aufirst=Ender&rft.date=2011-02-01&rft.volume=196&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=1235&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.issn=03787753&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.jpowsour.2010.08.052
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-04
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpowsour.2010.08.052
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Probing the electromagnetic field of a 15-nanometre hotspot by single molecule imaging
AN - 1753495968; 14262329
AB - When light illuminates a rough metallic surface, hotspots can appear, where the light is concentrated on the nanometre scale, producing an intense electromagnetic field. This phenomenon, called the surface enhancement effect, has a broad range of potential applications, such as the detection of weak chemical signals. Hotspots are believed to be associated with localized electromagnetic modes, caused by the randomness of the surface texture. Probing the electromagnetic field of the hotspots would offer much insight towards uncovering the mechanism generating the enhancement; however, it requires a spatial resolution of 1-2nm, which has been a long-standing challenge in optics. The resolution of an optical microscope is limited to about half the wavelength of the incident light, approximately 200-300nm. Although current state-of-the-art techniques, including near-field scanning optical microscopy, electron energy-loss spectroscopy, cathode luminescence imaging and two-photon photoemission imaging have subwavelength resolution, they either introduce a non-negligible amount of perturbation, complicating interpretation of the data, or operate only in a vacuum. As a result, after more than 30 years since the discovery of the surface enhancement effect, how the local field is distributed remains unknown. Here we present a technique that uses Brownian motion of single molecules to probe the local field. It enables two-dimensional imaging of the fluorescence enhancement profile of single hotspots on the surfaces of aluminium thin films and silver nanoparticle clusters, with accuracy down to 1.2nm. Strong fluorescence enhancements, up to 54 and 136 times respectively, are observed in those two systems. This strong enhancement indicates that the local field, which decays exponentially from the peak of a hotspot, dominates the fluorescence enhancement profile.
JF - Nature
AU - Cang, Hu
AU - Labno, Anna
AU - Lu, Changgui
AU - Yin, Xiaobo
AU - Liu, Ming
AU - Gladden, Christopher
AU - Liu, Yongmin
AU - Zhang, Xiang
AD - [1] Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA [2] NSF Nano Scale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC), 3112 Etcheverry Hall, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
Y1 - 2011/01/20/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Jan 20
SP - 385
EP - 388
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building London N1 9XW UK
VL - 469
IS - 7330
SN - 0028-0836, 0028-0836
KW - Solid State and Superconductivity Abstracts (SO); Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts (MT); METADEX (MD); Advanced Polymers Abstracts (EP); Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); Composites Industry Abstracts (ED); Engineered Materials Abstracts, Ceramics (EC); Electronics and Communications Abstracts (EA); Computer and Information Systems Abstracts (CI); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE); ANTE: Abstracts in New Technologies and Engineering (AN); Aluminium Industry Abstracts (AI)
KW - Scanning electron microscopy
KW - Fluorescence
KW - Surface layer
KW - Imaging
KW - Silver
KW - Nanostructure
KW - Electromagnetic fields
KW - Texture
KW - Yes:(AN)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1753495968?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature&rft.atitle=Probing+the+electromagnetic+field+of+a+15-nanometre+hotspot+by+single+molecule+imaging&rft.au=Cang%2C+Hu%3BLabno%2C+Anna%3BLu%2C+Changgui%3BYin%2C+Xiaobo%3BLiu%2C+Ming%3BGladden%2C+Christopher%3BLiu%2C+Yongmin%3BZhang%2C+Xiang&rft.aulast=Cang&rft.aufirst=Hu&rft.date=2011-01-20&rft.volume=469&rft.issue=7330&rft.spage=385&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature&rft.issn=00280836&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fnature09698
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09698
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Shedding of Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from adult and pediatric bathers in marine waters
AN - 907148973; 14323964
AB - Staphylococcus aureus including methicillin resistant S. aureus, MRSA, are human colonizing bacteria that commonly cause opportunistic infections primarily involving the skin in otherwise healthy individuals. These infections have been linked to close contact and sharing of common facilities such as locker rooms, schools and prisons Waterborne exposure and transmission routes have not been traditionally associated with S. aureus infections. Coastal marine waters and beaches used for recreation are potential locations for the combination of high numbers of people with close contact and therefore could contribute to the exposure to and infection by these organisms. The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the amount and characteristics of the shedding of methicillin sensitive S. aureus, MSSA and MRSA by human bathers in marine waters. Nasal cultures were collected from bathers, and water samples were collected from two sets of pools designed to isolate and quantify MSSA and MRSA shed by adults and toddlers during exposure to marine water. A combination of selective growth media and biochemical and polymerase chain reaction analysis was used to identify and perform limited characterization of the S. aureus isolated from the water and the participants. Twelve of 15 MRSA isolates collected from the water had identical genetic characteristics as the organisms isolated from the participants exposed to that water while the remaining 3 MRSA were without matching nasal isolates from participants. The amount of S. aureus shed per person corresponded to 105 to 106 CFU per person per 15-minute bathing period, with 15 to 20% of this quantity testing positive for MRSA. This is the first report of a comparison of human colonizing organisms with bacteria from human exposed marine water attempting to confirm that participants shed their own colonizing MSSA and MRSA into their bathing milieu. These findings clearly demonstrate that adults and toddlers shed their colonizing organisms into marine waters and therefore can be sources of potentially pathogenic S. aureus and MRSA in recreational marine waters. Additional research is needed to evaluate recreational beaches and marine waters as potential exposure and transmission pathways for MRSA.
JF - BMC Microbiology
AU - Plano, Lisa RW
AU - Garza, Anna C
AU - Shibata, Tomoyuki
AU - Elmir, Samir M
AU - Kish, Jonathan
AU - Sinigalliano, Christopher D
AU - Gidley, Maribeth L
AU - Miller, Gary
AU - Withum, Kelly
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AD - NSF-NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami, Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, EG 211 Key Biscayne, FL 33149 USA
Y1 - 2011/01/06/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Jan 06
SP - 5
PB - BioMed Central Ltd., Middlesex House London W1T 4LB UK
VL - 11
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - Prisons
KW - Beaches
KW - Skin
KW - Pediatrics
KW - Drug resistance
KW - Media (selective)
KW - Opportunist infection
KW - Methicillin
KW - Recreation
KW - Colony-forming cells
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Staphylococcus aureus
KW - A 01340:Antibiotics & Antimicrobials
KW - J 02400:Human Diseases
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/907148973?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=BMC+Microbiology&rft.atitle=Shedding+of+Staphylococcus+aureus+and+methicillin-resistant+Staphylococcus+aureus+from+adult+and+pediatric+bathers+in+marine+waters&rft.au=Plano%2C+Lisa+RW%3BGarza%2C+Anna+C%3BShibata%2C+Tomoyuki%3BElmir%2C+Samir+M%3BKish%2C+Jonathan%3BSinigalliano%2C+Christopher+D%3BGidley%2C+Maribeth+L%3BMiller%2C+Gary%3BWithum%2C+Kelly%3BFleming%2C+Lora+E%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M&rft.aulast=Plano&rft.aufirst=Lisa&rft.date=2011-01-06&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=&rft.spage=5&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=BMC+Microbiology&rft.issn=1471-2180&rft_id=info:doi/10.1186%2F1471-2180-11-5
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Prisons; Beaches; Skin; Recreation; Methicillin; Pediatrics; Colony-forming cells; Drug resistance; Polymerase chain reaction; Media (selective); Opportunist infection; Staphylococcus aureus
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-11-5
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The current state and future of stratigraphy
AN - 959092165; 2012-033607
JF - Record - Geological Survey of Western Australia
AU - Lane, H Richard
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
SP - 85
PB - Geological Survey of Western Australia, Perth, West. Aust.
SN - 0728-2311, 0728-2311
KW - United States
KW - stratigraphy
KW - financing
KW - public awareness
KW - future
KW - current research
KW - education
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Record+-+Geological+Survey+of+Western+Australia&rft.atitle=The+current+state+and+future+of+stratigraphy&rft.au=Lane%2C+H+Richard&rft.aulast=Lane&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=85&rft.isbn=9781741683912&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Record+-+Geological+Survey+of+Western+Australia&rft.issn=07282311&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.dmp.wa.gov.au/ebookshop/productlist.asp?SeriesId=6
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - ICCP 2011; 17th international congress on the Carboniferous and Permian
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute. Produced under license from the Commonwealth of Australia as represented by Geoscience Australia, Canberra, ACT, Australia
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - PubXState - West. Aust.
N1 - SuppNotes - Accessed on March 1, 2012
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - current research; education; financing; future; public awareness; stratigraphy; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Daily measures of microbes and human health at a non-point source marine beach
AN - 911160197; 16066857
AB - Studies evaluating the relationship between microbes and human health at non-point source beaches are necessary for establishing criteria which would protect public health while minimizing economic burdens. The objective of this study was to evaluate water quality and daily cumulative health effects (gastrointestinal, skin, and respiratory illnesses) for bathers at a non-point source subtropical marine recreational beach in order to better understand the inter-relationships between these factors and hence improve monitoring and pollution prevention techniques. Daily composite samples were collected, during the Oceans and Human Health Beach Exposure Assessment and Characterization Health Epidemiologic Study conducted in Miami (Florida, USA) at a non-point source beach, and analyzed for several pathogens, microbial source tracking markers, indicator microbes, and environmental parameters. Analysis demonstrated that rainfall and tide were more influential, when compared to other environmental factors and source tracking markers, in determining the presence of both indicator microbes and pathogens. Antecedent rainfall and F+ coliphage detection in water should be further assessed to confirm their possible association with skin and gastrointestinal (GI) illness outcomes, respectively. The results of this research illustrate the potential complexity of beach systems characterized by non-point sources, and how more novel and comprehensive approaches are needed to assess beach water quality for the purpose of protecting bather health.
JF - Journal of Water and Health
AU - Abdelzaher, Amir M
AU - Wright, Mary E
AU - Ortega, Cristina
AU - Hasan, A Rasem
AU - Shibata, Tomoyoki
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Kish, Jonathan
AU - Withum, Kelly
AU - He, Guoqing
AU - Elmir, Samir M
AU - Bonilla, J Alfredo
AU - Bonilla, Tonya D
AU - Palmer, Carol J
AU - Scott, Troy M
AU - Lukasik, Jerzy
AU - Harwood, Valerie J
AU - McQuaig, Shannon
AU - Sinigalliano, Christopher D
AU - Gidley, Maribeth L
AU - Wanless, David
AU - Plano, Lisa R W
AU - Garza, Anna C
AU - Zhu, Xiaofang
AU - Stewart, Jill R
AU - Dickerson, Jerold W
AU - Yampara-Iquise, Helen
AU - Carson, Charles
AU - Fleisher, Jay M
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AD - NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway Miami, FL 33149, USA, hmsolo@miami.edu
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
SP - 443
EP - 457
PB - IWA Publishing, Alliance House London SW1H 0QS United Kingdom
VL - 9
IS - 3
SN - 1477-8920, 1477-8920
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA Marine Biotechnology Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - water quality
KW - Rainfall
KW - Indicators
KW - Water quality
KW - Public health
KW - Economics
KW - ASW, USA, Florida
KW - Water Quality
KW - Nonpoint pollution
KW - Shore protection
KW - Monitoring
KW - Pollution monitoring
KW - Pollution effects
KW - Environmental factors
KW - Assessments
KW - Beaches
KW - Skin
KW - Nonpoint Pollution Sources
KW - ASW, USA, Florida, Miami
KW - Pathogens
KW - Tides
KW - Water pollution
KW - Tracking
KW - Oceans
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 3040:Wastewater treatment processes
KW - Q4 27760:Microorganisms
KW - P 1000:MARINE POLLUTION
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - Q5 08522:Protective measures and control
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/911160197?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Water+and+Health&rft.atitle=Daily+measures+of+microbes+and+human+health+at+a+non-point+source+marine+beach&rft.au=Abdelzaher%2C+Amir+M%3BWright%2C+Mary+E%3BOrtega%2C+Cristina%3BHasan%2C+A+Rasem%3BShibata%2C+Tomoyoki%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BKish%2C+Jonathan%3BWithum%2C+Kelly%3BHe%2C+Guoqing%3BElmir%2C+Samir+M%3BBonilla%2C+J+Alfredo%3BBonilla%2C+Tonya+D%3BPalmer%2C+Carol+J%3BScott%2C+Troy+M%3BLukasik%2C+Jerzy%3BHarwood%2C+Valerie+J%3BMcQuaig%2C+Shannon%3BSinigalliano%2C+Christopher+D%3BGidley%2C+Maribeth+L%3BWanless%2C+David%3BPlano%2C+Lisa+R+W%3BGarza%2C+Anna+C%3BZhu%2C+Xiaofang%3BStewart%2C+Jill+R%3BDickerson%2C+Jerold+W%3BYampara-Iquise%2C+Helen%3BCarson%2C+Charles%3BFleisher%2C+Jay+M%3BFleming%2C+Lora+E&rft.aulast=Abdelzaher&rft.aufirst=Amir&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=443&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Water+and+Health&rft.issn=14778920&rft_id=info:doi/10.2166%2Fwh.2011.146
L2 - http://www.iwaponline.com/jwh/009/jwh0090443.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-02
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pollution monitoring; Shore protection; Pollution effects; Pathogens; Water quality; Environmental factors; Tracking; Water pollution; Public health; Beaches; Skin; Oceans; Rainfall; Economics; Tides; water quality; Nonpoint pollution; Assessments; Indicators; Water Quality; Nonpoint Pollution Sources; Monitoring; ASW, USA, Florida; ASW, USA, Florida, Miami
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wh.2011.146
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - On the role of the degradation rates for the dominance of the fittest in Eigen's quasispecies model
AN - 902348902; 15875643
AB - The existence of an error threshold of the mutation rate in Eigen's quasispecies model has been computationally demonstrated exclusively in the case when the degradation rates of all model genotypes are equal. Here we explore the case with different degradation rates and demonstrate examples for which the type that has highest fitness in the absence of mutation can preserve its dominance independently of the value of the mutation rate. The examples are formulated based on analysis of the equilibria at the two extreme mutation rate values and suggest absence of an error threshold in a number of cases, most prominently when the degradation rate of the wild type is much smaller that the degradation rates of the mutants.
JF - Journal of Biological Dynamics
AU - Kostova, Tanya
AU - Zhou, Carol
AU - Zemla, Adam
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, suite 1025, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
SP - 531
EP - 548
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN United Kingdom
VL - 5
IS - 5
SN - 1751-3758, 1751-3758
KW - Ecology Abstracts
KW - Fitness
KW - Genotypes
KW - Mutation rates
KW - Models
KW - Dominance
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/902348902?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Biological+Dynamics&rft.atitle=On+the+role+of+the+degradation+rates+for+the+dominance+of+the+fittest+in+Eigen%27s+quasispecies+model&rft.au=Kostova%2C+Tanya%3BZhou%2C+Carol%3BZemla%2C+Adam&rft.aulast=Kostova&rft.aufirst=Tanya&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=5&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=531&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Biological+Dynamics&rft.issn=17513758&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F17513758.2010.544766
L2 - http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17513758.2010.544766
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-04-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Fitness; Genotypes; Mutation rates; Dominance; Models
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17513758.2010.544766
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Internet Disputes, Fairness in Arbitration and Transnationalism: A Reply to Julia Hornle
AN - 902065576; 201108772
AB - A reply to Julia Hornle, one of the world's leading scholars in the field of online dispute resolution (ODR). In her article "Cross-border Internet Dispute Resolution", Hornle expounds her vision of a fair system to resolve Internet disputes by defining the lineaments of justice in cyberspace. Her arguments appear to be based on conventional wisdoms prevalent in the "ODR Community", which, in its 15 years of existence has failed to come up with a laudable and working model of ODR. Adapted from the source document.
JF - International Journal of Law and Information Technology
AU - Schultz, Thomas
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation Ambizione Fellow, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies thomas.schultz@graduateinstitute.ch
Y1 - 2011///0,
PY - 2011
DA - 0, 2011
SP - 153
EP - 163
PB - Oxford University Press, UK
VL - 19
IS - 2
SN - 0967-0769, 0967-0769
KW - Dispute resolution
KW - Transborder data flow
KW - Regulation
KW - Electronic commerce
KW - article
KW - 14.19: COMPUTER APPLICATIONS
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/902065576?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+Journal+of+Law+and+Information+Technology&rft.atitle=Internet+Disputes%2C+Fairness+in+Arbitration+and+Transnationalism%3A+A+Reply+to+Julia+Hornle&rft.au=Schultz%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Schultz&rft.aufirst=Thomas&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=19&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=153&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Journal+of+Law+and+Information+Technology&rft.issn=09670769&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2011-11-02
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Electronic commerce; Transborder data flow; Regulation; Dispute resolution
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Samantar v Yousuf: Narrowing the Prospects for Human Rights Litigation against Foreign Officials?
AN - 881467674; 201112173
AB - On 1 June 2010, the US Supreme Court held in Samantar v Yousuf that the US statute governing the sovereign immunity of foreign states, the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976, does not cover the immunity claims of individual foreign officials. This ruling comes as the jurisdictional immunity of states and their officials before the courts of foreign states in cases involving human rights violations has increasingly been called into question. The present note analyses the Supreme Court's decision and its consequences for litigation in US courts of cases involving human rights abuses imputed to foreign officials. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Human Rights Law Review
AU - Knuchel, Sevrine
AD - Fribourg University, Switzerland; 2010 -- 2011 Swiss National Science Foundation Fellow and Visiting Scholar at Boston College Law School, Newton, MA, USA knuchel@bc.edu
Y1 - 2011///0,
PY - 2011
DA - 0, 2011
SP - 152
EP - 169
PB - Oxford University Press, UK
VL - 11
IS - 1
SN - 1641-7781, 1641-7781
KW - jurisdiction, foreign sovereign immunity, foreign officials' immunity, human rights litigation, Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act 1976 (US), Samantar v Yousuf
KW - United States Supreme Court
KW - Statutes
KW - Jurisdiction
KW - United States of America
KW - Judicial Decisions
KW - Immunity
KW - Litigation
KW - Human Rights
KW - Legal Cases
KW - article
KW - 9061: international relations; international law
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/881467674?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Human+Rights+Law+Review&rft.atitle=Samantar+v+Yousuf%3A+Narrowing+the+Prospects+for+Human+Rights+Litigation+against+Foreign+Officials%3F&rft.au=Knuchel%2C+Sevrine&rft.aulast=Knuchel&rft.aufirst=Sevrine&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=152&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Human+Rights+Law+Review&rft.issn=16417781&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093%2Fhrlr%2Fngq052
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2011-08-04
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Immunity; United States Supreme Court; United States of America; Litigation; Jurisdiction; Legal Cases; Human Rights; Judicial Decisions; Statutes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hrlr/ngq052
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - International collaboration in the Antarctic for global science
AN - 881451889; 2011-062809
AB - Article III of the Antarctic Treaty outlines the way in which international cooperation, established during the International Geophysical Year, should be continued. Exchanges of scientists have occurred among many nations over the last 50 years, but increasing planning and logistics collaboration have marked the achievement of many major scientific goals possible only through multinational activity. The recently completed International Polar Year provides clear evidence of how well this is succeeding in Antarctic science for the twenty-first century, and the publication record clearly reflects this pooling of talent.
JF - Antarctic Treaty summit; Science-policy interactions in international governance
AU - Erb, Karl A
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
PB - Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, Washington, DC
SN - 9781935623069
KW - geology
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Antarctica
KW - IPY 2007-08 Education, Outreach and Communication Publications
KW - Antarctic Treaty
KW - conservation
KW - International Polar Year 2007-08
KW - legislation
KW - international cooperation
KW - policy
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/881451889?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/GeoRef&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Erb%2C+Karl+A&rft.aulast=Erb&rft.aufirst=Karl&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=9781935623069&rft.btitle=International+collaboration+in+the+Antarctic+for+global+science&rft.title=International+collaboration+in+the+Antarctic+for+global+science&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Antarctic Treaty summit; Science-policy interactions in international governance
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The inter-tidal zone is the pathway of input of enterococci to a subtropical recreational marine beach
AN - 872141752; 14898490
AB - Efforts were made to evaluate the source of enterococci levels at a recreational beach. Four monitoring efforts were implemented which included tidal studies, hourly sampling, runoff sampling, and spatially intensive sediment sampling. Spatially intensive sediment sampling indicated that enterococci concentrations consistently decreased away from the inter-tidal zone, both seaward and landward. During dry conditions, the highest concentrations in the water were observed during high tide (7148 CFU/100 mL) and lower concentrations were observed during low tide (43 CFU/100 mL). Runoff was characterised by very high levels (11,700 CFU/100 mL). Results from these monitoring efforts collectively showed that the source of enterococci to the study beach is geographically located within the inter-tidal zone. Wash-in from the inter-tidal zone through tidal action and runoff plays a major role in controlling enterococci levels within the water column. Such results are significant in identifying the source and transport mechanisms of enterococci, which can subsequently be used as part of a modelling effort aimed at predicting enterococci levels at recreational beaches.
JF - Water Science & Technology
AU - Wright, ME
AU - Abdelzaher, A M
AU - Solo-Gabriele, H M
AU - Elmir, S
AU - Fleming, LE
AD - National Science Foundation (NSF)-National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, EG 211 Key Biscayne, FL 33149, USA, hmsolo@miami.edu
Y1 - 2011/01/01/
PY - 2011
DA - 2011 Jan 01
SP - 542
EP - 549
PB - IWA Publishing, Alliance House L20100000 SW1H 0QS UK
VL - 63
IS - 3
SN - 0273-1223, 0273-1223
KW - Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - High tides
KW - Beaches
KW - Recreation areas
KW - water column
KW - Tides
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - M2 551.466:Ocean Waves and Tides (551.466)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/872141752?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvabstractsmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Science+%26+Technology&rft.atitle=The+inter-tidal+zone+is+the+pathway+of+input+of+enterococci+to+a+subtropical+recreational+marine+beach&rft.au=Wright%2C+ME%3BAbdelzaher%2C+A+M%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+H+M%3BElmir%2C+S%3BFleming%2C+LE&rft.aulast=Wright&rft.aufirst=ME&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=63&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=542&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Science+%26+Technology&rft.issn=02731223&rft_id=info:doi/10.2166%2Fwst.2011.255
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - High tides; Beaches; Recreation areas; water column; Tides
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2011.255
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Subduction erosion of forearc mantle wedge implicated in the genesis of the South Sandwich Island (SSI) arc; evidence from boron isotope systematics
AN - 861987697; 2011-036197
AB - The South Sandwich volcanic arc is sited on a young oceanic crust, erupts low-K tholeiitic rocks, is characterized by unexotic pelagic and volcanogenic sediments on the down-going slab, and simple tectonic setting, and is ideal for assessing element transport through subduction zones. As a means of quantifying processes attending transfer of subduction-related fluids from the slab to the mantle wedge, boron concentrations and isotopic compositions were determined for representative lavas from along the arc. The samples show variable fluid-mobile/fluid-immobile element ratios and high enrichments of B/Nb (2.7 to 55) and B/Zr (0.12 to 0.57), similar to those observed in western Pacific arcs. delta (super 11) B values are among the highest so far reported for mantle-derived lavas; these are highest in the central part of the arc (+15 to +18 ppm) and decrease toward the southern and northern ends (+12 to +14 ppm). delta (super 11) B is roughly positively correlated with B concentrations and with (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr ratios, but poorly coupled with other fluid-mobile elements such as Rb, Ba, Sr and U. Peridotites dredged from the forearc trench also have high delta (super 11) B (ca. +10 ppm) and elevated B contents (38-140 ppm). Incoming pelagic sediments sampled at ODP Site 701 display a wide range in delta (super 11) B (+5 to -13 ppm; average = -4.1 ppm), with negative values most common. The unusually high delta (super 11) B values inferred for the South Sandwich mantle wedge cannot easily be attributed to direct incorporation of subducting slab materials or fluids derived directly therefrom. Rather, the heavy B isotopic signature of the magma sources is more plausibly explained by ingress of fluids derived from subduction erosion of altered frontal arc mantle wedge materials similar to those in the Marianas forearc. We propose that multi-stage recycling of high-delta (super 11) B and high-B serpentinite (possibly embellished by arc crust and volcaniclastic sediments) can produce extremely (super 11) B-rich fluids at slab depths beneath the volcanic arc. Infiltration of such fluids into the mantle wedge likely accounts for the unusual magma sources inferred for this arc.
JF - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
AU - Tonarini, Sonia
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Leat, Phil T
Y1 - 2011/01//
PY - 2011
DA - January 2011
SP - 275
EP - 284
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 301
IS - 1-2
SN - 0012-821X, 0012-821X
KW - oceanic crust
KW - metaigneous rocks
KW - neutron activation analysis data
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - subduction zones
KW - Leg 114
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - thermal ionization mass spectra
KW - mass spectra
KW - fluid phase
KW - metasomatism
KW - stable isotopes
KW - prompt gamma neutron activation analysis data
KW - serpentinite
KW - Mid-Atlantic Ridge
KW - ICP atomic emission spectra
KW - metamorphic rocks
KW - basalts
KW - spectra
KW - mobility
KW - mantle wedges
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - recycling
KW - isotope ratios
KW - atomic emission spectra
KW - subduction
KW - South Sandwich Islands
KW - metamorphism
KW - genesis
KW - Atlantic Ocean Islands
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - ODP Site 701
KW - island arcs
KW - metals
KW - B-11/B-10
KW - slabs
KW - boron
KW - South Atlantic
KW - Ocean Drilling Program
KW - dehydration
KW - Scotia Sea Islands
KW - strontium
KW - metasomatic rocks
KW - crust
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/861987697?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Earth+and+Planetary+Science+Letters&rft.atitle=Subduction+erosion+of+forearc+mantle+wedge+implicated+in+the+genesis+of+the+South+Sandwich+Island+%28SSI%29+arc%3B+evidence+from+boron+isotope+systematics&rft.au=Tonarini%2C+Sonia%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BLeat%2C+Phil+T&rft.aulast=Tonarini&rft.aufirst=Sonia&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=301&rft.issue=1-2&rft.spage=275&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Earth+and+Planetary+Science+Letters&rft.issn=0012821X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.epsl.2010.11.008
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0012821X
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 78
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, geol. sketch map
N1 - SuppNotes - Supplemental information/data is available in the online version of this article
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EPSLA2
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Atlantic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean Islands; atomic emission spectra; B-11/B-10; basalts; boron; crust; dehydration; fluid phase; genesis; ICP atomic emission spectra; igneous rocks; island arcs; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 114; mantle wedges; mass spectra; metaigneous rocks; metals; metamorphic rocks; metamorphism; metasomatic rocks; metasomatism; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; mobility; neutron activation analysis data; Ocean Drilling Program; oceanic crust; ODP Site 701; prompt gamma neutron activation analysis data; recycling; Scotia Sea Islands; serpentinite; slabs; South Atlantic; South Sandwich Islands; spectra; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; subduction; subduction zones; thermal ionization mass spectra; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2010.11.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Review of Florida red tide and human health effects
AN - 860386831; 14360025
AB - This paper reviews the literature describing research performed over the past decade on the known and possible exposures and human health effects associated with Florida red tides. These harmful algal blooms are caused by the dinoflagellate, Karenia brevis, and similar organisms, all of which produce a suite of natural toxins known as brevetoxins. Florida red tide research has benefited from a consistently funded, long-term research program, that has allowed an interdisciplinary team of researchers to focus their attention on this specific environmental issue--one that is critically important to Gulf of Mexico and other coastal communities. This long-term interdisciplinary approach has allowed the team to engage the local community, identify measures to protect public health, take emerging technologies into the field, forge advances in natural products chemistry, and develop a valuable pharmaceutical product. The review includes a brief discussion of the Florida red tide organisms and their toxins, and then focuses on the effects of these toxins on animals and humans, including how these effects predict what we might expect to see in exposed people.
JF - Harmful Algae
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AU - Kirkpatrick, Barbara
AU - Backer, Lorraine C
AU - Walsh, Cathy J
AU - Nierenberg, Kate
AU - Clark, John
AU - Reich, Andrew
AU - Hollenbeck, Julie
AU - Benson, Janet
AU - Cheng, Yung Sung
AU - Naar, Jerome
AU - Pierce, Richard
AU - Bourdelais, Andrea J
AU - Abraham, William M
AU - Kirkpatrick, Gary
AU - Zaias, Julia
AU - Wanner, Adam
AU - Mendes, Eliana
AU - Shalat, Stuart
AU - Hoagland, Porter
AU - Stephan, Wendy
AU - Bean, Judy
AU - Watkins, Sharon
AU - Clarke, Tainya
AU - Byrne, Margaret
AU - Baden, Daniel G
AD - NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami, FL 33149, United States, lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu lfleming@med.miami.edu
Y1 - 2011/01//
PY - 2011
DA - Jan 2011
SP - 224
EP - 233
PB - Elsevier Science, P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 10
IS - 2
SN - 1568-9883, 1568-9883
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology
KW - PbTx
KW - cm
KW - COPD
KW - ELISA
KW - HAB
KW - HABISS
KW - K. brevis
KW - km
KW - LC-MS
KW - mg/m3
KW - I14g/L
KW - ng/m3
KW - NSP
KW - OPD
KW - Brevetoxins
KW - Florida red tide
KW - Harmful algal bloom (HAB)
KW - Karenia brevis
KW - Marine toxin diseases
KW - Neurotoxic fish poisoning
KW - Neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP)
KW - Red tide
KW - Respiratory irritation
KW - Shellfish poisoning
KW - Noxious organisms
KW - ASW, USA, Florida
KW - Algal blooms
KW - Red tides
KW - Toxicants
KW - Biological poisons
KW - Phytoplankton
KW - natural products
KW - Metabolites
KW - Toxins
KW - Public health
KW - ASW, Mexico Gulf
KW - Literature reviews
KW - Reviews
KW - Dinoflagellates
KW - Pharmaceuticals
KW - Research programs
KW - Algae
KW - X 24370:Natural Toxins
KW - O 1085:Biotechnology
KW - K 03400:Human Diseases
KW - Q1 08484:Species interactions: parasites and diseases
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/860386831?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxicologyabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Harmful+Algae&rft.atitle=Review+of+Florida+red+tide+and+human+health+effects&rft.au=Fleming%2C+Lora+E%3BKirkpatrick%2C+Barbara%3BBacker%2C+Lorraine+C%3BWalsh%2C+Cathy+J%3BNierenberg%2C+Kate%3BClark%2C+John%3BReich%2C+Andrew%3BHollenbeck%2C+Julie%3BBenson%2C+Janet%3BCheng%2C+Yung+Sung%3BNaar%2C+Jerome%3BPierce%2C+Richard%3BBourdelais%2C+Andrea+J%3BAbraham%2C+William+M%3BKirkpatrick%2C+Gary%3BZaias%2C+Julia%3BWanner%2C+Adam%3BMendes%2C+Eliana%3BShalat%2C+Stuart%3BHoagland%2C+Porter%3BStephan%2C+Wendy%3BBean%2C+Judy%3BWatkins%2C+Sharon%3BClarke%2C+Tainya%3BByrne%2C+Margaret%3BBaden%2C+Daniel+G&rft.aulast=Fleming&rft.aufirst=Lora&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=224&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Harmful+Algae&rft.issn=15689883&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.hal.2010.08.006
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Noxious organisms; Algal blooms; Literature reviews; Toxicants; Red tides; Biological poisons; Phytoplankton; Metabolites; Public health; Brevetoxins; Reviews; Dinoflagellates; Pharmaceuticals; natural products; Research programs; Toxins; Algae; Karenia brevis; ASW, Mexico Gulf; ASW, USA, Florida
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2010.08.006
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2011. NSF 11-309
AN - 860365658; ED516940
AB - This report provides statistical information about the participation of women, minorities, and persons with disabilities in science and engineering education and employment. Its primary purpose is to serve as an information source. It offers no endorsement of or recommendations about policies or programs. National Science Foundation reporting on this topic is mandated by the Science and Engineering Equal Opportunities Act (Public Law 96-516). This digest, new for 2011, highlights key statistics drawn from the wide variety of data sources used to provide this information. Data and figures in this digest are organized into six topical areas--enrollment, field of degree, employment status, occupation, academic employment, and persons with disabilities. Surveys conducted by the Science Resources Statistics division of the National Science Foundation provided a large portion of the data used in this report. During the report's production, the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010 was signed into law. Section 505 of the bill renames the Division of Science Resources Statistics as the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES). The new name signals the central role of NCSES in the collection, interpretation, analysis, and dissemination of objective data on the science and engineering enterprise. Furthermore, the technical notes for this report provide information on specific data sources, including the survey population, data collection procedures, and sampling errors. This digest includes data on people with degrees in science, engineering, and health fields, constituted in this report by the following fields: astronomy, chemistry, physics, atmospheric sciences, earth sciences, oceanography, mathematics and statistics, computer sciences, agricultural sciences, biological sciences, psychology, social sciences, engineering, medical sciences, and other life sciences. Glossary and a list of online resources are also included.
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
SP - 20
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Statistics
KW - Hawaiians
KW - Salaries
KW - Psychology
KW - African Americans
KW - STEM Education
KW - Majors (Students)
KW - Outcomes of Education
KW - Whites
KW - Scientists
KW - Minority Groups
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Hispanic Americans
KW - Agricultural Education
KW - Alaska Natives
KW - Age Differences
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Physics
KW - Masters Degrees
KW - Computer Science
KW - Gender Differences
KW - Astronomy
KW - Oceanography
KW - Racial Differences
KW - Medical Education
KW - Sciences
KW - Bachelors Degrees
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Social Sciences
KW - Occupations
KW - Earth Science
KW - Employment Level
KW - Chemistry
KW - Males
KW - Undergraduate Study
KW - American Indians
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Mathematics
KW - Enrollment Trends
KW - Disabilities
KW - Pacific Islanders
KW - Institutional Characteristics
KW - Citizenship
KW - Undergraduate Students
KW - Ethnicity
KW - Womens Education
KW - Biological Sciences
KW - College Faculty
KW - Asian Americans
KW - Females
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/860365658?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Investigating plume-ridge interaction and its tectonic implications; insights from the distal ends of the Galapagos spreading center at 86 degrees W and 97.5 degrees W
AN - 1438970230; 2013-074287
JF - AGU Chapman conference on the Galapagos as a laboratory for the earth sciences
AU - Garman, Katrina A
AU - Perfit, Michael R
AU - Ridley, W I
AU - Fornari, Daniel J
AU - Richards, Mark A
AU - Geist, Dennis
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
SP - 22
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - East Pacific Ocean Islands
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Galapagos Islands
KW - lava
KW - volcanism
KW - sea-floor spreading
KW - surveys
KW - bathymetry
KW - ocean floors
KW - spreading centers
KW - mantle plumes
KW - mid-ocean ridges
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/GeoRef&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Garman%2C+Katrina+A%3BPerfit%2C+Michael+R%3BRidley%2C+W+I%3BFornari%2C+Daniel+J%3BRichards%2C+Mark+A%3BGeist%2C+Dennis&rft.aulast=Garman&rft.aufirst=Katrina&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Investigating+plume-ridge+interaction+and+its+tectonic+implications%3B+insights+from+the+distal+ends+of+the+Galapagos+spreading+center+at+86+degrees+W+and+97.5+degrees+W&rft.title=Investigating+plume-ridge+interaction+and+its+tectonic+implications%3B+insights+from+the+distal+ends+of+the+Galapagos+spreading+center+at+86+degrees+W+and+97.5+degrees+W&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - AGU Chapman conference on the Galapagos as a laboratory for the earth sciences
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-03
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Seismic constraints on the formation of the Galapagos and Iceland platforms
AN - 1438970118; 2013-074297
JF - AGU Chapman conference on the Galapagos as a laboratory for the earth sciences
AU - Hooft, Emilie E
AU - Brandsdottir, Bryndis
AU - Toomey, Douglas R
AU - Detrick, Robert
AU - Mjelde, Rolf
AU - Solomon, Sean C
AU - Shimamura, Hideki
AU - Murai, Yoshio
AU - Richards, Mark A
AU - Geist, Dennis
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
KW - oceanic crust
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - Kolbeinsey Ridge
KW - Europe
KW - platforms
KW - Norwegian Sea
KW - refraction methods
KW - Galapagos Islands
KW - volcanism
KW - bottom features
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - marine terraces
KW - ocean floors
KW - shore features
KW - Western Europe
KW - magmatism
KW - geophysical methods
KW - basement
KW - East Pacific Ocean Islands
KW - seismic methods
KW - eruptions
KW - surveys
KW - scarps
KW - geomorphology
KW - Iceland
KW - crust
KW - mid-ocean ridges
KW - 23:Geomorphology
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1438970118?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/GeoRef&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Hooft%2C+Emilie+E%3BBrandsdottir%2C+Bryndis%3BToomey%2C+Douglas+R%3BDetrick%2C+Robert%3BMjelde%2C+Rolf%3BSolomon%2C+Sean+C%3BShimamura%2C+Hideki%3BMurai%2C+Yoshio%3BRichards%2C+Mark+A%3BGeist%2C+Dennis&rft.aulast=Hooft&rft.aufirst=Emilie&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Seismic+constraints+on+the+formation+of+the+Galapagos+and+Iceland+platforms&rft.title=Seismic+constraints+on+the+formation+of+the+Galapagos+and+Iceland+platforms&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - AGU Chapman conference on the Galapagos as a laboratory for the earth sciences
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Cold upper mantle evidences of the abyssal peridotite of Saint Peter Saint Paul rocks and adjacent areas, Equatorial Atlantic Ocean; fossil slab beneath Gondwana?
AN - 1320155329; 2013-027769
JF - International Gondwana Symposium
AU - Sichel, Susanna Eleonora
AU - Esperanca, Sonia
AU - Motoki, Akihisa
AU - Maia, Marcia
AU - Horan, Mary
AU - Szatmari, Peter
Y1 - 2011
PY - 2011
DA - 2011
SP - 260
PB - International Gondwana Symposium, [s.l.]
VL - 14
KW - Saint Paul Rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - rhenium
KW - mantle
KW - platinum group
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - metamorphic rocks
KW - tectonics
KW - Equatorial Atlantic
KW - ductile deformation
KW - upper mantle
KW - cataclasis
KW - Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago
KW - brittle deformation
KW - subduction
KW - mylonites
KW - deformation
KW - ultramafics
KW - Atlantic Ocean Islands
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - slabs
KW - peridotites
KW - osmium
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1320155329?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+Gondwana+Symposium&rft.atitle=Cold+upper+mantle+evidences+of+the+abyssal+peridotite+of+Saint+Peter+Saint+Paul+rocks+and+adjacent+areas%2C+Equatorial+Atlantic+Ocean%3B+fossil+slab+beneath+Gondwana%3F&rft.au=Sichel%2C+Susanna+Eleonora%3BEsperanca%2C+Sonia%3BMotoki%2C+Akihisa%3BMaia%2C+Marcia%3BHoran%2C+Mary%3BSzatmari%2C+Peter&rft.aulast=Sichel&rft.aufirst=Susanna&rft.date=2011-01-01&rft.volume=14&rft.issue=&rft.spage=260&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Gondwana+Symposium&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 14th international Gondwana symposium, "Reuniting Gondwana; the East meets the West"
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-03-28
N1 - CODEN - GWSYAA
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean Islands; brittle deformation; cataclasis; deformation; ductile deformation; Equatorial Atlantic; igneous rocks; mantle; metals; metamorphic rocks; mylonites; osmium; peridotites; plate tectonics; platinum group; plutonic rocks; rhenium; Saint Paul Rocks; Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago; slabs; subduction; tectonics; ultramafics; upper mantle
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Timing of changes in sea-level and currents along Miocene platforms on the Marion Plateau, Australia
AN - 902069643; 2011-093688
AB - The question of global synchroneity of sea-level changes and their role in the formation of coeval unconformities on continental margins in different ocean basins remain major research topics in sequence stratigraphy. The Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) has addressed questions surrounding sea level in several drilling legs. One of these drilling efforts was ODP Leg 194, which drilled two platform-to-slope transects of the Miocene carbonate platforms on the Marion Plateau, situated just seaward from the Great Barrier Reef, NE Australia. The seismic and core information of this leg are used for an assessment of eustasy by determining the ages of seismic sequence boundaries on the Plateau and comparing them to sequence boundaries in the Atlantic. In addition, we evaluate the influence of current changes on the current-swept Plateau and its effect on the sequence architecture and the drowning of these cool, subtropical carbonate sequences. The two platforms, Northern and Southern Marion Platforms, are built by cool, subtropical faunal assemblages and have an asymmetric geometry. Four previously defined megasequences (A-D) are subdivided into 14 unconformity-bounded sequences. The early to middle Miocene sequences are prograding and aggrading sequences that responded mostly to the fluctuating sea level. From the late middle Miocene onward, the sea-level changes are coupled with increased activity of the southward-flowing East Australian Current. As a result, the sequences developed a characteristic mounded geometry in the basinal area where large drift deposits accumulated. Changes of current strength and position produced unconformities within the drift successions that are identified by downlap, onlap terminations and, locally, erosional truncation. These drift unconformities are observed along reflections that in the proximal position are onlap unconformities and sequence boundaries. The coeval nature of the two types of unconformities indicates that changes in sea level and currents occurred in concert. The interplay between sea level and currents also produced hardgrounds that record long hiatuses at sequence boundaries. The two most prominent sequences boundaries are drowning unconformities. An older one covers the top and flanks of the Northern Marion Platform, which drowned during the sea-level rise at 11.1 Ma. The Southern Marion Platform survived this event only to drown at the end of the late Miocene at approximately 7 Ma. A thin and varied drowning succession documents that the platform was intermittently active in the Pliocene. The top of the drowning succession is still a hardground surface on the modern seafloor, whereas Pliocene to Recent drift deposits overlie the hardgrounds on the slopes. It is likely that the combined effect of sea-level rise and subsequent sweeping of the platform by strong currents prevented the re-establishment of carbonate production on the bank and aided in the demise of the platforms. The timing of the sea-level changes is assessed by determining the ages of the sequence boundaries based on revised age models relying on biostratigraphy and Sr-isotope dates from cores at ODP Leg 194 drill sites. The age of each sequence boundary is remarkably similar at each site along the drilled transects. The age consistency along the seismic reflections corroborates the hypothesis that seismic reflections follow depositional surfaces and have chronostratigraphic significance. Furthermore, the timing of many Neogene sequence boundaries on the Marion Plateau (ODP Leg 194) coincides with the timing of sequence boundaries on the Queensland Plateau (ODP Leg 133) and along the Bahamas Transect (ODP Leg 166). The similar ages of the sequence boundaries and associated sea-level changes on the Pacific northeast Australian margin and the Atlantic Bahamian margin indicate a global synchroneity of third-order sea-level changes in the Neogene.
JF - Special Publication - Society for Sedimentary Geology
AU - Eberli, Gregor P
AU - Anselmetti, Flavio S
AU - Isern, Alexandra R
AU - Delius, Heike
A2 - Morgan, William A.
A2 - George, Annette D.
A2 - Harris, Paul M.
A2 - Kupecz, Julie A.
A2 - Sarg, J. F.
Y1 - 2010/12//
PY - 2010
DA - December 2010
SP - 219
EP - 242
PB - Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM), Tulsa, OK
VL - 95
SN - 1060-071X, 1060-071X
KW - sequence stratigraphy
KW - currents
KW - carbonate platforms
KW - Southwest Pacific
KW - South Pacific
KW - Leg 194
KW - Miocene
KW - West Pacific
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Tertiary
KW - sea-level changes
KW - sedimentary rocks
KW - Coral Sea
KW - Neogene
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - stratigraphic boundary
KW - Ocean Drilling Program
KW - Marion Plateau
KW - carbonate rocks
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Special+Publication+-+Society+for+Sedimentary+Geology&rft.atitle=Timing+of+changes+in+sea-level+and+currents+along+Miocene+platforms+on+the+Marion+Plateau%2C+Australia&rft.au=Eberli%2C+Gregor+P%3BAnselmetti%2C+Flavio+S%3BIsern%2C+Alexandra+R%3BDelius%2C+Heike&rft.aulast=Eberli&rft.aufirst=Gregor&rft.date=2010-12-01&rft.volume=95&rft.issue=&rft.spage=219&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Special+Publication+-+Society+for+Sedimentary+Geology&rft.issn=1060071X&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://sp.sepmonline.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 63
N1 - PubXState - OK
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sects., 2 plates, 2 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - carbonate platforms; carbonate rocks; Cenozoic; Coral Sea; currents; Leg 194; Marion Plateau; Miocene; Neogene; Ocean Drilling Program; Pacific Ocean; sea-level changes; sedimentary rocks; sequence stratigraphy; South Pacific; Southwest Pacific; stratigraphic boundary; Tertiary; West Pacific
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Greenhouse gas mitigation can reduce sea-ice loss and increase polar bear persistence
AN - 853217115; 2011-019835
JF - Nature (London)
AU - Amstrup, Steven C
AU - DeWeaver, Eric T
AU - Douglas, David C
AU - Marcot, Bruce G
AU - Durner, George M
AU - Bitz, Cecilia M
AU - Bailey, David A
Y1 - 2010/12//
PY - 2010
DA - December 2010
SP - 955
EP - 958
PB - Macmillan Journals, London
VL - 468
IS - 7326
SN - 0028-0836, 0028-0836
KW - Chordata
KW - sea ice
KW - Carnivora
KW - Mammalia
KW - ice cover
KW - global change
KW - Ursus
KW - models
KW - Theria
KW - habitat
KW - mitigation
KW - Ursidae
KW - Fissipeda
KW - marine environment
KW - ice
KW - Ursus maritimus
KW - ecology
KW - greenhouse effect
KW - Vertebrata
KW - Eutheria
KW - Tetrapoda
KW - global warming
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/853217115?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature+%28London%29&rft.atitle=Greenhouse+gas+mitigation+can+reduce+sea-ice+loss+and+increase+polar+bear+persistence&rft.au=Amstrup%2C+Steven+C%3BDeWeaver%2C+Eric+T%3BDouglas%2C+David+C%3BMarcot%2C+Bruce+G%3BDurner%2C+George+M%3BBitz%2C+Cecilia+M%3BBailey%2C+David+A&rft.aulast=Amstrup&rft.aufirst=Steven&rft.date=2010-12-01&rft.volume=468&rft.issue=7326&rft.spage=955&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature+%28London%29&rft.issn=00280836&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fnature09653
L2 - http://www.nature.com/nature/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 30
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - SuppNotes - Supplemental information/data is available in the online version of this article
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - NATUAS
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Carnivora; Chordata; ecology; Eutheria; Fissipeda; global change; global warming; greenhouse effect; habitat; ice; ice cover; Mammalia; marine environment; mitigation; models; sea ice; Tetrapoda; Theria; Ursidae; Ursus; Ursus maritimus; Vertebrata
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09653
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - The End of Mandatory Retirement for Doctoral Scientists and Engineers in Postsecondary Institutions: Retirement Patterns 10 Years Later. InfoBrief. NSF 11-302
AN - 851224039; ED514366
AB - Mandatory retirement in postsecondary educational institutions ended in 1994. In this paper, examination of retirements in 1993 (just before the end of this practice) and again 10 years later shows that by 2003, the age distribution of doctoral scientists and engineers working in postsecondary institutions had shifted, with a larger proportion being older than 56 years of age, compared with 1993. However, this is not solely due to changes in the propensity of the older age groups to retire. Tracking retirement is a challenge because many individuals continue to work in another capacity after officially retiring from one job, and others move in and out of retirement in the same type of job. In this report, "retired individuals" are those whose most recent employment was in a postsecondary institution and are not working because they have retired, and those who have retired but are working part time in any sector. It does not include individuals who retired from a postsecondary institution and later returned to full-time employment in any sector. (Contains 1 figure, 4 tables and 6 notes.)
AU - Hoffer, Thomas B.
AU - Sederstrom, Scott
AU - Harper, Deborah
Y1 - 2010/12//
PY - 2010
DA - December 2010
SP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Scientists
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Technical Occupations
KW - Pattern Recognition
KW - Employment
KW - Institutions
KW - Retirement
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/851224039?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Water Supply Performance and Fire Suppression during the World Trade Center Disaster
AN - 849483873; 14094888
AB - This paper describes the New York City water supply performance and suppression of fire during the World Trade Center (WTC) disaster. The water losses sustained by damaged water distribution pipelines are discussed and their impacts on emergency response and telecommunications and transportation infrastructure are noted. The results of hydraulic network analyses are presented to quantify the performance of hose and engine relay systems from fireboats to the WTC site. The results of an analytical study of firefighting relay systems are summarized to provide guidance on the most effective selection of hose size, number of hose lines, and engines for future use of fireboats for landside fire protection. The fire department response to the WTC disaster is compared with similar response to the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. Drawing on lessons from both events, recommendations are made for improved emergency planning and services.
JF - Journal of Infrastructure Systems
AU - Bonneau, A
AU - O'Rourke, T D
AU - Palmer, M C
AD - Private Consultant and formerly National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Cornell Univ., Hollister Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853., mcp5@cornell.edu
Y1 - 2010/12//
PY - 2010
DA - December 2010
SP - 264
EP - 272
PB - American Society of Civil Engineers, 1801 Alexander Bell Drive Reston VA 20191-4400 USA
VL - 16
IS - 4
SN - 1076-0342, 1076-0342
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts
KW - Man-made disasters
KW - Emergency services
KW - Terrorism
KW - New York
KW - New York City
KW - Infrastructure
KW - Fires
KW - Water supply
KW - Earthquakes
KW - California
KW - Comparative studies
KW - Water Supply
KW - Water supplies
KW - USA, New York, New York City
KW - Transportation
KW - Planning
KW - Networks
KW - Pipelines
KW - Disasters
KW - USA, California, Loma Prieta
KW - Performance Evaluation
KW - Emergency preparedness
KW - Seismic activity
KW - Water Loss
KW - infrastructure
KW - AQ 00007:Industrial Effluents
KW - H 2000:Transportation
KW - SW 3060:Water treatment and distribution
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849483873?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Infrastructure+Systems&rft.atitle=Water+Supply+Performance+and+Fire+Suppression+during+the+World+Trade+Center+Disaster&rft.au=Bonneau%2C+A%3BO%27Rourke%2C+T+D%3BPalmer%2C+M+C&rft.aulast=Bonneau&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2010-12-01&rft.volume=16&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=264&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Infrastructure+Systems&rft.issn=10760342&rft_id=info:doi/10.1061%2F%28ASCE%29IS.1943-555X.0000028
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Earthquakes; Fires; Transportation; Emergency preparedness; Seismic activity; Disasters; Pipelines; infrastructure; Water supplies; Performance Evaluation; Planning; Networks; Water Supply; Water Loss; USA, New York, New York City; USA, California, Loma Prieta
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)IS.1943-555X.0000028
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of oxidation on the magnetization of nanoparticulate magnetite.
AN - 763473478; 20879747
AB - Synthetic nanomagnetite has been suggested as a potential reactant for the in situ treatment of contaminated groundwater. Although the application of magnetite nanoparticles for environmental remediation is promising, a full understanding of particle reactivity has been deterred by the propensity of the nanoparticles to aggregate and become colloidally unstable. Attractive magnetic interactions between particles are partially responsible for their aggregation. In this study, we characterized the magnetic behavior of magnetite by determining the saturation magnetization, coercivity, remanent magnetization, susceptibility, and blocking temperature of synthetic magnetite using a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID). We show how these properties vary in the presence of surface-associated solutes such as tetramethylammonium (TMA(+)) and ferrous (Fe(II)) cations. More importantly, because magnetite readily reacts with O(2) to produce maghemite, we analyzed the effect of oxidation on the magnetic properties of the particles. Because maghemite has a reported magnetic saturation that is less than that of magnetite, we hypothesized that oxidation would decrease the magnitude of the magnetic attractive force between adjacent particles. The presence of TMA(+) and Fe(II) caused a change in the magnetic properties of magnetite potentially because of alterations in its crystalline order. Magnetite oxidation caused a decrease in saturation magnetization, resulting in less significant magnetic interactions between particles. Oxidation, therefore, could lead to the decreased aggregation of magnetite nanoparticles and a potential enhancement of their colloidal stability.
JF - Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids
AU - Rebodos, Robert L
AU - Vikesland, Peter J
AD - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and The Institute of Critical Technology and Applied Science, NSF-EPA Center for the Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24060, USA.
Y1 - 2010/11/16/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Nov 16
SP - 16745
EP - 16753
VL - 26
IS - 22
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/763473478?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Langmuir+%3A+the+ACS+journal+of+surfaces+and+colloids&rft.atitle=Effects+of+oxidation+on+the+magnetization+of+nanoparticulate+magnetite.&rft.au=Rebodos%2C+Robert+L%3BVikesland%2C+Peter+J&rft.aulast=Rebodos&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2010-11-16&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=22&rft.spage=16745&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Langmuir+%3A+the+ACS+journal+of+surfaces+and+colloids&rft.issn=1520-5827&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fla102461z
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2011-03-04
N1 - Date created - 2010-11-10
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la102461z
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Shoreline Armoring, Risk Management, and Coastal Resilience Under Rising Seas
AN - 867744571; 14626613
AB - The land-sea interface is a complex social-ecological system characterized by natural ecological processes and human-induced changes. Holistic management of the shoreline is a critical element of an ecosystem-based approach to the land-sea interface in coastal zone management (CZM) programs. Anthropogenic alteration of shoreline environments has resulted in significant loss of sandy beach ecosystems and eroded the resilience of these systems to disturbance. We tested the efficacy of CZM programs in managing the land-sea interface under current and future challenges by comparing alternative approaches to shoreline management in two U.S. states (Hawai'i and North Carolina). Our results show that explicit prohibition of shoreline armoring has been more effective in conserving dynamic coastal environments and communities by passing the risk associated with coastal development from the public trust to private landowners. Over the long-term, robust anti-armoring legislation will de-incentivize risky coastal development projects while preserving coastal environments and the ecological services they provide to society. Policy prescriptions for effective shoreline management and increased coastal resilience under persistent coastal erosion and future sea-level rise are proposed.
JF - Coastal Management
AU - Kittinger, John N
AU - Ayers, Adam L
AD - Department of Geography, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, National Science Foundation Integrated Graduate Education, Research & Training (IGERT) Program in Ecology, Conservation & Pathogen Biology, Honolulu, Hawai'i, USA
Y1 - 2010/11//
PY - 2010
DA - Nov 2010
SP - 634
EP - 653
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN UK
VL - 38
IS - 6
SN - 0892-0753, 0892-0753
KW - Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Environment Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - armoring
KW - erosion
KW - coastal zone management
KW - natural hazard
KW - resilience
KW - shoreline
KW - social-ecological systems
KW - Sea level
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Sea level rise
KW - Man-induced effects
KW - Risks
KW - Coasts
KW - Marine
KW - ANW, USA, North Carolina
KW - disturbance
KW - Beaches
KW - Coastal erosion
KW - anthropogenic factors
KW - Environmental impact
KW - Ecosystem disturbance
KW - Coastal zone management
KW - Erosion
KW - Coastal zone
KW - Human factors
KW - Legislation
KW - Sea level changes
KW - M2 551.510.42:Air Pollution (551.510.42)
KW - O 4090:Conservation and Environmental Protection
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - Q2 09124:Coastal zone management
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Coastal zone; Coastal erosion; Environmental impact; Man-induced effects; Ecosystem disturbance; Risks; Sea level changes; Coasts; Coastal zone management; Ecosystems; Sea level rise; Beaches; disturbance; Erosion; Sea level; anthropogenic factors; coastal zone management; Human factors; Legislation; ANW, USA, North Carolina; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08920753.2010.529038
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - NSF programs for enhancing the geosciences at community colleges
AN - 864945699; 2011-042089
AB - The National Science Foundation supports numerous programs that fund the development, improvement, and expansion of geoscience programs at community colleges. The NSF Division of Undergraduate Education manages the Advanced Technological Education (ATE) program, the Transforming Undergraduate Education in STEM (TUES) program, and the STEM Talent Expansion Program (STEP). The ATE program provides support to prepare technicians for high-technology fields. Commonly involving partnerships between community colleges and potential employers, the ATE program supports development of technical courses, certificate programs, or associate degrees, professional development activities that enhance the technical abilities of college faculty and secondary school teachers, and development of career pathways from secondary schools to two-year colleges and from two-year colleges to four-year institutions. The TUES program supports efforts to apply current STEM disciplinary knowledge and implement known best practices to investigate new ways to improve the undergraduate experience. Projects that involve the creation and adaptation of learning materials and teaching strategies, develop or enhance faculty expertise, enhance understanding of how students learn STEM topics, or facilitate widespread adoption and implementation of educational innovations are encouraged by TUES. STEP funds projects designed to produce an increase in the number of students completing associate degrees in STEM fields, completing credits toward transfer to STEM baccalaureate degree programs while at a community college, or obtaining STEM degrees at baccalaureate institutions. Typically, STEP projects involve adapting and implementing known strategies and best practices that facilitate recruitment and/or enhance retention of undergraduate students in STEM fields. The NSF GEO Directorate also supports a number of programs (GeoEd, OEDG, and REU) that provide community colleges with additional opportunities to more effectively attract, engage, and educate students.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Matty, David J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2010/11//
PY - 2010
DA - November 2010
SP - 157
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 42
IS - 5
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - Transforming Undergraduate Education in STEM program
KW - programs
KW - college-level education
KW - Advanced Technological Education program
KW - development
KW - STEM Talent Expansion Program
KW - government agencies
KW - education
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/864945699?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=NSF+programs+for+enhancing+the+geosciences+at+community+colleges&rft.au=Matty%2C+David+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Matty&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2010-11-01&rft.volume=42&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=157&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2010 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Advanced Technological Education program; college-level education; development; education; geology; government agencies; NSF; programs; STEM Talent Expansion Program; Transforming Undergraduate Education in STEM program
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Numbers of Doctorates Awarded Continue to Grow in 2009; Indicators of Employment Outcomes Mixed. InfoBrief. NSF 11-305
AN - 822508452; ED513342
AB - This InfoBrief uses data collected from the 2009 Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED) to report on trends in the numbers of individuals who earn research doctoral degrees from U.S. academic institutions. Postgraduation plans of new doctorate recipients are examined from 2004 to 2009, a period that includes the recent economic decline. The following key findings are described in detail in this report: (1) 49,562 research doctorates were awarded in 2009, up 1.6% over the 2008 total; (2) Doctorates awarded in science and engineering (S&E) fields were up 1.9% over 2008, owing entirely to growth in numbers of female S&E doctorate recipients; (3) The number of doctorates earned by U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are members of racial/ethnic minority groups continues to grow faster than the number earned by white recipients; (4) The number of doctorate recipients with temporary visas was down 3.5% from 2008; (5) The proportion of 2009 doctorate recipients with employment prospects in the coming year (gauged by definite commitments to a position) was slightly less than that reported in 2008 and about the same as that reported in 2007, the year before the advent of the recession; and (6) Among doctorate recipients reporting definite commitments, a growing proportion are taking postdoctoral (postdoc) positions; 2009 marked the largest single-year increase in the proportion of doctorate recipients taking postdoc positions during the 2004-09 period. (Contains 2 figures, 4 tables and 5 notes.)
AU - Fiegener, Mark K.
Y1 - 2010/11//
PY - 2010
DA - November 2010
SP - 10
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Graduate Students
KW - Minority Group Students
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Educational Attainment
KW - Employment
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - White Students
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Minority Groups
KW - College Graduates
KW - Universities
KW - Graduation Rate
KW - Graduate Surveys
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Gender Differences
KW - Racial Differences
KW - Foreign Students
KW - Economic Climate
KW - Employment Potential
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Tables (Data)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/822508452?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Molten-salt thermal energy storage in thermoclines under different environmental boundary conditions
AN - 754881126; 13402122
AB - Operation during the charge and discharge cycles of molten-salt thermoclines used for solar thermal energy storage depends strongly on the environmental boundary conditions to which the tanks are exposed. A comprehensive model which accounts for thermal transport in the molten-salt heat transfer fluid and the filler material in the tank is developed for exploring the effects of boundary conditions on thermocline performance. Heat loss from the tank under non-adiabatic boundary conditions is found to distort the temperature and salt flow distributions relative to the uniform conditions found in adiabatic thermoclines; as a result, the outflow temperature drops more rapidly in the former case. Such effects of non-adiabatic boundaries become insignificant at large salt-flow Reynolds numbers. As the Reynolds number increases beyond 250, the discharge efficiency of non-adiabatic thermoclines approaches that of the adiabatic counterparts. In the case of significant heat loss at the walls, the discharge efficiency of thermoclines increases with increasing Reynolds number, a trend that is opposite to that in adiabatic thermoclines.
JF - Applied Energy
AU - Yang, Zhen
AU - Garimella, Suresh V
AD - Cooling Technologies Research Center, an NSF I/UCRC, School of Mechanical Engineering, 585 Purdue Mall, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2088, USA, sureshg@purdue.edu
Y1 - 2010/11//
PY - 2010
DA - Nov 2010
SP - 3322
EP - 3329
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK
VL - 87
IS - 11
SN - 0306-2619, 0306-2619
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Solar thermal energy
KW - Energy storage
KW - Thermocline
KW - Molten salt
KW - Concentrating solar plants
KW - Sustainability
KW - Storage
KW - Salts
KW - thermocline
KW - Temperature
KW - heat transfer
KW - outflow
KW - boundary conditions
KW - ENA 03:Energy
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754881126?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Energy&rft.atitle=Molten-salt+thermal+energy+storage+in+thermoclines+under+different+environmental+boundary+conditions&rft.au=Yang%2C+Zhen%3BGarimella%2C+Suresh+V&rft.aulast=Yang&rft.aufirst=Zhen&rft.date=2010-11-01&rft.volume=87&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=3322&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Energy&rft.issn=03062619&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.apenergy.2010.04.024
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-09
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Storage; Salts; thermocline; Temperature; outflow; heat transfer; boundary conditions
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2010.04.024
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Using polar research data in K-12 and college classrooms
AN - 1030489632; 2012-068361
AB - Real-time and near real-time data can be collected in different formats such as numerical measurements, photographs/video recordings, and scientific observations. There is a plethora of such types of data covering a variety of disciplines publicly available from the National Science Foundation's Office of Polar Programs (NSF OPP). Several projects sponsored by NSF OPP will be highlighted to identify the data sources currently available to educators and to demonstrate the methods educators at different levels have already used the data in their classrooms. Ice core isotope levels, Greenland ice reflectance/albedo rates, Arctic and Antarctic atmospheric gas levels, snowfall and snowmelt rates, and snow depths are some of the types of data to be highlighted.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Lukes, Laura A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2010/11//
PY - 2010
DA - November 2010
SP - 123
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 42
IS - 5
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - snowfall
KW - snowmelt
KW - Arctic region
KW - education
KW - research
KW - observations
KW - measurement
KW - Greenland
KW - college-level education
KW - K-12 education
KW - Antarctica
KW - snow
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1030489632?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Using+polar+research+data+in+K-12+and+college+classrooms&rft.au=Lukes%2C+Laura+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Lukes&rft.aufirst=Laura&rft.date=2010-11-01&rft.volume=42&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=123&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2010 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-08-02
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Antarctica; Arctic region; college-level education; education; Greenland; K-12 education; measurement; observations; research; snow; snowfall; snowmelt
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Virtual Sustainability
AN - 858420384; 14446943
AB - In four ways, massively multiplayer online role-playing games may serve as tools for advancing sustainability goals, and as laboratories for developing alternatives to current social arrangements that have implications for the natural environment. First, by moving conspicuous consumption and other usually costly status competitions into virtual environments, these virtual worlds might reduce the need for physical resources. Second, they provide training that could prepare individuals to be teleworkers, and develop or demonstrate methods for using information technology to replace much transportation technology, notably in commuting. Third, virtual worlds and online games build international cooperation, even blending national cultures, thereby inching us toward not only the world consciousness needed for international agreements about the environment, but also toward non-spatial government that cuts across archaic nationalisms. Finally, realizing the potential social benefits of this new technology may urge us to reconsider a number of traditional societal institutions.
JF - Sustainability
AU - Bainbridge, W S
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230, USA
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - Oct 2010
SP - 3195
EP - 3210
PB - Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Matthaeusstr 11 Basel 4057 Switzerland
VL - 2
IS - 10
SN - 2071-1050, 2071-1050
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Commuting
KW - sustainability
KW - M3:1010
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/858420384?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Sustainability&rft.atitle=Virtual+Sustainability&rft.au=Bainbridge%2C+W+S&rft.aulast=Bainbridge&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2010-10-01&rft.volume=2&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=3195&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Sustainability&rft.issn=20711050&rft_id=info:doi/10.3390%2Fsu2103195
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - sustainability
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su2103195
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A Wider Scope: International Regulations
AN - 853488776; 14307986
AB - With the recent BP Deepwater Horizon oil rig disaster and the passing of the five-year anniversary for Hurricane Katrina, we are reminded how delicate our ecosystems and water supplies are. But these events occurred in a generalized local area. What about water regulations on an international level?.
JF - Water Quality Products
AU - Bentley, D L
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - Oct 2010
SP - 6
PB - Scranton Gillette Communications, Inc.
VL - 15
IS - 10
SN - 1092-0978, 1092-0978
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - water quality
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Water Supply
KW - Water quality
KW - Water supplies
KW - Oil
KW - Regulations
KW - Water Quality
KW - Disasters
KW - Water supply
KW - Hurricanes
KW - International regulations
KW - Q5 08503:Characteristics, behavior and fate
KW - SW 5010:Network design
KW - AQ 00007:Industrial Effluents
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/853488776?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Quality+Products&rft.atitle=A+Wider+Scope%3A+International+Regulations&rft.au=Bentley%2C+D+L&rft.aulast=Bentley&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2010-10-01&rft.volume=15&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=6&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Quality+Products&rft.issn=10920978&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Hurricanes; Disasters; Water quality; Water supply; Oil; water quality; Ecosystems; International regulations; Water supplies; Water Quality; Water Supply; Regulations
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Time-Frequency and Autoregressive Techniques for Prognostication of Shock-Impact Reliability of Implantable Biological Electronic Systems
AN - 849485647; 14110994
AB - In this paper, autoregressive and time-frequency- based techniques have been investigated to predict and monitor the damage in implantable biological electronics such as pacemakers and defibrillators. The approach focuses is on the pre-failure space and methodologies for quantification of failure in electronic equipment subjected to shock and vibration loads using the dynamic response of the electronic equipment. Presented methodologies are applicable at the system-level for identification of impending failures to trigger repair or replacement significantly prior to failure. Leading indicators of shock-damage have been developed to correlate with the damage initiation and progression in under variety of stresses in electronic systems. The approach is based on monitoring critical solder interconnects, and sensing the change in test-signal characteristics prior to failure, in addition to monitoring the transient strain characteristics optically using digital image correlation and strain gages. Previously, SPR based on wavelet packet energy decomposition and the Mahalanobis distance approach have been studied by the authors for quantification of shock damage in electronic assemblies ("Solder-joint reliability in electronics under shock and vibration using explicit finite element sub-modeling," P. Lall, [et al]Proc. 56th ECTC, May-Jun. 2006, pp. 428-435, "Life prediction and damage equivalency for shock survivability of electronic components," P. Lall, [et al] Proc. ITherm, May-Jun., 2006, pp. 804-816). In this paper, Autoregressive (AR), wavelet packet energy decomposition, and time-frequency (TFA) techniques have been investigated for system identification, condition monitoring, and fault detection and diagnosis in implantable biological electronic systems. One of the main advantages of the AR technique is that it is primarily a signal-based technique. Reduced reliance on system analysis helps avoid errors which otherwise may render the process of fault detection and diagnosis quite complex and dependent on the skills of the analyst. Results of the present study show that the AR and TFA-based health monitoring techniques are feasible for fault detection and damage-assessment in electronic units. Explicit finite-element models have been developed and various kinds of failure modes have been simulated such as solder ball cracking, package falloff, and solder ball failure.
JF - IEEE Transactions on Electronics Packaging Manufacturing
AU - Lall, Pradeep
AU - Gupta, Prashant
AU - Kulkarni, Manish
AU - Hofmeister, James
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering and NSF Center for Advanced Vehicle and Extreme Environment Electronics, Auburn University, Auburn,
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - Oct 2010
SP - 289
EP - 302
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., 3 Park Avenue, 17th Fl New York NY 10016-5997 USA
VL - 33
IS - 4
SN - 1521-334X, 1521-334X
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Vibrations
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Shock
KW - Energy
KW - Defibrillators
KW - Statistical analysis
KW - Stress
KW - Electronic equipment
KW - Pacemakers
KW - Decomposition
KW - double prime P elements
KW - W 30900:Methods
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=IEEE+Transactions+on+Electronics+Packaging+Manufacturing&rft.atitle=Time-Frequency+and+Autoregressive+Techniques+for+Prognostication+of+Shock-Impact+Reliability+of+Implantable+Biological+Electronic+Systems&rft.au=Lall%2C+Pradeep%3BGupta%2C+Prashant%3BKulkarni%2C+Manish%3BHofmeister%2C+James&rft.aulast=Lall&rft.aufirst=Pradeep&rft.date=2010-10-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=289&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=IEEE+Transactions+on+Electronics+Packaging+Manufacturing&rft.issn=1521334X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1109%2FTEPM.2010.2078824
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Vibrations; Mathematical models; Shock; Defibrillators; Energy; Statistical analysis; Stress; Electronic equipment; Pacemakers; Decomposition; double prime P elements
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TEPM.2010.2078824
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Ocean drilling; forty years of international collaboration
AN - 849006757; 2011-017676
AB - International cooperation is an essential component of modern scientific research and societal advancement [see Ismail-Zadeh and Beer, 2009], and scientific ocean drilling represents one of earth science's longest-running and most successful international collaborations. The strength of this collaboration and its continued success result from the realization that scientific ocean drilling provides a unique and powerful tool to study the critical processes of both short-term change and the long-term evolution of Earth systems. A record of Earth's changing tectonics, climate, ocean circulation, and biota is preserved in marine sedimentary deposits and the underlying basement rocks. And because the ocean floor is the natural site for accumulation and preservation of geological materials, it may preserve a continuous record of these processes.
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Smith, Deborah K
AU - Exon, Neville
AU - Barriga, Fernando J A S
AU - Tatsumi, Yoshiyuki
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - October 2010
SP - 393
EP - 394
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 91
IS - 43
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - history
KW - marine geology
KW - international cooperation
KW - Glomar Challenger
KW - Deep Sea Drilling Project
KW - Ocean Drilling Program
KW - ECORD
KW - JOIDES
KW - European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling
KW - 07:Oceanography
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 2
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - ETAGCT
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Deep Sea Drilling Project; ECORD; European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling; Glomar Challenger; history; international cooperation; JOIDES; marine geology; Ocean Drilling Program
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2010EO430001
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Balancing Access to Health Data and Privacy: A Review of the Issues and Approaches for the Future
AN - 839573629; 201102353
AB - Background. There has been a dramatic increase in the types of microdata, and this holds great promise for health services research. However, legislative efforts to protect individual privacy have reduced the flow of health care data for research purposes and increased costs and delays, affecting the quality of analysis. Aim. challenges raised by concerns about data confidentiality in the context of health services research, the current methodologies used to ensure data security, and a description of one successful approach to balancing access and privacy. Materials and Methods. We analyze the issues of access and privacy using a conceptual framework based on balancing the risk of reidentification with the utility associated with data analysis. The guiding principle should be to generate released data that are as close to the maximum acceptable risk as possible. HIPAA and other privacy measures can perhaps be seen as having had the effect of lowering the 'maximum acceptable risk' level and rendering some data unreleasable. Results. utility associated with different types of data used in health services research and the ability to link data from multiple sources as well as current models of data sharing and their limitations. Discussion. One particularly compelling approach is to establish a remote access 'data enclave,' where statistical protections are applied to the data, technical protections ensure compliance with data-sharing requirements, and operational controls limit researchers' access to the data they need for their specific research questions. Conclusion. access to data for research, increasing the use of remote access data enclaves, and disseminating knowledge and promulgating standards for best practices related to data protection. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Health Services Research
AU - Lane, Julia
AU - Schur, Claudia
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, VA 22230
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - October 2010
SP - 1456
EP - 1467
PB - Blackwell Publishers, Oxford UK
VL - 45
IS - 5p2
SN - 0017-9124, 0017-9124
KW - Administrative data uses confidentiality-privacy issues health policy-politics-law-regulation research ethics-institutional review boards-publication dissemination issues
KW - Health costs
KW - Medical research
KW - Confidentiality
KW - Privacy
KW - Health information
KW - Health services
KW - article
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LA - English
DB - Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-10
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - CODEN - HESEA5
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Medical research; Privacy; Health services; Confidentiality; Health costs; Health information
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2010.01141.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The hunt for a descriptive theory of choice under risk - A view from the road not taken
AN - 764423717; 201065230
AB - In this paper I propose that the development of descriptive theories of choice in economics has been profoundly influenced by an arbitrary and seemly innocuous decision as to how to present risky choices to experimental subjects. This decision to represent lotteries as prospects has lead to a preoccupation with the question of whether preferences conform to what is known as the 'independence axiom." Had the profession chosen to represent lotteries in the action-by-state matrices favored by Savage, the independence axiom would have appeared uncontroversial but we would have questioned whether preferences obeyed arguably more fundamental tenets of rationality like transitivity. That different ways of representing lotteries lead to different conclusions regarding which axioms preferences do and don't obey suggests that the choices people make aren't necessarily reflecting properties of their preferences at all. Instead the choices reveal properties of the decision rule individuals use to try to satisfy their preferences - a rule that involves judgments regarding the similarity or dissimilarity of prizes and their associated payoffs across alternatives. The paper discusses how such judgments explain observed behaviors given both prospect and matrix representations of lottery choices as well as explaining anomalies in other choice domains. [Copyright Elsevier Inc.]
JF - The Journal of Socio-Economics
AU - Leland, Jonathan
AD - National Science Foundation, Decision, Risk and Management Sciences, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Suite 995.07, Arlington, VA 22230, United States
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - October 2010
SP - 568
EP - 577
PB - Elsevier Science, Amsterdam The Netherlands
VL - 39
IS - 5
SN - 1053-5357, 1053-5357
KW - Risky choice Anomalies Allais Savage Regret theory Prospect theory Similarity judgments Non-expected utility Framing effects
KW - Risk
KW - Matrices
KW - Lotteries
KW - Choices
KW - Rationality
KW - Decisions
KW - article
KW - 0715: social change and economic development; social change & economic development
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LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2010-11-11
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - JSECFK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Choices; Lotteries; Decisions; Rationality; Matrices; Risk
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2009.05.009
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The influence of the Columbia River plume on the survival of steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha): a numerical exploration
AN - 759322117; 13783471
AB - Are smolt-to-adult return rates (SARs) for wild steelhead (i.e., sea-run rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss) and wild Snake River spring-summer Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) related to changes in the Columbia River plume at the time that juvenile migrants enter the ocean? We used three-dimensional (3D) numerical models of the baroclinic circulation in the Columbia River estuary-plume-shelf system to simulate within-season variation in plume size and location, comparing the results with SARs for each day that juvenile salmon entered the ocean for 1999-2003. We found that steelhead benefited from the plume environment at a narrow window of time around their ocean entry. However, when large-scale ocean conditions turned unfavorable, the contribution of local plume conditions to the overall variability in steelhead survival became not significant. A similar evaluation revealed that the plume did not affect survival of Chinook salmon, at least at the fine scale of variability considered. The differential response between the two species is consistent with observed and previously reported behavioral characteristics they exhibit. We speculate that steelhead mainly use the plume to move quickly away from coastal habitats and the predation pressures associated with this environment, for a more direct migration than Chinook salmon to ocean habitats in the Gulf of Alaska.Original Abstract: Les taux de survie du saumoneau a l'adulte (SARs) des truites arc-en-ciel anadromes (Oncorhynchus mykiss) sauvages et des saumons chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) de printemps-ete de la Snake sont-ils relies aux changements dans le panache du Columbia au moment ou les jeunes saumons penetrent dans l'ocean? Nous avons utilise des modeles numeriques tridimensionnels (3D) de la circulation baroclinique dans le systeme estuaire-panache-plate-forme du Columbia pour simuler la variation au cours de la saison de la taille et de la position du panache, en associant les resultats aux SAR pour chaque jour ou les jeunes saumons ont penetre dans la mer en 1999-2003. Les truites arc-en-ciel anadromes ont tire benefice de l'environnement du panache pendant une courte periode au moment de leur arrivee dans l'ocean. Cependant, lorsque les conditions oceaniques a grande echelle sont devenues defavorables, la contribution des conditions du panache local a la variabilite globale de la survie des truites arc-en-ciel anadromes est devenue non significative. Une evaluation similaire a montre que le panache n'affecte pas la survie des saumons chinook, au moins a l'echelle fine de la variabilite consideree. Les reponses differentes des deux especes sont en accord avec les caracteristiques comportementales observees presentement et signalees anterieurement chez elles. Nous croyons que les truites arc-en-ciel anadromes utilisent le panache pour s'eloigner rapidement des habitats cotiers et des pressions de predation qui leur sont associees, afin de migrer plus directement que les saumons chinook vers les habitats oceaniques dans le golfe de l'Alaska.
JF - Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
AU - Burla, Michela
AU - Baptista, Antonio M
AU - Casillas, Edmundo
AU - Williams, John G
AU - Marsh, Douglas M
AD - National Science Foundation (NSF) Science and Technology Center for Coastal Margin Observation & Prediction, Oregon Health & Science University, 20000 NW Walker Road, Beaverton, OR 97006, USA., burla@stccmop.org
Y1 - 2010/10//
PY - 2010
DA - October 2010
SP - 1671
EP - 1684
PB - NRC Research Press, 1200 Montreal Rd, Bldg M-55, Ottawa, ON K1A 0R6, Canada, Tel.: 613-993-9084, 613-990-7873 or 1-800-668-1222 (Canada and U.S.), Fax: 613-952-7656, Ottawa ON K1A 0R6 Canada
VL - 67
IS - 10
KW - ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Environment Abstracts; Ecology Abstracts; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - river plumes
KW - Anadromous species
KW - Predation
KW - Freshwater
KW - Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
KW - Migration
KW - Evaluation
KW - Numerical models
KW - Salmon
KW - Rivers
KW - USA, Snake R.
KW - Environmental impact
KW - Oncorhynchus mykiss
KW - Atmospheric circulation
KW - Habitat
KW - INE, Pacific, Columbia River Plume
KW - Baroclinic mode
KW - Coastal oceanography
KW - salmon
KW - survival
KW - Variability
KW - Survival
KW - Environmental factors
KW - INE, USA, Columbia Estuary
KW - Habitats
KW - River plumes
KW - Fisheries
KW - Exploration
KW - Pressure
KW - Plumes
KW - Rainbows
KW - Mathematical models
KW - migrants
KW - Oceans
KW - Migrations
KW - INE, USA, Alaska, Alaska Gulf
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - SW 0835:Streamflow and runoff
KW - Q1 08422:Environmental effects
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
KW - M2 551.468:Coastal Oceanography (551.468)
KW - ENA 12:Oceans & Estuaries
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-10-01
N1 - Number of references - 36
N1 - Last updated - 2016-03-17
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Baroclinic mode; Mathematical models; River plumes; Anadromous species; Environmental impact; Migrations; Survival; Environmental factors; Rivers; Oceans; Predation; Exploration; Pressure; Habitat; Migration; Plumes; Numerical models; Coastal oceanography; Fisheries; Atmospheric circulation; Rainbows; river plumes; migrants; salmon; survival; Evaluation; Salmon; Habitats; Variability; Oncorhynchus mykiss; Oncorhynchus tshawytscha; USA, Snake R.; INE, USA, Columbia Estuary; INE, USA, Alaska, Alaska Gulf; INE, Pacific, Columbia River Plume; Freshwater
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/F10-083
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (DRAFT PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT). [Part 1 of 1]
T2 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (DRAFT PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 873133339; 14661-0_0001
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. The potential impact identified has been the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA). For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the worlds oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and may be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles (nm) off the coast, and primarily would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours depending upon the objectives of the research and the requirements of the geophysical study. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this draft EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles. The impact analysis presented in this draft programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 exemplary (representative) areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the worlds oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation and to address the potential for cumulative effects of marine seismic research acoustic sources upon marine resources. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian Manatees is likely to occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.).
JF - EPA number: 100390, Draft EIS--512 pages, Appendices--289 pages, September 30, 2010
PY - 2010
VL - 1
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2010-11-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: September 30, 2010
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - MARINE SEISMIC RESEARCH FUNDED BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OR CONDUCTED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (DRAFT PROGRAMMATIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT/OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT).
AN - 772276193; 14661
AB - PURPOSE: A programmatic approach to the assessment of marine seismic research funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) or conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is proposed. Currently, environmental assessments are prepared for individual or a small group of research cruises. The potential impact identified has been the sound from seismic surveys on marine resources and species listed under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and Endangered Species Act (ESA). For research cruises with the potential for adverse impacts to listed species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and/or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) have issued a biological opinion and related incidental take statements, which included terms and conditions to minimize impacts on threatened and endangered species. In parallel with this effort, when applicable, a separate application for an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) under the MMPA was submitted for each cruise to another division within NOAA, which subsequently issued the IHA. Under the proposed action, marine seismic surveys funded by NSF could take place across the worlds oceans, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea, and may be located in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) or territorial waters of the U.S. or foreign countries. Four to seven cruises would be conducted each year with cruises lasting about one to seven weeks. Generally, vessels would be more than three nautical miles (nm) off the coast, and primarily would utilize high-energy source systems such as strings or arrays of six to 36 airguns. Seismic operations conducted during any specific research cruise could range from 20 to more than 800 hours depending upon the objectives of the research and the requirements of the geophysical study. Seismic operations generally occur in deeper, open ocean waters but can range from less than 328 feet to more than 26,247 feet. The research vessels have the capability of towing different airgun configurations and a variety of other research can also be conducted on NSF-funded marine seismic research cruises, including, but not limited to, mapping, water sampling, and scientific dredging, drilling, and coring. USGS seismic research has been primarily coastal, utilizing high-resolution, low-energy source systems. About eight to 12 cruises are conducted each year in water depths varying from less than 66 feet to generally not more than 3,281 feet. Two action alternatives and a No Action Alternative are analyzed in this draft EIS. Alternative A would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures. Alternative B is the preferred alternative and would involve conducting marine seismic research using cruise-specific mitigation measures with generic mitigation measures for low-energy acoustic sources. Mitigation measures would include preliminary assessment of potential impacts during cruise planning, visual monitoring for marine mammals and turtles, passive acoustic monitoring for the presence of marine mammals, proposed safety radii or mitigation zones, and other operational procedures. Under Alternative B, for any seismic survey that proposes a low-energy source there would be a standard mitigation zone of 328 feet for all marine mammals and turtles. The impact analysis presented in this draft programmatic EIS is narrowed to 13 exemplary (representative) areas, with five areas subject to detailed analysis and eight subject to qualitative analysis. POSITIVE IMPACTS: Marine seismic research would continue the investigation of the geology and geophysics of the seafloor by collecting seismic reflection and refraction data that reveal the structure and stratigraphy of the crust and/or overlying sediment below the worlds oceans thus fostering a better understanding of Earths history, natural hazards, and climate history. A programmatic approach would minimize duplication of effort in environmental documentation and to address the potential for cumulative effects of marine seismic research acoustic sources upon marine resources. The collective analysis of representative project locations would provide a strong technical basis for a more global assessment of the potential cumulative impacts of NSF-funded and USGS marine seismic activities in the future. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Implementation of either action alternative could affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, federally listed sea turtle species. Short-term, localized behavioral disturbance of small numbers of individual marine mammals, including cetaceans, pinnipeds, sea otters, and West Indian Manatees is likely to occur. LEGAL MANDATES: Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.).
JF - EPA number: 100390, Draft EIS--512 pages, Appendices--289 pages, September 30, 2010
PY - 2010
KW - Water
KW - Birds
KW - Endangered Species (Animals)
KW - Fish
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Geology
KW - International Programs
KW - Marine Mammals
KW - Noise Assessments
KW - Oceans
KW - Research
KW - Seismic Surveys
KW - Shellfish
KW - Ships
KW - Wildlife
KW - Wildlife Habitat
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Mediterranean Sea
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - Endangered Species Act of 1973, Animals
KW - Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, Compliance
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Division of Ocean Sciences, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2010-11-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: September 30, 2010
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative real-time PCR and fluorescence insitu hybridization approaches for enumerating Brevundimonas diminuta in drinking water
AN - 877600325; 13752230
AB - Brevundimonas diminuta is a small Gram-negative bacterium used for validation of membranes and filters used in the pharmaceutical and drinking water treatment industries. Current assays are time consuming, nonselective, and may be subject to interference by competing indigenous microorganisms. The focus of this study is to develop rapid and specific enumeration methodologies for B.diminuta. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and fluorescence insitu hybridization (FISH) assays were developed based on the gyrB (1,166bp) and rpoD (829bp) gene sequences of B.diminuta ATCC 19146. Species-specific primers and probes were designed, and a 100-200bp segment of each gene was targeted in the qPCR studies. For both the qPCR and FISH assays, an internal 25bp sequence was selected for use as a TaqMan probe (labeled with 6-FAM and a Black Hole Quencher). Probe specificity studies, conducted against Gram-negative and Gram-positive reference strains as well as environmental strains, revealed high specificity of the primer/probe pairs to B.diminuta. Sensitivities of the qPCR reactions using purified genomic DNA from B.diminuta were determined to be 0.89pg for rpoD and 8.9pg for gyrB. The feasibility of using whole-cell B.diminuta suspensions directly with the rpoD qPCR protocol was also evaluated. The greatest sensitivity observed for B.diminuta was 110 super(3) colony forming units (CFU) per mL when tryptic soy broth was used as the growth medium. When compared with direct microscopic enumeration using a 5' 6-FAM FISH probe, traditional plating methods showed significant underestimation of B.diminuta concentration (P=0.01) when this organism was cultivated in saline lactose broth. The results of this investigation demonstrate that qPCR and FISH are effective methods for rapid (<4h) enumeration of B.diminuta and may be viable alternatives to plating when validating drinking water filtration systems.
JF - Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AU - Bestervelt, Lorelle L
AU - Saha, Ratul
AU - Bagley, Susan T
AD - NSF International, 789 Dixboro Road, Ann Arbor, MI, 48105, USA, Donofrio@nsf.org
Y1 - 2010/09//
PY - 2010
DA - Sep 2010
SP - 909
EP - 918
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany
VL - 37
IS - 9
SN - 1367-5435, 1367-5435
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Toxicology Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Brevundimonas diminuta
KW - Lactose
KW - Fluorescence
KW - DNA probes
KW - DNA topoisomerase
KW - Soybeans
KW - Filters
KW - Colonies
KW - Filtration
KW - Colony-forming cells
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Pharmaceuticals
KW - Primers
KW - genomics
KW - Drinking water
KW - Fluorescence in situ hybridization
KW - A 01450:Environmental Pollution & Waste Treatment
KW - X 24350:Industrial Chemicals
KW - W 30935:Food Biotechnology
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2013-12-04
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Lactose; Fluorescence; DNA probes; DNA topoisomerase; Soybeans; Filters; Filtration; Colonies; Colony-forming cells; Microorganisms; Pharmaceuticals; Polymerase chain reaction; Primers; genomics; Drinking water; Fluorescence in situ hybridization; Brevundimonas diminuta
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10295-010-0738-1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Integrated Watershed Management Modeling: Generic Optimization Model Applied to the Ipswich River Basin
AN - 856756497; 13806253
AB - A generic integrated watershed management optimization model was developed to efficiently screen a broad range of technical, economic, and policy management options within a watershed system framework and select the optimal combination of management strategies and associated water allocations for designing a sustainable watershed management plan at least cost. The watershed management model integrates both natural and human elements of a watershed system including the management of ground and surface water sources, water treatment and distribution systems, human demands, wastewater treatment and collection systems, water reuse facilities, nonpotable water distribution infrastructure, aquifer storage and recharge facilities, storm water, and land use. The model was formulated as a linear program and applied to the upper Ipswich River Basin in Massachusetts. Our results demonstrate the merits of integrated watershed management by showing (1) the relative efficacy and economic efficiency of undervalued or underutilized management options such as incentive pricing; (2) the value of management strategies that serve several functions such as the benefits of increased infiltration for meeting both storm water and water supply management objectives; and (3) that both human and environmental water needs can be met by simultaneously implementing multiple diverse management tools, which in this case study led to achieving 70% of the recommended in-stream flow with only 25% decrease in net benefits.
JF - Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
AU - Zoltay, Viktoria I
AU - Vogel, Richard M
AU - Kirshen, Paul H
AU - Westphal, Kirk S
AD - Former National Science Foundation Graduate Student Fellow, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts Univ., Medford, MA 02155; and Senior Analyst, Abt Associates, Inc., 55 Wheeler St., Cambridge, MA 02138, viktoria_zoltay@abtassoc.com
Y1 - 2010/09//
PY - 2010
DA - September 2010
SP - 566
EP - 575
SN - 0733-9496, 0733-9496
KW - ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts
KW - Optimization models
KW - Integrated systems
KW - Decision support systems
KW - Water supply
KW - Watersheds
KW - Water management
KW - Stormwater management
KW - Land management
KW - Wastewater management
KW - Groundwater recharge
KW - River Basins
KW - Resource management
KW - Economic Efficiency
KW - Water Costs
KW - Water resources
KW - Watershed Management
KW - Aquifer storage
KW - Storms
KW - Storm Water
KW - Watershed management
KW - Water sources
KW - Water resources planning
KW - River basin management
KW - Modelling
KW - USA, Massachusetts
KW - River basins
KW - Land use
KW - Model Studies
KW - Aquifer recharge
KW - Infiltration
KW - Benefits
KW - Environment management
KW - Optimization
KW - Q2 09144:Regional studies, expeditions and data reports
KW - AQ 00006:Sewage
KW - SW 3040:Wastewater treatment processes
KW - M2 556.14:Infiltration/Soil Moisture (556.14)
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2017-02-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Resource management; Water management; Water resources; River basins; Watersheds; Environment management; River basin management; Water supply; Modelling; Aquifer recharge; Infiltration; Watershed management; Water sources; Aquifer storage; Water resources planning; Storms; Land use; Storm Water; River Basins; Economic Efficiency; Water Costs; Watershed Management; Benefits; Optimization; Model Studies; USA, Massachusetts
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0000083
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Cyanobacterial blooms and the occurrence of the neurotoxin, beta-N-methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA), in South Florida aquatic food webs
AN - 839645111; 13512915
AB - Recent studies demonstrate that most cyanobacteria produce the neurotoxin beta-N-methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA) and that it can biomagnify in at least one terrestrial food chain. BMAA has been implicated as a significant environmental risk in the development of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). We examined several blooms of cyanobacteria in South Florida, and the BMAA content of resident animals, including species used as human food. A wide range of BMAA concentrations were found, ranging from below assay detection limits to approximately 7000I14g/g, a concentration associated with a potential long-term human health hazard.
JF - Harmful Algae
AU - Brand, Larry E
AU - Pablo, John
AU - Compton, Angela
AU - Hammerschlag, Neil
AU - Mash, Deborah C
AD - Division of Marine Biology and Fisheries and NSF/NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Cswy., Miami, FL 33149, United States
Y1 - 2010/09//
PY - 2010
DA - Sep 2010
SP - 620
EP - 635
PB - Elsevier Science, P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 9
IS - 6
SN - 1568-9883, 1568-9883
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources
KW - BMAA
KW - Cyanobacteria
KW - Florida
KW - Harmful algal blooms
KW - Neurodegenerative disease
KW - Toxin
KW - Algal blooms
KW - Food chains
KW - USA, Florida
KW - Biological poisons
KW - Parkinson's disease
KW - Alzheimer's disease
KW - Human food
KW - Phytoplankton
KW - Public health
KW - Neurodegenerative diseases
KW - Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
KW - Movement disorders
KW - Neurotoxins
KW - Food webs
KW - Algae
KW - X 24370:Natural Toxins
KW - Q1 08484:Species interactions: parasites and diseases
KW - O 5060:Aquaculture
KW - K 03450:Ecology
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Algal blooms; Cyanobacteria; Food chains; Biological poisons; Human food; Phytoplankton; Neurotoxins; Food webs; Public health; Neurodegenerative diseases; Movement disorders; Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; Parkinson's disease; Alzheimer's disease; Algae; USA, Florida
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2010.05.002
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Pricing and Capital Allocation for Multiline Insurance Firms
AN - 754875147; 13246781
AB - AbstractWe study multiline insurance companies with limited liability. Insurance premiums are determined by no-arbitrage principles. The results are developed under the realistic assumption that the losses created by insurer default are allocated among policyholders following an ex post, pro rata, sharing rule. In general, the ratio of default costs to expected claims, and thus the ratio of premiums to expected claims, vary across insurance lines. Moreover, capital and related costs are allocated across lines in proportion to each line's share of a digital default option on the insurer. Our results expand and generalize those derived elsewhere in the literature.
JF - Journal of Risk and Insurance
AU - Ibragimov, Rustam
AU - Jaffee, Dwight
AU - Walden, Johan
AD - *Rustam Ibragimov is in the Department of Economics, Harvard University. Dwight Jaffee and Johan Walden are in the Haas School of Business, University of California at Berkeley. The authors can be contacted via e-mail: ribragim[AT]fas.harvard.edu, jaffee[AT]haas.berkeley.edu, and walden[AT]haas.berkeley.edu, respectively. We are grateful to the referee for helpful suggestions. Ibragimov gratefully acknowledges partial research support by the NSF grant SES-0820124.
Y1 - 2010/09//
PY - 2010
DA - Sep 2010
SP - 551
EP - 578
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 USA
VL - 77
IS - 3
SN - 0022-4367, 0022-4367
KW - Risk Abstracts
KW - pricing
KW - Liability
KW - Insurance
KW - R2 23070:Economics, organization
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ariskabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Risk+and+Insurance&rft.atitle=Pricing+and+Capital+Allocation+for+Multiline+Insurance+Firms&rft.au=Ibragimov%2C+Rustam%3BJaffee%2C+Dwight%3BWalden%2C+Johan&rft.aulast=Ibragimov&rft.aufirst=Rustam&rft.date=2010-09-01&rft.volume=77&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=551&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Risk+and+Insurance&rft.issn=00224367&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1539-6975.2010.01353.x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - pricing; Liability; Insurance
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1539-6975.2010.01353.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of manufacturing processes on formability and surface topography of proton exchange membrane fuel cell metallic bipolar plates
AN - 753751437; 13036293
AB - Metallic bipolar plates in PEM fuel cells offer low-volume, low-mass and low-cost stack fabrication in addition to superior durability when compared to composite bipolar plates, which suffer due to their much higher thickness and less durability. This study aims to address the formability and surface topography issues of metallic bipolar plates fabricated by stamping and hydroforming technologies. Particular emphasis was given to process repeatability, surface topology, and dimensional quality of bipolar plates that would greatly affect the corrosion and contact resistance characteristics. Thin metal sheets of several alloys (i.e., SS304, SS316L, SS430, Ni270, Ti grades 1 and 2) were used in the fabrication experiments. SS304 and SS316L were shown to possess better formability when compared to other alloys that were used in this study, while SS430 and Ti grade 2 demonstrated the worst among all. Channel formability was observed to be greatly affected by the hydroforming pressure, while it does not differ much above certain level of stamping force. The confocal microscopy analyses showed that surface roughness values of the formed samples were altered significantly when compared to the initial flat blanks. In general, increasing hydroforming pressure and stamping force yielded higher surface roughness values at channel peaks. In addition, the surface topography was shown to be influenced mainly by the pressure level rather than the pressure rate in hydroforming process.
JF - Journal of Power Sources
AU - Mahabunphachai, Sasawat
AU - Cora, Oemer Necati
AU - Koc, Muammer
AD - NSF I/UCR Center for Precision Forming (CPF), Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), Richmond, VA 23284 USA
Y1 - 2010/08/15/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Aug 15
SP - 5269
EP - 5277
PB - Elesevier Science B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 195
IS - 16
SN - 0378-7753, 0378-7753
KW - Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts (MT); METADEX (MD); Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); Electronics and Communications Abstracts (EA); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Ferritic stainless steels
KW - Austenitic stainless steels
KW - 430
KW - 304
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.atitle=Effect+of+manufacturing+processes+on+formability+and+surface+topography+of+proton+exchange+membrane+fuel+cell+metallic+bipolar+plates&rft.au=Mahabunphachai%2C+Sasawat%3BCora%2C+Oemer+Necati%3BKoc%2C+Muammer&rft.aulast=Mahabunphachai&rft.aufirst=Sasawat&rft.date=2010-08-15&rft.volume=195&rft.issue=16&rft.spage=5269&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.issn=03787753&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.jpowsour.2010.03.018
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-11-14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpowsour.2010.03.018
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Supply and Demand Coordination in Energy Adaptive Computing
T2 - 19th International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks (ICCCN 2010)
AN - 1312960712; 6024043
JF - 19th International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks (ICCCN 2010)
AU - Kant, Krishna
Y1 - 2010/08/02/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Aug 02
KW - Energy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312960712?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.icccn.org/icccn10/techprogram.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Incorporation of subducted slab-derived sediment and fluid in arc magmas; B-Be- (super 10) Be-epsilon Nd systematics of the Kurile convergent margin, Russia
AN - 759305243; 2010-087253
AB - We present an investigation of B-Be- (super 10) Be-epsilon Nd systematics of the incoming crust and across the wide, active Kurile arc in the NW Pacific ocean basin to address the role of recent sediment incorporation in arc magmas as a function of depth to the Wadati-Benioff Zone. The (super 10) Be flux ratio (8-14%) through the arc constrains the fate of sediments subducted at the trench and requires that a minimum ?10 m of the sediment column must reach the depths of magma generation. Enrichments in subducted sediment-derived (super 10) Be in rear-arc lavas are comparable with those in the volcanic front, despite longer subduction transit times, and require a mechanism for the prolonged release of (super 10) Be from the subducting slab. Cross-arc (super 10) Be enrichments, together with drastic reductions in B/Be, imply a protracted stability of their primary mineralogical host in subducted sediment, white mica (phengite). The persistence of phengite constrains slab surface temperatures to be < 950 degrees C to 165 km depth and limits the extent of partial melting of the slab to < 20%. The simplest interpretation of combined incoming sediment and cross-arc B/Be- (super 10) Be/9Be-epsilon Nd systematics is that the agent of element transfer changes from aqueous fluid-dominated beneath the volcanic front to melt-like beneath the deeper regions of the arc.
JF - Journal of Petrology
AU - Dreyer, B M
AU - Morris, J D
AU - Gill, J B
Y1 - 2010/08//
PY - 2010
DA - August 2010
SP - 1761
EP - 1782
PB - Oxford University Press, Oxford
VL - 51
IS - 8
SN - 0022-3530, 0022-3530
KW - subduction zones
KW - isotopes
KW - fluid phase
KW - stable isotopes
KW - West Pacific
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - phase equilibria
KW - sediments
KW - Kuril Trench
KW - Northwest Pacific
KW - chemical composition
KW - geochemistry
KW - active margins
KW - Be-10/Be-9
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - isotope ratios
KW - solid phase
KW - North Pacific
KW - lava
KW - island arcs
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - boron
KW - beryllium
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/759305243?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Petrology&rft.atitle=Incorporation+of+subducted+slab-derived+sediment+and+fluid+in+arc+magmas%3B+B-Be-+%28super+10%29+Be-epsilon+Nd+systematics+of+the+Kurile+convergent+margin%2C+Russia&rft.au=Dreyer%2C+B+M%3BMorris%2C+J+D%3BGill%2C+J+B&rft.aulast=Dreyer&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2010-08-01&rft.volume=51&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=1761&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Petrology&rft.issn=00223530&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093%2Fpetrology%2Fegq038
L2 - http://petrology.oxfordjournals.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JPTGAD
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - active margins; alkaline earth metals; Be-10/Be-9; beryllium; boron; chemical composition; fluid phase; geochemistry; island arcs; isotope ratios; isotopes; Kuril Trench; lava; magmas; metals; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Pacific Ocean; phase equilibria; radioactive isotopes; sediments; solid phase; stable isotopes; subduction zones; West Pacific
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egq038
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF-DUE programs of interest to community colleges
T2 - 21st Biennial Conference on Chemical Education (BCCE 2010)
AN - 1312970089; 6025269
JF - 21st Biennial Conference on Chemical Education (BCCE 2010)
AU - Chang, Eun-Woo
Y1 - 2010/08/01/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Aug 01
KW - Chemical education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312970089?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=21st+Biennial+Conference+on+Chemical+Education+%28BCCE+2010%29&rft.atitle=NSF-DUE+programs+of+interest+to+community+colleges&rft.au=Chang%2C+Eun-Woo&rft.aulast=Chang&rft.aufirst=Eun-Woo&rft.date=2010-08-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=21st+Biennial+Conference+on+Chemical+Education+%28BCCE+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.bcce2010.org/program_schedule/program_schedule.php
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Educational innovation: Projects and opportunities supported by NSF
T2 - 95th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2010)
AN - 1312962887; 6028947
JF - 95th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2010)
AU - Sevian, Hannah
Y1 - 2010/08/01/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Aug 01
KW - innovations
KW - Education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312962887?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=95th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2010%29&rft.atitle=Educational+innovation%3A+Projects+and+opportunities+supported+by+NSF&rft.au=Sevian%2C+Hannah&rft.aulast=Sevian&rft.aufirst=Hannah&rft.date=2010-08-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=95th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2010/techprogram/index.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Anthropogenic resource utilization, represented in the diet of the Sacred Ibis, Threskiornis aethiopicus, a non-native wading bird in southeastern Florida, USA
T2 - 95th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2010)
AN - 1312929377; 6030178
JF - 95th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2010)
AU - Calle, Leonardo
Y1 - 2010/08/01/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Aug 01
KW - USA, Southeast
KW - USA, Florida
KW - Aves
KW - anthropogenic factors
KW - Diets
KW - Resource utilization
KW - Anthropogenic factors
KW - Threskiornis aethiopicus
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312929377?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=95th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2010%29&rft.atitle=Anthropogenic+resource+utilization%2C+represented+in+the+diet+of+the+Sacred+Ibis%2C+Threskiornis+aethiopicus%2C+a+non-native+wading+bird+in+southeastern+Florida%2C+USA&rft.au=Calle%2C+Leonardo&rft.aulast=Calle&rft.aufirst=Leonardo&rft.date=2010-08-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=95th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2010/techprogram/index.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Introduction about graduate education training and overall goals of the GK-12 program
T2 - 95th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2010)
AN - 1312929127; 6030253
JF - 95th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2010)
AU - Ortega, Sonia
Y1 - 2010/08/01/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Aug 01
KW - Training
KW - Education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312929127?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=95th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2010%29&rft.atitle=Introduction+about+graduate+education+training+and+overall+goals+of+the+GK-12+program&rft.au=Ortega%2C+Sonia&rft.aulast=Ortega&rft.aufirst=Sonia&rft.date=2010-08-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=95th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2010/techprogram/index.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Innovating the Invisible: Dominant Innovation for Product and Service Systems in a Changing World
T2 - 2010 Conference of the Portland International Center for Management of Engineering and Technology (PICMET 2010)
AN - 1312928190; 6008483
JF - 2010 Conference of the Portland International Center for Management of Engineering and Technology (PICMET 2010)
AU - Lee, Jay
Y1 - 2010/07/18/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jul 18
KW - innovations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312928190?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+Conference+of+the+Portland+International+Center+for+Management+of+Engineering+and+Technology+%28PICMET+2010%29&rft.atitle=Innovating+the+Invisible%3A+Dominant+Innovation+for+Product+and+Service+Systems+in+a+Changing+World&rft.au=Lee%2C+Jay&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=Jay&rft.date=2010-07-18&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+Conference+of+the+Portland+International+Center+for+Management+of+Engineering+and+Technology+%28PICMET+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.picmet.org/new/conferences/2010/bulletin10.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Deciding to Give Up Tenure: Surprising Decisions Along the Path
T2 - 2010 SIAM Annual Meeting (AN10)
AN - 1312865861; 5999277
JF - 2010 SIAM Annual Meeting (AN10)
AU - Horn, Mary
Y1 - 2010/07/12/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jul 12
KW - Applied mathematics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1312865861?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+SIAM+Annual+Meeting+%28AN10%29&rft.atitle=Deciding+to+Give+Up+Tenure%3A+Surprising+Decisions+Along+the+Path&rft.au=Horn%2C+Mary&rft.aulast=Horn&rft.aufirst=Mary&rft.date=2010-07-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+SIAM+Annual+Meeting+%28AN10%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://meetings.siam.org/program.cfm?CONFCODE=AN10
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2013-02-26
N1 - Last updated - 2013-02-28
ER -
TY - MGZN
T1 - Green Bank Telescope Enables "Intensity Mapping" to Shed Light on Mysteries of Dark Energy
AN - 755420480
AB - Using the world's largest, fully steerable radio telescope--the National Science Foundation's Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) in W.Va.--an international team of researchers has given astronomers the promise of a new tool for mapping the universe and gaining valuable clues about the nature of the mysterious "dark energy" believed to constitute nearly three-fourths of the universe's mass and energy. "Intensity Mapping" offers the potential for significant contributions to the field and further discovery.
JF - U.S. News & World Report
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2010/07//
PY - 2010
DA - Jul 2010
SP - 1
CY - Washington
PB - U.S. News and World Report
KW - General Interest Periodicals--United States
KW - Telescopes
KW - Radio telescopes
KW - Astronomy
KW - Dark energy
KW - Mapping
KW - United States--US
KW - www.usnews.com/articles/science/2010/07/23/green-bank-telescope-enables-intensity-mapping-to-shed-light-on-mysteries-of-dark-energy.html
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/755420480?accountid=14244
L2 - http://www.usnews.com/articles/science/2010/07/23/green-bank-telescope-enables-intensity-mapping-to-shed-light-on-mysteries-of-dark-energy.html
L2 - http://www.usnews.com/articles/science/2010/07/23/green-bank-telescope-enables-intensity-mapping-to-shed-light-on-mysteries-of-dark-energy.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Central
N1 - Copyright - Copyright U.S. News and World Report Jul 2010
N1 - Last updated - 2014-10-14
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Foreign Science and Engineering Students in the United States. InfoBrief. NSF 10-324
AN - 754911323; ED510865
AB - In 2008, about 568,000 foreign students (those holding temporary visas) studied at U.S. universities and colleges, 248,000 of them in science and engineering (S&E). There was an expectation that fall 2009 foreign enrollments might be negatively affected by the 2008-09 world financial crisis because of schools' restrictions on enrollment, declines in institutional funds available for graduate student financial support, and declines in the value of foreign home currencies compared to the U.S. dollar, as well as the price of education in the United States compared to other countries and the increased capacity for education in the home countries. A recent report from the Council of Graduate Schools showed no increase from fall 2008 to fall 2009 in first-time foreign graduate enrollment and only a slight increase in overall foreign graduate enrollment after several years of double-digit increases (CGS 2009). This InfoBrief addresses trends in foreign enrollment at all levels in S&E fields as well as in all fields in U.S. institutions of higher education through fall 2009. Using data from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS), this InfoBrief examines changes in S&E enrollment by level, field, and country of origin from fall 2006 to fall 2009. (Contains 5 tables, 1 figure and 1 note.)
AU - Burrelli, Joan
Y1 - 2010/07//
PY - 2010
DA - July 2010
SP - 8
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Student Financial Aid
KW - Financial Support
KW - Foreign Students
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Graduate Students
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Colleges
KW - Enrollment Trends
KW - Surveys
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754911323?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Terrestrial age, weathering, Delta (super 17) O and Moessbauer studies of meteorites from the Nullarbor, Australia
AN - 1438972216; 2013-074935
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - McHargue, L R
AU - Bland, P A
AU - Greenwood, R C
AU - Bevan, A W R
AU - Kim, K J
AU - LaMotta, S E
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2010/07//
PY - 2010
DA - July 2010
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 45, SUPPL.
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - Western Australia
KW - stable isotopes
KW - meteorites
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - carbon
KW - Australia
KW - spectra
KW - O-17/O-16
KW - Mossbauer spectra
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Be-10
KW - Australasia
KW - isotope ratios
KW - oxidation
KW - terrestrial age
KW - weathering
KW - Nullarbor Plain
KW - metals
KW - residence time
KW - C-14
KW - South Australia
KW - beryllium
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1438972216?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Terrestrial+age%2C+weathering%2C+Delta+%28super+17%29+O+and+Moessbauer+studies+of+meteorites+from+the+Nullarbor%2C+Australia&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+T%3BMcHargue%2C+L+R%3BBland%2C+P+A%3BGreenwood%2C+R+C%3BBevan%2C+A+W+R%3BKim%2C+K+J%3BLaMotta%2C+S+E%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2010-07-01&rft.volume=45%2C+SUPPL.&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A99&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1945-5100.2010.01051.x
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 73rd annual meeting of the Meteoritical Society
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 5
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2013-10-03
N1 - CODEN - MERTAW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Australasia; Australia; Be-10; beryllium; C-14; carbon; isotope ratios; isotopes; metals; meteorites; Mossbauer spectra; Nullarbor Plain; O-17/O-16; oxidation; oxygen; radioactive isotopes; residence time; South Australia; spectra; stable isotopes; terrestrial age; weathering; Western Australia
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.2010.01051.x
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Knowledge check questions: Best practices for use of this instructional strategy
T2 - 2010 World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia & Telecommunications (ED-MEDIA 2010)
AN - 839688271; 5931322
JF - 2010 World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia & Telecommunications (ED-MEDIA 2010)
AU - Lewis, David
AU - Trail, Trudian
AU - Srinivasan, Sandhya
AU - Lee, Sang
AU - Lopez, Samantha
Y1 - 2010/06/28/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 28
KW - {Q1}
KW - Best practices
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/839688271?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+World+Conference+on+Educational+Multimedia%2C+Hypermedia+%26+Telecommunications+%28ED-MEDIA+2010%29&rft.atitle=Knowledge+check+questions%3A+Best+practices+for+use+of+this+instructional+strategy&rft.au=Lewis%2C+David%3BTrail%2C+Trudian%3BSrinivasan%2C+Sandhya%3BLee%2C+Sang%3BLopez%2C+Samantha&rft.aulast=Lewis&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2010-06-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+World+Conference+on+Educational+Multimedia%2C+Hypermedia+%26+Telecommunications+%28ED-MEDIA+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.editlib.org/j/EDMEDIA/v/2010/n/1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Mechanisms of Copper homeostasis in eukaryotes and bacteria
T2 - 2010 Gordon Research Conference on Metals in Medicine
AN - 839682666; 5940035
JF - 2010 Gordon Research Conference on Metals in Medicine
AU - Arguello, Jose
Y1 - 2010/06/27/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 27
KW - {Q1}
KW - Copper
KW - Homeostasis
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/839682666?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2010&program=metalsmed
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Imaging Hiv Transfer between T Cells with Optical Superresolution
T2 - 35th Congress of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies (FEBS 2010)
AN - 839654699; 5899329
JF - 35th Congress of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies (FEBS 2010)
AU - Huser, Thomas
Y1 - 2010/06/27/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 27
KW - {Q1}
KW - Human immunodeficiency virus
KW - Imaging techniques
KW - Lymphocytes T
KW - {Q2}
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://www.febs2010.org/wordpress/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - New Research Directions of Security and Privacy in Cloud Computing
T2 - 30th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS 2010)
AN - 839647567; 5898772
JF - 30th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS 2010)
AU - Kant, Krishna
AU - De Capitani di Vimercati, Sabrina
AU - Brassil, Jack
Y1 - 2010/06/21/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 21
KW - {Q1}
KW - Clouds
KW - Security
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://adsn.net.info.hiroshima-cu.ac.jp/Program-ADSN2010.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Membrane Product Specific Challenge Test Results under the LT2ESWTR with Endospores as Cryptosporidium surrogate
T2 - 129th Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 10)
AN - 839697572; 5933227
JF - 129th Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 10)
AU - Bartley, Clayton
AU - Blumenstein, Michael
AU - Adams, Jeffrey
Y1 - 2010/06/20/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 20
KW - {Q1}
KW - Membranes
KW - {Q2}
KW - Cryptosporidium
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF Biosensing Program: Problems and Perspectives
T2 - 2010 Gordon Research Conference on Bioanalytical Sensors
AN - 839603033; 5877507
JF - 2010 Gordon Research Conference on Bioanalytical Sensors
AU - Simonian, Aleksandr
Y1 - 2010/06/20/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 20
KW - {Q1}
KW - Biosensors
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
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L2 - http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2010&program=biosens
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Conversion of Biorenewable Feedstocks: New Challenges in Heterogeneous Catalysis
T2 - 21st International Symposium on Chemical Reaction Engineering (ISCRE 21)
AN - 754253559; 5821032
JF - 21st International Symposium on Chemical Reaction Engineering (ISCRE 21)
AU - Shanks, Brent
Y1 - 2010/06/13/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 13
KW - Catalysis
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://www.iscre.org/iscre21/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Mechatronics for Rehabilitation and Mobile Assistive Systems
T2 - 8th IEEE International Conference on Control and Automation (ICCA)
AN - 754299863; 5843690
JF - 8th IEEE International Conference on Control and Automation (ICCA)
AU - Tomizuka, Masayoshi
Y1 - 2010/06/09/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 09
KW - Rehabilitation
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754299863?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://uav.ece.nus.edu.sg/~icca10/programbook.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - International Polar Year is for Everyone: The U.S. National Science Foundation's Investments in Informal Science Education during IPY
T2 - 2010 International Polar Year Oslo Science Conference
AN - 839663220; 5917733
JF - 2010 International Polar Year Oslo Science Conference
AU - Kass, V
AU - Crain, R
AU - Canipe, M
Y1 - 2010/06/08/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 08
KW - {Q1}
KW - USA
KW - Education
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/839663220?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://ipy-osc.no/osc_programme
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Towards grid/clouds benchmarks for Autonomic Computing
T2 - 2nd Workshop Grids Meets Autonomic Computing (GMAC 2010)
AN - 754312142; 5866139
JF - 2nd Workshop Grids Meets Autonomic Computing (GMAC 2010)
AU - Fortes, Jose
AU - Pordes, Ruth
AU - Parashar, Manish
AU - Miller, Brent
Y1 - 2010/06/07/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 07
KW - Clouds
KW - Benchmarks
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2nd+Workshop+Grids+Meets+Autonomic+Computing+%28GMAC+2010%29&rft.atitle=Towards+grid%2Fclouds+benchmarks+for+Autonomic+Computing&rft.au=Fortes%2C+Jose%3BPordes%2C+Ruth%3BParashar%2C+Manish%3BMiller%2C+Brent&rft.aulast=Fortes&rft.aufirst=Jose&rft.date=2010-06-07&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2nd+Workshop+Grids+Meets+Autonomic+Computing+%28GMAC+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gmac2010.lri.fr/index.php/GMAC_2010#Program
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Supereruptions of the Snake River plain; two-stage derivation of low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites from normal-delta (super 18) O crust as constrained by Archean xenoliths
AN - 742915321; 2010-050209
AB - Supereruptive volumes of low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites define the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone Plateau volcanic province, begging the question of the sources and the processes by which (super 18) O-depleted magmas are generated. New analyses show that Archean crustal xenoliths from the central and eastern Snake River Plain have normal-delta (super 18) O signatures of 6 per mil-9 per mil, precluding them as a low-delta (super 18) O source in the genesis of >10,000 km (super 3) of low-delta (super 18) O (delta (super 18) O <6 per mil) Snake River Plain rhyolites. Synthesis of O-Sr-Nd-Pb isotope data for Archean xenoliths and Snake River Plain magmas defines separate compositional fields of rhyolites and their crustal and mantle sources. Sr-O and Nd-O isotopic mixing models for the most recent volcanic fields in the eastern Snake River Plain, Yellowstone Plateau and Heise, show that normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolites have variable crust ( approximately 30%-50%) and mantle ( approximately 50%-70%) proportions that are specific for each eruption. Low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites can be traced along a genetic array of mixing lines from normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolite end members to a low-delta (super 18) O ( approximately -1 per mil) source. The data support a two-stage magma genesis process, in which normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolites are generated by partial melting and hybridization of the crust by mantle-derived basalt, and low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites tap approximately 20%-80% of hydrothermally altered portions of normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolitic rocks. This two-stage magma genesis process may be applicable to other caldera systems around the world for which the characteristic O isotope depletions are either less pronounced or undiscovered.
JF - Geology (Boulder)
AU - Watts, Kathryn E
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Bindeman, Ilya N
AU - Larson, Peter B
Y1 - 2010/06//
PY - 2010
DA - June 2010
SP - 503
EP - 506
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 38
IS - 6
SN - 0091-7613, 0091-7613
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - partial melting
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - sampling
KW - volcanism
KW - inclusions
KW - Archean
KW - Yellowstone Plateau
KW - hybridization
KW - geochemistry
KW - xenoliths
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - Precambrian
KW - isotope ratios
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - volcanic fields
KW - Heise Idaho
KW - Craters of the Moon
KW - Magic Reservoir
KW - magmas
KW - eruptions
KW - Snake River plain
KW - Square Mountain
KW - crust
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742915321?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.gsajournals.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States | Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 15
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, geol. sketch map
N1 - SuppNotes - With GSA Data Repository Item 2010147
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GLGYBA
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Archean; Cenozoic; Craters of the Moon; crust; eruptions; geochemistry; Heise Idaho; hybridization; Idaho; igneous rocks; inclusions; isotope ratios; isotopes; Magic Reservoir; magmas; O-18/O-16; oxygen; partial melting; Precambrian; rhyolites; sampling; Snake River plain; Square Mountain; stable isotopes; United States; volcanic fields; volcanic rocks; volcanism; xenoliths; Yellowstone Plateau
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G30735.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Corrosion resistance characteristics of stamped and hydroformed proton exchange membrane fuel cell metallic bipolar plates
AN - 1777143847; 15122141
AB - Metallic bipolar plates have several advantages over bipolar plates made from graphite and composites due to their high conductivity, low material and production costs. Moreover, thin bipolar plates are possible with metallic alloys, and hence low fuel cell stack volume and mass are. Among existing fabrication methods for metallic bipolar plates, stamping and hydroforming are seen as prominent approaches for mass production scales. In this study, the effects of important process parameters of these manufacturing processes on the corrosion resistance of metallic bipolar plates made of SS304 were investigated. Specifically, the effects of punch speed, pressure rate, stamping force and hydroforming pressure were studied as they were considered to inevitably affect the bipolar plate micro-channel dimensions, surface topography, and hence the corrosion resistance. Corrosion resistance under real fuel cell conditions was examined using both potentiodynamic and potentiostatic experiments. The majority of the results exhibited a reduction in the corrosion resistance for both stamped and hydroformed plates when compared with non-deformed blank plates of SS304. In addition, it was observed that there exist an optimal process window for punch speed in stamping and the pressure rate in hydroforming to achieve improved corrosion resistance at a faster production rate.
JF - Journal of Power Sources
AU - Dundar, F
AU - Dur, Ender
AU - Mahabunphachai, S
AU - Koc, M
AD - NSF I/UCRC Center for Precision Forming (CPF), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA
Y1 - 2010/06/01/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jun 01
SP - 3546
EP - 3552
PB - Elesevier Science B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands
VL - 195
IS - 11
SN - 0378-7753, 0378-7753
KW - Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts (MT); Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); Electronics and Communications Abstracts (EA); Corrosion Abstracts (CO); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE); Aerospace & High Technology Database (AH)
KW - Metallic bipolar plates
KW - PEMFC
KW - Corrosion
KW - Micro-manufacturing
KW - Micro-channels
KW - Hydroforming
KW - Stamping
KW - Manufacturing engineering
KW - Plates
KW - Mass production
KW - Punches
KW - Fuel cells
KW - Corrosion resistance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1777143847?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.atitle=Corrosion+resistance+characteristics+of+stamped+and+hydroformed+proton+exchange+membrane+fuel+cell+metallic+bipolar+plates&rft.au=Dundar%2C+F%3BDur%2C+Ender%3BMahabunphachai%2C+S%3BKoc%2C+M&rft.aulast=Dundar&rft.aufirst=F&rft.date=2010-06-01&rft.volume=195&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=3546&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Power+Sources&rft.issn=03787753&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.jpowsour.2009.12.040
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpowsour.2009.12.040
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermal analysis of solar thermal energy storage in a molten-salt thermocline
AN - 1671265729; 13042464
AB - A comprehensive, two-temperature model is developed to investigate energy storage in a molten-salt thermocline. The commercially available molten salt HITEC is considered for illustration with quartzite rocks as the filler. Heat transfer between the molten salt and quartzite rock is represented by an interstitial heat transfer coefficient. Volume-averaged mass and momentum equations are employed, with the Brinkman-Forchheimer extension to the Darcy law used to model the porous-medium resistance. The governing equations are solved using a finite-volume approach. The model is first validated against experiments from the literature and then used to systematically study the discharge behavior of thermocline thermal storage system. Thermal characteristics including temperature profiles and discharge efficiency are explored. Guidelines are developed for designing solar thermocline systems. The discharge efficiency is found to be improved at small Reynolds numbers and larger tank heights. The filler particle size strongly influences the interstitial heat transfer rate, and thus the discharge efficiency.
JF - Solar Energy
AU - Yang, Zhen
AU - Garimella, Suresh V
AD - Cooling Technologies Research Center, NSF I/UCRC, School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2088, USA
Y1 - 2010/06//
PY - 2010
DA - Jun 2010
SP - 974
EP - 985
PB - Elsevier Science, P.O. Box 800 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1DX United Kingdom
VL - 84
IS - 6
SN - 0038-092X, 0038-092X
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); Electronics and Communications Abstracts (EA); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Discharge
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Fused salts
KW - Interstitials
KW - Thermoclines
KW - Fillers
KW - Quartzite
KW - Mathematical analysis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1671265729?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Solar+Energy&rft.atitle=Thermal+analysis+of+solar+thermal+energy+storage+in+a+molten-salt+thermocline&rft.au=Yang%2C+Zhen%3BGarimella%2C+Suresh+V&rft.aulast=Yang&rft.aufirst=Zhen&rft.date=2010-06-01&rft.volume=84&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=974&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Solar+Energy&rft.issn=0038092X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.solener.2010.03.007
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-09
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.solener.2010.03.007
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Determination of Clenbuterol in Dietary Supplements
T2 - 58th ASMS Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Allied Topics
AN - 839666085; 5921473
JF - 58th ASMS Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Allied Topics
AU - Travis, John
AU - Weller, David
AU - Kneen, Kurtis
AU - LeVanseler, Kerri
AU - Clipper, Scott
Y1 - 2010/05/23/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 May 23
KW - {Q1}
KW - Dietary supplements
KW - Clenbuterol
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/839666085?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=58th+ASMS+Conference+on+Mass+Spectrometry+and+Allied+Topics&rft.atitle=Determination+of+Clenbuterol+in+Dietary+Supplements&rft.au=Travis%2C+John%3BWeller%2C+David%3BKneen%2C+Kurtis%3BLeVanseler%2C+Kerri%3BClipper%2C+Scott&rft.aulast=Travis&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2010-05-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=58th+ASMS+Conference+on+Mass+Spectrometry+and+Allied+Topics&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.asms.org/Conferences/AnnualConference/Program/tabid/113/Def
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-11
N1 - Last updated - 2011-01-14
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Preparing the Next Generation of STEM Innovators: Identifying and Developing Our Nation's Human Capital. NSB-10-33
AN - 851224596; ED514061
AB - Scientific and technological innovation continues to play an essential role in catalyzing the creation of new industries, spawning job growth, and improving the quality of life in the United States and throughout the world. Innovation relies, in part, on individuals possessing the knowledge, skills, creativity, and foresight to forge new paths. The National Science Board (Board) is pleased to present its recommendations on how to support the identification and development of talented young men and women who have the potential to become this country's next generation of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) innovators. This report contains a series of policy actions, a research agenda, and three key recommendations detailing how this nation might foster the identification and development of future STEM innovators. This report draws on the findings from an expert panel discussion held at the National Science Foundation (NSF) on August 23-25, 2009, and a 2-year examination of the issue by the Board with the support of expert staff from the NSF Directorate for Education and Human Resources and the U.S. Department of Education. Appendices include: (1) Charge to the NSB Committee on Education and Human Resources, Expert Panel Discussion on Preparing the Next Generation of STEM Innovators; (2) STEM Innovators Expert Panel Participants; and (3) STEM Innovators Expert Panel Agenda. (Contains 91 endnotes.)
Y1 - 2010/05/05/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 May 05
SP - 62
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Education
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - High Schools
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Secondary Education
KW - Human Capital
KW - Job Development
KW - Innovation
KW - Labor Force
KW - STEM Education
KW - Quality of Life
KW - Human Resources
KW - Accountability
KW - Identification
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/851224596?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - GENI - Global Environment for Network Innovations
T2 - The 6th International Conference on Testbeds and Research Infrastructures for the Development of Networks & Communities (TridentCom 2010)
AN - 754168827; 5720319
JF - The 6th International Conference on Testbeds and Research Infrastructures for the Development of Networks & Communities (TridentCom 2010)
AU - Elliott, Chip
Y1 - 2010/05/03/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 May 03
KW - Innovations
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754168827?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=The+6th+International+Conference+on+Testbeds+and+Research+Infrastructures+for+the+Development+of+Networks+%26+Communities+%28TridentCom+2010%29&rft.atitle=GENI+-+Global+Environment+for+Network+Innovations&rft.au=Elliott%2C+Chip&rft.aulast=Elliott&rft.aufirst=Chip&rft.date=2010-05-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=The+6th+International+Conference+on+Testbeds+and+Research+Infrastructures+for+the+Development+of+Networks+%26+Communities+%28TridentCom+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.tridentcom.org/technical_programme/full.shtml
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Climatology of the eastern Arabian Sea during the last glacial cycle reconstructed from paired measurement of Foraminiferal delta (super 18) O and Mg/Ca
AN - 859729824; 2011-032124
AB - Paired measurements of Mg/Ca and delta (super 18) O of Globigerenoides sacculifer from an Eastern Arabian Sea (EAS) sediment core indicate that sea-surface temperature (SST) varied within 2 degrees C and sea-surface salinity within 2 psu during the last 100 ka. SST was coldest ( approximately 27 degrees C) during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 4 and 2. Sea-surface salinity was highest ( approximately 37.5 psu) during most of the last glacial period ( approximately 60-18 ka), concurrent with increased delta (super 18) O (sub G.sacculifer) and C/N ratios of organic matter and indicative of sustained intense winter monsoons. SST time series are influenced by both Greenland and Antarctic climates. However, the sea-surface salinity time series and the deglacial warming in the SST record (beginning at approximately 18 ka) compare well with the LR04 benthic delta (super 18) O-stack and Antarctic temperatures. This suggests a teleconnection between the climate in the Southern Hemisphere and the EAS. Therefore, the last 100-ka variability in EAS climatology appears to have evolved in response to a combination of global climatic forcings and regional monsoons. The most intense summer monsoons within the Holocene occurred at approximately 8 ka and are marked by SST cooling of nearly equal 1 degrees C, sea-surface salinity decrease of 0.5 psu, and delta (super 18) O (sub G.sacculifer) decrease of 0.2 ppm.
JF - Quaternary Research
AU - Banakar, V K
AU - Mahesh, B S
AU - Burr, G
AU - Chodankar, A R
Y1 - 2010/05//
PY - 2010
DA - May 2010
SP - 535
EP - 540
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 73
IS - 3
SN - 0033-5894, 0033-5894
KW - calcium
KW - magnesium
KW - sea water
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - mass spectra
KW - salinity
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Holocene
KW - stable isotopes
KW - cores
KW - climate change
KW - upper Pleistocene
KW - Foraminifera
KW - Cenozoic
KW - accelerator mass spectra
KW - monsoons
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - Invertebrata
KW - spectra
KW - climate forcing
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - teleconnections
KW - Protista
KW - Quaternary
KW - sea surface water
KW - isotope ratios
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - Arabian Sea
KW - Mg/Ca
KW - metals
KW - upper Quaternary
KW - Pleistocene
KW - C-14
KW - sea-surface temperature
KW - microfossils
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Quaternary+Research&rft.atitle=Climatology+of+the+eastern+Arabian+Sea+during+the+last+glacial+cycle+reconstructed+from+paired+measurement+of+Foraminiferal+delta+%28super+18%29+O+and+Mg%2FCa&rft.au=Banakar%2C+V+K%3BMahesh%2C+B+S%3BBurr%2C+G%3BChodankar%2C+A+R&rft.aulast=Banakar&rft.aufirst=V&rft.date=2010-05-01&rft.volume=73&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=535&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Quaternary+Research&rft.issn=00335894&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.yqres.2010.02.002
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00335894
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 49
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - QRESAV
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accelerator mass spectra; alkaline earth metals; Arabian Sea; C-14; calcium; carbon; Cenozoic; climate change; climate forcing; cores; Foraminifera; Holocene; Indian Ocean; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; magnesium; marine sediments; mass spectra; metals; Mg/Ca; microfossils; monsoons; O-18/O-16; oxygen; paleoclimatology; Pleistocene; Protista; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; salinity; sea surface water; sea water; sea-surface temperature; sediments; spectra; stable isotopes; teleconnections; upper Pleistocene; upper Quaternary
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2010.02.002
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Anomaly Detection and Fault-Mode Isolation for Prognostics Health Monitoring of Electronics Subjected to Drop and Shock
T2 - 2010 EuroSimE Conference on Thermal, Mechanical and Multiphysics Simulation and Experiments in Micro-Electronics and Micro-Systems (EUROSIME 2010)
AN - 754184755; 5732423
JF - 2010 EuroSimE Conference on Thermal, Mechanical and Multiphysics Simulation and Experiments in Micro-Electronics and Micro-Systems (EUROSIME 2010)
AU - lall, Pradeep
AU - Gupta, Prashant
AU - Angral, Arjun
Y1 - 2010/04/26/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Apr 26
KW - Shock
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754184755?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+EuroSimE+Conference+on+Thermal%2C+Mechanical+and+Multiphysics+Simulation+and+Experiments+in+Micro-Electronics+and+Micro-Systems+%28EUROSIME+2010%29&rft.atitle=Anomaly+Detection+and+Fault-Mode+Isolation+for+Prognostics+Health+Monitoring+of+Electronics+Subjected+to+Drop+and+Shock&rft.au=lall%2C+Pradeep%3BGupta%2C+Prashant%3BAngral%2C+Arjun&rft.aulast=lall&rft.aufirst=Pradeep&rft.date=2010-04-26&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+EuroSimE+Conference+on+Thermal%2C+Mechanical+and+Multiphysics+Simulation+and+Experiments+in+Micro-Electronics+and+Micro-Systems+%28EUROSIME+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.eurosime.org/b10.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Applying Biophotonics in Molecular Medicine
T2 - 217th Meeting of the Electrochemical Society
AN - 754220332; 5785018
JF - 217th Meeting of the Electrochemical Society
AU - Chuang, F
AU - Huser, T
AU - Matthews, D
Y1 - 2010/04/25/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Apr 25
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754220332?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=217th+Meeting+of+the+Electrochemical+Society&rft.atitle=Applying+Biophotonics+in+Molecular+Medicine&rft.au=Chuang%2C+F%3BHuser%2C+T%3BMatthews%2C+D&rft.aulast=Chuang&rft.aufirst=F&rft.date=2010-04-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=217th+Meeting+of+the+Electrochemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.electrochem.org/meetings/biannual/217/assets/217_meeting_pr
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Autonomic Management of Distributed Systems using Online Clustering
T2 - 24th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS 2010)
AN - 754184981; 5726135
JF - 24th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS 2010)
AU - Quiroz, Andres
AU - Parashar, Manish
AU - Rodero, Ivan
Y1 - 2010/04/19/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Apr 19
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754184981?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=24th+IEEE+International+Parallel+and+Distributed+Processing+Symposium+%28IPDPS+2010%29&rft.atitle=Autonomic+Management+of+Distributed+Systems+using+Online+Clustering&rft.au=Quiroz%2C+Andres%3BParashar%2C+Manish%3BRodero%2C+Ivan&rft.aulast=Quiroz&rft.aufirst=Andres&rft.date=2010-04-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=24th+IEEE+International+Parallel+and+Distributed+Processing+Symposium+%28IPDPS+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ipdps.org/ipdps2010/abs_2010_workshop.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Object-Oriented Stream Programming using Aspects
T2 - 24th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS 2010)
AN - 754176986; 5726009
JF - 24th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS 2010)
AU - Wang, Mingliang
AU - Parashar, Manish
Y1 - 2010/04/19/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Apr 19
KW - Streams
KW - Planning
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754176986?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=24th+IEEE+International+Parallel+and+Distributed+Processing+Symposium+%28IPDPS+2010%29&rft.atitle=Object-Oriented+Stream+Programming+using+Aspects&rft.au=Wang%2C+Mingliang%3BParashar%2C+Manish&rft.aulast=Wang&rft.aufirst=Mingliang&rft.date=2010-04-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=24th+IEEE+International+Parallel+and+Distributed+Processing+Symposium+%28IPDPS+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ipdps.org/ipdps2010/abs_2010.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Positioning of quantum dots on metallic nanostructures.
AN - 733810350; 20234079
AB - The capability to position individual emitters, such as quantum dots, near metallic nanostructures is highly desirable for constructing active optical devices that can manipulate light at the single photon level. The emergence of the field of plasmonics as a means to confine light now introduces a need for high precision and reliability in positioning any source of emission, which has thus far been elusive. Placing an emission source within the influence of plasmonic structures now requires accuracy approaching molecular length scales. In this paper we report the ability to reliably position nanoscale functional objects, specifically quantum dots, with sub-100-nm accuracy, which is several times smaller than the diffraction limit of a quantum dot's emission light. Electron beam lithography-defined masks on metallic surfaces and a series of surface chemical functionalization processes allow the programmed assembly of DNA-linked colloidal quantum dots. The quantum dots are successfully functionalized to areas as small as (100 nm)(2) using the specific binding of thiolated DNA to Au/Ag, and exploiting the streptavidin-biotin interaction. An analysis of the reproducibility of the process for various pattern sizes shows that this technique is potentially scalable to the single quantum dot level with 50 nm accuracy accompanied by a moderate reduction in yield.
JF - Nanotechnology
AU - Kramer, R K
AU - Pholchai, N
AU - Sorger, V J
AU - Yim, T J
AU - Oulton, R
AU - Zhang, X
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Y1 - 2010/04/09/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Apr 09
SP - 145307
VL - 21
IS - 14
KW - Metals
KW - 0
KW - DNA
KW - 9007-49-2
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Algorithms
KW - Nanostructures -- ultrastructure
KW - Quantum Dots
KW - Nanostructures -- chemistry
KW - Metals -- chemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/733810350?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nanotechnology&rft.atitle=Positioning+of+quantum+dots+on+metallic+nanostructures.&rft.au=Kramer%2C+R+K%3BPholchai%2C+N%3BSorger%2C+V+J%3BYim%2C+T+J%3BOulton%2C+R%3BZhang%2C+X&rft.aulast=Kramer&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2010-04-09&rft.volume=21&rft.issue=14&rft.spage=145307&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nanotechnology&rft.issn=1361-6528&rft_id=info:doi/10.1088%2F0957-4484%2F21%2F14%2F145307
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2010-08-26
N1 - Date created - 2010-03-25
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0957-4484/21/14/145307
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Manipulating CD4+ T cells by optical tweezers for the initiation of cell-cell transfer of HIV-1
AN - 883034848; 15244012
AB - Cell-cell interactions through direct contact are very important for cellular communication and coordination - especially for immune cells. The human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1) induces immune cell interactions between CD4+ cells to shuttle between T cells via a virological synapse. A goal to understand the process of cell-cell transmission through virological synapses is to determine the cellular states that allow a chance encounter between cells to become a stable cell-cell adhesion. We demonstrate the use of optical tweezers to manipulate uninfected primary CD4+ T cells near HIV Gag-iGFP transfected Jurkat T cells to probe the determinants that induce stable adhesion. When combined with fast 4D confocal fluorescence microscopy, optical tweezers can be utilized not only to facilitate cell-cell contact, but also to simultaneously track the formation of a virological synapse, and ultimately to probe the events that precede virus transfer. ([copy 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
JF - Journal of Biophotonics
AU - McNerney, Gregory P
AU - Hubner, Wolfgang
AU - Chen, Benjamin K
AU - Huser, Thomas
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA, trhuser@ucdavis.edu
Y1 - 2010/04//
PY - 2010
DA - Apr 2010
SP - 216
EP - 223
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 3
IS - 4
SN - 1864-0648, 1864-0648
KW - Virology & AIDS Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - CD4 antigen
KW - Human immunodeficiency virus 1
KW - Lymphocytes T
KW - Probes
KW - Fluorescent indicators
KW - Cell interactions
KW - Immunological synapses
KW - Intercellular signalling
KW - Cell adhesion
KW - W 30905:Medical Applications
KW - V 22360:AIDS and HIV
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/883034848?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.atitle=Manipulating+CD4%2B+T+cells+by+optical+tweezers+for+the+initiation+of+cell-cell+transfer+of+HIV-1&rft.au=McNerney%2C+Gregory+P%3BHubner%2C+Wolfgang%3BChen%2C+Benjamin+K%3BHuser%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=McNerney&rft.aufirst=Gregory&rft.date=2010-04-01&rft.volume=3&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=216&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.issn=18640648&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjbio.200900102
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbio.200900102/abstract
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - CD4 antigen; Probes; Lymphocytes T; Fluorescent indicators; Cell interactions; Intercellular signalling; Immunological synapses; Cell adhesion; Human immunodeficiency virus 1
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbio.200900102
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Seasonal Patterns of Arthropod Diversity and Abundance on Big Sagebrush, Artemisia tridentata
AN - 856767300; 14072785
AB - The sagebrush biotype is the largest in the western United States. This vast sagebrush community is thought to harbor equally vast and diverse arthropod communities, but these remain little explored. Our objective was to examine the diversity, abundance, and seasonal phenology of arthropod taxa found on the dominant shrub of the sagebrush ecosystem, big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata). We wanted to improve understanding of this little-studied arthropod assemblage that may play significant roles in the dynamics of sagebrush populations and the sagebrush ecosystem. We sampled free-living and gall-forming arthropods from a stratified random sample of sagebrush plants at the Barton Road Ecological Research Area, Idaho, resulting in a sample of over 8000 individuals and 232 morphospecies. Species richness and abundance declined from May to August, and abundance of most taxa similarly declined over the summer. A few taxa, including Acari (mites), were notably more abundant in August. Fluid feeders were the most diverse and abundant free-living feeding guild during all months and comprised up to 79% of morphospecies. The gall formers included 4713 individuals of 12 species of gall flies (Rhopalomyia spp.), primarily (97%) R. ampullaria. Abundance of galls increased from small to large (presumably young to old) plants. Overall, A. tridentata was host to a high diversity of arthropods, some of which have potential to cause or mitigate significant damage to their host plant. Arthropods seem likely to have the greatest impact on sagebrush early in the growing season, when they are most diverse and abundant. Documentation of the full diversity of arthropods associated with sagebrush required samples taken throughout the growing season, but a single sample early in the growing season captured a high proportion of taxa.
JF - Western North American Naturalist
AU - Sanford, Monte P
AU - Huntly, Nancy J
Y1 - 2010/04//
PY - 2010
DA - Apr 2010
SP - 67
EP - 76
PB - Brigham Young University, 290 MLBM Provo UT 84602-0200 USA
VL - 70
IS - 1
SN - 1527-0904, 1527-0904
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Canker
KW - Biotypes
KW - Abundance
KW - feeding
KW - taxa
KW - Sulfur dioxide
KW - Phenology
KW - species richness
KW - arthropods
KW - Seasonal variations
KW - Species richness
KW - Ampullaria
KW - Shrubs
KW - Feeding
KW - Rhopalomyia
KW - Tridentata
KW - Host plants
KW - USA, Idaho
KW - Arthropoda
KW - Guilds
KW - Artemisia tridentata
KW - summer
KW - Acari
KW - abundance
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/856767300?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Western+North+American+Naturalist&rft.atitle=Seasonal+Patterns+of+Arthropod+Diversity+and+Abundance+on+Big+Sagebrush%2C+Artemisia+tridentata&rft.au=Sanford%2C+Monte+P%3BHuntly%2C+Nancy+J&rft.aulast=Sanford&rft.aufirst=Monte&rft.date=2010-04-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=67&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Western+North+American+Naturalist&rft.issn=15270904&rft_id=info:doi/10.3398%2F064.070.0108
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Shrubs; Canker; Feeding; Guilds; Biotypes; Phenology; Abundance; Host plants; Seasonal variations; Species richness; Sulfur dioxide; species richness; arthropods; feeding; summer; taxa; abundance; Ampullaria; Arthropoda; Artemisia tridentata; Tridentata; Rhopalomyia; Acari; USA, Idaho
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3398/064.070.0108
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Obituary
AN - 743066458; 201029070
AB - In memoriam of David Charles Gooding (1947-2009).
JF - Social Studies of Science
AU - Gorman, Michael E
AD - University of Virginia and National Science Foundation, 351 McCormick Road, P.O. Box 400744, Thornton Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4744, USA meg3c@virginia.edu
Y1 - 2010/04//
PY - 2010
DA - April 2010
SP - 341
EP - 343
PB - Sage Publications, London UK
VL - 40
IS - 2
SN - 0306-3127, 0306-3127
KW - Social Science Research
KW - Scholarship
KW - Obituaries
KW - article
KW - 1734: sociology of science; sociology of science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/743066458?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Social+Studies+of+Science&rft.atitle=Obituary&rft.au=Gorman%2C+Michael+E&rft.aulast=Gorman&rft.aufirst=Michael&rft.date=2010-04-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=341&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Social+Studies+of+Science&rft.issn=03063127&rft_id=info:doi/10.1177%2F0306312710364086
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2010-10-21
N1 - Number of references - 6
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - SSTSD2
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Scholarship; Social Science Research; Obituaries
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306312710364086
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Understanding NSF Funding Opportunities
T2 - Eighth Annual Consortium for Computing Sciences in Colleges Mid-South Conference (CCSC: Mid-South 2010)
AN - 742822446; 5707256
JF - Eighth Annual Consortium for Computing Sciences in Colleges Mid-South Conference (CCSC: Mid-South 2010)
AU - Grissom, Scott
Y1 - 2010/03/26/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Mar 26
KW - Financing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742822446?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=Eighth+Annual+Consortium+for+Computing+Sciences+in+Colleges+Mid-South+Conference+%28CCSC%3A+Mid-South+2010%29&rft.atitle=Understanding+NSF+Funding+Opportunities&rft.au=Grissom%2C+Scott&rft.aulast=Grissom&rft.aufirst=Scott&rft.date=2010-03-26&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eighth+Annual+Consortium+for+Computing+Sciences+in+Colleges+Mid-South+Conference+%28CCSC%3A+Mid-South+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ccsc-ms.org/index.php?page=conference&sub=agenda
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-05-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-08-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The IfS/AIChE Water Workshop: Materials, Proceedings, Outcomes
T2 - 2010 Spring National Meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and 6th Global Congress on Process Safety (AIChE 2010)
AN - 742820525; 5703877
JF - 2010 Spring National Meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and 6th Global Congress on Process Safety (AIChE 2010)
AU - Hamilton, Bruce
Y1 - 2010/03/21/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Mar 21
KW - Conferences
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742820525?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://aiche.confex.com/aiche/s10/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-05-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-08-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Space and Time Sharing of Reconfigurable Hardware for Accelerated Parallel Processing
T2 - 6th International Symposium on Applied Reconfigurable Computing (ARC 2010)
AN - 742809928; 5696192
JF - 6th International Symposium on Applied Reconfigurable Computing (ARC 2010)
AU - El-Araby, Esam
AU - Narayana, Vikram
AU - El-Ghazawi, Tarek
Y1 - 2010/03/17/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Mar 17
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742809928?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/conf/arc/arc2010.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-05-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-08-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Perspectives on International Collaboration
T2 - 2010 State of the Arctic Conference
AN - 754229280; 5770106
JF - 2010 State of the Arctic Conference
AU - Erb, Karl
Y1 - 2010/03/16/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Mar 16
KW - International agreements
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754229280?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+State+of+the+Arctic+Conference&rft.atitle=Perspectives+on+International+Collaboration&rft.au=Erb%2C+Karl&rft.aulast=Erb&rft.aufirst=Karl&rft.date=2010-03-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+State+of+the+Arctic+Conference&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://soa.arcus.org/program
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Remarks from the National Science Foundation
T2 - 2010 State of the Arctic Conference
AN - 754221040; 5769928
JF - 2010 State of the Arctic Conference
AU - Bement, Arden
Y1 - 2010/03/16/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Mar 16
KW - Foundations
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754221040?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+State+of+the+Arctic+Conference&rft.atitle=Remarks+from+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Bement%2C+Arden&rft.aulast=Bement&rft.aufirst=Arden&rft.date=2010-03-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+State+of+the+Arctic+Conference&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://soa.arcus.org/program
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Writing More Effective NSF Proposals
T2 - 41st ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE 2010)
AN - 742790693; 5675854
JF - 41st ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE 2010)
AU - Piotrowski, Victor
AU - Amoussou, Guy-Alain
AU - Grissom, Scott
Y1 - 2010/03/10/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Mar 10
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742790693?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=41st+ACM+Technical+Symposium+on+Computer+Science+Education+%28SIGCSE+2010%29&rft.atitle=Writing+More+Effective+NSF+Proposals&rft.au=Piotrowski%2C+Victor%3BAmoussou%2C+Guy-Alain%3BGrissom%2C+Scott&rft.aulast=Piotrowski&rft.aufirst=Victor&rft.date=2010-03-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=41st+ACM+Technical+Symposium+on+Computer+Science+Education+%28SIGCSE+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://db.grinnell.edu/sigcse/sigcse2010/Program/Program.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-05-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-08-14
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Signal generation and Raman-resonant imaging by non-degenerate four-wave mixing under tight focusing conditions
AN - 883026325; 15244025
AB - The authors demonstrate Raman-resonant imaging based on the simultaneous generation of several nonlinear frequency mixing processes resulting from a 3-color coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) experiment. The interaction of three coincident short-pulsed laser beams simultaneously generates both 2-color (degenerate) CARS and 3-color (non-degenerate) CARS signals, which are collected and characterized spectroscopically - allowing for resonant, doubly-resonant, and non-resonant contrast mechanisms. Images obtained from both 2-color and 3-color CARS signals are compared and found to provide complementary information. The 3-color CARS microscopy scheme provides a versatile multiplexed modality for biological imaging, which may extend the capabilities of label-free non-linear microscopy, e.g. by probing multiple Raman resonances. ([copy 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
JF - Journal of Biophotonics
AU - Weeks, Tyler
AU - Schie, Iwan W
AU - Wachsmann-Hogiu, Sebastian
AU - Huser, Thomas
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA, trhuser@ucdavis.edu
Y1 - 2010/03//
PY - 2010
DA - Mar 2010
SP - 169
EP - 175
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 3
IS - 3
SN - 1864-0648, 1864-0648
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Microscopy
KW - Lasers
KW - imaging
KW - W 30910:Imaging
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/883026325?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.atitle=Signal+generation+and+Raman-resonant+imaging+by+non-degenerate+four-wave+mixing+under+tight+focusing+conditions&rft.au=Weeks%2C+Tyler%3BSchie%2C+Iwan+W%3BWachsmann-Hogiu%2C+Sebastian%3BHuser%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Weeks&rft.aufirst=Tyler&rft.date=2010-03-01&rft.volume=3&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=169&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.issn=18640648&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjbio.200900068
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbio.200900068/abstract
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Microscopy; Lasers; imaging
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbio.200900068
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Locus of ownership and family involvement in small private firms
AN - 743795253; 3963216
AB - The relationship between ownership and family involvement in small businesses is not altogether clear because empirical studies have not distinguished among family ownership, family management, and owner-management in composing their samples. In the present study, a large sample of small private firms is parsed into sub-samples with distinctly different types of owners in order to isolate the effects of locus of ownership. The results show that firms with different locus of ownership behave differently with respect to the extent of involvement by the CEO's relatives as employees, key managers, advisors, and board members. Although owner-managers and sole-proprietors would seem to have more authority than other CEOs to involve family members in the operations of the business, the findings indicate that these self-owned firms have significantly less family involvement than firms owned entirely by relatives of the CEO. Reprinted by permission of Blackwell Publishers
JF - Journal of management studies
AU - Fiegener, Mark K
AD - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2010/03//
PY - 2010
DA - Mar 2010
SP - 296
EP - 321
VL - 47
IS - 2
SN - 0022-2380, 0022-2380
KW - Economics
KW - Comparative analysis
KW - Board of directors
KW - Family firms
KW - Business management
KW - Authority
KW - Ownership
KW - Senior management
KW - Small and medium sized enterprises
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/743795253?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+management+studies&rft.atitle=Locus+of+ownership+and+family+involvement+in+small+private+firms&rft.au=Fiegener%2C+Mark+K&rft.aulast=Fiegener&rft.aufirst=Mark&rft.date=2010-03-01&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=296&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+management+studies&rft.issn=00222380&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1467-6486.2009.00892.x
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 11735 4300; 9079; 1862 1841 2889 5549 7625; 4765 4300; 11502 7625; 1674 11502 7625; 1411; 2630 971
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6486.2009.00892.x
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Traditional and Molecular Assessment Fecal Indicator Bacteria and Selected Pathogens and Their Association to Health Effects at a Non-Point-Source Subtropical Recreational Beach
AN - 754884953; 13446299
AB - Rapid molecular testing methods and alternative FIBs such as the Bacteroidales group have been advocated to supplement or replace the current water quality testing methods and indicators. The objectives of this study were to evaluate risk to humans from exposure to subtropical recreational marine waters with no known point source, and investigate the possible relationships between traditional and alternative FIBs as measured by culture-based and molecular-based methods vs reported symptoms in human subjects with random exposure assignments and intensive individual microbial testing of their personal space water exposures. Staphylococcus aureus and other pathogens were also tested for and compared against reported symptoms. Over a period of seven months, 1303 adult regular bathers were randomly assigned to bather or non-bather groups, with subsequent follow-up for reported illness. Extensive environmental sampling and measurement of traditional and alternative indicator organisms (enterococci and Bacteroidales group) by culture and by quantitative PCR followed, along with several assays for selected pathogens. An increase of self-reported illness among bathers vs. non-bathers was observed, and dose response relationships by logistic regression modeling also observed for enterococci enumeration by membrane filtration vs. skin illness, for enterococci enumeration by qPCR vs. acute febrile respiratory illness, and for Human-specific Bacteroides enumerated by qPCR vs. skin illness and gastrointestinal illness The observed odds risk ratios and dose response curves for these alternative indicators and methods vs. reported health affects are suggestive. However, examination of the area under the ROC curve for these logistic regression models of FIBs vs. illness demonstrated only a borderline significant discrimination power only for the Enterococci membrane filtration enumeration vs. skin ailments. In addition methicillin-resistant S. aureus was observed. However, no correlation was observed between levels of Staphylococcus and any self-reported symptoms or illness. A variety of environmental parameters were also analyzed by multiple logistic regression models, but only one demonstrated a clear dose response (an inverse relationship between water temperature and respiratory illness). It may be that the sample size of this study was not large enough to elucidate a clearer relationship between specific FIB markers or pathogens and specific illnesses. Still, this study indicates that bathers may be at increased risk of illness relative to non-bathers, even in the absence of any known source of sewage impacting the recreational marine waters.
JF - Proceedings from the 2010 AGU Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Gidley, M
AU - Sinigalliano, C D
AU - Fleisher, J
AU - Solo-Gabriele, H
AU - Shibata, T
AU - Plano, L
AU - Elmir, S
AU - Wang, J D
AU - Kish, J
AU - Backer, L
AU - Fleming, L E
Y1 - 2010/02//
PY - 2010
DA - February 2010
PB - American Geophysical Union, 2000 Florida Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20009 USA, [URL:http://www.agu.org]
KW - Oceanic Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; ASFA Aquaculture Abstracts; ASFA Marine Biotechnology Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Symptoms
KW - Drug resistance
KW - Respiration
KW - Water quality
KW - Models
KW - Regression analysis
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Sampling
KW - Staphylococcus aureus
KW - Environmental monitoring
KW - Marine
KW - Beaches
KW - Skin
KW - Bacteroides
KW - Membrane filtration
KW - Water temperature
KW - Pathogens
KW - Water pollution
KW - Filtration
KW - Intensive culture
KW - Sewage
KW - Oceans
KW - Metabolism
KW - Q4 27750:Environmental
KW - A 01490:Miscellaneous
KW - O 5060:Aquaculture
KW - J 02400:Human Diseases
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
KW - Q3 08587:Diseases of Cultured Organisms
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Aquatic+Science+%26+Fisheries+Abstracts+%28ASFA%29+3%3A+Aquatic+Pollution+%26+Environmental+Quality&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Gidley%2C+M%3BSinigalliano%2C+C+D%3BFleisher%2C+J%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+H%3BShibata%2C+T%3BPlano%2C+L%3BElmir%2C+S%3BWang%2C+J+D%3BKish%2C+J%3BBacker%2C+L%3BFleming%2C+L+E&rft.aulast=Gidley&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2010-02-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Traditional+and+Molecular+Assessment+Fecal+Indicator+Bacteria+and+Selected+Pathogens+and+Their+Association+to+Health+Effects+at+a+Non-Point-Source+Subtropical+Recreational+Beach&rft.title=Traditional+and+Molecular+Assessment+Fecal+Indicator+Bacteria+and+Selected+Pathogens+and+Their+Association+to+Health+Effects+at+a+Non-Point-Source+Subtropical+Recreational+Beach&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Abstracts Available
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-22
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Ontogeny of digestion in Daphnia: implications for the effectiveness of algal defenses
AN - 745901782; 12580557
AB - Models of feeding and digestion predict that increased body size should result in longer gut passage time and improved assimilation efficiency. We examined the implications of digestion theory for size-structured interactions in a generalist zooplankton herbivore by studying the relationships between body size, ingestion rate, gut passage time (GPT), assimilation efficiency (AE), and growth rate in a clone of Daphnia pulex feeding on seven taxa of green algae that differed in digestibility. We also tested the effect of varying food concentration on GPT and AE while keeping body size constant. Food quality varied markedly among algal taxa, with mean juvenile growth rates at high food concentrations (1-2 mg/L) ranging from 0.10 to 0.61 d super(-1). Juvenile growth rate for high food concentrations was highly correlated with juvenile AE (r super(2) = 0.96), verifying the importance of digestibility for food quality. AE, measured with super(14)C-labeled algae, increased with increasing age and body size for each of four digestion-resistant taxa but did not vary with age and body size for three readily digested algae. GPT decreased with decreasing body size, supporting the hypothesis that shorter GPT in juveniles leads to lower AE for digestion-resistant resources. Lower food concentrations led to increased GPT and improved AE for juveniles feeding on two digestion-resistant algae, providing further support for a role of longer gut retention in overcoming digestion defenses. The results suggest that increased abundance of digestion-resistant food will lead to growth and recruitment bottlenecks for juvenile herbivores, but that the effectiveness of digestion defenses will be decreased when large-bodied grazers predominate and when low food concentrations result in longer gut passage times. Gut processing constraints may favor either high concentrations of slow-growing, digestion-resistant resources or low concentrations of fast-growing, undefended resources.
JF - Ecology
AU - DeMott, W R
AU - McKinney, EN
AU - Tessier, A J
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia 22230 USA, demott@ipfw.edu
Y1 - 2010/02//
PY - 2010
DA - Feb 2010
SP - 540
EP - 548
VL - 91
IS - 2
SN - 0012-9658, 0012-9658
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Age
KW - Abundance
KW - Phytoplankton
KW - Freshwater
KW - Population dynamics
KW - Daphnia pulex
KW - Models
KW - Digestion
KW - Freshwater crustaceans
KW - Body size
KW - Ontogeny
KW - Food quality
KW - Algae
KW - Growth rate
KW - Feeding
KW - Recruitment
KW - Zooplankton
KW - Aquatic plants
KW - Daphnia
KW - Digestive tract
KW - Herbivores
KW - Plant physiology
KW - Digestibility
KW - Q1 08461:Plankton
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
KW - K 03320:Cell Biology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/745901782?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology&rft.atitle=Ontogeny+of+digestion+in+Daphnia%3A+implications+for+the+effectiveness+of+algal+defenses&rft.au=DeMott%2C+W+R%3BMcKinney%2C+EN%3BTessier%2C+A+J&rft.aulast=DeMott&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2010-02-01&rft.volume=91&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=540&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology&rft.issn=00129658&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-12-24
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Growth rate; Herbivores; Plant physiology; Freshwater crustaceans; Aquatic plants; Phytoplankton; Population dynamics; Feeding; Age; Abundance; Zooplankton; Recruitment; Models; Digestion; Digestive tract; Digestibility; Body size; Ontogeny; Food quality; Algae; Daphnia; Daphnia pulex; Freshwater
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Third Party Verification of Arb Emissions Data Reports
T2 - 13th Annual Energy and Environment Conference and Expo (EUEC 2010)
AN - 42362592; 5665867
JF - 13th Annual Energy and Environment Conference and Expo (EUEC 2010)
AU - Shideler, John
Y1 - 2010/02/01/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Feb 01
KW - Emissions
KW - Data processing
KW - Data reports
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42362592?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=13th+Annual+Energy+and+Environment+Conference+and+Expo+%28EUEC+2010%29&rft.atitle=Third+Party+Verification+of+Arb+Emissions+Data+Reports&rft.au=Shideler%2C+John&rft.aulast=Shideler&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2010-02-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=13th+Annual+Energy+and+Environment+Conference+and+Expo+%28EUEC+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://euec.com/documents/pdf/Pre-Guide2010.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Presence of Pathogens and Indicator Microbes at a Non-Point Source Subtropical Recreational Marine Beach ,
AN - 21304484; 11917374
AB - Swimming in ocean water, including ocean water at beaches not impacted by known point sources of pollution, is an increasing health concern. This study was an initial evaluation of the presence of indicator microbes and pathogens and the association among the indicator microbes, pathogens, and environmental conditions at a subtropical, recreational marine beach in south Florida impacted by non-point sources of pollution. Twelve water and eight sand samples were collected during four sampling events at high or low tide under elevated or reduced solar insolation conditions. The analyses performed included analyses of fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) (fecal coliforms, Escherichia coli, enterococci, and Clostridium perfringens), human-associated microbial source tracking (MST) markers (human polyomaviruses [HPyVs] and Enterococcus faecium esp gene), and pathogens (Vibrio vulnificus, Staphylococcus aureus, enterovirus, norovirus, hepatitis A virus, Cryptosporidium spp., and Giardia spp.). The enterococcus concentrations in water and sand determined by quantitative PCR were greater than the concentrations determined by membrane filtration measurement. The FIB concentrations in water were below the recreational water quality standards for three of the four sampling events, when pathogens and MST markers were also generally undetectable. The FIB levels exceeded regulatory guidelines during one event, and this was accompanied by detection of HPyVs and pathogens, including detection of the autochthonous bacterium V. vulnificus in sand and water, detection of the allochthonous protozoans Giardia spp. in water, and detection of Cryptosporidium spp. in sand samples. The elevated microbial levels were detected at high tide and under low-solar-insolation conditions. Additional sampling should be conducted to further explore the relationships between tidal and solar insolation conditions and between indicator microbes and pathogens in subtropical recreational marine waters impacted by non-point source pollution.
JF - Applied and Environmental Microbiology
AU - Abdelzaher, Amir M
AU - Wright, Mary E
AU - Ortega, Cristina
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Miller, Gary
AU - Elmir, Samir
AU - Newman, Xihui
AU - Shih, Peter
AU - Bonilla, JAlfredo
AU - Bonilla, Tonya D
AU - Palmer, Carol J
AU - Scott, Troy
AU - Lukasik, Jerzy
AU - Harwood, Valerie J
AU - McQuaig, Shannon
AU - Sinigalliano, Chris
AU - Gidley, Maribeth
AU - Plano, Lisa RW
AU - Zhu, Xiaofang
AU - Wang, John D
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AD - University of Miami, NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Miami, Florida 33149, hmsolo@miami.edu
Y1 - 2010/02//
PY - 2010
DA - Feb 2010
SP - 724
EP - 732
PB - American Society for Microbiology, 1752 N Street N.W. Washington, DC 20036 USA
VL - 76
IS - 3
SN - 0099-2240, 0099-2240
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Virology & AIDS Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology
KW - Beaches
KW - Clostridium perfringens
KW - Pathogens
KW - J:02450
KW - V:22340
KW - A:01340
KW - K:03450
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21304484?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+and+Environmental+Microbiology&rft.atitle=Presence+of+Pathogens+and+Indicator+Microbes+at+a+Non-Point+Source+Subtropical+Recreational+Marine+Beach+%2C&rft.au=Abdelzaher%2C+Amir+M%3BWright%2C+Mary+E%3BOrtega%2C+Cristina%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BMiller%2C+Gary%3BElmir%2C+Samir%3BNewman%2C+Xihui%3BShih%2C+Peter%3BBonilla%2C+JAlfredo%3BBonilla%2C+Tonya+D%3BPalmer%2C+Carol+J%3BScott%2C+Troy%3BLukasik%2C+Jerzy%3BHarwood%2C+Valerie+J%3BMcQuaig%2C+Shannon%3BSinigalliano%2C+Chris%3BGidley%2C+Maribeth%3BPlano%2C+Lisa+RW%3BZhu%2C+Xiaofang%3BWang%2C+John+D%3BFleming%2C+Lora+E&rft.aulast=Abdelzaher&rft.aufirst=Amir&rft.date=2010-02-01&rft.volume=76&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=724&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+and+Environmental+Microbiology&rft.issn=00992240&rft_id=info:doi/10.1128%2FAEM.02127-09
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-03-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pathogens; Clostridium perfringens
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02127-09
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Superresolution microscopy of viral infection pathways
T2 - 2010 SPIE Photonics West
AN - 754163488; 5717170
JF - 2010 SPIE Photonics West
AU - Thompson, Deanna
AU - McNerney, Gregory
AU - Huser, Thomas
Y1 - 2010/01/23/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 23
KW - Infection
KW - Microscopy
KW - Viral diseases
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754163488?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+SPIE+Photonics+West&rft.atitle=Superresolution+microscopy+of+viral+infection+pathways&rft.au=Thompson%2C+Deanna%3BMcNerney%2C+Gregory%3BHuser%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Thompson&rft.aufirst=Deanna&rft.date=2010-01-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+SPIE+Photonics+West&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/PW2010-Advance-Progra
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Emerging Research in Microsystems: Opportunities and Challenges in Health-Care and Environmental Sensing Applications
T2 - 2010 SPIE Photonics West
AN - 754158060; 5718136
JF - 2010 SPIE Photonics West
AU - Gianchandani, Yogesh
Y1 - 2010/01/23/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 23
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754158060?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+SPIE+Photonics+West&rft.atitle=Emerging+Research+in+Microsystems%3A+Opportunities+and+Challenges+in+Health-Care+and+Environmental+Sensing+Applications&rft.au=Gianchandani%2C+Yogesh&rft.aulast=Gianchandani&rft.aufirst=Yogesh&rft.date=2010-01-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+SPIE+Photonics+West&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/PW2010-Advance-Progra
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-02
N1 - Last updated - 2010-09-25
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF and space weather today
T2 - 90th Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society
AN - 742794965; 5678256
JF - 90th Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society
AU - Killeen, Timothy
AU - Behnke, R
Y1 - 2010/01/17/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 17
KW - Weather
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742794965?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=90th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Meteorological+Society&rft.atitle=NSF+and+space+weather+today&rft.au=Killeen%2C+Timothy%3BBehnke%2C+R&rft.aulast=Killeen&rft.aufirst=Timothy&rft.date=2010-01-17&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=90th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Meteorological+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/90annual/techprogram/MEETING.HTM
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-05-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-08-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NCAR and the Geosciences
T2 - 90th Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society
AN - 742794640; 5678868
JF - 90th Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society
AU - Killeen, Timothy
Y1 - 2010/01/17/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 17
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742794640?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=90th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Meteorological+Society&rft.atitle=NCAR+and+the+Geosciences&rft.au=Killeen%2C+Timothy&rft.aulast=Killeen&rft.aufirst=Timothy&rft.date=2010-01-17&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=90th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Meteorological+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/90annual/techprogram/MEETING.HTM
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-05-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-08-14
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Scaling Up What Works in Laboratory Experiences
T2 - 22nd Annual California State University Biotechnology Symposium
AN - 42364025; 5665463
JF - 22nd Annual California State University Biotechnology Symposium
AU - Carter, Celeste
AU - Williams, Kathy
Y1 - 2010/01/08/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 08
KW - Scaling
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42364025?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=22nd+Annual+California+State+University+Biotechnology+Symposium&rft.atitle=Scaling+Up+What+Works+in+Laboratory+Experiences&rft.au=Carter%2C+Celeste%3BWilliams%2C+Kathy&rft.aulast=Carter&rft.aufirst=Celeste&rft.date=2010-01-08&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=22nd+Annual+California+State+University+Biotechnology+Symposium&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.calstate.edu/csuperb/symposium/2010/documents/Symposium-201 0-final.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Relevant Funding Sources
T2 - 22nd Annual California State University Biotechnology Symposium
AN - 42362374; 5665470
JF - 22nd Annual California State University Biotechnology Symposium
AU - Carter, Celeste
Y1 - 2010/01/08/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 08
KW - Financing
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42362374?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=22nd+Annual+California+State+University+Biotechnology+Symposium&rft.atitle=Relevant+Funding+Sources&rft.au=Carter%2C+Celeste&rft.aulast=Carter&rft.aufirst=Celeste&rft.date=2010-01-08&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=22nd+Annual+California+State+University+Biotechnology+Symposium&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.calstate.edu/csuperb/symposium/2010/documents/Symposium-201 0-final.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Redesign of the National Science Foundation's Business R&D and Innovation Survey: What Worked and What Didn't in Trying to Measure Global R&D, Intellectual Property, Technology Transfer, and Innovation
T2 - 2010 Allied Social Sciences Association Annual Meeting (ASSA 2010)
AN - 42303463; 5635820
JF - 2010 Allied Social Sciences Association Annual Meeting (ASSA 2010)
AU - Jankowski, John
AU - Carlson, Lynda
AU - Gibson, Peter
AU - Hough, Richard
AU - Lee, Ronald
AU - Shackelford, Brandon
AU - Wolfe, Raymond
Y1 - 2010/01/03/
PY - 2010
DA - 2010 Jan 03
KW - Innovations
KW - Technology transfer
KW - Intellectual property
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42303463?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2010+Allied+Social+Sciences+Association+Annual+Meeting+%28ASSA+2010%29&rft.atitle=The+Redesign+of+the+National+Science+Foundation%27s+Business+R%26amp%3BD+and+Innovation+Survey%3A+What+Worked+and+What+Didn%27t+in+Trying+to+Measure+Global+R%26amp%3BD%2C+Intellectual+Property%2C+Technology+Transfer%2C+and+Innovation&rft.au=Jankowski%2C+John%3BCarlson%2C+Lynda%3BGibson%2C+Peter%3BHough%2C+Richard%3BLee%2C+Ronald%3BShackelford%2C+Brandon%3BWolfe%2C+Raymond&rft.aulast=Jankowski&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2010-01-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2010+Allied+Social+Sciences+Association+Annual+Meeting+%28ASSA+2010%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.aeaweb.org/aea/conference/program/preliminary.php
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geochemical, isotopic, and physical evidence for vigorous meridional overturning circulation at mid-depth in the Atlantic Ocean at the LGM
AN - 919641549; 2012-017248
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - McManus, Jerry F
AU - Major, Candace O
AU - Mohamed, Kais J
AU - Robinson, Laura F
AU - Oppo, Delia W
AU - Curry, William B
AU - Yu, Jimin
AU - Bradtmiller, Louisa
AU - Jaccard, Samuel L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 1
PB - Pergamon, Oxford
VL - 74
IS - 12, Suppl. 1
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - last glacial maximum
KW - Th-230
KW - isotopes
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - paleocirculation
KW - glaciomarine environment
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - climate change
KW - Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Mid-Atlantic Ridge
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - transport
KW - glacial environment
KW - sediments
KW - protactinium
KW - Pa-231
KW - ocean floors
KW - geochemistry
KW - Quaternary
KW - numerical models
KW - time series analysis
KW - sediment transport
KW - statistical analysis
KW - metals
KW - marine environment
KW - upper Quaternary
KW - thorium
KW - theoretical models
KW - North Atlantic
KW - actinides
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - mid-ocean ridges
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/919641549?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://goldschmidt.info/2010/abstracts/A-Z+Index.pdf http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 20th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - actinides; Atlantic meridional overturning circulation; Atlantic Ocean; Cenozoic; climate change; geochemistry; glacial environment; glaciomarine environment; isotopes; last glacial maximum; marine environment; marine sediments; metals; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; mid-ocean ridges; North Atlantic; numerical models; ocean floors; Pa-231; paleo-oceanography; paleocirculation; paleoclimatology; protactinium; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; sediment transport; sediments; statistical analysis; Th-230; theoretical models; thorium; time series analysis; transport; upper Quaternary
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of abyssal ocean circulation in abrupt climate changes in the past
AN - 919641528; 2012-017247
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - McManus, Jerry F
AU - Yan, Beizhan
AU - Yanchilina, Anastasia G
AU - Major, Candace O
AU - Toledo, Felipe A L
AU - Eglinton, Timothy I
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 1
PB - Pergamon, Oxford
VL - 74
IS - 12, Suppl. 1
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - currents
KW - continental margin
KW - Quaternary
KW - numerical models
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - paleocirculation
KW - glaciomarine environment
KW - Europe
KW - bottom currents
KW - Iberian Peninsula
KW - deep-sea environment
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - ocean currents
KW - climate change
KW - Southern Europe
KW - Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
KW - Cenozoic
KW - marine environment
KW - glacial environment
KW - Bermuda Rise
KW - theoretical models
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/919641528?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=The+role+of+abyssal+ocean+circulation+in+abrupt+climate+changes+in+the+past&rft.au=McManus%2C+Jerry+F%3BYan%2C+Beizhan%3BYanchilina%2C+Anastasia+G%3BMajor%2C+Candace+O%3BToledo%2C+Felipe+A+L%3BEglinton%2C+Timothy+I%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=McManus&rft.aufirst=Jerry&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=74&rft.issue=12%2C+Suppl.+1&rft.spage=A690&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://goldschmidt.info/2010/abstracts/A-Z+Index.pdf http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 20th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic meridional overturning circulation; Atlantic Ocean; Bermuda Rise; bottom currents; Cenozoic; climate change; continental margin; currents; deep-sea environment; Europe; glacial environment; glaciomarine environment; Iberian Peninsula; marine environment; North Atlantic; numerical models; ocean currents; paleo-oceanography; paleocirculation; paleoclimatology; Quaternary; Southern Europe; theoretical models
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Key Science and Engineering Indicators: 2010 Digest. NSB 10-02
AN - 851224643; ED514059
AB - The National Science Board (Board) is required under the National Science Foundation (NSF) Act, 42 U.S.C. (United States Code) Section 1863 (j) (1) to prepare and transmit the biennial "Science and Engineering Indicators" ("SEI") report to the President and to the Congress by January 15 of every even-numbered year. The report is prepared by the NSF Division of Science Resources Statistics (SRS) under the guidance of the Board. It is subject to extensive review by Board members, outside experts, interested federal agencies, and SRS internal reviewers for accuracy, coverage, and balance. Indicators are quantitative representations--summaries--of factors relevant to the scope, quality, and vitality of the science and engineering (S&E) enterprise. "SEI" is the major authoritative source of these high-quality U.S. and international data. "SEI" is factual and policy-neutral; it neither offers policy options nor makes policy recommendations. The indicators included in the report are intended to contribute to the understanding of the current S&E environment. This digest of key S&E indicators draws from the Board's "Science and Engineering Indicators 2010", the 19th volume of this biennial series. The digest serves to draw attention to important trends and data points from across "SEI 2010" and to introduce readers to the data resources available in the report. A list of glossary and key to acronyms and a list of online resources are presented. [For the related reports, see "Science and Engineering Indicators 2010" (ED514060) and "Globalization of Science and Engineering Research: A Companion to the Science and Engineering Indicators 2010" (ED514062).]
AU - Roesel, Cheryl
Y1 - 2010/01//
PY - 2010
DA - January 2010
SP - 24
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - National Science Foundation Act 1950
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Engineering
KW - Sciences
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Public Agencies
KW - Economics
KW - Enrollment
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Competition
KW - Global Approach
KW - Industry
KW - International Trade
KW - Technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/851224643?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators 2010. NSB 10-01
AN - 851224337; ED514060
AB - "Science and Engineering Indicators" (SEI) is first and foremost a volume of record comprising the major high-quality quantitative data on the U.S. and international science and engineering enterprise. SEI is factual and policy neutral. It does not offer policy options, and it does not make policy recommendations. SEI employs a variety of presentation styles--tables, figures, narrative text, bulleted text, Web-based links, highlights, introductions, conclusions, reference lists--to make the data accessible to readers with different information needs and different information-processing preferences. The data are "indicators." Indicators are quantitative representations that might reasonably be thought to provide summary information bearing on the scope, quality, and vitality of the science and engineering enterprise. The indicators reported in SEI are intended to contribute to an understanding of the current environment and to inform the development of future policies. SEI includes seven chapters that follow a generally consistent pattern; an eighth chapter, on state indicators, presented in a unique format; and an overview that precedes these eight chapters. The chapter titles are: (1) Elementary and Secondary Education; (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering; (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force; (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Linkages; (5) Academic Research and Development; (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace; (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding; and (8) State Indicators. An appendix volume, available online at http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/indicators/, contains detailed data tables keyed to each of the eight chapters. SEI includes a list of abbreviations/acronyms and an index. Each chapter consists of contents and lists of sidebars, text tables, and figures; highlights; introduction (chapter overview and chapter organization); a narrative synthesis of data and related contextual information; conclusion; notes; glossary; and references. [For the related reports, see "Key Science and Engineering Indicators: 2010 Digest" (ED514059) and "Globalization of Science and Engineering Research: A Companion to the Science and Engineering Indicators 2010" (ED514062).]
AU - Lehming, Rolf F.
AU - Alt, Martha Naomi
AU - Chen, Xianglei
AU - Hall, Leslie
AU - Burton, Lawrence
AU - Burrelli, Joan S.
AU - Kannankutty, Nirmala
AU - Proudfoot, Steven
AU - Regets, Mark C.
AU - Boroush, Mark
AU - Moris, Francisco A.
AU - Wolfe, Raymond M.
AU - Britt, Ronda
AU - Christovich, Leslie
AU - Hill, Derek
AU - Falkenheim, Jaquelina C.
AU - Dunnigan, Paula C.
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 566
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - Asia
KW - Europe
KW - United States
KW - National Assessment of Educational Progress
KW - Early Childhood Longitudinal Survey
KW - Program for International Student Assessment
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Grade 4
KW - Grade 8
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Two Year Colleges
KW - Science Education
KW - Scientific Attitudes
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Foreign Countries
KW - Scientists
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Sciences
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Technical Occupations
KW - Science and Society
KW - Global Approach
KW - Industry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/851224337?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Globalization of Science and Engineering Research: A Companion to the Science and Engineering Indicators 2010. NSB-10-3
AN - 851224088; ED514062
AB - As part of its mandate from Congress, the National Science Board oversees the collection of a very broad set of quantitative information about U.S. science, engineering and technology, and every 2 years publishes the data and trends in its "Science and Engineering Indicators" ("Indicators") report. On occasion, the data reveal trends that raise important policy concerns that the Board believes should be brought to the attention of the President, Congress, and the public as a "companion" policy statement to the "Indicators" report. Data presented in "Science and Engineering Indicators 2010" (NSB-10-01) illuminate trends and directions in global science and technology. The U.S. has long been a world leader in S&E (science and engineering) research and high-technology industry, but comparative international data in "Indicators 2010" underscore the sometimes rapidly growing competitiveness of other economies in these important areas. While increased global S&E research capacity holds great promise for the advancement of scientific knowledge and collaboration in science and engineering across international borders, the U.S. government must be attentive to developments in S&E capacity around the world, and take proactive steps to maintain this nation's competitive strength. In this companion piece to "Indicators 2010, Globalization of Science and Engineering Research", the National Science Board examines currently available data and trends and recommends the following Federal actions: (1) To ensure that the U.S. remains a world leader in S&E research, the National Science Foundation--the only non-mission-oriented Federal agency that funds S&E research--should assess its two merit review criteria for funding of S&E research to ensure that the criteria encourage the proposing and support of truly transformative research, and should modify the criteria and/or merit review process if the assessment finds modifications necessary to accomplish this goal; (2) The Office of Science and Technology Policy in the Executive Office of the President, through the National Science and Technology Council mechanism, should engage all Federal agencies involved with S&E research to: (a) develop means to assess or continue to assess the quality of their agency's supported research against international activities, and (b) identify and as appropriate make adjustments necessary to ensure that their agency's research is world-leading; and (3) The Office of Science and Technology Policy should call for a President's Council on Innovation and Competitiveness as described in the COMPETES (Creating Opportunities to Meaningfully Promote Excellence in Technology, Education, and Science) Act. Issues for discussion would include: (a) relationships between U.S. and foreign-supported R&D to ensure continued vitality and growth of U.S. technical strength, (b) safeguarding national interests in intellectual property, (c) ensuring that the U.S. economy benefits from R&D supported abroad, and (d) assessing critical research areas for which the U.S. should be the global R&D leader. (Contains 5 figures and 1 table.) [For the related reports, see "Key Science and Engineering Indicators: 2010 Digest" (ED514059) and "Science and Engineering Indicators 2010" (ED514060).]
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 17
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Financial Support
KW - Educational Indicators
KW - Politics of Education
KW - Research and Development
KW - Engineering
KW - Position Papers
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Educational Policy
KW - Change Strategies
KW - College Outcomes Assessment
KW - Competition
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - Global Approach
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/851224088?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemical signatures from hydrothermal venting on slow spreading ridges
AN - 818639117; 2011-004133
AB - At least 24 sites of active venting have been confirmed on slow and ultraslow spreading ridges, with dozens more indicated on the basis of hydrothermal plume distributions and/or dredge recovery of massive sulfides. Fluid chemistry data have been published for 13 sites: 8 on the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 3 on the southern Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and 2 on the Central Indian Ridge. Three of these 13 sites (Rainbow, Logatchev, and Lost City) are known to be hosted in ultramafic terrain, and their fluid chemistries reflect the influence of serpentinization reactions, including elevated hydrogen and methane, and low silica concentrations. This brief review presents the published fluid chemistry for all 13 sites, including time series where available, and demonstrates the diversity of chemical compositions engendered by the myriad settings (near and off axis, young volcanic to ultramafic terrain, and depths up to 4100 m) of hydrothermal systems on slow and ultraslow spreading ridges.
JF - Geophysical Monograph
AU - Edmonds, Henrietta N
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 27
EP - 42
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 188
SN - 0065-8448, 0065-8448
KW - hot spots
KW - serpentinization
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - hydrothermal vents
KW - metasomatism
KW - Mid-Atlantic Ridge
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - Central Indian Ridge
KW - basalts
KW - sea-floor spreading
KW - ocean floors
KW - chemical composition
KW - slow spreading centers
KW - vents
KW - spreading centers
KW - Mid-Indian Ridge
KW - concentration
KW - global
KW - ultramafics
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - mid-ocean ridges
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/818639117?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Monograph&rft.atitle=Chemical+signatures+from+hydrothermal+venting+on+slow+spreading+ridges&rft.au=Edmonds%2C+Henrietta+N&rft.aulast=Edmonds&rft.aufirst=Henrietta&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=188&rft.issue=&rft.spage=27&rft.isbn=9781118666616&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Monograph&rft.issn=00658448&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2010GM000931
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 32
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 4 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-14
N1 - CODEN - GPMGAD
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; basalts; Central Indian Ridge; chemical composition; concentration; global; hot spots; hydrothermal vents; igneous rocks; Indian Ocean; metasomatism; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; Mid-Indian Ridge; mid-ocean ridges; ocean floors; plate tectonics; plutonic rocks; sea-floor spreading; serpentinization; slow spreading centers; spreading centers; ultramafics; vents; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2010GM000931
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The BEACHES Study: health effects and exposures from non-point source microbial contaminants in subtropical recreational marine waters
AN - 817607702; 13967189
AB - BACKGROUND: Microbial water-quality indicators, in high concentrations in sewage, are used to determine whether water is safe for recreational purposes. Recently, the use of these indicators to regulate recreational water bodies, particularly in sub/tropical recreational marine waters without known sources of sewage, has been questioned. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the risk to humans from exposure to subtropical recreational marine waters with no known point source, and the possible relationship between microbe densities and reported symptoms in human subjects with random-exposure assignment and intensive individual microbial monitoring in this environment. METHODS: A total of 1303 adult regular bathers were randomly assigned to bather and non-bather groups, with subsequent follow-up for reported illness, in conjunction with extensive environmental sampling of indicator organisms (enterococci). RESULTS: Bathers were 1.76 times more likely to report gastrointestinal illness [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.94-3.30; P = 0.07]; 4.46 times more likely to report acute febrile respiratory illness (95% CI 0.99-20.90; P = 0.051) and 5.91 times more likely to report a skin illness (95% CI 2.76-12.63; P < 0.0001) relative to non-bathers. Evidence of a dose-response relationship was found between skin illnesses and increasing enterococci exposure among bathers [1.46 times (95% CI 0.97-2.21; P = 0.07) per increasing log10 unit of enterococci exposure], but not for gastrointestinal or respiratory illnesses. CONCLUSIONS: This study indicated that bathers may be at increased risk of several illnesses relative to non-bathers, even in the absence of any known source of domestic sewage impacting the recreational marine waters. There was no dose-response relationship between gastroenteritis and increasing exposure to enterococci, even though many current water-monitoring standards use gastroenteritis as the major outcome illness.
JF - International Journal of Epidemiology
AU - Fleisher, Jay M
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Kish, Jonathan K
AU - Sinigalliano, Christopher D
AU - Plano, Lisa
AU - Elmir, Samir M
AU - Wang, John D
AU - Withum, Kelly
AU - Shibata, Tomoyuki
AU - Gidley, Maribeth L
AU - Abdelzaher, Amir
AU - He, Guoqing
AU - Ortega, Cristina
AU - Zhu, Xiaofang
AU - Wright, Mary
AU - Hollenbeck, Julie
AU - Backer, Lorraine C
AD - Nova Southeastern University COM/MPH, Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA, NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Rosenstiel School, University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA, College of Engineering, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA, NOAA Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, Miami, FL, USA, Miami Dade County Public Health Department, Miami, FL, USA and National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 1291
EP - 1298
PB - Oxford University Press, Oxford Journals, Great Clarendon Street Oxford OX2 6DP UK
VL - 39
IS - 5
SN - 0300-5771, 0300-5771
KW - Water Resources Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Aqualine Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Risk Abstracts; Physical Education Index
KW - water quality
KW - Indicators
KW - Microbial contamination
KW - Adults
KW - Exposure
KW - Recreational waters
KW - Environmental monitoring
KW - Nonpoint pollution
KW - Illness
KW - Human relations
KW - Sewage
KW - Epidemiology
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Standards
KW - Monitoring
KW - Contaminants
KW - Wastewater
KW - Metabolism
KW - Symptoms
KW - Respiration
KW - Health
KW - Water
KW - Pollutants
KW - Dose-response effects
KW - Human subjects
KW - Sampling
KW - Domestic wastes
KW - Beaches
KW - Skin
KW - Toxicity
KW - Water pollution
KW - Risk
KW - Recreation areas
KW - gastroenteritis
KW - Gastroenteritis
KW - P 1000:MARINE POLLUTION
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - R2 23060:Medical and environmental health
KW - X 24350:Industrial Chemicals
KW - PE 030:Exercise, Health & Physical Fitness
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+Journal+of+Epidemiology&rft.atitle=The+BEACHES+Study%3A+health+effects+and+exposures+from+non-point+source+microbial+contaminants+in+subtropical+recreational+marine+waters&rft.au=Fleisher%2C+Jay+M%3BFleming%2C+Lora+E%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BKish%2C+Jonathan+K%3BSinigalliano%2C+Christopher+D%3BPlano%2C+Lisa%3BElmir%2C+Samir+M%3BWang%2C+John+D%3BWithum%2C+Kelly%3BShibata%2C+Tomoyuki%3BGidley%2C+Maribeth+L%3BAbdelzaher%2C+Amir%3BHe%2C+Guoqing%3BOrtega%2C+Cristina%3BZhu%2C+Xiaofang%3BWright%2C+Mary%3BHollenbeck%2C+Julie%3BBacker%2C+Lorraine+C&rft.aulast=Fleisher&rft.aufirst=Jay&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=1291&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Journal+of+Epidemiology&rft.issn=03005771&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Physical Education Index; ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-02
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Symptoms; Beaches; Epidemiology; Sewage; Respiration; Recreational waters; Water pollution; Metabolism; Human relations; Skin; Human subjects; Health; Standards; Adults; Illness; Water; Dose-response effects; Sampling; Contaminants; Gastroenteritis; Environmental monitoring; water quality; Recreation areas; gastroenteritis; Microbial contamination; Nonpoint pollution; Domestic wastes; Risk; Pollutants; Exposure; Indicators; Microorganisms; Toxicity; Monitoring; Wastewater
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Constraints on upper plate deformation in the Nicaraguan subduction zone from earthquake relocation and directivity analysis
AN - 742918805; 2010-053329
AB - In the Nicaraguan segment of the Central American subduction zone, bookshelf faulting has been proposed as the dominant style of Caribbean plate deformation in response to oblique subduction of the Cocos plate. A key element of this model is left-lateral motion on arc-normal strike-slip faults. On 3 August 2005, a M (sub w) 6.3 earthquake and its extensive foreshock and aftershock sequence occurred near Ometepe Island in Lake Nicaragua. To determine the fault plane that ruptured in the main shock, we relocated main shock, foreshock, and aftershock hypocenters and analyzed main shock source directivity using waveforms from the TUCAN Broadband Seismic Experiment. The relocation analysis was carried out by applying the hypoDD double-difference method to P and S onset times and differential traveltimes for event pairs determined by waveform cross correlation. The relocated hypocenters define a roughly vertical plane of seismicity with an N60 degrees E strike. This plane aligns with one of the two nodal planes of the main shock source mechanism. The directivity analysis was based on waveforms from 16 TUCAN stations and indicates that rupture on the N60 degrees E striking main shock nodal plane provides the best fit to the data. The relocation and directivity analyses identify the N60 degrees E vertical nodal plane as the main shock fault plane, consistent with the style of faulting required by the bookshelf model. Relocated hypocenters also define a second fault plane that lies to the south of the main shock fault plane with a strike of N350 degrees E-N355 degrees E. This fault plane became seismically active 5 h after the main shock, suggesting the influence of stresses transferred from the main shock fault plane. The August 2005 earthquake sequence was preceded by a small eruption of a nearby volcano, Concepcion, on 28 July 2005. However, the local seismicity does not provide evidence for earthquake triggering of the eruption or eruption triggering of the main shock through crustal stress transfer.
JF - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems - G3
AU - French, S W
AU - Warren, L M
AU - Fischer, K M
AU - Abers, G A
AU - Strauch, W
AU - Protti, J M
AU - Gonzalez, V
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
EP - Citation Q03S20
PB - American Geophysical Union and The Geochemical Society
VL - 11
IS - 3
KW - subduction zones
KW - stress
KW - Caribbean region
KW - subduction
KW - Nicaragua
KW - fore-arc basins
KW - deformation
KW - foreshocks
KW - Caribbean Plate
KW - plate tectonics
KW - oblique orientation
KW - Concepcion
KW - Cocos Plate
KW - basins
KW - volcanoes
KW - focus
KW - tectonics
KW - earthquakes
KW - Central America
KW - seismotectonics
KW - faults
KW - crust
KW - 19:Seismology
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742918805?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochemistry%2C+Geophysics%2C+Geosystems+-+G3&rft.atitle=Constraints+on+upper+plate+deformation+in+the+Nicaraguan+subduction+zone+from+earthquake+relocation+and+directivity+analysis&rft.au=French%2C+S+W%3BWarren%2C+L+M%3BFischer%2C+K+M%3BAbers%2C+G+A%3BStrauch%2C+W%3BProtti%2C+J+M%3BGonzalez%2C+V&rft.aulast=French&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochemistry%2C+Geophysics%2C+Geosystems+-+G3&rft.issn=1525-2027&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2009GC002841
L2 - http://g-cubed.org
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 43
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basins; Caribbean Plate; Caribbean region; Central America; Cocos Plate; Concepcion; crust; deformation; earthquakes; faults; focus; fore-arc basins; foreshocks; Nicaragua; oblique orientation; plate tectonics; seismotectonics; stress; subduction; subduction zones; tectonics; volcanoes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2009GC002841
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators 2010
AN - 1826531093; ED566518
AB - The Science Indicators series was designed to provide a broad base of quantitative information about U.S. science, engineering, and technology for use by policymakers, researchers, and the general public. "Science and Engineering Indicators 2010" contains analyses of key aspects of the scope, quality, and vitality of the Nation's science and engineering enterprise in the context of global science and technology. The report presents information on science, mathematics, and engineering education at all levels; the scientific and engineering workforce; U.S. international research and development performance; U.S. competitiveness in high technology; and public attitudes and understanding of science and engineering. A chapter on state-level science and engineering presents state comparisons on selected indicators. An overview (Rolf F. Lehming) distills selected key themes emerging from the report. A list of chapters and their authors include: (1) Elementary and Secondary Mathematics and Science Education (Martha Naomi Alt, Xianglei Chen, Leslie Hall, Lawrence Burton); (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering (Joan S. Burrelli,) (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force (Nirmala Kannankutty, Steven Proudfoot, Mark C. Regets); (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Linkages (Mark Boroush, Francisco A. Moris, Raymond M. Wolfe); (5) Academic Research and Development (Ronda Britt, Joan S. Burrelli, Lawrence Burton, Leslie Christovich); (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace (Derek Hill); (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding (Jaquelina C. Falkenheim); and (8) State Indicators (Paula C. Dunnigan). Chapters contain individual references, and in some instances a glossary of terms. Appended are: (1) Methodology and Statistics; and (2) List of appendix tables.
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 566
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Undergraduate Study
KW - STEM Education
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Scientists
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Knowledge Level
KW - Statistical Analysis
KW - Teachers
KW - Educational Technology
KW - Competition
KW - Global Approach
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - Geographic Location
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Surveys
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Academic Degrees
KW - Information Technology
KW - Foreign Countries
KW - Educational Research
KW - Public Opinion
KW - Industry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1826531093?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-13
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Now is the time for action: transitions and tipping points in complex environmental systems
AN - 1448371639; 4499241
AB - Many of our current environmental challenges unfold over such vast spatial scales and create consequences of such broad scope that they require a qualitatively different kind of scientific and social attention. The U.S. National Science Foundation's (NSF) Advisory Committee for Environmental Research and Education (AC-ERE) concluded that the necessary research and education in the environmental sciences are not progressing at the pace required by challenges of such scale and scope. In its recent report, the committee issued a call for action for researchers, educators, and policymakers. This agenda called for the National Science Foundation to increase its commitment to environmental science by increasing its investment in two areas: 1) fostering research that improves our ability to live sustainably on Earth, and 2) strengthening our understanding of the links between human behavior and natural processes. Why now? And why is this call to action so prescient? Our purpose in writing this article is to ensure that the recommendations and the larger discussion around these critical issues reach a broad audience. We anticipate a healthy discussion among many sectors, including the science community (the physical, natural, and social sciences) and policymakers. If we are to make progress toward understanding the feasible options for sustainability, the points addressed in the article need to be at the core of the conversation.
JF - Environment
AU - Stafford, Susan G
AU - Bartels, Dennis M
AU - Begay-Campbell, Sandra
AU - Bubier, Jill L
AU - Crittenden, John C
AU - Cutter, Susan L
AU - Delaney, John R
AU - Jordan, Teresa E
AU - Kay, Alan C
AU - Libecap, Gary D
AU - Moore, John C
AU - Rabalais, Nancy N
AU - Rejeski, David
AU - Sala, Osvaldo E
AU - Shepherd, J Marshall
AU - Travis, Joseph
AD - US National Science Foundation ; San Francisco Exploratorium ; Sandia National Laboratories ; Mount Holyoke College ; Georgia Institute of Technology ; University of South Carolina ; University of Washington ; Cornell University ; Viewpoints Research Institute ; University of California, Santa Barbara ; Colorado State University, Fort Collins ; Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium DeFelice Center ; Woodrow Wilson International Center ; Brown University ; University of Georgia
Y1 - 2010/01//
PY - 2010
DA - Jan 2010
SP - 38
EP - 45
VL - 52
IS - 1
SN - 0013-9157, 0013-9157
KW - Sociology
KW - Political Science
KW - Environmental science
KW - Policy making
KW - Investment
KW - Human behaviour
KW - Sustainability
KW - Research projects
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1448371639?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environment&rft.atitle=Now+is+the+time+for+action%3A+transitions+and+tipping+points+in+complex+environmental+systems&rft.au=Stafford%2C+Susan+G%3BBartels%2C+Dennis+M%3BBegay-Campbell%2C+Sandra%3BBubier%2C+Jill+L%3BCrittenden%2C+John+C%3BCutter%2C+Susan+L%3BDelaney%2C+John+R%3BJordan%2C+Teresa+E%3BKay%2C+Alan+C%3BLibecap%2C+Gary+D%3BMoore%2C+John+C%3BRabalais%2C+Nancy+N%3BRejeski%2C+David%3BSala%2C+Osvaldo+E%3BShepherd%2C+J+Marshall%3BTravis%2C+Joseph&rft.aulast=Stafford&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=52&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=38&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environment&rft.issn=00139157&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F00139150903481882
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-11-04
N1 - Last updated - 2013-11-05
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 6071 1542 11325; 4342 11325; 6852; 10926 10920 11332 3172 10472; 9625 9628; 12434
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00139150903481882
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Terrestrial ages of meteorites from the Nullarbor region, Australia, based on (super 14) C and (super 14) C- (super 10) Be measurements
AN - 1270041180; 2013-012161
AB - We have investigated the terrestrial ages, or residence times, of 78 meteorites (representing 73 discrete falls) recovered in Western Australia, and one from South Australia, using both 14C measurements and also 14C/10Be. The samples studied included two ureilites, one CK and one EL chondrite. We have included 10Be measurements from 30 meteorites, including some meteorites for which the 14C terrestrial age was previously determined. We find that the 14C/10Be terrestrial ages are more precise than 14C alone, as we can correct for shielding effects. In general, the two different age determinations age by 14C-10Be are precise to 0.5-1 ka and 14C alone within 1-2 ka. However, measurement of the 14C age alone gives good agreement with the 14C-10Be for most samples. The study of the terrestrial ages of meteorites gives us useful information concerning the storage and weathering of meteorites and the study of fall times and terrestrial age. We have compared the terrestrial ages to weathering, degree of oxidation (estimated from Moessbauer studies) and Delta 17O. In this study, we found that weathering is not well correlated with terrestrial age for Nullarbor meteorites. However, there is a good correlation between degree of oxidation and Delta 17O. The implications for the study of terrestrial ages and weathering from other desert environments will be discussed.
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J Timothy
AU - McHargue, Lanny R
AU - Bland, Philip A
AU - Greenwood, Richard C
AU - Bevan, Alexander W R
AU - Kim, Kyeong J
AU - LaMotta, Sarah E
AU - Johnson, Jeffrey A
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
SP - 1271
EP - 1283
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 45
IS - 8
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - oxygen
KW - Be-10
KW - Australasia
KW - isotopes
KW - isotope ratios
KW - oxidation
KW - terrestrial age
KW - shielding effects
KW - weathering
KW - stable isotopes
KW - deserts
KW - meteorites
KW - Nullarbor Plain
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - metals
KW - carbon
KW - residence time
KW - Australia
KW - C-14
KW - beryllium
KW - O-17/O-16
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1270041180?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Terrestrial+ages+of+meteorites+from+the+Nullarbor+region%2C+Australia%2C+based+on+%28super+14%29+C+and+%28super+14%29+C-+%28super+10%29+Be+measurements&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+Timothy%3BMcHargue%2C+Lanny+R%3BBland%2C+Philip+A%3BGreenwood%2C+Richard+C%3BBevan%2C+Alexander+W+R%3BKim%2C+Kyeong+J%3BLaMotta%2C+Sarah+E%3BJohnson%2C+Jeffrey+A&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=45&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=1271&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1945-5100.2010.01289.x
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, United Kingdom
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 84
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2013-01-17
N1 - CODEN - MERTAW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Australasia; Australia; Be-10; beryllium; C-14; carbon; deserts; isotope ratios; isotopes; metals; meteorites; Nullarbor Plain; O-17/O-16; oxidation; oxygen; radioactive isotopes; residence time; shielding effects; stable isotopes; terrestrial age; weathering
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.2010.01289.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Feasibility of soil moisture monitoring with heated fiber optics
AN - 1008820520; 2012-040500
AB - Accurate methods are needed to measure changing soil water content from meter to kilometer scales. Laboratory results demonstrate the feasibility of the heat pulse method implemented with fiber optic temperature sensing to obtain accurate distributed measurements of soil water content. A fiber optic cable with an electrically conductive armoring was buried in variably saturated sand and heated via electrical resistance to create thermal pulses monitored by observing the distributed Raman backscatter. A new and simple interpretation of heat data that takes advantage of the characteristics of fiber optic temperature measurements is presented. The accuracy of the soil water content measurements varied approximately linearly with water content. At volumetric moisture content of 0.05 m (super 3) /m (super 3) the standard deviation of the readings was 0.001 m (super 3) /m (super 3) , and at 0.41 m (super 3) /m (super 3) volumetric moisture content the standard deviation was 0.046 m (super 3) /m (super 3) . This uncertainty could be further reduced by averaging several heat pulse interrogations and through use of a higher-performance fiber optic sensing system.
JF - Water Resources Research
AU - Sayde, Chadi
AU - Gregory, Christopher
AU - Gil-Rodriguez, Maria
AU - Tufillaro, Nick
AU - Tyler, Scott W
AU - van de Giesen, Nick
AU - English, Marshall
AU - Cuenca, Richard
AU - Selker, John S
Y1 - 2010
PY - 2010
DA - 2010
EP - Citation W06201
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 46
IS - 6
SN - 0043-1397, 0043-1397
KW - soils
KW - hydrology
KW - sand
KW - experimental studies
KW - electrical conductivity
KW - monitoring
KW - clastic sediments
KW - moisture
KW - unsaturated zone
KW - heat capacity
KW - techniques
KW - resistivity
KW - thermal regime
KW - feasibility studies
KW - temperature
KW - measurement
KW - Raman spectroscopy
KW - laboratory studies
KW - sediments
KW - spectroscopy
KW - accuracy
KW - instruments
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1008820520?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Resources+Research&rft.atitle=Feasibility+of+soil+moisture+monitoring+with+heated+fiber+optics&rft.au=Sayde%2C+Chadi%3BGregory%2C+Christopher%3BGil-Rodriguez%2C+Maria%3BTufillaro%2C+Nick%3BTyler%2C+Scott+W%3Bvan+de+Giesen%2C+Nick%3BEnglish%2C+Marshall%3BCuenca%2C+Richard%3BSelker%2C+John+S&rft.aulast=Sayde&rft.aufirst=Chadi&rft.date=2010-01-01&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Resources+Research&rft.issn=00431397&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2009WR007846
L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/wr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 43
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - WRERAQ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accuracy; clastic sediments; electrical conductivity; experimental studies; feasibility studies; heat capacity; hydrology; instruments; laboratory studies; measurement; moisture; monitoring; Raman spectroscopy; resistivity; sand; sediments; soils; spectroscopy; techniques; temperature; thermal regime; unsaturated zone
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2009WR007846
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF Programs in Networked Control Systems (I)
T2 - 28th Chinese Control Conference (CCC 09)
AN - 42283818; 5627435
JF - 28th Chinese Control Conference (CCC 09)
AU - Baheti, Radhakisan
Y1 - 2009/12/16/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Dec 16
KW - Control systems
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42283818?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=28th+Chinese+Control+Conference+%28CCC+09%29&rft.atitle=NSF+Programs+in+Networked+Control+Systems+%28I%29&rft.au=Baheti%2C+Radhakisan&rft.aulast=Baheti&rft.aufirst=Radhakisan&rft.date=2009-12-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=28th+Chinese+Control+Conference+%28CCC+09%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://css.paperplaza.net/conferences/conferences/CDC09/program/CDC09 _ProgramAtAGlanceWeb.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Dimerization of CAC-Rich RNA Localization Elements Contributes to Their Function In Vivo
T2 - American Society for Cell Biology 49th Annual Meeting
AN - 42325935; 5649146
JF - American Society for Cell Biology 49th Annual Meeting
AU - Deshler, J
AU - Chen, Z
Y1 - 2009/12/05/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Dec 05
KW - RNA
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42325935?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=American+Society+for+Cell+Biology+49th+Annual+Meeting&rft.atitle=Dimerization+of+CAC-Rich+RNA+Localization+Elements+Contributes+to+Their+Function+In+Vivo&rft.au=Deshler%2C+J%3BChen%2C+Z&rft.aulast=Deshler&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2009-12-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Society+for+Cell+Biology+49th+Annual+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ascb.org/meetings/Docs/FINAL%20PROGRAM_lo%20res%20for%20web .pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Toward Holistic Evaluation and Assessment: Linking Ecosystems and Human Well-Being for the Three Gorges Dam
AN - 754884379; 13418243
AB - A significant challenge exists in assessing the social and ecological impacts of development projects in a holistic and comprehensive manner. Our objective is to elucidate the linkages between ecological change and human well-being, and its importance in integrated assessment policy for development projects, using the Three Gorges Dam (China) as a case study. A collaborative research initiative was undertaken to review and synthesize published information on the ecological and human health effects of the Three Gorges Dam. Our synthesis suggests that the Three Gorges Dam has altered social-ecological dynamics of human health and ecosystem function in the Yangtze River basin with significant consequences for human well-being. Direct impacts to human well-being were grouped into four primary categories, including: (1) toxicological impacts; (2) shifting infectious disease dynamics; (3) natural hazards; and (4) social health. Social-ecological relationships were altered in complex ways, with both direct and indirect effects, positive and negative interactions, and chronic and acute impacts on human well-being. Our synthesis supports a comprehensive evaluation of development projects via integrated assessments of human and environmental consequences. This is probably best achieved through a coupled social-environmental impact assessment to ensure holistic and comprehensive analyses of expected costs and benefits. The role of research can thereby be to elucidate the linkages between ecosystems and human health to better inform the assessment process. A synthesis of the existing information on the Three Gorges suggests that this is best achieved through institutional collaboration and transdisciplinary integration of expertise.
JF - EcoHealth
AU - Kittinger, John N
AU - Coontz, Kristopher M
AU - Yuan, Zhanpeng
AU - Han, Deju
AU - Zhao, Xianfu
AU - Wilcox, Bruce A
AD - Department of Geography, NSF IGERT Program in Ecology, Conservation & Pathogen Biology, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, 445 Saunders Hall, 2424 Maile Way, Honolulu, HI, 96822, USA, jkittinger@gmail.com
Y1 - 2009/12//
PY - 2009
DA - Dec 2009
SP - 601
EP - 613
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany
VL - 6
IS - 4
SN - 1612-9202, 1612-9202
KW - Ecology Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts
KW - Cost-benefit analysis
KW - Development projects
KW - Ecosystems
KW - Infectious diseases
KW - Integration
KW - Reviews
KW - River basins
KW - case studies
KW - China, People's Rep., Changjiang R.
KW - China, People's Rep., Sichuan Prov., Changjiang R., Three Gorges Dam
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754884379?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=EcoHealth&rft.atitle=Toward+Holistic+Evaluation+and+Assessment%3A+Linking+Ecosystems+and+Human+Well-Being+for+the+Three+Gorges+Dam&rft.au=Kittinger%2C+John+N%3BCoontz%2C+Kristopher+M%3BYuan%2C+Zhanpeng%3BHan%2C+Deju%3BZhao%2C+Xianfu%3BWilcox%2C+Bruce+A&rft.aulast=Kittinger&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2009-12-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=601&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=EcoHealth&rft.issn=16129202&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10393-010-0285-2
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Integration; Development projects; Infectious diseases; Reviews; River basins; Cost-benefit analysis; case studies; Ecosystems; China, People's Rep., Changjiang R.; China, People's Rep., Sichuan Prov., Changjiang R., Three Gorges Dam
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10393-010-0285-2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Intersection of the Sciences of Biogeography and Infectious Disease Ecology
AN - 754568295; 13418246
AB - Our understanding of disease ecology can be enhanced by the use of spatially explicit models and a biogeographic perspective. For example, disease emergence is partially a function of shifts in the geographic ranges of pathogens and hosts. Biogeographic approaches can be used to help us understand the interaction of host and pathogen diversity. Climate change is a global phenomenon that will require a biogeographic perspective if we are to predict its affect on global disease burden. Studies of disease ecology can enhance our general understanding of the effects of global change on species' distributions by providing useful case studies for developing and testing models. Possibly most important, studies of the spread of pathogens has the promise of giving us a general law of species' spread. Currently, biogeography and disease ecology are disciplinary communities with little overlap. The articles in this special feature are designed to help bridge that gap.
JF - EcoHealth
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA, sscheine@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/12//
PY - 2009
DA - Dec 2009
SP - 483
EP - 488
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany
VL - 6
IS - 4
SN - 1612-9202, 1612-9202
KW - Ecology Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Biogeography
KW - Climatic changes
KW - biogeography
KW - Pathogens
KW - Models
KW - Ecology
KW - case studies
KW - Infectious diseases
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754568295?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=EcoHealth&rft.atitle=The+Intersection+of+the+Sciences+of+Biogeography+and+Infectious+Disease+Ecology&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2009-12-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=483&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=EcoHealth&rft.issn=16129202&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10393-010-0298-x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Infectious diseases; Biogeography; Climatic changes; Pathogens; Models; case studies; Ecology; biogeography
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10393-010-0298-x
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Doctorate Recipients from U.S. Universities. Summary Report, 2007-08. Survey of Earned Doctorates. Special Report
AN - 61818411; ED507640
AB - "Doctorate Recipients from U.S. Universities: Summary Report 2007-08" is the 41st in a series of reports on research doctorates awarded by universities in the United States. Data presented in this report were collected by the Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED). The SED, which has been conducted annually since 1957, is a census of all individuals who receive a research doctorate from a U.S. academic institution in a given academic year (July 1 through June 30 of the following year). This report presents data from the 2007 and 2008 SED. The 2008 census covered 48,802 individuals who earned research doctorates in the academic year ending June 2008; the 2007 census covered 48,112 individuals who earned research doctorates in the academic year ending June 2007. The body of this report discusses the results of the 2008 SED, beginning with a summary of key findings. Trends in the numbers and percentages of doctorate recipients through 2008 are reported by the broad fields in which doctorate recipients earn their degrees, and by sex, race/ethnicity, and citizenship. Cross-sectional data on the educational pathways that doctorate recipients take to the research doctorate are reported for the 2008 cohort, as well as data on the average amount of time taken to complete the doctoral degree, doctorate recipients reporting disabilities, sources of financial support during graduate school, and the postgraduation status and plans of doctorate recipients. The data tables follow the main text, beginning with summary data tables for 2008 (tables 1-35), which display the numbers and percentages from which the figures and the numbers cited in the text are drawn. Detailed data tables for 2008 research doctorate recipients (tables 36-46) and for the previous 10-year period (1998-2008, tables 47-50) follow the summary 2008 data tables. Data collected by the 2007 SED are presented as a data supplement without accompanying narrative. These supplementary summary and detailed data tables follow the 2008 tables. Appended are: (1) Technical Notes; and (2) Survey of Earned Doctorates Questionnaires. (Contains 10 footnotes, 20 figures, and 106 tables.)
Y1 - 2009/12//
PY - 2009
DA - December 2009
SP - 322
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Adult Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Financial Support
KW - Special Needs Students
KW - Student Characteristics
KW - Geographic Distribution
KW - Debt (Financial)
KW - Educational Attainment
KW - Annual Reports
KW - Time to Degree
KW - Employment Potential
KW - College Graduates
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Universities
KW - Graduate Surveys
KW - Trend Analysis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61818411?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Demographic collapse
AN - 20821330; 10975693
AB - If nothing else kills it first, the human species could become extinct in a thousand years, simply for failure to reproduce at a sufficient rate to offset the natural deaths of individuals. Already, the death rate exceeds the birth rate in many nations of the European Union. All EU nations have fertility rates too low to sustain the population forever, and cultural globalization could spread this infertility to all humanity. Classical demographic transition theory assumed that modern societies would have birth rates just high enough to balance low death rates. However, their rates are too low, with the notable exception of the United States where high fertility among immigrants and unwed mothers contributes significantly. After documenting the situation, this article considers social responses to this problem, both moderate and radical, finding them less than satisfactory. Perhaps the only way the human species can survive is to transcend the current human condition by evolving into something that is no longer human.
JF - Futures
AU - Bainbridge, W S
AD - 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230, USA, wbainbri@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/12//
PY - 2009
DA - Dec 2009
SP - 738
EP - 745
PB - Elsevier Science, P.O. Box 800 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1DX UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 41
IS - 10
SN - 0016-3287, 0016-3287
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - demography
KW - globalization
KW - Mortality
KW - Fertility
KW - infertility
KW - immigrants
KW - USA
KW - European Union
KW - culture
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20821330?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Futures&rft.atitle=Demographic+collapse&rft.au=Bainbridge%2C+W+S&rft.aulast=Bainbridge&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2009-12-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=738&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Futures&rft.issn=00163287&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.futures.2009.07.005
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - USA; European Union; Mortality; demography; Fertility; culture; immigrants; infertility; globalization
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2009.07.005
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Reassembling the Pieces: Biological Systems and Systems Biology
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society (HSS 2009)
AN - 42185806; 5567867
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society (HSS 2009)
AU - Collins, James
Y1 - 2009/11/19/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 19
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://www.hssonline.org/images/Meetings/2009HSSProgram.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - National Science Foundation
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society (HSS 2009)
AN - 42183299; 5568002
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society (HSS 2009)
AU - Rothenberg, Marc
Y1 - 2009/11/19/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 19
KW - Foundations
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://www.hssonline.org/images/Meetings/2009HSSProgram.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF Strategic Plan for a Comprehensive National CyberInfrastructure
T2 - 21st International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 09)
AN - 42075956; 5500814
JF - 21st International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 09)
AU - Seidel, Edward
AU - Munoz, Jose
AU - Patra, Abani
AU - Parashar, Manish
AU - Pennington, Robert
Y1 - 2009/11/14/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 14
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://scyourway.nacse.org/conference/selection
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Accelerating Discovery in Science and Engineering through Petascale Simulations and Analysis: The NSF PetaApps Program
T2 - 21st International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 09)
AN - 42068081; 5500933
JF - 21st International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 09)
AU - Patra, Abani
AU - Parashar, Manish
Y1 - 2009/11/14/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 14
KW - Simulation
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42068081?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=21st+International+Conference+for+High+Performance+Computing%2C+Networking%2C+Storage+and+Analysis+%28SC+09%29&rft.atitle=Accelerating+Discovery+in+Science+and+Engineering+through+Petascale+Simulations+and+Analysis%3A+The+NSF+PetaApps+Program&rft.au=Patra%2C+Abani%3BParashar%2C+Manish&rft.aulast=Patra&rft.aufirst=Abani&rft.date=2009-11-14&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=21st+International+Conference+for+High+Performance+Computing%2C+Networking%2C+Storage+and+Analysis+%28SC+09%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://scyourway.nacse.org/conference/selection
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF High End Computing University Research Activity (HECURA)
T2 - 21st International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 09)
AN - 42036660; 5500934
JF - 21st International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 09)
AU - Chtchelkanova, Almadena
Y1 - 2009/11/14/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 14
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42036660?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://scyourway.nacse.org/conference/selection
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Using National Data to Evaluate the International Collaborations of United States Scientists and Engineers
T2 - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AN - 42296592; 5623998
JF - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AU - Tsapogas, John
Y1 - 2009/11/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 11
KW - USA
KW - International agreements
KW - Data processing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42296592?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Annual+Conference+of+the+American+Evaluation+Association+%28Evaluation+2009%29&rft.atitle=Using+National+Data+to+Evaluate+the+International+Collaborations+of+United+States+Scientists+and+Engineers&rft.au=Tsapogas%2C+John&rft.aulast=Tsapogas&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2009-11-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Annual+Conference+of+the+American+Evaluation+Association+%28Evaluation+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.eval.org/search09/allschedule.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Context and Evaluation: Another Perspective on the Complex Relationship
T2 - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AN - 42295193; 5623782
JF - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AU - Goodyear, Leslie
Y1 - 2009/11/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 11
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42295193?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Annual+Conference+of+the+American+Evaluation+Association+%28Evaluation+2009%29&rft.atitle=Context+and+Evaluation%3A+Another+Perspective+on+the+Complex+Relationship&rft.au=Goodyear%2C+Leslie&rft.aulast=Goodyear&rft.aufirst=Leslie&rft.date=2009-11-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Annual+Conference+of+the+American+Evaluation+Association+%28Evaluation+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.eval.org/search09/allschedule.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Stimulating Research on Science of Science and Innovation
T2 - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AN - 42285040; 5624166
JF - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AU - Lane, Julia
Y1 - 2009/11/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 11
KW - Innovations
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42285040?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.eval.org/search09/allschedule.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Using the Framework for Evaluating Impacts of Informal Science Education Projects
T2 - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AN - 42284950; 5624298
JF - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AU - Allen, Sue
Y1 - 2009/11/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 11
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42284950?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Annual+Conference+of+the+American+Evaluation+Association+%28Evaluation+2009%29&rft.atitle=Using+the+Framework+for+Evaluating+Impacts+of+Informal+Science+Education+Projects&rft.au=Allen%2C+Sue&rft.aulast=Allen&rft.aufirst=Sue&rft.date=2009-11-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Annual+Conference+of+the+American+Evaluation+Association+%28Evaluation+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.eval.org/search09/allschedule.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Trend Analyses: Understanding the Informal Science Education (ISE) Project Portfolio and Evaluations
T2 - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AN - 42283528; 5624297
JF - 2009 Annual Conference of the American Evaluation Association (Evaluation 2009)
AU - Ruffin, Monya
Y1 - 2009/11/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 11
KW - Education
KW - Portfolios
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42283528?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.eval.org/search09/allschedule.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Socially Intelligent Computing
T2 - The 5th International Conference on Collaborative Computing: Networking, Applications and Worksharing (CollaborateCom 2009)
AN - 42088718; 5523663
JF - The 5th International Conference on Collaborative Computing: Networking, Applications and Worksharing (CollaborateCom 2009)
AU - Hirsh, Haym
Y1 - 2009/11/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Nov 11
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42088718?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=The+5th+International+Conference+on+Collaborative+Computing%3A+Networking%2C+Applications+and+Worksharing+%28CollaborateCom+2009%29&rft.atitle=Socially+Intelligent+Computing&rft.au=Hirsh%2C+Haym&rft.aulast=Hirsh&rft.aufirst=Haym&rft.date=2009-11-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=The+5th+International+Conference+on+Collaborative+Computing%3A+Networking%2C+Applications+and+Worksharing+%28CollaborateCom+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.collaboratecom.org/2009/program.php
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Label-free biochemical characterization of stem cells using vibrational spectroscopy
AN - 883026201; 15243929
AB - Raman and infrared (IR) spectroscopy are two complementary vibrational spectroscopic techniques that have experienced a tremendous growth in their use in biological and biomedical research. This is, in large part, due to their unique capability of providing label-free intrinsic chemical information of living biological samples at tissue, cellular, or sub-cellular resolutions. This article reviews recent developments in applying these techniques for the characterization of stem cells. A discussion of the potential for these methods to address some of the major challenges in stem cell research is presented, as well as the technological and scientific advancements that are needed to progress the knowledge in the field. ([copy 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
JF - Journal of Biophotonics
AU - Chan, James W
AU - Lieu, Deborah K
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, 2700 Stockton Blvd Suite 1400, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA, chan19@llnl.gov
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - Nov 2009
SP - 656
EP - 668
PB - Wiley-Blackwell, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030-5774 United States
VL - 2
IS - 11
SN - 1864-0648, 1864-0648
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Stem cells
KW - I.R. spectroscopy
KW - Spectroscopy
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/883026201?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.atitle=Label-free+biochemical+characterization+of+stem+cells+using+vibrational+spectroscopy&rft.au=Chan%2C+James+W%3BLieu%2C+Deborah+K&rft.aulast=Chan&rft.aufirst=James&rft.date=2009-11-01&rft.volume=2&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=656&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Biophotonics&rft.issn=18640648&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fjbio.200910041
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbio.200910041/abstract
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Stem cells; I.R. spectroscopy; Spectroscopy
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbio.200910041
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The influence of plume head-lithosphere interaction on magmatism associated with the Yellowstone Hot Spot track
AN - 742913095; 2010-047549
AB - Although commonly attributed to a mantle plume, time-transgressive magmatism of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) province differs in important ways from that associated with typical oceanic hotspots. A fundamental question concerns the relative contributions of lithosphere vs. upwelling sub-lithospheric mantle to formation of SRPY basaltic magmas. Specifically, association of this province with initially thick and cold Archean lithosphere (Wyoming craton) poses a problem in that this lid will hinder and possibly prevent melting of rising plume material. Assuming an anhydrous peridotite mantle, melting can only occur if (1) the lid can be substantially thinned over geologically reasonable time and/or (2) the upwelling material is exceptionally warm, or (3) the lid was suitably thin to begin with. Petrologic modeling indicates that SRPY primitive basalts last segregated from mantle at conditions (1500 degrees C). Fully dynamic models were applied to investigate the extent and rate of lithosphere thinning assuming an initial structure representative of the Wyoming craton. We find that thermal erosion by plume impingement alone appears incapable of providing the required lithospheric thinning. Alternative models (e.g., low-angle Laramide subduction, lithospheric delamination) also conflict with geochemical evidence that SRPY basalts contain a dominant contribution of old, isotopically evolved mantle material - presumably derived from subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM). We conclude that SCLM is likely to be preserved, that the thick SCLM lid prevents substantial melting of rising plume material (tomographically imaged), and that SRPY basalts are predominantly derived by melting of lithospheric mantle.
JF - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
AU - Manea, Vlad C
AU - Manea, M
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Schutt, Derek L
A2 - Morgan, Lisa A.
A2 - Cathey, Henrietta E.
A2 - Pierce, Kenneth L.
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 68
EP - 85
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 188
IS - 1-3
SN - 0377-0273, 0377-0273
KW - United States
KW - upwelling
KW - upper mantle
KW - Idaho
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - numerical models
KW - crustal thinning
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - Wyoming Craton
KW - lithosphere
KW - igneous rocks
KW - magmatism
KW - mantle
KW - temperature
KW - Wyoming
KW - melting
KW - viscosity
KW - thermal erosion
KW - basalts
KW - Wyoming Province
KW - Snake River plain
KW - mantle plumes
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03770273
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 54
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, geol. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JVGRDQ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; crustal thinning; Idaho; igneous rocks; lithosphere; magmatism; mantle; mantle plumes; melting; numerical models; Snake River plain; temperature; thermal erosion; United States; upper mantle; upwelling; viscosity; volcanic rocks; Wyoming; Wyoming Craton; Wyoming Province; Yellowstone Hot Spot
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.12.012
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mantle source provinces beneath the Northwestern USA delimited by helium isotopes in young basalts
AN - 742906562; 2010-047553
AB - We report new He, Nd and Sr isotope results for basalts from the northwestern United States. The new (super 3) He/ (super 4) He results for olivine phenocrysts in basalts from the eastern Snake River Plain (SRP), the Owyhee Plateau (OP) and the Oregon High Lava Plains (HLP), together with published He isotope data for Yellowstone and the Cascades volcanic arc, delineate distinct mantle sources for each of these sub-provinces. All basalts from the eastern SRP (8 Quaternary localities plus 1 Miocene locality) have (super 3) He/ (super 4) He ratios higher than observed in normal mid-ocean ridge basalts, but overlapping with ranges observed in hotspot-related oceanic islands. For a lateral distance of some 400 km along the SRP, (super 3) He/ (super 4) He ranges from nearly equal 11 R (sub A) in the west to >19 R (sub A) adjacent to Yellowstone. Such high ratios have not been observed elsewhere in the western U.S., and are consistent with the presence of a mantle plume. The lateral gradient in (super 3) He/ (super 4) He suggests that the proportion of plume-derived He decreases westward, but this interpretation is complicated by possible addition of crustal helium during open-system crystal fractionation in some SRP basaltic magmas. Although crustal contamination may modulate (super 3) He/ (super 4) He in basalts along the SRP, the effect is not strong and it does not obscure the elevated (super 3) He/ (super 4) He mantle source signature. In contrast, young basalts from the HLP and the OP have (super 3) He/ (super 4) He values of 8.8-9.3 R (sub A) , within the range for mid-ocean ridge basalts; these data reflect a shallow asthenospheric source with no discernible influence from the Yellowstone hotspot. Basalts from Newberry volcano have slightly lower (super 3) He/ (super 4) He (7.6-8.3 R (sub A) ), within the range for other Cascades arc lavas (7.0-8.4 R (sub A) ). Three alternative explanations are possible for the origin of the high (super 3) He/ (super 4) He signature along the SRP: (1) multi-component mixing of (a) magmas and/or CO (sub 2) -rich fluids derived from plume mantle having high (super 3) He/ (super 4) He, (b) continental lithosphere having low (super 3) He/ (super 4) He, and (c) shallow asthenospheric mantle (MORB source); (2) a mantle plume beneath Yellowstone that has an unusual combination of He, Nd and Sr isotope characteristics; or (3) a continental lithospheric mantle that experienced ancient enrichment of (super 3) He relative to (U+Th). The isotope relations between He-Nd and He-Sr, along with other considerations, generally favor the first explanation, but the other possibilities cannot be ruled out at the present time.
JF - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
AU - Graham, D W
AU - Reid, Mary R
AU - Jordan, B T
AU - Grunder, A L
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Lupton, John E
A2 - Morgan, Lisa A.
A2 - Cathey, Henrietta E.
A2 - Pierce, Kenneth L.
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 128
EP - 140
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 188
IS - 1-3
SN - 0377-0273, 0377-0273
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - stable isotopes
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - spatial distribution
KW - Oregon
KW - Newberry Volcano
KW - noble gases
KW - basalts
KW - helium
KW - mantle plumes
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Northwestern U.S.
KW - Owyhee Mountains
KW - Cascade Range
KW - Deschutes County Oregon
KW - High Lava Plains
KW - He-4/He-3
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03770273
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 107
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. geol. sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JVGRDQ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; carbon dioxide; Cascade Range; Deschutes County Oregon; He-4/He-3; helium; High Lava Plains; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; mantle; mantle plumes; Newberry Volcano; noble gases; Northwestern U.S.; Oregon; Owyhee Mountains; Snake River plain; spatial distribution; stable isotopes; United States; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone Hot Spot
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.12.004
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermal structure beneath the Snake River plain; implications for the Yellowstone Hot Spot
AN - 742906389; 2010-047548
AB - Basaltic magmatism associated with the Yellowstone hotspot has been widely attributed to upwelling of a mantle plume, yet the temporal and spatial distribution of these magmas and their compositional characteristics are distinctive from oceanic hotspot magmatism. Fundamental questions concern the influence of continental cratonic lithosphere in producing the differences, and the extent to which upper plate processes contribute to magma production. To better understand scenarios of melt generation, P-T conditions are estimated for segregation of primitive Snake River Plain (SRP) basalts from the mantle. Combined with analysis of trace element and seismic constraints, we conclude from this that (1) melt production was concentrated at depths between roughly 70-100 km, (2) mantle temperature was only slightly higher than ambient conditions with a maximum potential temperature of 1450 degrees C, and (3) the mantle source was relatively fertile (Mg# <90). These results suggest that the seismically imaged plume below Yellowstone is significantly cooler than upwellings beneath Hawaii, Iceland and many other oceanic "hotspots". Our findings, in combination with other geochemical and geodynamic considerations, are permissive of magma generation within the ancient lithospheric mantle keel associated with the Wyoming craton. Plume contributions, while not excluded, involve physical and geochemical implications that suggest they are subordinate.
JF - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Schutt, Derek L
AU - Hughes, Scott S
A2 - Morgan, Lisa A.
A2 - Cathey, Henrietta E.
A2 - Pierce, Kenneth L.
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 57
EP - 67
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 188
IS - 1-3
SN - 0377-0273, 0377-0273
KW - United States
KW - upwelling
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - thermal regime
KW - melts
KW - temperature
KW - melting
KW - basalts
KW - tectonics
KW - trace elements
KW - mantle plumes
KW - P-T conditions
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - lithosphere
KW - magmatism
KW - deformation
KW - depth
KW - extension
KW - Wyoming
KW - asthenosphere
KW - magmas
KW - decompression
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03770273
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 99
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table
N1 - SuppNotes - Supplemental information/data is available in the online version of this article; includes appendix
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JVGRDQ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - asthenosphere; basalts; decompression; deformation; depth; extension; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; lithosphere; magmas; magmatism; mantle; mantle plumes; melting; melts; P-T conditions; Snake River plain; tectonics; temperature; thermal regime; trace elements; United States; upwelling; volcanic rocks; Wyoming; Yellowstone Hot Spot
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2009.01.034
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Boron isotopic variations in NW USA rhyolites; Yellowstone, Snake River plain, eastern Oregon
AN - 742906243; 2010-047556
AB - The geochemistry of NW USA rhyolites correlates strongly with geography and the nature of the underlying basement terranes. Rhyolites from the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) province have higher (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr, (super 207) Pb/ (super 206) Pb, and lower (super 143) Nd/ (super 144) Nd than those from the Oregon High Lava Plains (HLP) province, reflecting a dominant influence of Precambrian cratonic crust east of the western Idaho suture zone versus accreted oceanic terranes of Phanerozoic age to the west. Rhyolites from the cratonic domain show significant enrichments of Th, U, and LREE/HREE, whereas B concentration and especially B/Nb and B/Rb are systematically higher west of the tectonic boundary. This decoupling of B from the other incompatible elements is best explained in terms of distinctive magmatic sources east and west of the suture zone. B isotopic composition [delta (super 11) B] was measured for natural and synthetic glasses via multiple multiplier laser ablation-ICP-MS. delta (super 11) B values are systematically lighter in SRPY rhyolites (-5.6 to -8.9 ppm) compared to those from the HLP (-0.8 to -3.1 ppm). These data are consistent with strongly fluid-depleted and/or metamorphosed sources for SRPY rhyolites, whereas HLP sources resemble those of typical oceanic basalts, and could reflect melting of juvenile basalt-derived protoliths in the crust. B isotope ratios of low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites are indistinct from those with normal delta (super 8) O, suggesting that delta (super 11) B values are not strongly affected by hydrothermal processes that alter source materials with meteoric water. Considering all data, it is likely that B compositions of the rhyolites are inherited from their sources in the crust. Although low delta (super 11) B (<0 ppm) is also observed in many mantle-derived basalts (i.e., OIB, MORB), in SRPY rhyolites it is associated with enrichments of elements (e.g., U, Th, Rb, LREE) typically concentrated in continental crust, and thus old high-grade metamorphic continental crust is inferred to be (super 11) B-depleted. If rhyolite protoliths were originally metasediments, it is likely that bulk B and delta (super 11) B were selectively removed by metamorphic dehydration reactions and transported to the surface via (super 11) B-enriched fluids.
JF - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
AU - Savov, Ivan P
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty A
AU - Shirey, Steven B
A2 - Morgan, Lisa A.
A2 - Cathey, Henrietta E.
A2 - Pierce, Kenneth L.
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 162
EP - 172
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 188
IS - 1-3
SN - 0377-0273, 0377-0273
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - neutron activation analysis data
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - enrichment
KW - mass spectra
KW - lead
KW - aqueous solutions
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Oregon
KW - major elements
KW - eastern Oregon
KW - X-ray fluorescence spectra
KW - spectra
KW - rare earths
KW - trace elements
KW - Pb-207/Pb-206
KW - Idaho
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - rhyolites
KW - protoliths
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Northwestern U.S.
KW - Nd-144/Nd-143
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - metals
KW - B-11/B-10
KW - High Lava Plains
KW - boron
KW - mobilization
KW - neodymium
KW - Snake River plain
KW - strontium
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03770273
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 64
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, geol. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JVGRDQ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; aqueous solutions; B-11/B-10; boron; eastern Oregon; enrichment; High Lava Plains; hot spots; ICP mass spectra; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; lead; major elements; mass spectra; metals; mobilization; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; neutron activation analysis data; Northwestern U.S.; Oregon; Pb-207/Pb-206; protoliths; rare earths; rhyolites; Snake River plain; spectra; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; trace elements; United States; volcanic rocks; X-ray fluorescence spectra; Yellowstone Hot Spot
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2009.03.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Upwelling signals in radiocarbon from early 20th-century Peruvian bay scallop (Argopecten purpuratus) shells
AN - 742899773; 2010-038700
AB - We quantified Delta (super 14) C, delta (super 18) O, and delta (super 13) C cycles along ontogeny within four bay scallop (Argopecten purpuratus) shells collected from Callao Bay, Salaverry, and Sechura Bay, Peru following the 1907-1908 non-El Nino years and the 1925-1926 El Nino. Delta (super 14) C and delta (super 13) C generally covary; Delta (super 14) C and delta (super 18) O vary inversely. Simultaneous decreases in Delta (super 14) C and increases in delta (super 18) O in non-El Nino shells are followed by constant Delta (super 14) C and gradually decreasing delta (super 18) O, which we interpret as evidence for discrete marine upwelling events followed by warming of the initially cold upwelled water. Upwelling changes from El Nino events are detectable with difficulty in mollusk shell Delta (super 14) C.
JF - Quaternary Research
AU - Jones, Kevin B
AU - Hodgins, Gregory W L
AU - Etayo-Cadavid, Miguel F
AU - Andrus, C Fred T
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 452
EP - 456
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 72
IS - 3
SN - 0033-5894, 0033-5894
KW - upwelling
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - mass spectra
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Holocene
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - accelerator mass spectra
KW - El Nino Southern Oscillation
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - ontogeny
KW - carbon
KW - Invertebrata
KW - Peru
KW - spectra
KW - Mollusca
KW - Argopecten purpuratus
KW - shells
KW - Quaternary
KW - isotope ratios
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - Bivalvia
KW - South America
KW - paleoenvironment
KW - marine environment
KW - C-14
KW - upper Holocene
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00335894
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 39
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - QRESAV
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accelerator mass spectra; Argopecten purpuratus; Bivalvia; C-13/C-12; C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; El Nino Southern Oscillation; Holocene; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; marine environment; mass spectra; Mollusca; O-18/O-16; ontogeny; oxygen; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; paleoenvironment; Peru; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; shells; South America; spectra; stable isotopes; upper Holocene; upwelling
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2009.07.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Microbial load from animal feces at a recreational beach.
AN - 67697281; 19664785
AB - The goal of this study was to quantify the microbial load (enterococci) contributed by the different animals that frequent a beach site. The highest enterococci concentrations were observed in dog feces with average levels of 3.9 x 10(7) CFU/g; the next highest enterococci levels were observed in birds averaging 3.3 x 10(5)CFU/g. The lowest measured levels of enterococci were observed in material collected from shrimp fecal mounds (2.0 CFU/g). A comparison of the microbial loads showed that 1 dog fecal event was equivalent to 6940 bird fecal events or 3.2 x 10(8) shrimp fecal mounds. Comparing animal contributions to previously published numbers for human bather shedding indicates that one adult human swimmer contributes approximately the same microbial load as one bird fecal event. Given the abundance of animals observed on the beach, this study suggests that dogs are the largest contributing animal source of enterococci to the beach site.
JF - Marine pollution bulletin
AU - Wright, Mary E
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Elmir, Samir
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AD - National Science Foundation-National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, 1801 NW 9th Avenue, Suite 200 (R-669), Miami, Florida 33136, USA.
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 1649
EP - 1656
VL - 58
IS - 11
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Environmental Monitoring
KW - Animals
KW - Penaeidae
KW - Dogs
KW - Colony Count, Microbial
KW - Birds
KW - Feces -- microbiology
KW - Bathing Beaches
KW - Enterococcus -- isolation & purification
KW - Geologic Sediments -- microbiology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/67697281?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+pollution+bulletin&rft.atitle=Microbial+load+from+animal+feces+at+a+recreational+beach.&rft.au=Wright%2C+Mary+E%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BElmir%2C+Samir%3BFleming%2C+Lora+E&rft.aulast=Wright&rft.aufirst=Mary&rft.date=2009-11-01&rft.volume=58&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=1649&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+pollution+bulletin&rft.issn=1879-3363&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.marpolbul.2009.07.003
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2009-11-17
N1 - Date created - 2009-10-26
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
Appl Environ Microbiol. 1999 Dec;65(12):5628-30 [10584032]
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Int J Food Microbiol. 2003 Dec 1;88(2-3):133-45 [14596986]
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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1998 Dec;64(12):5027-9 [9835602]
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J Appl Microbiol. 2005;99(2):348-53 [16033466]
Water Res. 2005 Sep;39(15):3565-78 [16095656]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2005 Oct;71(10):5929-34 [16204506]
Microb Drug Resist. 2005 Winter;11(4):395-403 [16359201]
J Environ Qual. 2006 Jul-Aug;35(4):1088-100 [16738394]
Water Res. 2007 Jan;41(1):3-10 [17113123]
Int J Antimicrob Agents. 2007 Jul;30(1):98-100 [17509838]
Water Res. 2007 Aug;41(16):3585-94 [17575998]
Mar Pollut Bull. 2007 Sep;54(9):1472-82 [17610908]
Environ Sci Technol. 2001 Jun 15;35(12):2407-16 [11432541]
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2009.07.003
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Numbers of U.S. Doctorates Awarded Rise for Sixth Year, but Growth Slower. InfoBrief. NSF 10-308
AN - 61820640; ED507250
AB - U.S. academic institutions awarded 48,802 research doctorate degrees in 2008, the sixth consecutive annual increase in U.S. doctoral awards and the highest number ever reported by the Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED). This number represents an increase of 1.4% over the 2007 total (48,112), the smallest annual increase over the 6-year span. Doctorates awarded in science and engineering (S&E) fields of study accounted for the overall growth in 2008. Data is presented in science and engineering doctoral degrees and in demographics (sex, race and ethnicity, and citizenship). Data is also presented in postgraduation plans of doctorate recipients with temporary visas. (Contains 2 figures, 4 tables, and 2 notes.)
AU - Fiegener, Mark K.
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 8
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Educational Attainment
KW - Graduation Rate
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61820640?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Worldwide geomagnetic data collection and management
AN - 50071352; 2010-022364
AB - Geomagnetic data provided by different platforms piece together a global picture of Earth's magnetic field and its interaction with geospace. Furthermore, a great diversity of the geomagnetic field changes, from secular (over decades to centuries) to short time variations (down to minutes and seconds), can be detected only through continued observations. An international effort to watch and record geomagnetic changes first began in the 1830s with a network of scientific observers organized by Karl Friedrich Gauss in Germany, and this effort has continued since then. One of the most remarkable achievements in understanding the geomagnetic field morphology and time behavior was made possible by the International Geophysical Year (IGY), an exploration and research effort that lasted for 18 months, starting on 1 July 1957. The IGY encompassed 11 geoscience disciplines, including geomagnetism. The IGY has represented a giant step forward in the quality and quantity of worldwide geomagnetic measurements, as well as in the widespread interest in magnetic measurements. A half century of probing the geomagnetic field spatial and temporal variations has produced a number of outstanding results, and the interested reader can find recent reviews on various geomagnetic field topics (from measurements to modeling) in Encyclopedia of Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism [Gubbins and Herrero-Bervera, 2007] or Treatise on Geophysics: Geomagnetism [Kono, 2007].
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Mandea, Mioara
AU - Papitashvili, Vladimir
Y1 - 2009/11//
PY - 2009
DA - November 2009
SP - 409
EP - 410
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 90
IS - 45
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - digital data
KW - ground truth
KW - observatories
KW - global
KW - CHAMP
KW - international cooperation
KW - Magsat
KW - satellite methods
KW - magnetic field
KW - measurement
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50071352?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Worldwide+geomagnetic+data+collection+and+management&rft.au=Mandea%2C+Mioara%3BPapitashvili%2C+Vladimir&rft.aulast=Mandea&rft.aufirst=Mioara&rft.date=2009-11-01&rft.volume=90&rft.issue=45&rft.spage=409&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2009EO450001
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 5
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - CHAMP; digital data; global; ground truth; international cooperation; magnetic field; Magsat; measurement; observatories; satellite methods
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2009EO450001
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Physico-Chemical Characterization of Polylipid Nanoparticles for Gene Delivery to the Liver
AN - 754547056; 13301734
AB - Polylipid nanoparticles (PLNP) have been shown to be very effective in delivering antioxidative genes in the treatment of liver injury in mice. To build on our previous studies and to further characterize PLNP formulated from polycationic lipid (PCL) and cholesterol, we report here the synthesis of multigram quantities of PCL and employ analytical tools, such as Raman spectroscopy of single PLNP and live-cell imaging of lipofection, for the physicochemical characterization of PCL, PLNP, and the transfection process. Mass spectrometry demonstrates the characteristics of polymeric lipids. Raman spectrum of PCL reveals the polymeric structure of the polymers. The presence of cholesterol in PLNP formulation did not markedly change the Raman spectrum. PLNP-derived polyplexes exhibit Raman spectra very similar to PLNP except that the C-H out-of-plane deformation mode of the polymeric lipid is significantly suppressed, indicating the interaction with plasmid DNA. Zeta potential measurement indicates a large DNA-carrying capacity of PLNP and their stability for in vivo gene delivery. The live-cell fluorescent imaging dynamically shows that PLNP exerts transfection efficiency similar to lipofectamine in leading to early reporter gene expression in live hepatic cells. In conclusion, polylipid nanoparticles possess a high DNA carrying capacity and lipofection efficiency, rendering them suitable for testing in large animals. The employment of novel state-of-the-art technologies in the study of lipofection represents the level of physicochemical and biological characterization that is needed to best understand the key elements involved in the lipofection process.
JF - Bioconjugate Chemistry
AU - Nyunt, Maung T
AU - Dicus, Christopher W
AU - Cui, Yi-Yao
AU - Yappert, M Cecilia
AU - Huser, Thomas R
AU - Nantz, Michael H
AU - Wu, Jian
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, and Department of Internal Medicine, Transplant Research Program, University of California, Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, California 95817, Department of Chemistry, University of California, Davis, California 95616, and Department of Chemistry, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky 40292
Y1 - 2009/10/27/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 27
SP - 2047
EP - 2054
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 USA
VL - 20
IS - 11
SN - 1043-1802, 1043-1802
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Injuries
KW - Lipids
KW - Carrying capacity
KW - Cholesterol
KW - Plasmids
KW - imaging
KW - Mass spectroscopy
KW - Raman spectroscopy
KW - Gene transfer
KW - Transfection
KW - Reporter gene
KW - Zeta potential
KW - DNA
KW - Liver
KW - nanoparticles
KW - W 30905:Medical Applications
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754547056?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bioconjugate+Chemistry&rft.atitle=Physico-Chemical+Characterization+of+Polylipid+Nanoparticles+for+Gene+Delivery+to+the+Liver&rft.au=Nyunt%2C+Maung+T%3BDicus%2C+Christopher+W%3BCui%2C+Yi-Yao%3BYappert%2C+M+Cecilia%3BHuser%2C+Thomas+R%3BNantz%2C+Michael+H%3BWu%2C+Jian&rft.aulast=Nyunt&rft.aufirst=Maung&rft.date=2009-10-27&rft.volume=20&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=2047&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bioconjugate+Chemistry&rft.issn=10431802&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbc900150v
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Injuries; Lipids; Carrying capacity; Cholesterol; Plasmids; imaging; Mass spectroscopy; Raman spectroscopy; Reporter gene; Transfection; Gene transfer; Zeta potential; Liver; DNA; nanoparticles
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bc900150v
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Reemergence of sea ice cover anomalies and the role of the sea ice-albedo feedback in GCM simulations
T2 - NOAA's 34th Climate Diagnostics and Prediction Workshop
AN - 42094809; 5527093
JF - NOAA's 34th Climate Diagnostics and Prediction Workshop
AU - DeWeaver, Eric
Y1 - 2009/10/26/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 26
KW - Sea ice
KW - Simulation
KW - Feedback
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42094809?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=NOAA%27s+34th+Climate+Diagnostics+and+Prediction+Workshop&rft.atitle=Reemergence+of+sea+ice+cover+anomalies+and+the+role+of+the+sea+ice-albedo+feedback+in+GCM+simulations&rft.au=DeWeaver%2C+Eric&rft.aulast=DeWeaver&rft.aufirst=Eric&rft.date=2009-10-26&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=NOAA%27s+34th+Climate+Diagnostics+and+Prediction+Workshop&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.cpc.noaa.gov/products/outreach/workshops/CDPW34/CDPW34_agen da.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Precipitate Shape Evolution and Morphology in Nickel-Base Alloys: Comparison between Experimental Results and Computer Modeling
T2 - 2009 Materials Science and Technology Conference and Exposition (MS&T 2009)
AN - 42578627; 5480944
JF - 2009 Materials Science and Technology Conference and Exposition (MS&T 2009)
AU - Ardell, Alan
Y1 - 2009/10/25/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 25
KW - Alloys
KW - Morphology
KW - Evolution
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42578627?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.programmaster.org/PM/PM.nsf/SessionSheetView?OpenForm&Paren tUNID=460830349F34625F8525746B006198F0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Role of Ceramics in Energy Harvesting, Storage and Conservation
T2 - 2009 Materials Science and Technology Conference and Exposition (MS&T 2009)
AN - 42575771; 5481411
JF - 2009 Materials Science and Technology Conference and Exposition (MS&T 2009)
AU - Madsen, Lynnette
Y1 - 2009/10/25/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 25
KW - Conservation
KW - Storage
KW - Harvesting
KW - Energy conservation
KW - Ceramics
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://www.programmaster.org/PM/PM.nsf/SessionSheetView?OpenForm&Paren tUNID=460830349F34625F8525746B006198F0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Probabilistic proofs of hook length formulas involving trees
T2 - 2009 Fall AMS Eastern Section Meeting
AN - 42099823; 5535595
JF - 2009 Fall AMS Eastern Section Meeting
AU - Sagan, Bruce
Y1 - 2009/10/24/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 24
KW - Trees
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42099823?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Fall+AMS+Eastern+Section+Meeting&rft.atitle=Probabilistic+proofs+of+hook+length+formulas+involving+trees&rft.au=Sagan%2C+Bruce&rft.aulast=Sagan&rft.aufirst=Bruce&rft.date=2009-10-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Fall+AMS+Eastern+Section+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2171_progfull.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Targeted Delivery of Antisense Oligodeoxynucleotide by Transferrin Conjugated pH-Sensitive Lipopolyplex Nanoparticles: A Novel Oligonucleotide-Based Therapeutic Strategy in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
AN - 754550121; 13305439
AB - Therapeutic use of oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) that hybridize to and downregulate target mRNAs encoding proteins that contribute to malignant transformation has a sound rationale, but has had an overall limited clinical success in cancer due to insufficient intracellular delivery. Here we report a development of formulations capable of promoting targeted delivery and enhanced pharmacologic activity of ODNs in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell lines and patient primary cells. In this study, transferrin (Tf) conjugated pH-sensitive lipopolyplex nanoparticles (LPs) were prepared to deliver GTI-2040, an antisense ODN against the R2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase that has been shown to contribute to chemoresistance in AML. LPs had an average particle size around 110 nm and a moderately positive zeta potential at 10 mV. The ODN encapsulation efficiency of LPs was >90%. These nanoparticles could release ODNs at acidic endosomal pH and facilitate the cytoplasmic delivery of ODNs after endocytosis. In addition, Tf-mediated targeted delivery of GTI-2040 was achieved. R2 downregulation at both mRNA and protein levels was improved by 8-fold in Kasumi-1 cells and 2- to 20-fold in AML patient primary cells treated with GTI-2040-Tf-LPs, compared to free GTI-2040 treatment. Moreover, Tf-LPs were more effective than nontargeted LPs, with 10 to 100% improvement at various concentrations in Kasumi-1 cells and an average of 45% improvement at 3 *mM concentration in AML patient primary cells. Treatment with 1 *mM GTI-2040-Tf-LPs sensitized AML cells to the chemotherapy agent cytarabine, by decreasing its IC50 value from 47.69 nM to 9.05 nM. This study suggests that the combination of pH sensitive LP formulation and Tf mediated targeting is a promising strategy for antisense ODN delivery in leukemia therapy.
JF - Molecular Pharmaceutics
AU - Jin, Yan
AU - Liu, Shujun
AU - Yu, Bo
AU - Golan, Sharon
AU - Koh, Chee-Guan
AU - Yang, Jintao
AU - Huynh, Lenguyen
AU - Yang, Xiaojuan
AU - Pang, Jiuxia
AU - Muthusamy, Natarajan
AU - Chan, Kenneth K
AU - Byrd, John C
AU - Talmon, Yeshayahu
AU - Lee, L James
AU - Lee, Robert J
AU - Marcucci, Guido
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Comprehensive Cancer Center, and Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
Y1 - 2009/10/23/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 23
SP - 196
EP - 206
PB - American Chemical Society
VL - 7
IS - 1
SN - 1543-8384, 1543-8384
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Immunology Abstracts
KW - Particle size
KW - Transformation
KW - cytarabine
KW - Acute myeloid leukemia
KW - Chemotherapy
KW - Chemoresistance
KW - Oligonucleotides
KW - Cancer
KW - mRNA
KW - Encapsulation
KW - Endocytosis
KW - Antisense oligonucleotides
KW - Tumor cell lines
KW - Transferrin
KW - Antisense
KW - Zeta potential
KW - Sound
KW - Ribonucleoside-triphosphate reductase
KW - Lipopolysaccharides
KW - nanoparticles
KW - pH effects
KW - F 06955:Immunomodulation & Immunopharmacology
KW - N 14830:RNA
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Transformation; Particle size; cytarabine; Acute myeloid leukemia; Chemoresistance; Chemotherapy; Oligonucleotides; Cancer; Encapsulation; mRNA; Antisense oligonucleotides; Endocytosis; Antisense; Transferrin; Tumor cell lines; Zeta potential; Sound; Lipopolysaccharides; Ribonucleoside-triphosphate reductase; pH effects; nanoparticles
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/mp900205r
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Programs at the National Science Foundation That Support Chemical Education Research
T2 - 61st Southeast Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society (SERMACS 2009)
AN - 42084213; 5508584
JF - 61st Southeast Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society (SERMACS 2009)
AU - Holmes, Bert
Y1 - 2009/10/21/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 21
KW - Education
KW - Foundations
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42084213?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.sermacs2009.org/program/final_programs/Program_Book%20SERMA CS_2009_Complete.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Advancing Earth System Science Literacy: The View from Nsf:
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the Geology Society of America
AN - 42141118; 5550348
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the Geology Society of America
AU - Karsten, Jill
Y1 - 2009/10/18/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 18
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42141118?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2009AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Research on S&E Education at Msis: What Have We Learned?
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the Geology Society of America
AN - 42132109; 5549577
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the Geology Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn
Y1 - 2009/10/18/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 18
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42132109?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2009AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Cascadia Magmatism Provides Unique Insights into Subduction Zone (Sz) Processes
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the Geology Society of America
AN - 42129932; 5546895
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the Geology Society of America
AU - Leeman, William
AU - Tonarini, Sonia
Y1 - 2009/10/18/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 18
KW - Subduction zones
KW - Magma
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42129932?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2009AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Research Funded in Reaction Engineering at the National Science
T2 - The 5th Sino-US Conference of Chemical Engineering
AN - 42452510; 5420759
JF - The 5th Sino-US Conference of Chemical Engineering
AU - Burka, Maria
Y1 - 2009/10/13/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 13
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42452510?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.sinouschemeng.com/sinousche5th2009-10-03v4.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Development of a Compact and High-Throughput Laser Trap Raman System for Fully Automated Single Cell Analysis
T2 - 2009 Joint 93rd OSA Annual Meeting Frontiers in Optics And Laser Science XXV (FiO 2009/LS XXV)
AN - 42477649; 5429763
JF - 2009 Joint 93rd OSA Annual Meeting Frontiers in Optics And Laser Science XXV (FiO 2009/LS XXV)
AU - Liu, Rui
AU - Moritz, Tobias
AU - Taylor, Douglas
AU - Matthews, Dennis
AU - Chan, James
Y1 - 2009/10/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 11
KW - Lasers
KW - Automation
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42477649?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Joint+93rd+OSA+Annual+Meeting+Frontiers+in+Optics+And+Laser+Science+XXV+%28FiO+2009%2FLS+XXV%29&rft.atitle=Development+of+a+Compact+and+High-Throughput+Laser+Trap+Raman+System+for+Fully+Automated+Single+Cell+Analysis&rft.au=Liu%2C+Rui%3BMoritz%2C+Tobias%3BTaylor%2C+Douglas%3BMatthews%2C+Dennis%3BChan%2C+James&rft.aulast=Liu&rft.aufirst=Rui&rft.date=2009-10-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Joint+93rd+OSA+Annual+Meeting+Frontiers+in+Optics+And+Laser+Science+XXV+%28FiO+2009%2FLS+XXV%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/ConferenceProgram/default.aspx
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Plasmonic Nano-Laser below the Diffraction Limit
T2 - 2009 Joint 93rd OSA Annual Meeting Frontiers in Optics And Laser Science XXV (FiO 2009/LS XXV)
AN - 42474937; 5429348
JF - 2009 Joint 93rd OSA Annual Meeting Frontiers in Optics And Laser Science XXV (FiO 2009/LS XXV)
AU - Sorger, Volker
AU - Oulton, Rupert
AU - Zentgraf, Thomas
AU - Gladden, Chris
AU - Bartal, Guy
AU - Ma, Ren-Min
AU - Dai, Lun
AU - Zhang, Xiang
Y1 - 2009/10/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 11
KW - Diffraction
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42474937?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Joint+93rd+OSA+Annual+Meeting+Frontiers+in+Optics+And+Laser+Science+XXV+%28FiO+2009%2FLS+XXV%29&rft.atitle=Plasmonic+Nano-Laser+below+the+Diffraction+Limit&rft.au=Sorger%2C+Volker%3BOulton%2C+Rupert%3BZentgraf%2C+Thomas%3BGladden%2C+Chris%3BBartal%2C+Guy%3BMa%2C+Ren-Min%3BDai%2C+Lun%3BZhang%2C+Xiang&rft.aulast=Sorger&rft.aufirst=Volker&rft.date=2009-10-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Joint+93rd+OSA+Annual+Meeting+Frontiers+in+Optics+And+Laser+Science+XXV+%28FiO+2009%2FLS+XXV%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/ConferenceProgram/default.aspx
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Writing Effective Proposals for the National Science Foundation's Division of Undergraduate Education
T2 - 2009 Conference on Information Technology (CIT 2009)
AN - 42420614; 5402981
JF - 2009 Conference on Information Technology (CIT 2009)
AU - Chang, Eun-Woo
Y1 - 2009/10/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 11
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42420614?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+on+Information+Technology+%28CIT+2009%29&rft.atitle=Writing+Effective+Proposals+for+the+National+Science+Foundation%27s+Division+of+Undergraduate+Education&rft.au=Chang%2C+Eun-Woo&rft.aulast=Chang&rft.aufirst=Eun-Woo&rft.date=2009-10-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+on+Information+Technology+%28CIT+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.league.org/2/conferences/cit/2009/files/2009_CIT_Conference _Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - National Science Foundation: Funding Opportunities for Community Colleges and Partnerships
T2 - 2009 Conference on Information Technology (CIT 2009)
AN - 42419793; 5402775
JF - 2009 Conference on Information Technology (CIT 2009)
AU - Chang, Eun-Woo
Y1 - 2009/10/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Oct 11
KW - Foundations
KW - Financing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42419793?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+on+Information+Technology+%28CIT+2009%29&rft.atitle=National+Science+Foundation%3A+Funding+Opportunities+for+Community+Colleges+and+Partnerships&rft.au=Chang%2C+Eun-Woo&rft.aulast=Chang&rft.aufirst=Eun-Woo&rft.date=2009-10-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+on+Information+Technology+%28CIT+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.league.org/2/conferences/cit/2009/files/2009_CIT_Conference _Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Advancing Earth system science literacy; the view from NSF
AN - 881450236; 2011-065716
AB - The geoscience education community stands at an important threshold in its efforts to strengthen Earth system science education in the United States, achieve broader public understanding of, and appreciation for, the geosciences, and develop the future geoscience workforce that will be so essential to our nation's prosperity and well-being. There has been a remarkable convergence within the past two years that has led to this opportunity. The Federal agencies that invest in geoscience education-related activities are working with new-found synergy. The new Obama Administration has identified a green jobs-based economy, climate change research, Earth observations, and strengthening STEM education as being among its highest priorities, thereby giving new impetus to elevating the geosciences in discussions regarding STEM education reform. Release of the many literacy frameworks that will be discussed further in this session has been extremely timely, as these documents feed into high level conversations about the need to develop consistent state science standards that emphasize inter-disciplinary content themes (e.g., climate change) and promote 21st century workforce skills, including systems thinking and global competencies. Increasingly, these literacy frameworks are being used to guide Federal grant funding solicitations related to geoscience education, both in formal and informal settings. This paper will provide a brief history of how the community has converged to this point in time, and outline some of the next steps needed for implementation of the full community vision for an earth system science literate nation.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Karsten, Jill
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 712
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - programs
KW - public awareness
KW - government agencies
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/881450236?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Advancing+Earth+system+science+literacy%3B+the+view+from+NSF&rft.au=Karsten%2C+Jill%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Karsten&rft.aufirst=Jill&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=712&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - geology; government agencies; NSF; programs; public awareness
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Research on S&E education at MSIs; what have we learned?
AN - 864944404; 2011-040948
AB - The Historically Black Colleges and Universities Undergraduate Program (HBCU-UP) provides awards to enhance the quality of undergraduate science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and research at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) as a means to broaden participation in the Nation's STEM workforce. Minority Serving Institutions (MSI) play a significant role in the education and development of underrepresented minority (URM) students in the natural and physical sciences, including geosciences. However a challenge lies in the absence of systematic knowledge on how and why these institutions have been able to sustain their success for decades. Education Research projects in NSF's HBCU-UP focus on evidence-based research studies that contribute to advancing our understanding of how to broaden the participation and propel/sustain success for underrepresented groups in the STEM enterprise. That PI community poses as an excellent resource to allow us to learn important questions to pursue, innovative research designs, mixed research methodologies, and implementation challenges. There is also external evaluation of the program portfolio. There is process evaluation to describe the characteristics of recognizable models among HBCU-UP projects and identify strategies that may have accelerated or inhibited attainment of project goals, and there is summative evaluation focuses on the extent to which HBCU-UP has produced outcomes that meet its stated goals for students, faculty, and the institutional infrastructure of the HBCUs themselves. In this session we will share project goals, and discuss best practices, challenges, and preliminary findings, as well as consider how the outcomes might guide future directions in similar programs.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 539
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - programs
KW - minorities
KW - education
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/864944404?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Research+on+S%26amp%3BE+education+at+MSIs%3B+what+have+we+learned%3F&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=539&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - education; geology; minorities; programs
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Diversity in the geosciences
AN - 864944390; 2011-040942
AB - Data on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) enrollments and degrees, available from the National Science Foundation's Division of Science Resources Statistics, can be used to identify trends in graduation rates and graduate enrollment in the geosciences. Since 1966, fewer Bachelor's, Master's, and Ph.D. degrees have been awarded in the geosciences than in any other STEM field. Between 1995 and 2006, the percentage of Bachelor's and Master's degrees awarded to members of underrepresented racial and ethnic groups in STEM fields was lower in the geosciences than in other STEM fields. During the same time period, the percentage of geoscience doctorates granted to students drawn from underrepresented groups was similar to the percentage awarded in math and computer science, physical science, and engineering. These data suggest that the geosciences retain a greater proportion of underrepresented students through completion of the PhD and/or the geosciences recruit underrepresented PhD students away from other STEM fields. The geosciences have had success recruiting and retaining women since 1966. Lessons learned in increasing gender diversity in the field may help the geoscience community increase its racial and ethnic diversity in the future. Four strategies that consistently appear to be effective are: demonstrating the relevance of the field and opportunities for high-paying careers in it; developing partnerships among multiple stakeholders to reduce "leaks" from the educational pipeline; promoting strong mentoring relationships among students and geoscience professionals; providing opportunities for students to conduct research prior to graduate school; and contributing financial assistance when necessary. Community colleges now serve approximately 35% of postsecondary students nationwide [1] and experience high participation rates by members of underrepresented groups. Four-year institutions partnering with community colleges and providing financial support necessary to ensure completion by low-income students are experiencing increased transfer and retention of underrepresented students. [1] US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Community Colleges, Special Supplement to The Condition of Education 2008.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Huntoon, Jacqueline E
AU - Lane, Melissa J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 538
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - college-level education
KW - minorities
KW - education
KW - women
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/864944390?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Diversity+in+the+geosciences&rft.au=Huntoon%2C+Jacqueline+E%3BLane%2C+Melissa+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Huntoon&rft.aufirst=Jacqueline&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=538&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; education; geology; minorities; women
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Teaching paleontology in the 21st century; resources for teaching paleontology at the undergraduate level
AN - 861984526; 2011-033413
AB - In summer 2009, the NSF-funded project "On the Cutting Edge" held a workshop in Ithaca, NY on "Teaching Paleontology in the 21st Century". Sixty-five faculty from colleges and universities across the country attended. The workshop brought together faculty who teach paleontology to explore a wide variety of topics related to teaching paleontology effectively both in paleontology courses and other courses in geoscience and bioscience curricula. Participants discussed course goals and organization, explored strategies for promoting paleontology to students and colleagues, considered the challenges associated with teaching evolution, developed a list of resources for digital learning, and shared exemplary laboratory, classroom, museum, and field activities. We are developing an extensive on-line collection of these resources for general use. You can submit materials to these collections or access submitted materials via the following site: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/paleo/index.html. In-depth surveys of workshop participants revealed that 61% of their departments classify paleontology as an elective, as opposed to required, course and that 27% of courses are explicitly cross-listed with other departments. Course prerequisites are diverse, with most courses requiring at least one prerequisite (commonly physical and/or historical geology). About 87% of courses include a lab component, although faculty are increasingly incorporating lab activities into lecture time. About one-third of courses are taxon-oriented, rather than organized by concept. The two most commonly used textbooks are authored by Prothero (31%) and Foote and Miller (15%), although a number of participants are undecided (14%) or choose to use no textbook (10%). Most participants are currently not using digital resources (software, online databases, Web tools) in their courses. Geological applications of paleontology, such as biostratigraphy, are not emphasized as strongly as biological topics. Although evolution is cited as one of the most important concepts students should master, many participants identified phylogenetics as an especially difficult concept for students to grasp and few participants chose to submit evolution-based activities, emphasizing a need for curricular development in this area.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Yacobucci, Margaret M
AU - Lockwood, Rowan
AU - Tewksbury, Barbara J
AU - MacFadden, Bruce J
AU - Allmon, Warren D
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 455
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - college-level education
KW - curricula
KW - education
KW - paleontology
KW - 08:General paleontology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/861984526?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Teaching+paleontology+in+the+21st+century%3B+resources+for+teaching+paleontology+at+the+undergraduate+level&rft.au=Yacobucci%2C+Margaret+M%3BLockwood%2C+Rowan%3BTewksbury%2C+Barbara+J%3BMacFadden%2C+Bruce+J%3BAllmon%2C+Warren+D%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Yacobucci&rft.aufirst=Margaret&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=455&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; curricula; education; paleontology
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Exceptionally high water and other volatile concentrations in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the Yellowstone Hotspot and Columbia River flood basalts
AN - 857808975; 2011-028724
AB - The Yellowstone hotspot track, comprising the Snake River plain (SRP) and Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field, is widely attributed to mantle melting in response to impingement of a deep seated mantle plume on the southwesterly migrating North American plate. Origin of the mid-Miocene Columbia River Basalts (CRB) and coeval basalts in Oregon and northern Nevada is also attributed by many to effects of the Yellowstone plume, although the lithosphere in that region consists of accreted Permian to Cretaceous oceanic terranes. Propagation of Basin & Range extension into this region raises the possibility that some of these basalts may be melts of lithospheric rather than plume mantle. Other complicating factors such as lateral variation in lithosphere age, composition, and thickness may also contribute. H (sub 2) O and other volatiles (S, F, Cl), as well as major and trace elements have been analyzed in over 150 olivine-hosted melt inclusions from 15 basalt samples taken throughout the CRB-SRP region and covering both lavas contemporaneous with passage of the hypothesized plume and later lavas probably unrelated to the plume. H (sub 2) O concentrations as high as 3.3 wt% have been observed in melt inclusions in a Gerritt Basalt flow at Mesa Falls, Idaho. Some melt inclusions from the Malheur Gorge area of East Central Oregon preserve H (sub 2) O concentrations as high as 4.2 wt%. The highest H (sub 2) O concentrations are in all cases found in the most primitive melt inclusions, and thus are interpreted as magmatic minima. These values significantly exceed the maximum H (sub 2) O concentrations observed in Hawaiian melt inclusions of 0.9 wt%. Maximum observed concentrations of other volatiles are 2854 ppm S in the Malheur Gorge, 2606 ppm F in Picture Gorge Basalt (within the CRB), and 1100 ppm F in a Gerritt Basalt flow. High Ba concentrations and Ba/Th in melt inclusions suggest that the H (sub 2) O may have a subduction zone origin.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Stefano, Christopher J
AU - Mukasa, Samuel B
AU - Andronikov, Alexandre
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 339
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - flood basalts
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - subduction zones
KW - Cretaceous
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - phase transitions
KW - olivine group
KW - melt inclusions
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Oregon
KW - melting
KW - olivine
KW - inclusions
KW - basalts
KW - orthosilicates
KW - geochemistry
KW - Nevada
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - Paleozoic
KW - Columbia River Basalt Group
KW - Permian
KW - Miocene
KW - Mesozoic
KW - nesosilicates
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - fluid inclusions
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; Cenozoic; Columbia River Basalt Group; Cretaceous; flood basalts; fluid inclusions; geochemistry; igneous rocks; inclusions; mantle; melt inclusions; melting; Mesozoic; Miocene; Neogene; nesosilicates; Nevada; olivine; olivine group; Oregon; orthosilicates; Paleozoic; Permian; phase transitions; silicates; subduction zones; Tertiary; United States; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Olivine and spinel systematics of Boring volcanic field (BVF) basalts; evidence for magma source variations and interaction among basaltic magmas
AN - 815953765; 2011-000453
AB - Basalts of the Plio-Pleistocene BVF of the Portland Basin fall into two principal categories (Leeman et al., 2005). Group 1 lavas include low-K tholeiites (LKT) and various OIB-type lavas, both with a trace element geochemistry more typical for intraplate or extensional settings. Group 2 lavas include basalts with arc-characteristic trace element patterns and range from calc-alkalic (CAB) to high-K (HKCA, absarokite). Olivine phenocrysts and included spinels were analyzed from basalts representing the above compositional spectrum to evaluate possible distinctions in source characteristics for the different basalt groups. Only primitive basalts and basaltic andesites (Mg# of 56-70, 170-320 ppm Cr, 100-190 ppm Ni) were considered. The most forsteritic olivines in each sample are mostly consistent with expected equilibrium compositions: approximately Fo83 in LKT's; approximately Fo87 in CAB and HKCA. However, many samples also contain more Fe-rich olivines (as low as approximately Fo74). Only a few Group 2 lavas seem to lack such evolved olivines. Spinel compositions vary widely. The most primitive spinels (TiO2 40) have the following properties. LKT spinels have the lowest Cr# ( approximately 30) but highest Fe2+/Fe* ( approximately 0.7) and Al2O3 ( approximately 35 %). HKCA spinels have higher Cr# ( approximately 70), Fe2+/Fe* (0.3), and Al2O3 ( approximately 6 %). CAB and BA spinels fall in between these end member compositions. Our findings are consistent with Smith and Leeman (2005). Most samples also yield spinel inclusions with more evolved compositions with Mg# as low as 10 and TiO2 wt.% as high as 12 wt.%. Lower Mg# of spinel inclusions is well correlated with more Fe-rich olivine composition. Other parameters remain nearly constant, e.g., yielding horizontal arrays in a plot Fe2+/Fe* vs. Mg#. Compositions of primitive spinel inclusions allow discrimination between Group 1 and Group 2 lavas and suggest that mantle sources for these basalt types are distinct, with the Group 2 source being more refractory. This suggests Group 1 and 2 magmas are unlikely to be related to a common source affected by different degrees of metasomatism by slab-derived fluids. Furthermore, evolved olivine and spinel compositions suggest that individual lava flows are commonly composites of magmas with slight differences in their degree of evolution. Leeman et al., 2005, JVGR, v. 140, p. 67; Smith and Leeman, 2005, JVGR v. 140, p. 49.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Shempert, Jenifer M
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 310
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - olivine group
KW - Boring volcanic field
KW - variations
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Oregon
KW - volcanism
KW - olivine
KW - inclusions
KW - basalts
KW - orthosilicates
KW - oxides
KW - Portland Basin
KW - geochemistry
KW - processes
KW - Quaternary
KW - spinel
KW - volcanic fields
KW - nesosilicates
KW - mineral inclusions
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - magmas
KW - Pliocene
KW - Pleistocene
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; Boring volcanic field; Cenozoic; geochemistry; igneous rocks; inclusions; magmas; mineral inclusions; Neogene; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; Oregon; orthosilicates; oxides; Pleistocene; Pliocene; Portland Basin; processes; Quaternary; silicates; spinel; Tertiary; United States; variations; volcanic fields; volcanic rocks; volcanism
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Delamerian enclaves within the Lachlan Orogen of Zealandia and Antarctica
AN - 807617750; 2010-099550
AB - New geochronologic data from two sample sites in offshore Antarctica are used to further constrain the submarine and subice limits of Gondwanaland's orogenic belts. DSDP 270 was drilled in the central Ross Sea (77.4415 degrees S 178.5032 degrees W) in 1973, and bottomed in calcsilicate gneiss. New LA-ICP-MS U-Pb dating of titanite from the gneiss gives a 440 Ma age. We interpret this to be consistent with typical (410-450 Ma) Lachlan-Tuhua-Swanson Orogen metamorphic ages; it is too young to be a typical (>460 Ma) Ross Orogen metamorphic age. The Iselin Bank (73.7000 degrees S 176.4667 degrees W) is 400 km north of DSDP 270, on the Antarctic continental shelf edge facing Zealandia. It was dredged on a cruise by the R/V S.P. Lee in 1984. A variety of igneous and metamorphic rocks, including some obvious dropstones, were obtained. One rock, a meta-rhyolite, had a freshly broken surface and was the only sample thought by the shipboard scientists to be possibly in situ. New LA-ICP-MS U-Pb dating of zircon from the metarhyolite gives an age of 544 + or - 21 Ma which we interpret as an eruption age. New Ar-Ar dating of K-feldspar phenocrysts from the same sample gives 270-300 Ma low temperature step ages, rising monotonically to 540 Ma in the high temperature steps. The protolith age is substantially older than any rocks in the Lachlan-Tuhua-Robertson Bay-Swanson Orogen. We interpret these results to indicate a correlation of the Iselin Bank rhyolite with known Neoproterozoic-Cambrian igneous rocks in the Delamerian-Ross Orogen. If the Iselin Bank material is not ice-rafted debris, then it represents a further intriguing occurrence of older Ross-Delamerian basement found within the younger Pacificward greater Lachlan Orogen. Similar occurrences have been reported from the South Tasman Rise, Fiordland New Zealand, and West Antarctica. The size, mechanism and timing of dispersal of these pieces of Ross Orogen into the greater Lachlan Orogen is speculative. One likely explanation is rifting of the Ross-Delamerian Orogen during Ordovician deposition of Lachlan sediments. Alternative possibilities involve post-Lachlan subparallel strike slip faulting, and/or low-angle extensional exhumation.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Mortimer, Nick
AU - Palin, J Michael
AU - Dunlap, W James
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 290
EP - 291
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - upper Precambrian
KW - Precambrian
KW - Leg 28
KW - Iselin Bank
KW - Australasia
KW - Paleozoic
KW - Lachlan fold belt
KW - Proterozoic
KW - DSDP Site 270
KW - strike-slip faults
KW - Cambrian
KW - Antarctica
KW - lower Paleozoic
KW - sampling
KW - Ross Sea
KW - Gondwana
KW - Deep Sea Drilling Project
KW - Australia
KW - Delamerian Orogeny
KW - New Zealand
KW - faults
KW - Neoproterozoic
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Delamerian+enclaves+within+the+Lachlan+Orogen+of+Zealandia+and+Antarctica&rft.au=Mortimer%2C+Nick%3BPalin%2C+J+Michael%3BDunlap%2C+W+James%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Mortimer&rft.aufirst=Nick&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=290&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2016-04-14
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Antarctica; Australasia; Australia; Cambrian; Deep Sea Drilling Project; Delamerian Orogeny; DSDP Site 270; faults; Gondwana; Iselin Bank; Lachlan fold belt; Leg 28; lower Paleozoic; Neoproterozoic; New Zealand; Paleozoic; Precambrian; Proterozoic; Ross Sea; sampling; Southern Ocean; strike-slip faults; upper Precambrian
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Cascadia magmatism provides unique insights into subduction zone (SZ) processes
AN - 759303469; 2010-086443
AB - The Cascadia Arc is associated with one of the warmest modern SZs known. Extensive dehydration and volatile losses from the slab occur at shallow depths below the frontal arc, and slab-derived volatile contributions are likely minimal below the arc as reflected in Cascades basalts. These comprise two distinct compositional groups (1: low-K tholeiite and OIB-like; 2: calcalkalic) that, locally, are spatially and temporally coeval. Both groups have low fluid-mobile element contents for arc magmas (e.g., for most: B/Nb or = 1200 C), suggesting they are not products of flux-melting in the lower mantle wedge but rather formed by decompression melting of "normal" (i.e., volatile-poor) mantle. This is supported by low H2O melt inclusions (<1%, Group 1; <2-3%, Group 2). Chemical diversity among Cascades basalts likely reflects heterogeneous mantle sources. Estimated magma segregation depths support a vertical compositional layering in the mantle, wherein the most flux-modified sources are confined to shallower parts of the mantle wedge and the more normal mantle sources are confined to greater depths. That is, Group 2 magmas are derived in part from lithospheric mantle domains containing "fossil" slab contributions accrued over the 40 Ma lifespan of the arc, whereas Group 1 magmas likely derived from upwelling asthenospheric mantle that was little modified by slab contributions. Along-strike variations in basalt distributions and compositions suggest the thermal and compositional structure of the underlying mantle varies laterally. On a global scale, intensity of fluid-related subduction fluxes appears to inversely correlate with arc thermal structure. Volcanic arcs associated with "cooler" subduction zones (most cases) display evidence for larger subduction inputs (e.g., high contents of fluid-mobile elements), whereas those associated with warm subduction zones (e.g., Cascades, Mexico) do not. At cooler SZs, strong subduction-related modification may overprint and homogenize the mantle wedge. Conversely, warm SZs potentially reveal more information concerning initial mantle wedge compositional heterogeneity.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Tonarini, Sonia
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 64
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - subduction zones
KW - lithosphere
KW - igneous rocks
KW - magmatism
KW - mantle
KW - subduction
KW - Cascade Arc
KW - asthenosphere
KW - plate tectonics
KW - volcanism
KW - basalts
KW - slabs
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Cascadia+magmatism+provides+unique+insights+into+subduction+zone+%28SZ%29+processes&rft.au=Leeman%2C+William+P%3BTonarini%2C+Sonia%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=64&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - asthenosphere; basalts; Cascade Arc; igneous rocks; lithosphere; magmatism; mantle; plate tectonics; slabs; subduction; subduction zones; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanism
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A petrologic overview of the Boring volcanic field, Cascade Range, USA
AN - 742928176; 2010-056970
AB - Diverse mafic and intermediate lavas form the Pliocene-Quaternary Boring volcanic field in and around the Portland (OR) Basin. These lavas erupted in the forearc of the Cascades, but are similar to lavas found throughout a broad transect extending eastward at least 130 km. Some basalts display little or no subduction influence (low Ba/Nb and Th/Ta, plag+ol+sp-bearing mid-ocean ridge-like low-K tholeiite [LKT] + ocean island-like alkaline [OIB]), whereas others have typical subduction-related characteristics (high Ba/Nb, cpx+ol+sp high-K calc-alkaline [HKCA] + calc-alkaline [CAB]). The sudden onset of predominantly LKT + OIB magmatism ca. 2.5 to 1.0 Ma was time transgressive from SE to NW across the Portland Basin and was succeeded by eruption of CAB, HKCA, and diverse basaltic andesite (BA) and andesite magmas. The chronology suggests the heat source for the younger CAB + HKCA + BA magmatism was the earlier dry magmatism. Low B/Nb in Boring lavas suggests minimal fluid addition to the mantle wedge in this part of the arc (Leeman et al., 2004), and shallow mantle equilibration depths are inferred for Boring CAB + HKCA (Leeman et al., 2005). These characteristics, along with high Nb/Ta, Y/Yb, Ca/Al, and Zr/Ti ratios, support an origin for Boring CAB + HKCA via melting of fossil amphibole-bearing, subduction-metasomatized lithosphere. Melting was perhaps induced by advection of hotter deeper mantle that yielded LKT and OIB magmas beneath the northern OR Cascades during intra-arc rift propagation. Compositional variations in evolved magmas appear to be generated by poorly constrained assimilation-fractionation-mixing processes in the lower crust or uppermost mantle. A lower crustal evolution is inferred from high Al (sub 2) O (sub 3) and Sr concentrations, and high Sr/Y and Sr/Zr ratios in all evolved lavas. Basaltic andesite has a wide range in Ba/Nb, similar to that in LKT, OIB, CAB, and HKCA. All basalt types appear to have potential BA progeny but the genetic process is not simple fractionation. Andesite has Ba/Nb similar to CAB, but some exhibit extremely low Nb (3 ppm). The latter andesite lacks an apparent differentiation path from any of the mafic lavas, and likely incorporates a large component of crustal melt. Leeman et al., 2004, Chem. Geol., v. 212, p. 101; Leeman et al., 2005, JVGR, v. 140, p. 67.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Conrey, Richard M
AU - Evarts, Russell C
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Fleck, Robert J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 190
EP - 191
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - mantle
KW - mafic composition
KW - Boring volcanic field
KW - Cascade Range
KW - Oregon
KW - mineral composition
KW - lava
KW - volcanism
KW - magmas
KW - Multnomah County Oregon
KW - chemical composition
KW - geochemistry
KW - chemical ratios
KW - Portland Oregon
KW - chemical fractionation
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Boring volcanic field; Cascade Range; chemical composition; chemical fractionation; chemical ratios; geochemistry; lava; mafic composition; magmas; mantle; mineral composition; Multnomah County Oregon; Oregon; Portland Oregon; United States; volcanism
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mineralogical evidence for magma sources, mixing and ascent of basaltic to andesitic lavas of the Boring volcanic field (BVF), Portland Basin, Oregon
AN - 742920667; 2010-056971
AB - The 2.6 Ma-60 ka BVF of the greater Portland area comprises mostly low-K tholeiite (LKT) and calc-alkaline basalt (CAB) but also lesser OIB-type and high-K basalt (absarokite), diverse basaltic andesite (BA) and occasional true andesite. The basalts are usually phenocryst poor ( 40) within LKT (Group I lavas) has the lowest Cr# ( approximately 30), highest Al (sub 2) O (sub 3) (40 wt%) whereas spinel from absarokite has highest Cr# ( approximately 70) and lowest Al (sub 2) O (sub 3) ( approximately 7%). Compositional variations of olivine and spinel within single samples indicate that mixing of basaltic magmas is rather common, yet differences in primitive spinel compositions also suggest intrinsic compositional differences between magma sources of Group I and II lavas. Phenocryst-sized plagioclase frequently occurs but at very low abundances (1-3 crystals/thin section) and most show signs of resorption suggesting a xenocrystic origin and thus some crustal interaction. Clinopyroxene phenocrysts are largely restricted to CAB or absarokite. Zoning and composition of cpx indicate growth from basaltic melts but some are inherited from more evolved melts or crustal rocks as indicated by crystal cores with Mg# as low as 60 and low Cr contents. Sizable phenocrysts (>300 mu m) also grew rather rapidly--likely during ascent--as evidenced by olivines with skeletal outlines or characteristic melt inclusion shapes and sector zoning in cpx. Andesites are of both calc-alkalic and adakitic affinity, with the latter distinguished by higher maximum plagioclase An content ( approximately 89 vs. approximately 64). Andesites vary widely from phenocryst rich (plag, pyroxene, olivine and texturally akin to those erupted at nearby composite volcanoes like Mt. Hood) to nearly aphyric (< or = 1% phenocrysts) andesite that also contains rare pseudomorphs after amphibole. Thus intricate plumbing below large volcanic edifices appears to favor generation of phenocryst-rich arc magmas via mixing, stagnation, and crystallization whereas resorption and suppression of phenocryst growth seem important in generating the aphyric lithologies.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Smith, Robin S
AU - Conrey, Richard M
AU - Evarts, Russell C
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 191
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - tholeiite
KW - andesites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Boring volcanic field
KW - emplacement
KW - Oregon
KW - mineral composition
KW - lava
KW - mixing
KW - magmas
KW - basalts
KW - Multnomah County Oregon
KW - Portland Basin
KW - geochemistry
KW - Portland Oregon
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742920667?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Mineralogical+evidence+for+magma+sources%2C+mixing+and+ascent+of+basaltic+to+andesitic+lavas+of+the+Boring+volcanic+field+%28BVF%29%2C+Portland+Basin%2C+Oregon&rft.au=Streck%2C+Martin+J%3BSmith%2C+Robin+S%3BConrey%2C+Richard+M%3BEvarts%2C+Russell+C%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Streck&rft.aufirst=Martin&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=191&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - andesites; basalts; Boring volcanic field; emplacement; geochemistry; igneous rocks; lava; magmas; mineral composition; mixing; Multnomah County Oregon; Oregon; Portland Basin; Portland Oregon; tholeiite; United States; volcanic rocks
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mixing components and hybridization processes of Kalama period intermediate magmas from Mount St. Helens; evidence from mafic phenocrysts
AN - 742920531; 2010-056967
AB - A series of eruptions producing an extraordinary dacite-andesite-dacite stratigraphy occurred over less than 165 years during the Kalama period (1479-1750 A.D.) at Mount St. Helens. This rapid and strong change in composition has previously been attributed to the mixing of basaltic magma with dacitic magma to make andesite and mineral assemblages are consistent with this. Mafic phenocrysts of dacitic origin are amphibole and orthopyroxene, while those phenocrysts originating from basaltic magma are olivines and some clinopyroxenes. We have investigated mafic silicate phenocrysts from the andesitic middle Kalama period and likely dacitic and basaltic endmembers (early and late Kalama period lavas and tephras as dacitic endmembers; lavas of Castle Creek period, 1895-2550 years b.p., as basaltic endmembers) to detail magma components and mineralogical consequences of hybridization. The initial response to mixing is some resorption of olivine, the crystallization of clinopyroxene, and an overgrowth on pre-existing crystals in form of more Mg-rich rims on orthopyroxene and less Mg-rich rims on Cr-rich, high Mg# clinopyroxene. Prolonged exposure to a hybrid melt causes complete resorption of olivine and the breakdown of amphiboles into pseudomorphs that subsequently are overgrown by clinopyroxene. Compositions of amphiboles indicate an additional source beside those originating from magmas similar to dacites of early and late Kalama age. A dacitic X-tephra banded pumice layer has a bulk composition similar to early Kalama period dacite (e.g. Wn pumice), but contains resorbed olivine grains and orthopyroxene crystals with Mg-richer rims, although less pronounced than in Kalama andesites. Altogether, this is consistent with mixing, yet the influx of basalt was only 5% compared to approximately 60% in the andesitic hybrids. Middle Kalama period tephras and lavas do not likely represent a single magma batch in which phenocrysts crystallized or reacted progressively through time but rather represent individual magmas with different compositions, different mixing members and proportions, and erupting at different hybridization stages. Mafic input similar in LREEs and MREEs to some Castle Creek period basalts is likely to have been a mixing component during the middle Kalama period.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Carroll, Karen R
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Pallister, John S
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 190
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - Skamania County Washington
KW - Washington
KW - Quaternary
KW - Mount Saint Helens
KW - Kalama Period
KW - Holocene
KW - melts
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Cascade Range
KW - lava
KW - mixing
KW - magmas
KW - eruptions
KW - crystallization
KW - mineral assemblages
KW - hybridization
KW - geochemistry
KW - phenocrysts
KW - mafic magmas
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742920531?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Mixing+components+and+hybridization+processes+of+Kalama+period+intermediate+magmas+from+Mount+St.+Helens%3B+evidence+from+mafic+phenocrysts&rft.au=Carroll%2C+Karen+R%3BStreck%2C+Martin+J%3BPallister%2C+John+S%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Carroll&rft.aufirst=Karen&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=190&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cascade Range; Cenozoic; crystallization; eruptions; geochemistry; Holocene; hybridization; Kalama Period; lava; mafic magmas; magmas; melts; mineral assemblages; mixing; Mount Saint Helens; phenocrysts; Quaternary; Skamania County Washington; United States; Washington
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geochemical evidence for sediment accretion in the Costa Rica frontal prism
AN - 50124270; 2009-097992
AB - We report new geochemical data for marine sediments sampled in the frontal prism associated with the Costa Rica subduction zone during Leg 205 of the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP). We describe variation in sediment geochemistry with depth as the decollement zone, the interface between overriding and downgoing tectonic plates, is approached. This variation can be explained by three-component mixing of ash, lower plate sediments (LPS), and frontal prism or upper plate sediments (UPS). We detect in-mixing of LPS in localized sediment intervals, amounting to tens of vertical meters of LPS incorporation; no persuasive evidence of LPS transfer into the prism has been shown until this contribution. This inference of fine structure in the prism provides new insight into how tectonic kneading of sediments occurs in decollement zones.
JF - Geology (Boulder)
AU - Cardace, Dawn
AU - Morris, Julie D
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 891
EP - 894
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 37
IS - 10
SN - 0091-7613, 0091-7613
KW - East Pacific
KW - accretion
KW - subduction zones
KW - Northeast Pacific
KW - Costa Rica
KW - decollement
KW - marine sediments
KW - North Pacific
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - sediments
KW - accretionary wedges
KW - ODP Site 1255
KW - ODP Site 1254
KW - Ocean Drilling Program
KW - Leg 205
KW - geochemistry
KW - Central America
KW - Nicoya Peninsula
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 07:Oceanography
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L2 - http://www.gsajournals.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States | Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 21
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table, sketch map
N1 - SuppNotes - With GSA Data Repository Item 2009224
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GLGYBA
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accretion; accretionary wedges; Central America; Costa Rica; decollement; East Pacific; geochemistry; Leg 205; marine sediments; Nicoya Peninsula; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1254; ODP Site 1255; Pacific Ocean; sediments; subduction zones
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G25739A.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Oxygen isotope study of Archean xenoliths constrains the source of supervolcanic rhyolites in the Snake River plain-Yellowstone Plateau volcanic province
AN - 50067197; 2010-028745
AB - Extreme "supervolcanic" volumes of low-delta (super 18) O rhyolitic magmas characterize the Snake River plain-Yellowstone Plateau volcanic province, yet constraining the oxygen isotope composition of the crustal source of these rhyolites has relied upon deduction from analysis of volcanic rocks rather than direct evidence of the crust at depth. Here we present oxygen isotope compositions of 20 Archean crustal xenoliths from the central and eastern Snake River Plain to constrain the oxygen isotope signature of the underlying cratonic North American crust. All xenolith samples possess normal-delta (super 18) O signatures of 6-9 permil;, precluding a low-delta (super 18) O crustal source in the genesis of >11,000km (super 3) of low-delta (super 18) O (delta (super 18) O (sub 6permil) ) Snake River Plain rhyolites. We combine the new oxygen isotope data reported here with published strontium and neodymium isotope data to define compositional fields of Snake River Plain magmas and their crustal and mantle sources. Using isotopic data for two of the most recent and well-studied volcanic fields in the Snake River Plain, Yellowstone-Plateau and Heise, we constructed isotopic mixing models of Sr, Nd, and O. These indicate approximately 70-80 permil; crust and approximately 20-30 permil; mantle contribution in the genesis of normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolites. Low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites can be traced along a genetic array of mixing lines from normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolite endmembers to a common -1.5 permil; low-delta (super 18) O source. Low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites of the Bruneau-Jarbidge volcanic field also fit the Yellowstone-Heise trend. We advocate a two stage magma genesis process, in which normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolites are generated by partial melts of the crust and plume, and low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites tap approximately 20-80 permil of hydrothermally altered portions of normal-delta (super 18) O rhyolitic rocks.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Watts, Kathryn E
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Bindeman, Ilya N
AU - Larson, Peter A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - October 2009
SP - 139
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 41
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Precambrian
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - isotope ratios
KW - igneous rocks
KW - partial melting
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - metasomatism
KW - stable isotopes
KW - volcanism
KW - mixing
KW - magmas
KW - eruptions
KW - inclusions
KW - hydrothermal alteration
KW - Archean
KW - Snake River plain
KW - xenoliths
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Oxygen+isotope+study+of+Archean+xenoliths+constrains+the+source+of+supervolcanic+rhyolites+in+the+Snake+River+plain-Yellowstone+Plateau+volcanic+province&rft.au=Watts%2C+Kathryn+E%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BBindeman%2C+Ilya+N%3BLarson%2C+Peter+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Watts&rft.aufirst=Kathryn&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=139&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2009 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Archean; eruptions; hydrothermal alteration; Idaho; igneous rocks; inclusions; isotope ratios; isotopes; magmas; metasomatism; mixing; O-18/O-16; oxygen; partial melting; Precambrian; rhyolites; Snake River plain; stable isotopes; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanism; xenoliths; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Unbiased perspective
AN - 231287754
AB - By evaluating a food processing facility, a third-party audit can: * Review plans and procedures, and verify that all regulatory requirements are being met. * Look at corporate goals and evaluate them against your day-to-day operations to verify compliance. * Compare the condition of a facility to international standards benchmarked by the Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI), a program launched in 2000 that is now accepted by several major retailers around the world. With increased food recalls and tighter regulations from the FDA and USDA, third-party audits are playing a larger role in the meat and poultry industries.
JF - National Provisioner
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - Oct 2009
SP - 70
EP - 73
CY - Northbrook
PB - BNP Media
VL - 223
IS - 10
SN - 0027996X
KW - Food And Food Industries
KW - Audits
KW - Food safety
KW - Meat processing
KW - Quality standards
KW - Retail stores
KW - Process controls
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/231287754?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aabitrade&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=unknown&rft.jtitle=National+Provisioner&rft.atitle=Unbiased+perspective&rft.au=Anonymous&rft.aulast=Anonymous&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=223&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=70&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=National+Provisioner&rft.issn=0027996X&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Entrepreneurship Database; ProQuest Central
N1 - Copyright - Copyright BNP Media Oct 2009
N1 - Document feature - Photographs
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-22
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Gradient lithography of engineered proteins to fabricate 2D and 3D cell culture microenvironments
AN - 21311673; 11906333
AB - Spatial patterning of proteins is a valuable technique for many biological applications and is the prevailing tool for defining microenvironments for cells in culture, a required procedure in developmental biology and tissue engineering research. However, it is still challenging to achieve protein patterns that closely mimic native microenvironments, such as gradient protein distributions with desirable mechanical properties. By combining projection dynamic mask lithography and protein engineering with non-canonical photosensitive amino acids, we demonstrate a simple, scalable strategy to fabricate any user-defined 2D or 3D stable gradient pattern with complex geometries from an artificial extracellular matrix (aECM) protein. We show that the elastic modulus and chemical nature of the gradient profile are biocompatible and allow useful applications in cell biological research.
JF - Biomedical Microdevices
AU - Wang, Sheng
AU - Wong Po Foo, Cheryl
AU - Warrier, Ajithkumar
AU - Poo, Mu-ming
AU - Heilshorn, Sarah C
AU - Zhang, Xiang
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC), University of California, 3112 Etcheverry Hall, Berkeley, CA, 94720-1740, USA
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - Oct 2009
SP - 1127
EP - 1134
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany
VL - 11
IS - 5
SN - 1387-2176, 1387-2176
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Amino acids
KW - Protein engineering
KW - Extracellular matrix
KW - Microenvironments
KW - Cell culture
KW - Tissue engineering
KW - Pattern formation
KW - Mechanical properties
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21311673?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomedical+Microdevices&rft.atitle=Gradient+lithography+of+engineered+proteins+to+fabricate+2D+and+3D+cell+culture+microenvironments&rft.au=Wang%2C+Sheng%3BWong+Po+Foo%2C+Cheryl%3BWarrier%2C+Ajithkumar%3BPoo%2C+Mu-ming%3BHeilshorn%2C+Sarah+C%3BZhang%2C+Xiang&rft.aulast=Wang&rft.aufirst=Sheng&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=1127&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomedical+Microdevices&rft.issn=13872176&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10544-009-9329-1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Microenvironments; Cell culture; Mechanical properties; Pattern formation; Amino acids; Protein engineering; Tissue engineering; Extracellular matrix
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10544-009-9329-1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards a rational strategy for the human settlement of space
AN - 20116773; 10260571
AB - This paper revisits the core issues of space policy from the viewpoint of optimal decision theory. First it argues for a metric: maximizing the probability that humans and their technology in space someday reach what Rostow called the ''economic takeoff'' point where autonomous growth becomes possible, not bound by the rate of growth on earth. Next it discusses three concrete requirements to reach that point: benefits to earth which exceed costs to earth, large and diverse enough ''exports'' from space to earth, and advancements in technology and infrastructure. Energy from space (ES) is now one of the most promising export possibilities, based on what was learned in the last open US government effort on that topic, ''JIETSSP,'' led jointly by NSF and NASA. I review several options for ES, and propose a new one which, while slightly riskier, offers real hope of electricity at a price that could compete with coal and fission-plus-enrichment.
JF - Futures
AU - Werbos, P J
Y1 - 2009/10//
PY - 2009
DA - Oct 2009
SP - 547
EP - 553
PB - Elsevier Science, P.O. Box 800 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1DX UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 41
IS - 8
SN - 0016-3287, 0016-3287
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - exports
KW - Human settlements
KW - Coal
KW - Concrete
KW - Reviews
KW - Economics
KW - infrastructure
KW - Technology
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20116773?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Futures&rft.atitle=Towards+a+rational+strategy+for+the+human+settlement+of+space&rft.au=Werbos%2C+P+J&rft.aulast=Werbos&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2009-10-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=547&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Futures&rft.issn=00163287&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.futures.2009.04.017
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - exports; Technology; Coal; Economics; Reviews; Concrete; infrastructure; Human settlements
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2009.04.017
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - ANDEAN SPECIATION AND VICARIANCE IN NEOTROPICAL MACROCARPAEA (GENTIANACEAE-HELIEAE)1
AN - 912918783; 14133129
AB - The genus Macrocarpaea (Griseb.) Gilg (Gentianaceae, Helieae) is among the largest woody genera of tropical gentians, with most of its species occurring in the wet mountainous forests of the Andes. Phylogenetic and dispersal-vicariance analyses (DIVA) of 57 of the 105 currently recognized species in the genus, using two data sets from nuclear DNA (ITS and 5S-NTS sequences) and morphology, show a single origin of the Andean species from an ancestral distribution that includes southeastern Brazil. Within the Andes, species divide into two major clades: (1) northern species from the cordilleras of northern Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela; and (2) southern species of the Andean Amotape-Huancabamba Zone in Ecuador and Peru, as well as the Andes of central and southern Peru and Bolivia. The Amotape-Huancabamba Zone is supported as the ancestral area for Macrocarpaea within the Andes. There are repeated speciation patterns within the Andes, and three Mesoamerican species derive from the northern clade, as is the single sampled species from the Guayana Shield. The position of the subclade of the three Caribbean species is less certain, but it currently nests among Andean species. An Atlantic coastal Brazilian clade is placed as sister group to all other Macrocarpaea, providing further support for an ancestral refuge in southeastern Brazil for the Helieae. The biogeographic analysis showed that local speciation is more common than long-distance dispersal, and allopatric speciation is more common than sympatric speciation. Using detailed, georeferenced herbarium collection data, patterns in environmental characteristics between clades and sister species were analyzed with Spatial Evolutionary and Ecological Vicariance Analysis (SEEVA), utilizing geographic information system (GIS) and statistical methods. Sister clades and taxa were evaluated for statistical significance in variables such as annual rainfall and temperature, elevation, temperature and rainfall seasonality, geological bedrock age, and soil type to evaluate ecological vicariance between sister groups. The results indicate that there are no general patterns for each variable, but that there are many significant divergences in ecological niches between both larger sister groups and sister species, and ecological niche conservation was also observed when subsequent nodes in the phylogeny were compared.
JF - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
AU - Struwe, Lena
AU - Haag, Scott
AU - Heiberg, Einar
AU - Grant, Jason R
AD - This study was funded by the National Science Foundation (grant 0317612) and USDA-Rutgers University (Hatch no. 102211) to L.S., and the Swiss National Science Foundation (grants 3100-052885, 3100-065395) and Swiss Academy of Sciences (SCNAT) to J.R.G. The authors wish to express their sincere thanks to Peter Smouse and Richard G. Lathrop for constructive discussions and collaboration with SEEVA development. We also thank the following herbaria and their staff for their valuable help in accessing their collections and providing information: AAU, AFP (Herbario "Alvaro Fernandez Perez," Popayan, Cauca, Colombia), ALA, B, BM, BP, BR, BRIT, BSB, C, CAS, CAUP, CHOCO, CHRB, COAH, COL, CONN, CR, CUVC, CUZ, DAV, DUKE, E, EHH, F, FAUC, FI, FLAS, FMB, FR, G, GB, GH, GOET, HAC, HAL, HAM, HAO, HUA, HUCP, HUQ, HUT, IAN, INB, INPA, JAUM, JBSD, JE, K, L, LD, LINN, LOJA, LPB, LS, M, MA, MANCH, MARY, MBM, MEDEL, MER, MG, MICH, MIN, MO, MOL, MSB, MU, MY, NA, NEU, NO, NSW, NY, OXF, P,
Y1 - 2009/09/28/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Sep 28
SP - 450
EP - 469
PB - Missouri Botanical Garden
VL - 96
IS - 3
SN - 0026-6493, 0026-6493
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - ASW, Colombia
KW - Rainfall
KW - South America, Andes Mts.
KW - dispersal
KW - Bolivia
KW - botanical gardens
KW - ASW, Caribbean Sea
KW - ISE, Ecuador
KW - USA, Missouri
KW - soil types
KW - Temperature
KW - A, Atlantic
KW - Gentianaceae
KW - Morphology
KW - Venezuela
KW - Conservation
KW - Geographic information systems
KW - ISE, Peru
KW - niches
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/912918783?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.atitle=ANDEAN+SPECIATION+AND+VICARIANCE+IN+NEOTROPICAL+MACROCARPAEA+%28GENTIANACEAE-HELIEAE%291&rft.au=Struwe%2C+Lena%3BHaag%2C+Scott%3BHeiberg%2C+Einar%3BGrant%2C+Jason+R&rft.aulast=Struwe&rft.aufirst=Lena&rft.date=2009-09-28&rft.volume=96&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=450&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.issn=00266493&rft_id=info:doi/10.3417%2F2008040
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-03-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - soil types; Rainfall; Morphology; Temperature; Conservation; Geographic information systems; dispersal; botanical gardens; niches; Gentianaceae; ASW, Colombia; ASW, Caribbean Sea; Venezuela; ISE, Ecuador; USA, Missouri; South America, Andes Mts.; ISE, Peru; A, Atlantic; Bolivia
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3417/2008040
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - CLIMATE IN THE DRY CENTRAL ANDES OVER GEOLOGIC, MILLENNIAL, AND INTERANNUAL TIMESCALES1
AN - 867742327; 14074759
AB - Over the last eight years, we have developed several paleoenvironmental records from a broad geographic region spanning the Altiplano in Bolivia (18 degree S-22 degree S) and continuing south along the western Andean flank to ca. 26 degree S. These records include: cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in surface deposits, dated nitrate paleosoils, lake levels, groundwater levels from wetland deposits, and plant macrofossils from urine-encrusted rodent middens. Arid environments are often uniquely sensitive to climate perturbations, and there is evidence of significant changes in precipitation on the western flank of the central Andes and the adjacent Altiplano. In contrast, the Atacama Desert of northern Chile is hyperarid over many millions of years. This uniquely prolonged arid climate requires the isolation of the Atacama from the Amazon Basin, a situation that has existed for more than 10 million years and that resulted from the uplift of the Andes and/or formation of the Altiplano plateau. New evidence from multiple terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides, however, suggests that overall aridity is occasionally punctuated by rare rainfall events that likely originate from the Pacific. East of the hyperarid zone, climate history from multiple proxies reveals alternating wet and dry intervals where changes in precipitation originating from the Atlantic may exceed 50%. An analysis of Pleistocene climate records across the region allows reconstruction of the spatial and temporal components of climate change. These Pleistocene wet events span the modern transition between two modes of interannual precipitation variability, and regional climate history for the Central Andean Pluvial Event (CAPE; ca. 18-8 ka) points toward similar drivers of modern interannual and past millennial-scale climate variability. The north-northeast mode of climate variability is linked to El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) variability, and the southeast mode is linked to aridity in the Chaco region of Argentina.
JF - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
AU - Placzek, Christa
AU - Quade, Jay
AU - Betancourt, Julio L
AU - Patchett, PJonathan
AU - Rech, Jason A
AU - Latorre, Claudio
AU - Matmon, Ari
AU - Holmgren, Camille
AU - English, Nathan B
AD - We thank Sohrab Tawakholi and Servicio Nacional de Geologia y Mineria (SERGEOMIN) for field logistical support in Bolivia. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant EAR-0207850 to J.Q. and J.P., and grant 02-13657 to J.Q. and J.B.) and by grants from the Geological Society of America, the Arizona Geological Survey, Chevron, and University of Arizona Accelerator Facility. C.P. is currently funded by National Science Foundation grant 01-01249. C.L. has received grants Proyecto Fondo Basal-23 and the Iniciativa Cientifica Milenio P05-002 (to the Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity), as well as the Fondo de Desarrollo de Areas Prioritarias grant 1501 (to the Center for Advanced Studies in Ecology and Biodiversity) and the Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico grant 1060496.
Y1 - 2009/09/28/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Sep 28
SP - 386
EP - 397
PB - Missouri Botanical Garden
VL - 96
IS - 3
SN - 0026-6493, 0026-6493
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Historical account
KW - pleistocene
KW - Chile, Atacama Desert
KW - Bolivia, Altiplano
KW - Rainfall
KW - Basins
KW - South America, Andes Mts.
KW - A, Atlantic
KW - Chile, Atacama
KW - plateaus
KW - ISE, Chile
KW - Lakes
KW - South America, Amazon R.
KW - Deserts
KW - USA, Missouri
KW - Wetlands
KW - PSW, Argentina
KW - Groundwater
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/867742327?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.atitle=CLIMATE+IN+THE+DRY+CENTRAL+ANDES+OVER+GEOLOGIC%2C+MILLENNIAL%2C+AND+INTERANNUAL+TIMESCALES1&rft.au=Placzek%2C+Christa%3BQuade%2C+Jay%3BBetancourt%2C+Julio+L%3BPatchett%2C+PJonathan%3BRech%2C+Jason+A%3BLatorre%2C+Claudio%3BMatmon%2C+Ari%3BHolmgren%2C+Camille%3BEnglish%2C+Nathan+B&rft.aulast=Placzek&rft.aufirst=Christa&rft.date=2009-09-28&rft.volume=96&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=386&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.issn=00266493&rft_id=info:doi/10.3417%2F2008019
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-05-01
N1 - Number of references - 69
N1 - Last updated - 2013-08-23
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - plateaus; Historical account; Lakes; pleistocene; Deserts; Rainfall; Basins; Wetlands; Groundwater; ISE, Chile; South America, Amazon R.; Chile, Atacama Desert; Bolivia, Altiplano; USA, Missouri; South America, Andes Mts.; PSW, Argentina; Chile, Atacama; A, Atlantic
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3417/2008019
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Vulnerability Analysis of Wireless Sensor Networks: Challenges and Solutions
T2 - 28th IEEE International Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems
AN - 42436394; 5411927
JF - 28th IEEE International Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems
AU - Das, Sajal
Y1 - 2009/09/27/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Sep 27
KW - Vulnerability
KW - Sensors
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42436394?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=28th+IEEE+International+Symposium+on+Reliable+Distributed+Systems&rft.atitle=Vulnerability+Analysis+of+Wireless+Sensor+Networks%3A+Challenges+and+Solutions&rft.au=Das%2C+Sajal&rft.aulast=Das&rft.aufirst=Sajal&rft.date=2009-09-27&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=28th+IEEE+International+Symposium+on+Reliable+Distributed+Systems&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.cse.buffalo.edu/srds2009/content.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Fabrication of PEMFC metallic bipolar plates with micro-channel arrays using stamping and hydroforming processes
T2 - 2009 International Conference on Multi-Material Micro-Manufacture(4M) and the International Conference on Micro-Manufacture (ICOMM) (4M/ICOMM 2009)
AN - 42028138; 5492621
JF - 2009 International Conference on Multi-Material Micro-Manufacture(4M) and the International Conference on Micro-Manufacture (ICOMM) (4M/ICOMM 2009)
AU - Mahabunphachai, S
AU - Koc, M
Y1 - 2009/09/23/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Sep 23
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42028138?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+International+Conference+on+Multi-Material+Micro-Manufacture%284M%29+and+the+International+Conference+on+Micro-Manufacture+%28ICOMM%29+%284M%2FICOMM+2009%29&rft.atitle=Fabrication+of+PEMFC+metallic+bipolar+plates+with+micro-channel+arrays+using+stamping+and+hydroforming+processes&rft.au=Mahabunphachai%2C+S%3BKoc%2C+M&rft.aulast=Mahabunphachai&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2009-09-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+International+Conference+on+Multi-Material+Micro-Manufacture%284M%29+and+the+International+Conference+on+Micro-Manufacture+%28ICOMM%29+%284M%2FICOMM+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.pepublishing.com/content/g837w8
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Efficient Delivery of Antisense Oligodeoxyribonucleotide G3139 by Human Serum Albumin-Coated Liposomes
AN - 754550389; 13305409
AB - Human serum albumin (HSA)-coated liposomal formulations were synthesized and evaluated for the delivery of antisense oligodeoxyribonucleotide (ODN) G3139 in KB human oral carcinoma cells. Liposomes composed of dimethyldioctadecyl ammonium bromide/egg phosphatidylcholine/*a-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate (58:40:2 molar ratio) complexed with G3139 and coated with HSA were investigated for Bcl-2 downregulating activity. Cellular uptake of HSA-coated liposome-ODN complexes was more efficient than the uncoated liposome-ODN complexes. Treatment of the cells with HSA-coated liposome-ODN complexes resulted in efficient Bcl-2 mRNA downregulation that was approximately 3-fold greater than with uncoated liposomes (p < 0.05) and 6-fold greater than with free ODN. The transfection efficiency of liposome-ODN complexes coated with HSA was dependent on the concentration of HSA used and on the contents of *a-helix and *b-strand in HSA. HSA-coated liposomes are effective delivery vehicles for antisense ODN.
JF - Molecular Pharmaceutics
AU - Weecharangsan, Wanlop
AU - Yu, Bo
AU - Zheng, Yu
AU - Liu, Shujun
AU - Pang, Jiu Xia
AU - Lee, L James
AU - Marcucci, Guido
AU - Lee, Robert J
AD - Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmacy, Srinakharinwirot University, Nakhon Nayok, Thailand, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC), The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, Division of Hematology and Oncology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, and NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC) for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices (CANPBD), The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
Y1 - 2009/09/02/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Sep 02
SP - 1848
EP - 1855
PB - American Chemical Society
VL - 6
IS - 6
SN - 1543-8384, 1543-8384
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Ammonium
KW - Lecithin
KW - human serum albumin
KW - bromides
KW - Oligonucleotides
KW - Liposomes
KW - mRNA
KW - Antisense oligonucleotides
KW - Antisense
KW - oral carcinoma
KW - Transfection
KW - Bcl-2 protein
KW - Polyethylene glycol
KW - N 14830:RNA
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754550389?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Molecular+Pharmaceutics&rft.atitle=Efficient+Delivery+of+Antisense+Oligodeoxyribonucleotide+G3139+by+Human+Serum+Albumin-Coated+Liposomes&rft.au=Weecharangsan%2C+Wanlop%3BYu%2C+Bo%3BZheng%2C+Yu%3BLiu%2C+Shujun%3BPang%2C+Jiu+Xia%3BLee%2C+L+James%3BMarcucci%2C+Guido%3BLee%2C+Robert+J&rft.aulast=Weecharangsan&rft.aufirst=Wanlop&rft.date=2009-09-02&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=1848&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Molecular+Pharmaceutics&rft.issn=15438384&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fmp900150g
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Ammonium; Lecithin; human serum albumin; bromides; Liposomes; Oligonucleotides; mRNA; Antisense oligonucleotides; Antisense; Transfection; oral carcinoma; Bcl-2 protein; Polyethylene glycol
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/mp900150g
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Hurel -- an in vivo-surrogate assay platform for cell-based studies.
AN - 734075586; 19807199
AB - Accurate prediction of the human response to potential pharmaceuticals is difficult, often unreliable, and invariably expensive. Traditional in vitro cell culture assays are of limited value, because they do not accurately mimic the complex environment to which a drug candidate is subjected within the human body. While in vivo animal studies can account for the complex inter-cellular and inter-tissue effects not observable from in vitro assays, animal studies are expensive, labour intensive, time consuming, and unpopular. In addition, there is considerable concern as to whether animal studies can predict human risk sufficiently precisely, because, first, there is no known mechanistic basis for extrapolation from high to low doses, and second, cross-species extrapolation has frequently been found to be problematic with respect to toxicity and pharmacokinetic characteristics. To address these limitations, an interactive, cell-based microfluidic biochip called a Hurel was developed. The Hurel system consists of living cells segregated into interconnected "tissue" or "organ" compartments. The organ compartments are connected by a re-circulating culture medium that acts as a "blood surrogate". The fluidics are designed so that the primary elements of the circulatory system, and more importantly, the interactions of the organ systems, are accurately mimicked. Drug candidates are exposed to a more-realistic animal or human physiological environment, thus providing a higher and more accurate informational content than can the traditional in vitro assays. By affording dynamic assessment of potential toxicity, metabolism, and bioavailability, the device's capabilities hold the potential to markedly improve the prioritisation of drug leads prior to animal studies. 2009 FRAME.
JF - Alternatives to laboratory animals : ATLA
AU - Baxter, Gregory T
AD - School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA. gbaxter@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/09//
PY - 2009
DA - September 2009
SP - 11
EP - 18
VL - 37 Suppl 1
SN - 0261-1929, 0261-1929
KW - Biomarkers
KW - 0
KW - Pharmaceutical Preparations
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Humans
KW - Biological Assay
KW - Cell Culture Techniques
KW - Liver -- metabolism
KW - Predictive Value of Tests
KW - Lung -- metabolism
KW - Models, Biological
KW - Pharmacokinetics
KW - Adipose Tissue -- metabolism
KW - Cell Survival -- drug effects
KW - Liver -- drug effects
KW - Adipose Tissue -- drug effects
KW - Lung -- drug effects
KW - Cell Line
KW - Pharmaceutical Preparations -- administration & dosage
KW - Animal Testing Alternatives
KW - Pharmaceutical Preparations -- metabolism
KW - Cells, Cultured -- metabolism
KW - Microfluidics -- instrumentation
KW - Microfluidics -- methods
KW - Cells, Cultured -- drug effects
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2010-01-06
N1 - Date created - 2009-10-07
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlations between microbial indicators, pathogens, and environmental factors in a subtropical estuary.
AN - 67611045; 19464704
AB - The objective of this study was to evaluate whether indicator microbes and physical-chemical parameters were correlated with pathogens within a tidally influenced Estuary. Measurements included the analysis of physical-chemical parameters (pH, salinity, temperature, and turbidity), measurements of bacterial indicators (enterococci, fecal coliform, Escherichia coli, and total coliform), viral indicators (somatic and MS2 coliphage), viral pathogens (enterovirus by culture), and protozoan pathogens (Cryptosporidium and Giardia). All pathogen results were negative with the exception of one sample which tested positive for culturable reovirus (8.5MPN/100L). Notable physical-chemical parameters for this sample included low salinity (<1ppt) and high water temperature (31 degrees C). Indicator bacteria and indicator virus levels for this sample were within average values typically measured within the study site and were low in comparison with levels observed in other freshwater environments. Overall results suggest that high levels of bacterial and viral indicators were associated with low salinity sites.
JF - Marine pollution bulletin
AU - Ortega, Cristina
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Abdelzaher, Amir
AU - Wright, Mary
AU - Deng, Yang
AU - Stark, Lillian M
AD - University of Miami, NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Key Biscayne, FL 33149, USA.
Y1 - 2009/09//
PY - 2009
DA - September 2009
SP - 1374
EP - 1381
VL - 58
IS - 9
KW - Water Pollutants
KW - 0
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Oceans and Seas
KW - Animals
KW - Water Pollutants -- analysis
KW - Kinetics
KW - Seawater -- chemistry
KW - Rivers -- parasitology
KW - Eukaryota -- isolation & purification
KW - Viruses -- isolation & purification
KW - Bacteria -- isolation & purification
KW - Seawater -- microbiology
KW - Rivers -- chemistry
KW - Rivers -- microbiology
KW - Environmental Monitoring -- methods
KW - Seawater -- parasitology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/67611045?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+pollution+bulletin&rft.atitle=Correlations+between+microbial+indicators%2C+pathogens%2C+and+environmental+factors+in+a+subtropical+estuary.&rft.au=Ortega%2C+Cristina%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+Helena+M%3BAbdelzaher%2C+Amir%3BWright%2C+Mary%3BDeng%2C+Yang%3BStark%2C+Lillian+M&rft.aulast=Ortega&rft.aufirst=Cristina&rft.date=2009-09-01&rft.volume=58&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=1374&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+pollution+bulletin&rft.issn=1879-3363&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.marpolbul.2009.04.015
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2009-10-09
N1 - Date created - 2009-08-26
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
J Clin Invest. 2000 Apr;105(8):1035-8 [10772645]
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Appl Environ Microbiol. 2001 Jul;67(7):3016-20 [11425715]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2002 Mar;68(3):1165-72 [11872464]
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Appl Environ Microbiol. 2003 Sep;69(9):5555-62 [12957945]
Mar Pollut Bull. 2004 Apr;48(7-8):698-704 [15041426]
Environ Int. 2004 Jul;30(5):741-59 [15051248]
Water Res. 2004 Jul;38(13):3119-31 [15261551]
Water Sci Technol. 2004;50(1):239-45 [15318516]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 1984 Oct;48(4):818-25 [6508290]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 1977 Aug;34(2):139-49 [20838]
Water Sci Technol. 2004;50(1):259-62 [15318519]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 1999 Sep;65(9):4118-25 [10473424]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2005 Mar;71(3):1453-61 [15746348]
Water Res. 2006 Aug;40(14):2613-20 [16839583]
Water Res. 2007 Jan;41(1):3-10 [17113123]
Water Res. 2007 Jul;41(14):3132-40 [17543369]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2007 Jul;73(13):4095-9 [17483272]
Mar Pollut Bull. 2001 Apr;42(4):286-93 [11381749]
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2009.04.015
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Federal S&E Obligations to Three Types of Minority-Serving Institutions Decline in FY 2007. InfoBrief. NSF 09-319
AN - 61820457; ED507675
AB - This analysis first addresses federal science and engineering (S&E) support findings for all academic institutions, followed by an analysis of the major findings on minority-serving institutions. The National Science Foundation's (NSF's) latest statistics from the Survey of Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions show that federal agencies obligated $28.5 billion (table 1) in current dollars to 1,216 academic institutions for science and engineering (S&E) activities in FY 2007. This amount represents a current-dollar decrease of 0.4% from the FY 2006 level, or a 3.0% decrease in inflation-adjusted constant 2000 dollars. This decrease was the first in current dollars reported to this survey in 11 years. It follows a 0.9% current-dollar increase (a 2.3% decrease in inflation-adjusted dollars) in total federal academic S&E support between FY 2005 and FY 2006. Furthermore, this InfoBrief presents data on federal S&E support to minority-serving institutions: historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), high-Hispanic-enrollment (HHE) institutions, and tribal colleges and universities. (Contains 4 tables and 6 notes.)
AU - Bennof, Richard J.
Y1 - 2009/09//
PY - 2009
DA - September 2009
SP - 8
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Statistics
KW - Engineering Technology
KW - Federal Aid
KW - Government School Relationship
KW - Black Colleges
KW - Tribally Controlled Education
KW - Minority Groups
KW - Public Agencies
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Colleges
KW - Hispanic American Students
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61820457?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Characteristics of Doctoral Scientists and Engineers in the United States: 2006. Detailed Statistical Tables. NSF 09-317
AN - 61816374; ED507638
AB - This report presents data from the 2006 Survey of Doctorate Recipients (SDR). The SDR is a panel survey that collects longitudinal data, biennially, on demographic and general employment characteristics of individuals who have received a doctorate in a science, engineering, or health field from a U.S. academic institution. Sampled individuals are followed from shortly after they receive their doctorate through age 75 years. The SDR sample is augmented each cycle with new samples of the most recent cohorts of science and engineering doctorate recipients, identified by the Survey of Earned Doctorates, an annual census of research doctorates awarded in the United States. The detailed statistical tables presented provide information on the number and median salaries of doctoral scientists and engineers by field of doctorate and occupation; demographic characteristics, such as sex, race/ethnicity, citizenship, and age; and employment-related characteristics, such as sector of employment, employer location, and labor-force rates. Appendix A provides technical information about the survey methodology, coverage, concepts, definitions, sampling errors, and standard error tables; Appendix B provides crosswalks defining field of doctorate and occupation classifications used in survey sampling. The 2006 SDR mail questionnaire is provided in appendix C. The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health sponsored the 2006 survey, which was conducted by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago. It is the 17th in a series of surveys initiated in 1973 in response to the needs of the federal government for demographic and employment information on scientists and engineers trained at the doctoral level. The goal of the 2006 SDR is to provide policymakers and researchers with high-quality data on the career patterns and achievements of the nation's doctoral scientists and engineers. (Contains 1 footnote, 164 tables and 4 notes.)
AU - Foley, Daniel J.
Y1 - 2009/09//
PY - 2009
DA - September 2009
SP - 354
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Researchers
KW - Policymakers
KW - Higher Education
KW - Professional Occupations
KW - Research Methodology
KW - Surveys
KW - Federal Government
KW - Graduates
KW - Employment
KW - Cohort Analysis
KW - Health Occupations
KW - Engineering
KW - Scientists
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Employment Patterns
KW - Sampling
KW - Data Analysis
KW - Education Work Relationship
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61816374?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions: FY 2007. Detailed Statistical Tables. NSF 09-315
AN - 61813938; ED507674
AB - Institutions of higher education, the major source of the nation's scientists and engineers, perform about one-half of the nation's basic research. Therefore, the level, distribution, and characteristics of federal academic support are of much interest to officials at federal, state, and local levels and in nongovernmental sectors. The National Science Foundation annually collects statistical data from the 19 federal agencies that account for virtually all support for science and engineering (S&E) research and development at educational institutions. The data presented in these tables cover all categories of direct federal science and engineering (S&E) support to institutions of higher education in the United States for S&E activities. The 19 agencies listed in these tables provide virtually all federal funding for S&E research and development (R&D) at U.S. universities and colleges. Data are also reported on these agencies' obligations to nonprofit institutions. (Contains 36 tables.)
Y1 - 2009/09//
PY - 2009
DA - September 2009
SP - 289
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Public Agencies
KW - Engineering Technology
KW - Colleges
KW - Federal Aid
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Research and Development
KW - Data Collection
KW - Higher Education
KW - Nonprofit Organizations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61813938?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Can good events lead to bad outcomes? Endogenous banking crises and fiscal policy responses
AN - 58843248; 2008-403432
AB - In this paper, we study the impact of changes in the urban labor force and foreign direct investment on the banking sector, using a dynamic general equilibrium model with a financial sector. Numerical simulations are performed using stylized Chinese data, and bank failures are generated through increases in the growth rate of the labor force, a revaluation of the exchange rate, or an increase in debt issue to finance the government deficit, as compared to a benchmark scenario in which banks remain solvent. Thus bank failures can result from what might seem to be either beneficial economic trends or correct monetary and fiscal policies. We introduce fiscal policies that modify relative factor prices by lowering the capital tax rate and increasing the tax rate on labor. Such policies can prevent banking failures by raising the return to capital. It is shown that such fiscal policies are, in the short run, welfare reducing. [Copyright Elsevier B.V.]
JF - Journal of Asian Economics
AU - Feltenstein, Andrew
AU - Rochon, Celine
AD - National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA 22230, USA
Y1 - 2009/09//
PY - 2009
DA - September 2009
SP - 396
EP - 409
PB - Elsevier Ltd, The Netherlands
VL - 20
IS - 4
SN - 1049-0078, 1049-0078
KW - Banking and public and private finance - Banking operations and services
KW - Economic conditions and policy - Economic conditions
KW - Banking and public and private finance - Public finance
KW - Banking and public and private finance - Banks and other financial institutions
KW - Economic conditions and policy - Property and wealth
KW - Business and service sector - Accounting
KW - Banking failures Fiscal policies
KW - Debt
KW - Bank failures
KW - Capital
KW - Economic conditions
KW - Banking
KW - Fiscal policy
KW - article
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/58843248?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apais&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Asian+Economics&rft.atitle=Can+good+events+lead+to+bad+outcomes%3F+Endogenous+banking+crises+and+fiscal+policy+responses&rft.au=Feltenstein%2C+Andrew%3BRochon%2C+Celine&rft.aulast=Feltenstein&rft.aufirst=Andrew&rft.date=2009-09-01&rft.volume=20&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=396&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Asian+Economics&rft.issn=10490078&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.asieco.2009.05.002
LA - English
DB - PAIS Index
N1 - Date revised - 2009-10-02
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Banking; Economic conditions; Fiscal policy; Bank failures; Capital; Debt
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.asieco.2009.05.002
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Engineering. Cellulosic biofuels--got gasoline?
AN - 67581245; 19679801
JF - Science (New York, N.Y.)
AU - Regalbuto, John R
AD - Catalysis and Biocatalysis, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA 22230, USA. jregalbu@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/08/14/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 14
SP - 822
EP - 824
VL - 325
IS - 5942
KW - Gasoline
KW - 0
KW - Hydrocarbons
KW - Ethanol
KW - 3K9958V90M
KW - Cellulose
KW - 9004-34-6
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Bacteria -- metabolism
KW - Bacteria -- genetics
KW - Genetic Engineering
KW - Fermentation
KW - Wood
KW - Ethanol -- metabolism
KW - Biotechnology
KW - Catalysis
KW - Hydrocarbons -- chemistry
KW - Cellulose -- metabolism
KW - Plants -- metabolism
KW - Cellulose -- chemistry
KW - Energy-Generating Resources -- economics
KW - Hydrocarbons -- metabolism
KW - Biomass
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/67581245?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Science+%28New+York%2C+N.Y.%29&rft.atitle=Engineering.+Cellulosic+biofuels--got+gasoline%3F&rft.au=Regalbuto%2C+John+R&rft.aulast=Regalbuto&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2009-08-14&rft.volume=325&rft.issue=5942&rft.spage=822&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Science+%28New+York%2C+N.Y.%29&rft.issn=1095-9203&rft_id=info:doi/10.1126%2Fscience.1174581
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2009-08-25
N1 - Date created - 2009-08-14
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1174581
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Global Climate-process Issues and Their Impacts on Water Availability
T2 - 33rd Congress of the International Association of Hydraulic Engineering and Research
AN - 41928775; 5307824
JF - 33rd Congress of the International Association of Hydraulic Engineering and Research
AU - Killeen, Timothy
Y1 - 2009/08/10/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 10
KW - Water availability
KW - Climate
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41928775?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=33rd+Congress+of+the+International+Association+of+Hydraulic+Engineering+and+Research&rft.atitle=Global+Climate-process+Issues+and+Their+Impacts+on+Water+Availability&rft.au=Killeen%2C+Timothy&rft.aulast=Killeen&rft.aufirst=Timothy&rft.date=2009-08-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=33rd+Congress+of+the+International+Association+of+Hydraulic+Engineering+and+Research&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://content.asce.org/files/pdf/IAHR09_Onsite_Program.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Building a Sustainable Energy Future: U.S. Actions for an Effective Energy Economy Transformation
AN - 58841865; 2010-477177
AB - The scope and urgency of the sustainable energy challenge requires immediate and robust U.S. and global commitment. This commitment is necessary to effectively transform the current U.S. economy to a sustainable energy economy. Such a transformation will help promote energy independence, foster future economic prosperity and ensure stewardship and continued vitality of the environment. The United States can promote a sustainable energy economy through creation of a nationally coordinated sustainable energy RD3E strategy. This strategy would provide Federal leadership and coordination, boost public and private investment in sustainable energy RD3E, construct essential policies to facilitate innovation in sustainable energy, build human capital, engage in international cooperation, and promote public awareness and action. This report reflects a concerted effort by the Board, colleagues, and stakeholders throughout the Federal, private, academic, and nonprofit sectors to address the challenges and opportunities for sustainable energy in the 21st century. The recommendations offered to the U.S. Government strive to promote leadership and coordinated efforts to move toward a sustainable energy economy. Tables, Figures, Appendixes, References.
JF - National Science Foundation, Aug 3 2009, vi+64 pp.
AU - National Science Board
Y1 - 2009/08/03/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 03
PB - National Science Foundation
KW - Energy resources and policy - Energy policy
KW - Politics - Politics and policy-making
KW - Economic conditions and policy - Economic conditions
KW - Labor conditions and policy - Employment and labor supply
KW - Banking and public and private finance - Investments and securities
KW - Environment and environmental policy - Ecology and environmental policy
KW - International relations - International relations
KW - Environment
KW - United States
KW - Human capital
KW - Economic change
KW - Investments
KW - Energy policy
KW - International cooperation
KW - Leadership
KW - book
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/58841865?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/PAIS+Index&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=National+Science+Board&rft.aulast=National+Science+Board&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-08-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Building+a+Sustainable+Energy+Future%3A+U.S.+Actions+for+an+Effective+Energy+Economy+Transformation&rft.title=Building+a+Sustainable+Energy+Future%3A+U.S.+Actions+for+an+Effective+Energy+Economy+Transformation&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2009/nsb0955/nsb0955.pdf
LA - English
DB - PAIS Index
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-07
N1 - Publication note - National Science Foundation, 2009
N1 - SuppNotes - NSB-09-55
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Using Documentation to Revitalize Language
T2 - 44th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages (ICSNL 44)
AN - 40416414; 5303972
JF - 44th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages (ICSNL 44)
AU - Penfield, Susan
Y1 - 2009/08/03/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 03
KW - Language
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40416414?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=44th+International+Conference+on+Salish+and+Neighboring+Languages+%28ICSNL+44%29&rft.atitle=Using+Documentation+to+Revitalize+Language&rft.au=Penfield%2C+Susan&rft.aulast=Penfield&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2009-08-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=44th+International+Conference+on+Salish+and+Neighboring+Languages+%28ICSNL+44%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.umt.edu/ling/ICSNL44/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Funding Endangered Languages Projects
T2 - 44th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages (ICSNL 44)
AN - 40397768; 5303976
JF - 44th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages (ICSNL 44)
AU - Penfield, Susan
Y1 - 2009/08/03/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 03
KW - Language
KW - Financing
KW - Rare species
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40397768?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=44th+International+Conference+on+Salish+and+Neighboring+Languages+%28ICSNL+44%29&rft.atitle=Funding+Endangered+Languages+Projects&rft.au=Penfield%2C+Susan&rft.aulast=Penfield&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2009-08-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=44th+International+Conference+on+Salish+and+Neighboring+Languages+%28ICSNL+44%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.umt.edu/ling/ICSNL44/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Design of new anchored p-dopants for high power efficiency OLEDs
T2 - 2009 Conference on Optics + Photonics
AN - 42295439; 5349548
JF - 2009 Conference on Optics + Photonics
AU - Sapochak, Linda
AU - Koech, Philip
AU - Rainbolt, James
AU - Cosimbescu, Lelia
AU - Polikarpov, Eugene
AU - Swensen, James
AU - Wang, Liang
AU - Padmaperuma, Asanga
AU - Gaspar, Daniel
Y1 - 2009/08/02/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 02
KW - Efficiency
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42295439?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+on+Optics+%2B+Photonics&rft.atitle=Design+of+new+anchored+p-dopants+for+high+power+efficiency+OLEDs&rft.au=Sapochak%2C+Linda%3BKoech%2C+Philip%3BRainbolt%2C+James%3BCosimbescu%2C+Lelia%3BPolikarpov%2C+Eugene%3BSwensen%2C+James%3BWang%2C+Liang%3BPadmaperuma%2C+Asanga%3BGaspar%2C+Daniel&rft.aulast=Sapochak&rft.aufirst=Linda&rft.date=2009-08-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+on+Optics+%2B+Photonics&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/OP09-final-program-L. pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Nanometer-scale machining with soft x-ray lasers
T2 - 2009 Conference on Optics + Photonics
AN - 42291833; 5350995
JF - 2009 Conference on Optics + Photonics
AU - Bravo, Herman
AU - Szapiro, Benito
AU - Wachulak, Przemeslaw
AU - Marconi, Mario
AU - Chao, Weilun
AU - Anderson, Erik
AU - Attwood, Jr., David
AU - Menoni, Carmen
AU - Rocca, Jorge
Y1 - 2009/08/02/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 02
KW - Lasers
KW - Ionizing radiation
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42291833?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+on+Optics+%2B+Photonics&rft.atitle=Nanometer-scale+machining+with+soft+x-ray+lasers&rft.au=Bravo%2C+Herman%3BSzapiro%2C+Benito%3BWachulak%2C+Przemeslaw%3BMarconi%2C+Mario%3BChao%2C+Weilun%3BAnderson%2C+Erik%3BAttwood%2C+Jr.%2C+David%3BMenoni%2C+Carmen%3BRocca%2C+Jorge&rft.aulast=Bravo&rft.aufirst=Herman&rft.date=2009-08-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+on+Optics+%2B+Photonics&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/OP09-final-program-L. pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Advances in full field microscopy with table-top soft x-ray lasers
T2 - 2009 Conference on Optics + Photonics
AN - 42290488; 5350982
JF - 2009 Conference on Optics + Photonics
AU - Menoni, Carmen
AU - Brizuela, Fernando
AU - Wang, Yong
AU - Brewer, Courtney
AU - Luther, Bradley
AU - Pedaci, Francesco
AU - Wachulak, Przemeslaw
AU - Marconi, Mario
AU - Rocca, Jorge
AU - Chao, Weilun
AU - Anderson, Erik
AU - Liu, Yanwei
AU - Goldberg, Kenneth
AU - Attwood, Jr., David
AU - Vinogradov, Alexander
AU - Artyukov, Igor
AU - Pershyn, Yuri
AU - Kondratenko, Viktor
Y1 - 2009/08/02/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 02
KW - Lasers
KW - Microscopy
KW - Ionizing radiation
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42290488?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+on+Optics+%2B+Photonics&rft.atitle=Advances+in+full+field+microscopy+with+table-top+soft+x-ray+lasers&rft.au=Menoni%2C+Carmen%3BBrizuela%2C+Fernando%3BWang%2C+Yong%3BBrewer%2C+Courtney%3BLuther%2C+Bradley%3BPedaci%2C+Francesco%3BWachulak%2C+Przemeslaw%3BMarconi%2C+Mario%3BRocca%2C+Jorge%3BChao%2C+Weilun%3BAnderson%2C+Erik%3BLiu%2C+Yanwei%3BGoldberg%2C+Kenneth%3BAttwood%2C+Jr.%2C+David%3BVinogradov%2C+Alexander%3BArtyukov%2C+Igor%3BPershyn%2C+Yuri%3BKondratenko%2C+Viktor&rft.aulast=Menoni&rft.aufirst=Carmen&rft.date=2009-08-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+on+Optics+%2B+Photonics&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/OP09-final-program-L. pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Chemical Oceanography: News from the NSF
T2 - 2009 Gordon Research Conference on Chemical Oceanography
AN - 40406381; 5301547
JF - 2009 Gordon Research Conference on Chemical Oceanography
AU - Rice, Don
Y1 - 2009/08/02/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 02
KW - Oceanography
KW - Chemical oceanography
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40406381?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Gordon+Research+Conference+on+Chemical+Oceanography&rft.atitle=Chemical+Oceanography%3A+News+from+the+NSF&rft.au=Rice%2C+Don&rft.aulast=Rice&rft.aufirst=Don&rft.date=2009-08-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Gordon+Research+Conference+on+Chemical+Oceanography&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2009&program=chemocean
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Characterization and evaluation of nanoparticle release during the synthesis of single-walled and multiwalled carbon nanotubes by chemical vapor deposition.
AN - 67638392; 19731712
AB - Airborne nanoparticles released during the synthesis of single-walled and multi-walled carbon nanotubes were measured and characterized. This study reported the field measurements during the development of carbon nanotube production. Monitoring data were taken and the sampling methods to characterize aerosol release were developed along with the modification of carbon nanotube production in a time period from 2006 to 2009. Particle number concentrations for diameters from 5 nm to 20 microm were measured using the fast mobility particle sizer and the aerodynamic particle sizer; the particles released from the furnace were found to be less than 500 nm in diameter. The morphology and elemental composition of the released nanoparticles were characterized by scanning and transmission electron microscopy and energy dispersive spectroscopy. Different operating conditions of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) production were studied to evaluate their effects on the number and morphology of aerosol particles, and the number of particles released. Carbon nanotube filaments and carbon particles in clusters were found among the released aerosol particles during production of multiwalled carbon nanotubes.
JF - Environmental science & technology
AU - Tsai, Su-Jung
AU - Hofmann, Mario
AU - Hallock, Marilyn
AU - Ada, Earl
AU - Kong, Jing
AU - Ellenbecker, Michael
AD - NSF Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing (CHN), University of Massachusetts Lowell, One University Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts 01854, USA. SuJung_Tsai@uml.edu
Y1 - 2009/08/01/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Aug 01
SP - 6017
EP - 6023
VL - 43
IS - 15
SN - 0013-936X, 0013-936X
KW - Aerosols
KW - 0
KW - Air Pollutants
KW - Environmental Pollutants
KW - Gases
KW - Nanotubes, Carbon
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Incineration
KW - Equipment Design
KW - Microscopy, Electron, Transmission -- methods
KW - Particle Size
KW - Temperature
KW - Air Pollutants -- analysis
KW - Environmental Monitoring -- methods
KW - Nanotubes, Carbon -- chemistry
KW - Nanotubes, Carbon -- analysis
KW - Nanotechnology -- methods
KW - Nanoparticles -- chemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/67638392?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.atitle=Characterization+and+evaluation+of+nanoparticle+release+during+the+synthesis+of+single-walled+and+multiwalled+carbon+nanotubes+by+chemical+vapor+deposition.&rft.au=Tsai%2C+Su-Jung%3BHofmann%2C+Mario%3BHallock%2C+Marilyn%3BAda%2C+Earl%3BKong%2C+Jing%3BEllenbecker%2C+Michael&rft.aulast=Tsai&rft.aufirst=Su-Jung&rft.date=2009-08-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=15&rft.spage=6017&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+science+%26+technology&rft.issn=0013936X&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2009-10-19
N1 - Date created - 2009-09-07
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Age-dependent systemic antibody responses and immunisation-associated changes in mice orally and nasally immunised with Lactococcus lactis expressing a malaria parasite protein
AN - 20242694; 10321429
AB - Gram positive food-grade bacteria such as lactococci have significant advantages over attenuated pathogens as vaccine delivery vehicles because of their inherently greater safety. Plasmodium falciparum merozoite surface antigen 2 (MSA2) was expressed in recombinant Lactococcus lactis both intracellularly and covalently anchored to the peptidoglycan of the cell wall (MSA2cP). Balb/c mice of different ages were immunised with the MSA2cP expressing L. lactis in a combined oral and nasal immunisation procedure. Serum IgG antibody responses to MSA2 were higher in young adult Balb/c mice compared to old mice and neonates. The elicited serum IgG antibodies reacted with native MSA2 on the surface of P. falciparum merozoites in an immunofluorescence assay. The serum IgG antibody isotypes in young adult mice were mainly IgG1, IgG2a and IgG2b, while IgG3 tended to be higher in old mice. IgA antibodies to MSA2 were also produced in young mice. Enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes, and more prominent lymphoid tissue in the lamina propria of the ileum and lymphoid follicles in the spleen, were observed in mice fed L. lactis. These findings are relevant for developing L. lactis as a vector to deliver vaccines in human populations.
JF - Vaccine
AU - Moorthy, SAV
AU - Yasawardena, S G
AU - Ramasamy, R
AD - National Science Foundation, Sri Lanka, ramasamy@im.ubd.edu.bn
Y1 - 2009/08//
PY - 2009
DA - Aug 2009
SP - 4947
EP - 4952
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:usinfo-f@elsevier.com], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 27
IS - 36
SN - 0264-410X, 0264-410X
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Immunology Abstracts
KW - Food-grade bacteria
KW - Gut histology
KW - Lactococcus
KW - Mucosal immunisation
KW - Nasal immunisation
KW - Oral immunisation
KW - Plasmodium falciparum
KW - Vaccines
KW - Vaccine vectors
KW - Parasites
KW - Lactococcus lactis
KW - Age
KW - Food
KW - Disease control
KW - peptidoglycans
KW - Malaria
KW - Public health
KW - Antigens
KW - lamina propria
KW - Follicles
KW - Merozoite surface protein 2
KW - Vectors
KW - Spleen
KW - Lymph
KW - Immunofluorescence
KW - Ileum
KW - Pathogens
KW - Immunization
KW - Lymph nodes
KW - Lymphoid tissue
KW - Immunoglobulin A
KW - Antibodies
KW - Serum
KW - Immunoglobulin G
KW - Merozoites
KW - Neonates
KW - Cell walls
KW - K 03350:Immunology
KW - Q1 08484:Species interactions: parasites and diseases
KW - F 06915:Cancer Immunology
KW - J 02350:Immunology
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20242694?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aasfaaquaticpollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Vaccine&rft.atitle=Age-dependent+systemic+antibody+responses+and+immunisation-associated+changes+in+mice+orally+and+nasally+immunised+with+Lactococcus+lactis+expressing+a+malaria+parasite+protein&rft.au=Moorthy%2C+SAV%3BYasawardena%2C+S+G%3BRamasamy%2C+R&rft.aulast=Moorthy&rft.aufirst=SAV&rft.date=2009-08-01&rft.volume=27&rft.issue=36&rft.spage=4947&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Vaccine&rft.issn=0264410X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.vaccine.2009.06.011
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-10-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Parasites; Antibodies; Antigens; Serum; Disease control; Lymph; Pathogens; Vaccines; Public health; Age; Follicles; Food; peptidoglycans; Spleen; Vectors; Merozoite surface protein 2; Malaria; Ileum; Immunofluorescence; Lymphoid tissue; Lymph nodes; Immunization; Immunoglobulin A; Immunoglobulin G; Merozoites; Neonates; lamina propria; Cell walls; Lactococcus lactis; Plasmodium falciparum
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2009.06.011
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 8 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826547; 13967-090263_0008
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 8
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826547?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 10 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826536; 13967-090263_0010
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 10
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826536?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 6 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826385; 13967-090263_0006
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 6
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826385?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 4 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826373; 13967-090263_0004
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 4
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826373?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 14 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826268; 13967-090263_0014
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 14
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826268?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 12 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826258; 13967-090263_0012
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 12
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826258?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 11 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826223; 13967-090263_0011
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 11
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826223?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 3 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826217; 13967-090263_0003
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 3
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826217?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 13 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826210; 13967-090263_0013
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 13
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826210?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 9 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826206; 13967-090263_0009
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 9
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826206?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 7 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826203; 13967-090263_0007
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 7
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826203?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 5 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826197; 13967-090263_0005
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 5
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826197?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 2 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826196; 13967-090263_0002
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 2
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826196?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-07-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII. [Part 1 of 14]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 756826194; 13967-090263_0001
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 1
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 36346430; 13967
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.2-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the conservation district on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the mountain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground-based and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed 13-foot diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere; and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the proposed action, this final EIS considers two other alternatives, construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0571D, Volume 30, Number 4.
JF - EPA number: 090263, Volume I--420 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--585 pages, Volume IV-- 456 pages, July 24, 2009
PY - 2009
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Roads
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Haleakala National Park
KW - Hawaii
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Final. Preparation date: July 24, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Distribution history and climatic controls of the late Miocene Pikermian chronofauna
AN - 1270038319; 2013-008866
AB - The Late Miocene development of faunas and environments in western Eurasia is well known, but the climatic and environmental processes that controlled its details are incompletely understood. Here we map the rise and fall of the classic Pikermian fossil mammal chronofauna between 12 and 4.2 Ma, using genus-level faunal similarity between localities. To directly relate land mammal community evolution to environmental change, we use the hypsodonty paleoprecipitation proxy and paleoclimate modeling. The geographic distribution of faunal similarity and paleoprecipitation in successive timeslices shows the development of the open biome that favored the evolution and spread of the open-habitat adapted large mammal lineages. In the climate model run, this corresponds to a decrease in precipitation over its core area south of the Paratethys Sea. The process began in the latest Middle Miocene and climaxed in the medial Late Miocene, about 7-8 million years ago. The geographic range of the Pikermian chronofauna contracted in the latest Miocene, a time of increasing summer drought and regional differentiation of habitats in Eastern Europe and Southwestern Asia. Its demise at the Miocene-Pliocene boundary coincides with an environmental reversal toward increased humidity and forestation, changes inevitably detrimental to open-adapted, wide-ranging large mammals.
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
AU - Eronen, Jussi T
AU - Ataabadi, Majid Mirzaie
AU - Micheels, Arne
AU - Karme, Aleksis
AU - Bernor, Raymond L
AU - Fortelius, Mikael
Y1 - 2009/07/21/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jul 21
SP - 11867
EP - 11871
PB - National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC
VL - 106
IS - 29
SN - 0027-8424, 0027-8424
KW - Iran
KW - Greece
KW - Europe
KW - hypsodonty
KW - biogeography
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - climate change
KW - Central Asia
KW - Southern Europe
KW - Cenozoic
KW - controls
KW - Maragheh Iran
KW - Commonwealth of Independent States
KW - Samos
KW - Central Europe
KW - Caucasus
KW - Asia
KW - Middle East
KW - Chordata
KW - Pikermian fauna
KW - Mammalia
KW - Turkey
KW - faunal studies
KW - paleogeography
KW - Aegean Islands
KW - Miocene
KW - Tertiary
KW - lower Pliocene
KW - Anatolia
KW - Neogene
KW - Pliocene
KW - upper Miocene
KW - Greek Aegean Islands
KW - Vertebrata
KW - Tetrapoda
KW - Mediterranean region
KW - Pikermi Greece
KW - 11:Vertebrate paleontology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Proceedings+of+the+National+Academy+of+Sciences+of+the+United+States+of+America&rft.atitle=Distribution+history+and+climatic+controls+of+the+late+Miocene+Pikermian+chronofauna&rft.au=Eronen%2C+Jussi+T%3BAtaabadi%2C+Majid+Mirzaie%3BMicheels%2C+Arne%3BKarme%2C+Aleksis%3BBernor%2C+Raymond+L%3BFortelius%2C+Mikael&rft.aulast=Eronen&rft.aufirst=Jussi&rft.date=2009-07-21&rft.volume=106&rft.issue=29&rft.spage=11867&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Proceedings+of+the+National+Academy+of+Sciences+of+the+United+States+of+America&rft.issn=00278424&rft_id=info:doi/10.1073%2Fpnas.0902598106
L2 - http://www.pnas.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 52
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - SuppNotes - Supplemental information/data is available in the online version of this article
N1 - Last updated - 2013-01-17
N1 - CODEN - PNASA6
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Aegean Islands; Anatolia; Asia; biogeography; Caucasus; Cenozoic; Central Asia; Central Europe; Chordata; climate change; Commonwealth of Independent States; controls; Europe; faunal studies; Greece; Greek Aegean Islands; hypsodonty; Iran; lower Pliocene; Mammalia; Maragheh Iran; Mediterranean region; Middle East; Miocene; Neogene; paleoclimatology; paleogeography; Pikermi Greece; Pikermian fauna; Pliocene; Samos; Southern Europe; Tertiary; Tetrapoda; Turkey; upper Miocene; Vertebrata
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902598106
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Evaluation of Four Membrane Filter Materials for Use with 3M(TM) Petrifilm(TM) E. coli Coliform Count Plates to Enumerate Escherichia coli in Water Samples
T2 - 96th Annual Meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP 2009)
AN - 40343478; 5270262
JF - 96th Annual Meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP 2009)
AU - Donofrio, Robert
AU - Harrison, Amy
AU - Bechanko, Robin
AU - Benesh, DeAnn
AU - Zook, Cynthia
Y1 - 2009/07/12/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jul 12
KW - Water sampling
KW - Filters
KW - Coliforms
KW - Membranes
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=96th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+International+Association+for+Food+Protection+%28IAFP+2009%29&rft.atitle=Evaluation+of+Four+Membrane+Filter+Materials+for+Use+with+3M%28TM%29+Petrifilm%28TM%29+E.+coli+Coliform+Count+Plates+to+Enumerate+Escherichia+coli+in+Water+Samples&rft.au=Donofrio%2C+Robert%3BHarrison%2C+Amy%3BBechanko%2C+Robin%3BBenesh%2C+DeAnn%3BZook%2C+Cynthia&rft.aulast=Donofrio&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2009-07-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=96th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+International+Association+for+Food+Protection+%28IAFP+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://foodprotection.org/files/annual_meeting/full-program-2009.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Metric Regularity and Convergence of Approximations in Optimal Control
T2 - 2009 Conference of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics on Control and its Applications (CT09)
AN - 40272563; 5227250
JF - 2009 Conference of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics on Control and its Applications (CT09)
AU - Dontchev, Asen
Y1 - 2009/07/06/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jul 06
KW - Convergence
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40272563?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+of+the+Society+for+Industrial+and+Applied+Mathematics+on+Control+and+its+Applications+%28CT09%29&rft.atitle=Metric+Regularity+and+Convergence+of+Approximations+in+Optimal+Control&rft.au=Dontchev%2C+Asen&rft.aulast=Dontchev&rft.aufirst=Asen&rft.date=2009-07-06&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+of+the+Society+for+Industrial+and+Applied+Mathematics+on+Control+and+its+Applications+%28CT09%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://meetings.siam.org/program.cfm?CONFCODE=CT09
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Addressing Information Assurance Education standards
T2 - 14th ACM-SIGCSE Annual Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education (ITiCSE 2009)
AN - 40210618; 5193322
JF - 14th ACM-SIGCSE Annual Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education (ITiCSE 2009)
AU - Cooper, Stephen
AU - Piotrowski, Victor
AU - Nickell, Christine
Y1 - 2009/07/03/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jul 03
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40210618?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=14th+ACM-SIGCSE+Annual+Conference+on+Innovation+and+Technology+in+Computer+Science+Education+%28ITiCSE+2009%29&rft.atitle=Addressing+Information+Assurance+Education+standards&rft.au=Cooper%2C+Stephen%3BPiotrowski%2C+Victor%3BNickell%2C+Christine&rft.aulast=Cooper&rft.aufirst=Stephen&rft.date=2009-07-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=14th+ACM-SIGCSE+Annual+Conference+on+Innovation+and+Technology+in+Computer+Science+Education+%28ITiCSE+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://db.grinnell.edu/sigcse/iticse2009/Program/Program.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy: in vivo application to diagnosis of oral carcinoma.
AN - 67449286; 19572006
AB - A compact clinically compatible fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) system was designed and built for intraoperative disease diagnosis and validated in vivo in a hamster oral carcinogenesis model. This apparatus allows for the remote image collection via a flexible imaging probe consisting of a gradient index objective lens and a fiber bundle. Tissue autofluorescence (337 nm excitation) was imaged using an intensified CCD with a gate width down to 0.2 ns. We demonstrate a significant contrast in fluorescence lifetime between tumor (1.77+/-0.26 ns) and normal (2.50+/-0.36 ns) tissues at 450 nm and an over 80% intensity decrease at 390 nm emission in tumor versus normal areas. The time-resolved images were minimally affected by tissue morphology, endogenous absorbers, and illumination. These results demonstrate the potential of FLIM as an intraoperative diagnostic technique.
JF - Optics letters
AU - Sun, Yinghua
AU - Phipps, Jennifer
AU - Elson, Daniel S
AU - Stoy, Heather
AU - Tinling, Steven
AU - Meier, Jeremy
AU - Poirier, Brian
AU - Chuang, Frank S
AU - Farwell, D Gregory
AU - Marcu, Laura
AD - Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California-Davis, NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Y1 - 2009/07/01/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jul 01
SP - 2081
EP - 2083
VL - 34
IS - 13
SN - 0146-9592, 0146-9592
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Animals
KW - Cheek -- pathology
KW - Cricetinae
KW - Mouth Neoplasms -- diagnosis
KW - Microscopy, Fluorescence -- instrumentation
KW - Microscopy, Fluorescence -- methods
KW - Mouth Neoplasms -- pathology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Optics+letters&rft.atitle=Fluorescence+lifetime+imaging+microscopy%3A+in+vivo+application+to+diagnosis+of+oral+carcinoma.&rft.au=Sun%2C+Yinghua%3BPhipps%2C+Jennifer%3BElson%2C+Daniel+S%3BStoy%2C+Heather%3BTinling%2C+Steven%3BMeier%2C+Jeremy%3BPoirier%2C+Brian%3BChuang%2C+Frank+S%3BFarwell%2C+D+Gregory%3BMarcu%2C+Laura&rft.aulast=Sun&rft.aufirst=Yinghua&rft.date=2009-07-01&rft.volume=34&rft.issue=13&rft.spage=2081&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Optics+letters&rft.issn=01469592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2009-10-14
N1 - Date created - 2009-07-02
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
Photochem Photobiol Sci. 2004 Aug;3(8):795-801 [15295637]
Annu Rev Phys Chem. 1996;47:555-606 [8930102]
J Oral Pathol Med. 1998 Nov;27(10):470-4 [9831958]
Clin Cancer Res. 2008 Apr 15;14(8):2396-404 [18413830]
J Biomed Opt. 2005 Nov-Dec;10(6):064026 [16409091]
J Biomed Opt. 2007 Mar-Apr;12(2):024014 [17477729]
Opt Lett. 2008 Mar 15;33(6):630-2 [18347733]
J Biomed Opt. 2005 Sep-Oct;10(5):051403 [16292940]
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Peerless Pathways to Find Peer Reviewers
AN - 57692108; 200909113
AB - Finding peer reviewers is an extremely challenging task not only for funding organizations, but also for journal editors and authors. Moreover, the same process that works for finding the best possible peer reviewers also proves very effective for finding the best possible collaborators or mentors. Web of Science (WOS) and Scopus are online databases that offer a wealth of features useful for anyone looking for peer reviewers. This article provides an overview of the special features of WOS and Scopus that enable interested parties to find peer reviewers. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Online
AU - Bianchi, Stephanie
AD - National Science Foundation wciicpb@comcast.net
Y1 - 2009/07//
PY - 2009
DA - July 2009
SP - 14
EP - 18
PB - Information Today Inc, Medford, NJ
VL - 33
IS - 4
SN - 0146-5422, 0146-5422
KW - Scholarly publishing
KW - Peer review
KW - Online data bases
KW - article
KW - 16.16: PUBLISHING
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/57692108?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Alisa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Online&rft.atitle=Peerless+Pathways+to+Find+Peer+Reviewers&rft.au=Bianchi%2C+Stephanie&rft.aulast=Bianchi&rft.aufirst=Stephanie&rft.date=2009-07-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=14&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Online&rft.issn=01465422&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA)
N1 - Date revised - 2015-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Peer review; Scholarly publishing; Online data bases
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Exposure and Effect Assessment of Aerosolized Red Tide Toxins (Brevetoxins) and Asthma
AN - 21074695; 10989530
AB - Background In previous studies we demonstrated statistically significant changes in reported symptoms for lifeguards, general beach goers, and persons with asthma, as well as statistically significant changes in pulmonary function tests (PFTs) in asthmatics, after exposure to brevetoxins in Florida red tide (Karenia brevis bloom) aerosols. Objectives In this study we explored the use of different methods of intensive ambient and personal air monitoring to characterize these exposures to predict self-reported health effects in our asthmatic study population. Methods We evaluated health effects in 87 subjects with asthma before and after 1 hr of exposure to Florida red tide aerosols and assessed for aerosolized brevetoxin exposure using personal and ambient samplers. Results After only 1 hr of exposure to Florida red tide aerosols containing brevetoxin concentrations > 57 ng/m super(3), asthmatics had statistically significant increases in self-reported respiratory symptoms and total symptom scores. However, we did not see the expected corresponding changes in PFT results. Significant increases in self-reported symptoms were also observed for those not using asthma medication and those living aY 1 mile from the coast. Conclusions These results provide additional evidence of health effects in asthmatics from ambient exposure to aerosols containing very low concentrations of brevetoxins, possibly at the lower threshold for inducing a biologic response (i.e., toxicity). Consistent with the literature describing self-reported symptoms as an accurate measure of asthmatic distress, our results suggest that self-reported symptoms are a valuable measure of the extent of health effects from exposure to aerosolized brevetoxins in asthmatic populations.
JF - Environmental Health Perspectives
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AU - Bean, Judy A
AU - Kirkpatrick, Barbara
AU - Cheng, Yung Sung
AU - Pierce, Richard
AU - Naar, Jerome
AU - Nierenberg, Kate
AU - Backer, Lorraine C
AU - Wanner, Adam
AU - Reich, Andrew
AU - Zhou, Yue
AU - Watkins, Sharon
AU - Henry, Mike
AU - Zaias, Julia
AU - Abraham, William M
AU - Benson, Janet
AU - Cassedy, Amy
AU - Hollenbeck, Julie
AU - Kirkpatrick, Gary
AU - Clarke, Tainya
AU - Baden, Daniel G
AD - National Science Foundation National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Miami, Florida, USA
Y1 - 2009/07//
PY - 2009
DA - Jul 2009
SP - 1095
EP - 1100
PB - US Government Printing Office, Superintendent of Documents, P.O. Box 371954 Pittsburgh PA 15250-7954 USA
VL - 117
IS - 7
SN - 0091-6765, 0091-6765
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - asthma
KW - brevetoxins
KW - harmful algal blooms (HABs)
KW - Karenia brevis
KW - red tides
KW - sensitive populations
KW - spirometry
KW - Noxious organisms
KW - Algal blooms
KW - USA, Florida
KW - Phytoplankton
KW - Respiratory diseases
KW - Public health
KW - Exposure
KW - Environmental monitoring
KW - ASW, USA, Florida
KW - Aerosols
KW - Asthma
KW - Toxins
KW - Coastal zone
KW - Brevetoxins
KW - Monitoring
KW - Pollution monitoring
KW - Symptoms
KW - Red tides
KW - Statistical analysis
KW - Assessments
KW - Respiratory function
KW - Drugs
KW - Coasts
KW - Marine
KW - Beaches
KW - Population studies
KW - Toxicity
KW - Samplers
KW - Lung
KW - Red Tide
KW - X 24370:Natural Toxins
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - Q1 08481:Productivity
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
KW - P 6000:TOXICOLOGY AND HEALTH
KW - ENA 01:Air Pollution
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21074695?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Health+Perspectives&rft.atitle=Exposure+and+Effect+Assessment+of+Aerosolized+Red+Tide+Toxins+%28Brevetoxins%29+and+Asthma&rft.au=Fleming%2C+Lora+E%3BBean%2C+Judy+A%3BKirkpatrick%2C+Barbara%3BCheng%2C+Yung+Sung%3BPierce%2C+Richard%3BNaar%2C+Jerome%3BNierenberg%2C+Kate%3BBacker%2C+Lorraine+C%3BWanner%2C+Adam%3BReich%2C+Andrew%3BZhou%2C+Yue%3BWatkins%2C+Sharon%3BHenry%2C+Mike%3BZaias%2C+Julia%3BAbraham%2C+William+M%3BBenson%2C+Janet%3BCassedy%2C+Amy%3BHollenbeck%2C+Julie%3BKirkpatrick%2C+Gary%3BClarke%2C+Tainya%3BBaden%2C+Daniel+G&rft.aulast=Fleming&rft.aufirst=Lora&rft.date=2009-07-01&rft.volume=117&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=1095&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Health+Perspectives&rft.issn=00916765&rft_id=info:doi/10.1289%2Fehp.0900673
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-05-13
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Environmental monitoring; Noxious organisms; Algal blooms; Symptoms; Coastal zone; Aerosols; Red tides; Phytoplankton; Public health; Beaches; Lung; Brevetoxins; Statistical analysis; Population studies; Asthma; Toxicity; Samplers; Toxins; Coasts; Pollution monitoring; Respiratory function; Respiratory diseases; Drugs; Assessments; Exposure; Red Tide; Monitoring; Karenia brevis; ASW, USA, Florida; USA, Florida; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.0900673
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Terrestrial carbonates of meteorites from Chile, Oman, Northwest Africa and Saudi Arabia
AN - 1366815343; 2013-045452
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Giscard, M D
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Hewitt, L R
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/07//
PY - 2009
DA - July 2009
EP - Abstract 5186
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 44, SUPPL.
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - Northwest Africa Meteorites
KW - Saudi Arabia
KW - isotopes
KW - Chile
KW - stable isotopes
KW - climate change
KW - carbon dioxide
KW - Cenozoic
KW - meteorites
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - paleotemperature
KW - carbon
KW - Asia
KW - Quaternary
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Oman
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - terrestrial age
KW - atmosphere
KW - weathering
KW - Arabian Peninsula
KW - South America
KW - upper Quaternary
KW - C-14
KW - leaching
KW - carbonates
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1366815343?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Terrestrial+carbonates+of+meteorites+from+Chile%2C+Oman%2C+Northwest+Africa+and+Saudi+Arabia&rft.au=Giscard%2C+M+D%3BJull%2C+A+J+T%3BHewitt%2C+L+R%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Giscard&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2009-07-01&rft.volume=44%2C+SUPPL.&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 72nd annual meeting of the Meteoritical Society
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 7
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2013-06-13
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Arabian Peninsula; Asia; atmosphere; C-13/C-12; C-14; carbon; carbon dioxide; carbonates; Cenozoic; Chile; climate change; isotope ratios; isotopes; leaching; meteorites; Northwest Africa Meteorites; Oman; paleotemperature; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; Saudi Arabia; South America; stable isotopes; terrestrial age; upper Quaternary; weathering
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Production rates of (super 14) C and (super 10) Be in Vaca Muerta (mesosiderite), Carancas and some recent falls
AN - 1366814090; 2013-045504
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Gisgard, M D
AU - McHargue, L R
AU - Kim, K J
AU - Reedy, R C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/07//
PY - 2009
DA - July 2009
EP - Abstract 5276
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 44, SUPPL.
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - ordinary chondrites
KW - stony meteorites
KW - isotopes
KW - Tamdakht Meteorite
KW - Tatahouine Meteorite
KW - L chondrites
KW - Vaca Muerta Meteorite
KW - meteorites
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - carbon
KW - Carancas Meteorite
KW - chondrites
KW - stony irons
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Be-10
KW - diogenite
KW - Saratov Meteorite
KW - H chondrites
KW - achondrites
KW - meteorite falls
KW - Knyahinya Meteorite
KW - metals
KW - mesosiderite
KW - C-14
KW - beryllium
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1366814090?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Production+rates+of+%28super+14%29+C+and+%28super+10%29+Be+in+Vaca+Muerta+%28mesosiderite%29%2C+Carancas+and+some+recent+falls&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+T%3BGisgard%2C+M+D%3BMcHargue%2C+L+R%3BKim%2C+K+J%3BReedy%2C+R+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2009-07-01&rft.volume=44%2C+SUPPL.&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 72nd annual meeting of the Meteoritical Society
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 7
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2013-06-13
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - achondrites; alkaline earth metals; Be-10; beryllium; C-14; Carancas Meteorite; carbon; chondrites; diogenite; H chondrites; isotopes; Knyahinya Meteorite; L chondrites; mesosiderite; metals; meteorite falls; meteorites; ordinary chondrites; radioactive isotopes; Saratov Meteorite; stony irons; stony meteorites; Tamdakht Meteorite; Tatahouine Meteorite; Vaca Muerta Meteorite
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The legacy and future of 'community' in NSF
T2 - 4th International Conference on Communities and Technologies (C & T 2009)
AN - 40170871; 5177375
JF - 4th International Conference on Communities and Technologies (C & T 2009)
AU - McDonald, David
Y1 - 2009/06/25/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jun 25
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40170871?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=4th+International+Conference+on+Communities+and+Technologies+%28C+%26+T+2009%29&rft.atitle=The+legacy+and+future+of+%27community%27+in+NSF&rft.au=McDonald%2C+David&rft.aulast=McDonald&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2009-06-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=4th+International+Conference+on+Communities+and+Technologies+%28C+%26+T+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cct2009.ist.psu.edu/program.cfm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - On the Role of Autonomics in Emerging Grid Ecosystems
T2 - 6th International Conference on Autonomic Computing and Communications (ICAC-09)
AN - 42133424; 5151782
JF - 6th International Conference on Autonomic Computing and Communications (ICAC-09)
AU - Parashar, Manish
Y1 - 2009/06/15/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jun 15
KW - Ecosystems
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42133424?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=6th+International+Conference+on+Autonomic+Computing+and+Communications+%28ICAC-09%29&rft.atitle=On+the+Role+of+Autonomics+in+Emerging+Grid+Ecosystems&rft.au=Parashar%2C+Manish&rft.aulast=Parashar&rft.aufirst=Manish&rft.date=2009-06-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=6th+International+Conference+on+Autonomic+Computing+and+Communications+%28ICAC-09%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.frombarcelona.org/GRIDmeetsAC/?page_id=37
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Boron isotope systematics in Central America volcanoes
AN - 753846103; 2010-076474
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Tonarini, S
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Agostini, S
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - June 2009
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 73
IS - 13S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Costa Rica
KW - silicate melts
KW - mantle
KW - Nicaragua
KW - stable isotopes
KW - melts
KW - magma transport
KW - transport
KW - magmas
KW - El Salvador
KW - B-11/B-10
KW - slabs
KW - volcanoes
KW - boron
KW - geochemistry
KW - Central America
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/753846103?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=Boron+isotope+systematics+in+Central+America+volcanoes&rft.au=Tonarini%2C+S%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BAgostini%2C+S%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Tonarini&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2009-06-01&rft.volume=73&rft.issue=13S&rft.spage=A1339&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 19th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 2
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - B-11/B-10; boron; Central America; Costa Rica; El Salvador; geochemistry; igneous rocks; isotopes; magma transport; magmas; mantle; melts; Nicaragua; silicate melts; slabs; stable isotopes; transport; volcanic rocks; volcanoes
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geochemical evidence for the climatic impact of ocean circulation
AN - 742910583; 2010-052602
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - McManus, Jerry F
AU - Yanchilina, Anastasia G
AU - Major, Candace O
AU - Eglinton, Timothy I
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - June 2009
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 73
IS - 13S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - Th-230
KW - isotopes
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - paleocirculation
KW - Europe
KW - Iberian Peninsula
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - deglaciation
KW - climate change
KW - Southern Europe
KW - Heinrich events
KW - Cenozoic
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - sediments
KW - protactinium
KW - Bermuda Rise
KW - Pa-231
KW - geochemistry
KW - continental margin
KW - Quaternary
KW - Pa-231/Th-230
KW - metals
KW - upper Quaternary
KW - Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
KW - thorium
KW - sea-surface temperature
KW - North Atlantic
KW - actinides
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742910583?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=Geochemical+evidence+for+the+climatic+impact+of+ocean+circulation&rft.au=McManus%2C+Jerry+F%3BYanchilina%2C+Anastasia+G%3BMajor%2C+Candace+O%3BEglinton%2C+Timothy+I%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=McManus&rft.aufirst=Jerry&rft.date=2009-06-01&rft.volume=73&rft.issue=13S&rft.spage=A860&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 19th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - actinides; Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation; Atlantic Ocean; Bermuda Rise; Cenozoic; climate change; continental margin; deglaciation; Europe; geochemistry; Heinrich events; Iberian Peninsula; isotopes; marine sediments; metals; North Atlantic; Pa-231; Pa-231/Th-230; paleo-oceanography; paleocirculation; paleoclimatology; protactinium; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; sea-surface temperature; sediments; Southern Europe; Th-230; thorium; upper Quaternary
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - B-Be- (super 10) Be-epsilon Nd systematics of the Kurile Arc
AN - 742903799; 2010-040488
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Morris, J D
AU - Dreyer, B M
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - June 2009
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 73
IS - 13S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - Russian Pacific region
KW - Sakhalin Russian Federation
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - fluid phase
KW - Russian Federation
KW - stable isotopes
KW - melts
KW - marine sediments
KW - Kuril Islands
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - Commonwealth of Independent States
KW - sediments
KW - rare earths
KW - prograde metamorphism
KW - Asia
KW - geochemistry
KW - Be-10/Be-9
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - isotope ratios
KW - subduction
KW - metamorphism
KW - partition coefficients
KW - lava
KW - island arcs
KW - metals
KW - slabs
KW - boron
KW - neodymium
KW - crust
KW - beryllium
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742903799?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=B-Be-+%28super+10%29+Be-epsilon+Nd+systematics+of+the+Kurile+Arc&rft.au=Morris%2C+J+D%3BDreyer%2C+B+M%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Morris&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2009-06-01&rft.volume=73&rft.issue=13S&rft.spage=A908&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 19th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 3
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Asia; Be-10/Be-9; beryllium; boron; Commonwealth of Independent States; crust; fluid phase; geochemistry; igneous rocks; island arcs; isotope ratios; isotopes; Kuril Islands; lava; mantle; marine sediments; melts; metals; metamorphism; neodymium; partition coefficients; prograde metamorphism; radioactive isotopes; rare earths; Russian Federation; Russian Pacific region; Sakhalin Russian Federation; sediments; slabs; stable isotopes; subduction; volcanic rocks
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The village clay: Recursive innovations and community self-fashioning among Sinhalese potters
AN - 60302055; 201001041
AB - Capital-intensive technological change among petty commodity producers is often thought to increase socio-economic and gender differentiation. But among the Sri Lankan potters described here, this appears not to have happened. Instead, the community has harnessed the power of kinship and memory to maintain egalitarian and communitarian values and practices, and sustain a fragile but eminently practical balance between the needs of individual households and the interests of the community they comprise and on which they depend. Building on economist W. Brian Arthur's theories of origination and archaeologist Sander van der Leeuw's work on potter agency, it is argued here that culture and social organization comprise support systems that are as vital as capital to successful technological change. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
AU - Winslow, Deborah
AD - National Science Foundation dwinslow@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - June 2009
SP - 254
EP - 275
PB - Blackwell Publishing, Oxford UK
VL - 15
IS - 2
SN - 1359-0987, 1359-0987
KW - Support Networks
KW - Collective Memory
KW - Cultural Values
KW - Kinship
KW - Egalitarianism
KW - Technological Change
KW - article
KW - 0514: culture and social structure; social anthropology
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LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-05
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Kinship; Collective Memory; Egalitarianism; Cultural Values; Support Networks; Technological Change
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2009.01552.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantifying the roles of igneous differentiation and chemical weathering on the formation of continental crust
AN - 50057288; 2010-030165
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Lee, C T A
AU - Shen, B
AU - Jacobsen, B
AU - Yin, Q Z
AU - Morton, D M
AU - Horodyskyj, U N
AU - Little, M G
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - June 2009
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 73
IS - 13S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - United States
KW - magmatic differentiation
KW - magnesium
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - Cretaceous
KW - igneous rocks
KW - continental crust
KW - Peninsular Ranges Batholith
KW - Upper Cretaceous
KW - stable isotopes
KW - California
KW - assimilation
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - batholiths
KW - geochemistry
KW - plutons
KW - North America
KW - chemical weathering
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - experimental studies
KW - isotope ratios
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - weathering
KW - Mesozoic
KW - emplacement
KW - case studies
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - intrusions
KW - Southern California
KW - Mg-26/Mg-24
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - fractional crystallization
KW - strontium
KW - crust
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 19th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; assimilation; batholiths; California; case studies; chemical weathering; continental crust; Cretaceous; crust; emplacement; experimental studies; fractional crystallization; geochemistry; igneous rocks; intrusions; isotope ratios; isotopes; magmas; magmatic differentiation; magnesium; Mesozoic; metals; Mg-26/Mg-24; North America; O-18/O-16; oxygen; Peninsular Ranges Batholith; plutonic rocks; plutons; quantitative analysis; Southern California; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; United States; Upper Cretaceous; weathering
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Varying Rate of RNA Chain Elongation during rrn Transcription in Escherichia coli
AN - 21294311; 11916728
AB - The value of the rRNA chain elongation rate in bacteria is an important physiological parameter, as it affects not only the rRNA promoter activity but also the free-RNA polymerase concentration and thereby the transcription of all genes. On average, rRNA chains elongate at a rate of 80 to 90 nucleotides (nt) per s, and the transcription of an entire rrn operon takes about 60 s (at 37C). Here we have analyzed a reported distribution obtained from electron micrographs of RNA polymerase molecules along rrn operons in E. coli growing at 2.5 doublings per hour (S. Quan, N. Zhang, S. French, and C. L. Squires, J. Bacteriol. 187:1632-1638, 2005). The distribution exhibits two peaks of higher polymerase density centered within the 16S and 23S rRNA genes. An evaluation of this distribution indicates that RNA polymerase transcribes the 5' leader region at speeds up to or greater than 250 nt/s. Once past the leader, transcription slows down to about 65 nt/s within the 16S gene, speeds up in the spacer region between the 16S and 23S genes, slows again to about 65 nt/s in the 23S region, and finally speeds up to a rate greater than 400 nt/s near the end of the operon. We suggest that the slowing of transcript elongation in the 16S and 23S sections is the result of transcriptional pauses, possibly caused by temporary interactions of the RNA polymerase with secondary structures in the nascent rRNA.
JF - Journal of Bacteriology
AU - Dennis, P P
AU - Ehrenberg, M
AU - Fange, D
AU - Bremer, H
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, Virginia 22230, pdennis@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - Jun 2009
SP - 3740
EP - 3746
PB - American Society for Microbiology, 1752 N Street N.W. Washington, DC 20036 USA
VL - 191
IS - 11
SN - 0021-9193, 0021-9193
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - rRNA 23S
KW - Secondary structure
KW - Transcription
KW - Nucleotides
KW - Protein structure
KW - rRNA
KW - Elongation
KW - Promoters
KW - DNA-directed RNA polymerase
KW - Spacer region
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - Operons
KW - rRNA 16S
KW - J 02310:Genetics & Taxonomy
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Bacteriology&rft.atitle=Varying+Rate+of+RNA+Chain+Elongation+during+rrn+Transcription+in+Escherichia+coli&rft.au=Dennis%2C+P+P%3BEhrenberg%2C+M%3BFange%2C+D%3BBremer%2C+H&rft.aulast=Dennis&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2009-06-01&rft.volume=191&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=3740&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Bacteriology&rft.issn=00219193&rft_id=info:doi/10.1128%2FJB.00128-09
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-03-01
N1 - Number of references - 23
N1 - Last updated - 2013-07-15
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Protein structure; Promoters; Elongation; rRNA; Spacer region; DNA-directed RNA polymerase; rRNA 23S; Secondary structure; Transcription; Operons; rRNA 16S; Nucleotides; Escherichia coli
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00128-09
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of microbial faecal sources in the New River in the United States-Mexican border region
AN - 20775440; 10281188
AB - Water samples were analysed to differentiate human and animal faecal contamination of the New River, Mexico/USA, by genotyping bacterial viruses detected in the samples. From 46 water samples collected from the New River, 372 plaques of male-specific coliphages were isolated and genotyped; 44% of the plaques were identified as F-RNA coliphages and further characterized into four groups. Group I was the most prevalent (56%), followed by group IV (25%), group III (10%) and group II (9%). Group III coliphages were only detected at the sampling site in the vicinity of the international boundary, indicating human faecal contamination. As the New River traverses through the US region, groups I and IV coliphages were predominantly identified, but no human-specific genotypes were detected. The study also found that water temperature influenced the prevalence of the relative proportions of F-RNA coliphages in the environmental water samples. The strategy used in this study appears to be a practical and reliable tool for monitoring and distinguishing between human and animal faecal contamination.
JF - Journal of Water and Health
AU - Rahman, R
AU - Alum, A
AU - Ryu, H
AU - Abbaszadegan, M
AD - Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Arizona State University, ECG 252, Tempe, AZ 85287-5306, USA, abbaszsiegan@ssu.edv
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - Jun 2009
SP - 267
EP - 275
VL - 7
IS - 2
SN - 1477-8920, 1477-8920
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Virology & AIDS Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Pollution Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Pollution monitoring
KW - Water Temperature
KW - Water sampling
KW - international boundaries
KW - Contamination
KW - Water Analysis
KW - Water Sampling
KW - Viruses
KW - Genotypes
KW - Freshwater
KW - Plaques
KW - Sampling
KW - Disease detection
KW - Feces
KW - International boundaries
KW - Rivers
KW - Fecal coliforms
KW - Genotyping
KW - Water Quality
KW - Water temperature
KW - USA
KW - Mexico
KW - Boundaries
KW - Monitoring
KW - water temperature
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - A 01450:Environmental Pollution & Waste Treatment
KW - SW 3020:Sources and fate of pollution
KW - Q5 08502:Methods and instruments
KW - AQ 00003:Monitoring and Analysis of Water and Wastes
KW - J 02430:Symbiosis, Antibiosis & Phages
KW - V 22310:Genetics, Taxonomy & Structure
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-05
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Rivers; Pollution monitoring; Contamination; Viruses; Genotypes; Disease detection; International boundaries; Genotyping; Boundaries; Plaques; Water temperature; Sampling; Fecal coliforms; international boundaries; Water sampling; water temperature; Water Temperature; Water Analysis; Water Sampling; Water Quality; Monitoring; Feces; USA; Mexico; Freshwater
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wh.2009.025
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Transferrin Receptor Targeted Lipopolyplexes for Delivery of Antisense Oligonucleotide G3139 in a Murine K562 Xenograft Model
AN - 20591046; 9299576
AB - Purpose: Transferrin (Tf) conjugated lipopolyplexes (LPs) carrying G3139, an antisense oligonucleotide for Bcl-2, were synthesized and evaluated in Tf receptor positive K562 erythroleukemia cells and then in a murine K562 xenograft model. Materials and Methods: Particle size and Zeta potentials of transferrin conjugated lipopolyplexs containing G3139 (Tf-LP-G3139) were measured by Dynamic Light Scattering and ZetaPALS. In vitro and in vivo sample's Bcl-2 downregulation was analyzed using Western blot and tumor tissue samples also exhibited by immunohistochemistry method. For athymic mice bearing with K562 xenograft tumors, tumor growth inhibition and survival rate were investigated. Nanoparticle distribution in 3-D cell cluster was observed by Laser scan confocal microscopy. IL-12 production in the plasma was measured by ELISA kit. Results: In vitro, Tf-LP-G3139 was more effective in inducing down regulation of Bcl-2 in K562 cells than non-targeted LP-G3139, free G3139 and mismatched control ODN-G4126 in the same formulation. In vivo Tf-LP-G3139 was less effective than free G3139 in Bcl-2 down regulation. 3-D cell cluster model diffusion results indeed indicated limited penetration of the LPs into the cell cluster. Finally, the therapeutic efficacies of Tf-LP-G3139 and free G3139 were determined in the K562 xenograft model. Tf-LP-G3139 showed slower plasma clearance, higher AUC, and greater accumulation in the tumor compared to free G3139. In addition, Tf-LP-G3139 was found to be more effective in tumor growth inhibition and prolonging mouse survival than free G3139. This was associated with increased spleen weight and IL-12 production in the plasma. Conclusion: The role of the immune system in the therapeutic response obtained with the Tf-LPs is necessary and in vitro 3-D cell cluster model can be a potential tool to evaluate the nanoparticle distribution.
JF - Pharmaceutical Research
AU - Zhang, Xulang
AU - Koh, Chee Guan
AU - Yu, Bo
AU - Liu, Shujun
AU - Piao, Longzhu
AU - Marcucci, Guido
AU - Lee, Robert J
AU - Lee, LJames
AD - NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC), The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 43210, USA, Lee.1339@osu.edu
Y1 - 2009/06//
PY - 2009
DA - Jun 2009
SP - 1516
EP - 1524
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17
VL - 26
IS - 6
SN - 0724-8741, 0724-8741
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Immunology Abstracts
KW - Particle size
KW - Western blotting
KW - Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
KW - Immune system
KW - Light scattering
KW - Animal models
KW - Spleen
KW - Cell culture
KW - Tumors
KW - Interleukin 12
KW - Antisense oligonucleotides
KW - Transferrin
KW - Transferrin receptors
KW - Erythroleukemia
KW - Zeta potential
KW - Confocal microscopy
KW - Lipopolysaccharides
KW - Lasers
KW - Diffusion
KW - Bcl-2 protein
KW - Xenografts
KW - nanoparticles
KW - Immunohistochemistry
KW - N 14810:Methods
KW - F 06920:Transplantation
KW - W 30900:Methods
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Particle size; Western blotting; Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; Immune system; Animal models; Light scattering; Spleen; Cell culture; Tumors; Antisense oligonucleotides; Interleukin 12; Transferrin; Transferrin receptors; Erythroleukemia; Zeta potential; Confocal microscopy; Lipopolysaccharides; Diffusion; Lasers; Xenografts; Bcl-2 protein; Immunohistochemistry; nanoparticles
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11095-009-9864-8
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Chemical and Electrochemical Properties of Trimetallicnitride Endohedral Fullerenes, M3N@C2n (M= Sc, Y, Er, Gd, Nd, Pr, Ce and La and n>=40)
T2 - 215th Meeting of the Electrochemical Society
AN - 42150739; 5158530
JF - 215th Meeting of the Electrochemical Society
AU - Echegoyen, Luis
Y1 - 2009/05/24/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 May 24
KW - Electrochemistry
KW - Fullerenes
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://ecsmeet7.peerx-press.org/jsp/mas/reportSymposiumList.jsp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Programs at the National Science Foundation That Support Teaching and Research Involving Undergraduate Students
T2 - 2009 Central Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society (CERMACS 2009)
AN - 42133188; 5152599
JF - 2009 Central Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society (CERMACS 2009)
AU - Holmes, Bert
Y1 - 2009/05/20/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 May 20
KW - Foundations
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://acs.confex.com/acs/cerm09/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Analysis of Environmental Sample DNA Extraction Efficiency for Quantitative Real-Time PCR of Fecal Indicator Bacteria Using a Commercial DNA Binding Matrix Purification Procedure
T2 - 109th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology
AN - 42143145; 5150927
JF - 109th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology
AU - Bartkowiak, J
AU - Wanless, D
AU - Sinigalliano, C
AU - Goodwin, K
Y1 - 2009/05/17/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 May 17
KW - Efficiency
KW - Environmental monitoring
KW - Fecal coliforms
KW - Purification
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - Nucleotide sequence
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://www.abstractsonline.com/plan/Browse.aspx
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 7 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756826165; 13871-090147_0007
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 7
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826165?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 2 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756826164; 13871-090147_0002
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 2
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756826164?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 1 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756825421; 13871-090147_0001
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 1
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756825421?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 6 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756825008; 13871-090147_0006
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 6
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756825008?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 3 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756825000; 13871-090147_0003
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 3
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 8 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756824851; 13871-090147_0008
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 8
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/756824851?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 5 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756824838; 13871-090147_0005
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 5
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Full+Text&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006). [Part 4 of 8]
T2 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 756824818; 13871-090147_0004
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
VL - 4
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - S&E Graduate Enrollments Accelerate in 2007; Enrollments of Foreign Students Reach New High. InfoBrief. NSF 09-314
AN - 61813847; ED507673
AB - U.S. enrollment in science and engineering (S&E) graduate programs in 2007 increased by 3.3% over comparable data for 2006. This is the highest annual growth rate since 2002 and is nearly double the 1.7% growth rate seen in 2006. First-time, full-time enrollment of foreign students (the terms "foreign student" and "temporary" visa holder are equivalent in this report) eclipsed its previous high, set in 2001, and total enrollment of temporary visa holders topped its 2003 high. Despite this growth, the proportion of S&E graduate students who are temporary visa holders remained below its peak level, set in 2002, because of growth in the numbers of U.S. citizens and permanent residents pursuing graduate-level study in S&E fields. The National Science Foundation-National Institutes of Health (NNSF-NIH) Survey of Graduate Students and Post-doctorates in Science and Engineering (GSS), which collects these data, was refined in 2007 to improve reporting. New fields were added to the survey, and some fields were reclassified. Because of these changes this InfoBrief presents 2007 data in two ways: (1) "2007new" counts report the data as collected using the new methodology; and (2) "2007old" counts reflect the data as they would have been collected in prior years. Current-year discussions in this InfoBrief are based on 2007new data. Differences between prior years and 2007 are based on 2007old data, and trends are presented this way. Survey changes and impacts on data collection are discussed in detail in the section "Survey Changes and Comparative Analysis." (Contains 3 tables, 1 figure and 4 notes.)
AU - Burns, Laura
AU - Einaudi, Peter
AU - Green, Patricia
Y1 - 2009/05//
PY - 2009
DA - May 2009
SP - 8
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Indigenous Populations
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Graduate Students
KW - Change
KW - Research Methodology
KW - Surveys
KW - Foreign Students
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Enrollment Trends
KW - Data Collection
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61813847?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of land surface representation and surface data assimilation on the simulation of an off-shore trough over the Arabian Sea
AN - 50365412; 2009-070139
AB - The accurate simulation of location and evolution of the off-shore trough and its associated inland precipitation is sensitive to the representation of the surface processes within a mesoscale model. The objectives of this study are (i) to investigate the effect of the Noah land surface model (LSM) over a multi-level soil slab model and (ii) focusing on an off-shore trough formed over the Arabian Sea during June 2002, assess the impact on the simulation of improved surface representation using surface data assimilation (SDA) and four-dimensional data assimilation (FDDA). The model used in this study is the Fifth Generation Mesoscale Model (MM5). Four sets of numerical experiments were performed to illustrate the study objectives, and the results of these different simulations are compared with one another, with the analysis, and with the observations. The inclusion of the Noah LSM was observed to contribute to a decrease in the surface moisture content and an increase in the ground temperature over the land regions during the day. These effects in turn resulted in an increase in the surface sensible heat flux and a decrease in the surface latent heat flux over the land during the day. Also, the inclusion of Noah LSM has strengthened the horizontal east-west gradients of the surface humidity due to land sea contrasts and simultaneously reduced the north-south gradients of surface humidity over the land during the day. As is evident in the comparison with ship observations, the inclusion of detailed land surface processes as well as surface data assimilation resulted in improved simulation of surface-sensible and latent heat fluxes. Moreover, the SDA run simulated the strongest vertical wind velocity fields as well as the associated potential vorticity fields as compared with the other runs. We conclude that the improvements in the land surface representation and surface data assimilation not only resulted in more accurate land surface boundary conditions, but also more accurate evolution of the dynamical processes which provided a more accurate simulation of the off shore trough.
JF - Global and Planetary Change
AU - Vinodkumar
AU - Chandrasekar, A
AU - Niyogi, Dev
AU - Alapaty, K
A2 - Xiao, Xiangming
A2 - Niyogi, Dev
A2 - Ojima, Dennis S.
Y1 - 2009/05//
PY - 2009
DA - May 2009
SP - 104
EP - 116
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 67
IS - 1-2
SN - 0921-8181, 0921-8181
KW - scale factor
KW - hydrology
KW - land cover
KW - numerical models
KW - data acquisition
KW - data processing
KW - atmosphere
KW - satellite methods
KW - Arabian Sea
KW - India
KW - case studies
KW - Indian Ocean
KW - humidity
KW - Indian Peninsula
KW - Asia
KW - meteorology
KW - remote sensing
KW - MODIS
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Global+and+Planetary+Change&rft.atitle=Impact+of+land+surface+representation+and+surface+data+assimilation+on+the+simulation+of+an+off-shore+trough+over+the+Arabian+Sea&rft.au=Vinodkumar%3BChandrasekar%2C+A%3BNiyogi%2C+Dev%3BAlapaty%2C+K&rft.aulast=Vinodkumar&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=67&rft.issue=1-2&rft.spage=104&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Global+and+Planetary+Change&rft.issn=09218181&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.gloplacha.2008.12.004
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/09218181
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - AGU 2005 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 26
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sketch maps
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Arabian Sea; Asia; atmosphere; case studies; data acquisition; data processing; humidity; hydrology; India; Indian Ocean; Indian Peninsula; land cover; meteorology; MODIS; numerical models; remote sensing; satellite methods; scale factor
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2008.12.004
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII (DRAFT SUPPLEMENT TO THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT OF SEPTEMBER 2006).
AN - 15225400; 13871
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatory Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleakala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (Red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. The Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomena are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. An unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wavelengths from visible through mid-infrared. After the evaluation of 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. This supplemental draft EIS considers two additional alternatives, specifically, the construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. It also evaluates the potential impacts associated with operation of commercial vehicles on the Haleakala National Park road during construction and operation of the ATST project. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Hawaiian petrel borrow habitat during nesting season. The Hawaiian goose and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui. PRIOR REFERENCES: For the abstract of the draft EIS, see 06-0427D, Volume 30, Number 3.
JF - EPA number: 090147, Volume I--416 pages, Volume II--675 pages, Volume III--583 pages, May 1, 2009
PY - 2009
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Biologic Assessments
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Assessments
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Pesticides
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/15225400?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Environmental+Impact+Statements%3A+Digests&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=report&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-05-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.title=ADVANCED+TECHNOLOGY+SOLAR+TELESCOPE%2C+HALEAKALA%2C+MAUI%2C+HAWAII+%28DRAFT+SUPPLEMENT+TO+THE+DRAFT+ENVIRONMENTAL+IMPACT+STATEMENT+OF+SEPTEMBER+2006%29.&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-16
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: May 1, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Power Control of High Speed Network Interconnects in Data Centers
T2 - 28th Annual Conference of the IEEE Communications Society (IEEE INFOCOM 2009)
AN - 41865248; 5078064
JF - 28th Annual Conference of the IEEE Communications Society (IEEE INFOCOM 2009)
AU - Kant, Krishna
Y1 - 2009/04/19/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Apr 19
KW - Data processing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41865248?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://users.encs.concordia.ca/~assi/hsn2009/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Biology in the 21st century, the life sciences in transition
T2 - 2009 Conference on Experimental Biology
AN - 40375729; 5291274
JF - 2009 Conference on Experimental Biology
AU - Collins, J
Y1 - 2009/04/18/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Apr 18
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40375729?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Conference+on+Experimental+Biology&rft.atitle=Biology+in+the+21st+century%2C+the+life+sciences+in+transition&rft.au=Collins%2C+J&rft.aulast=Collins&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2009-04-18&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Conference+on+Experimental+Biology&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://submissions.miracd.com/eb2009/Itinerary/SearchHome.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-28
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Discipline-based efforts to enhance undergraduate STEM education
AN - 57277884; 200908859
AB - Initiatives designed to enhance STEM undergraduate education have much in common, as well as distinctive differences by field. Adapted from the source document.
JF - New Directions for Teaching & Learning
AU - Ferrini-Mundy, Joan
AU - Gucler, Beste
AD - Michigan State University and the National Science Foundation's Division of Research on Learning and Informal Settings, in the Directorate for Education and Human Resources
Y1 - 2009/04//
PY - 2009
DA - April 2009
SP - 55
EP - 67
PB - Wiley, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA
VL - 2009
IS - 117
SN - 0271-0633, 0271-0633
KW - Curriculum
KW - Enhancement
KW - Undergraduate students
KW - article
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/57277884?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aassia&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=New+Directions+for+Teaching+%26+Learning&rft.atitle=Discipline-based+efforts+to+enhance+undergraduate+STEM+education&rft.au=Ferrini-Mundy%2C+Joan%3BGucler%2C+Beste&rft.aulast=Ferrini-Mundy&rft.aufirst=Joan&rft.date=2009-04-01&rft.volume=2009&rft.issue=117&rft.spage=55&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=New+Directions+for+Teaching+%26+Learning&rft.issn=02710633&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Ftl.344
LA - English
DB - Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
N1 - Date revised - 2009-05-04
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Curriculum; Enhancement; Undergraduate students
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/tl.344
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Product market competition and human resource practices in the retail food sector
AN - 37107576; 3843357
AB - In the wake of Wal-Mart and other mass merchandisers' entry into food retailing, the nature of competition in the industry has changed radically. Using longitudinal data on workers and firms to construct measures of compensation and churning for traditional food retailers, this paper examines how these measures change in response to mass merchandiser entry. While there is considerable heterogeneity across retail food establishments, human resource practices are persistent even in the face of new external competition. Reprinted by permission of Blackwell Publishing
JF - Industrial relations
AU - Davis, Elizabeth
AU - Freedman, Matthew
AU - Lane, Julia
AU - McCall, Brian
AU - Nestoriak, Nicole
AU - Park, Timothy
AD - University of Minnesota ; Cornell University ; National Science Foundation ; University of Michigan ; US Bureau of Labor Statistics ; University of Georgia
Y1 - 2009/04//
PY - 2009
DA - Apr 2009
SP - 350
EP - 371
VL - 48
IS - 2
SN - 0019-8676, 0019-8676
KW - Sociology
KW - Economics
KW - Retail trade
KW - Labour relations
KW - Human resources
KW - Supermarkets
KW - Personnel management
KW - U.S.A.
KW - Agricultural and food market
KW - Working conditions
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/37107576?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Industrial+relations&rft.atitle=Product+market+competition+and+human+resource+practices+in+the+retail+food+sector&rft.au=Davis%2C+Elizabeth%3BFreedman%2C+Matthew%3BLane%2C+Julia%3BMcCall%2C+Brian%3BNestoriak%2C+Nicole%3BPark%2C+Timothy&rft.aulast=Davis&rft.aufirst=Elizabeth&rft.date=2009-04-01&rft.volume=48&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=350&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Industrial+relations&rft.issn=00198676&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 7174 3993 6093; 10980 12812; 12394 10980 12812; 742 7711; 6099; 13713 4214; 9430 7625; 433 293 14
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Spatial contagion of predation risk affects colonization dynamics in experimental aquatic landscapes
AN - 20528255; 9223653
AB - Colonization rate is a critical factor determining abundance and diversity in spatially distinct communities. Beyond simple variation driven by random processes, many species select/avoid habitat patches based on variation in habitat quality. Perceived habitat quality and colonization dynamics of individual patches may be influenced by specific characteristics of neighboring patches. We demonstrate that abundance and diversity of colonizing aquatic beetles is a function of both spatial variation in predator presence/absence and risk contagion generated by the proximity of predator patches to predator-free patches. Spatial contagion of predation risk generated repulsive sources: high fitness patches that were avoided. Thus, colonization dynamics of spatially discrete communities depends not only on intrinsic patch characteristics, but on the specific characteristics of nearby patches. The landscape-level dynamics of communities and metacommunities, as well as the efficacy of habitat restoration and conservation efforts, depends on how habitat quality is assessed, correctly or incorrectly, by colonizing species.
JF - Ecology
AU - Resetarits, WJ Jr
AU - Binckley, CA
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230 USA, wresetar@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/04//
PY - 2009
DA - Apr 2009
SP - 869
EP - 876
VL - 90
IS - 4
SN - 0012-9658, 0012-9658
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; Entomology Abstracts; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Fitness
KW - Predation
KW - Abundance
KW - Landscape
KW - Predators
KW - Habitat
KW - colonization
KW - predators
KW - spatial distribution
KW - Colonization
KW - Perception
KW - Conservation
KW - abundance
KW - Z 05340:Ecology and Behavior
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20528255?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology&rft.atitle=Spatial+contagion+of+predation+risk+affects+colonization+dynamics+in+experimental+aquatic+landscapes&rft.au=Resetarits%2C+WJ+Jr%3BBinckley%2C+CA&rft.aulast=Resetarits&rft.aufirst=WJ&rft.date=2009-04-01&rft.volume=90&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=869&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology&rft.issn=00129658&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Fitness; Colonization; Landscape; Abundance; Predation; Conservation; Predators; Habitat; spatial distribution; Perception; colonization; abundance; predators
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Application of Cold-Weather Concreting Technology to Ground Modification
T2 - 2009 International Foundations Congress and Equipment Exposition (IFCEE 2009)
AN - 41900555; 5097564
JF - 2009 International Foundations Congress and Equipment Exposition (IFCEE 2009)
AU - Daniels, John
AU - Janardhanam, Rajaram
AU - Starnes, James
AU - DeBlasis, Nicholas
AU - Miles, Koyett
Y1 - 2009/03/15/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Mar 15
KW - Technology
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41900555?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+International+Foundations+Congress+and+Equipment+Exposition+%28IFCEE+2009%29&rft.atitle=Application+of+Cold-Weather+Concreting+Technology+to+Ground+Modification&rft.au=Daniels%2C+John%3BJanardhanam%2C+Rajaram%3BStarnes%2C+James%3BDeBlasis%2C+Nicholas%3BMiles%2C+Koyett&rft.aulast=Daniels&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2009-03-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+International+Foundations+Congress+and+Equipment+Exposition+%28IFCEE+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ifcee09.org/files/public/IFCEE09Program_022309_pm.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Sustainable Energy: Research Challenges and Opportunities
T2 - 60th Pittsburgh Conference and Expo on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy (Pittcon 2009)
AN - 41798631; 5039613
JF - 60th Pittsburgh Conference and Expo on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy (Pittcon 2009)
AU - Van Nguyen, Trung
Y1 - 2009/03/08/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Mar 08
KW - Sustainable development
KW - Energy research
KW - Energy
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41798631?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=60th+Pittsburgh+Conference+and+Expo+on+Analytical+Chemistry+and+Applied+Spectroscopy+%28Pittcon+2009%29&rft.atitle=Sustainable+Energy%3A+Research+Challenges+and+Opportunities&rft.au=Van+Nguyen%2C+Trung&rft.aulast=Van+Nguyen&rft.aufirst=Trung&rft.date=2009-03-08&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=60th+Pittsburgh+Conference+and+Expo+on+Analytical+Chemistry+and+Applied+Spectroscopy+%28Pittcon+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.pittcon.org/technical/finalprogram.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Transforming the Development of Software
T2 - 30th IEEE Aerospace Conference
AN - 41935346; 5128374
JF - 30th IEEE Aerospace Conference
AU - Urban, Joseph
Y1 - 2009/03/07/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Mar 07
KW - Computer programs
KW - Software
KW - U 5500:Geoscience
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41935346?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=30th+IEEE+Aerospace+Conference&rft.atitle=Transforming+the+Development+of+Software&rft.au=Urban%2C+Joseph&rft.aulast=Urban&rft.aufirst=Joseph&rft.date=2009-03-07&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=30th+IEEE+Aerospace+Conference&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.aeroconf.org/cgi-bin/start.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF in the Cloud: Cluster Exploratory (CLuE) and Data Intensive Computing (DC)
T2 - 40th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE 2009)
AN - 41670236; 4994882
JF - 40th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE 2009)
AU - French, Jim
Y1 - 2009/03/04/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Mar 04
KW - Clouds
KW - Data processing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41670236?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=40th+ACM+Technical+Symposium+on+Computer+Science+Education+%28SIGCSE+2009%29&rft.atitle=NSF+in+the+Cloud%3A+Cluster+Exploratory+%28CLuE%29+and+Data+Intensive+Computing+%28DC%29&rft.au=French%2C+Jim&rft.aulast=French&rft.aufirst=Jim&rft.date=2009-03-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=40th+ACM+Technical+Symposium+on+Computer+Science+Education+%28SIGCSE+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://db.grinnell.edu/sigcse/sigcse2009/Program/programAtAGlance.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Section 7033 of the America COMPETES Act: Hispanic-Serving Institutions and Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)
AN - 61812023; ED507672
AB - On March 1, 2009 from 2 pm to 5 pm at the Madison Hotel in Washington, DC, the National Science Foundation hosted a listening session, requesting input on Section 7033 of the America COMPETES (Creating Opportunities to Meaningfully Promote Excellence in Technology, Education, and Science) Act regarding Hispanic-serving institutions and science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education. The America COMPETES Act authorizes the National Science Foundation to establish a new program that would award grants on a competitive merit-reviewed basis to Hispanic-serving institutions or HSIs. This would supplement, but not supplant, what the Foundation already does with reference to Hispanic-serving institutions, and in connection with Hispanics in science, technology, engineering and mathematics or STEM. Introduction and welcoming remarks for the listening session were provided by: (1) Vic Santiago (Program Manager, National Science Foundation); (2) Fae Korsmo (Senior Advisor, National Science Foundation); (3) Cora B. Marrett (Acting Deputy Director, National Science Foundation); and (4) Antonio R. Flores (President & CEO, Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities). The speakers welcomed participants to share strategies they think are appropriate, the challenges, the successes, and the failures of the implementation of the Section 7033 of the America COMPETES Act regarding Hispanic-serving institutions and STEM education. The transcript of this meeting is presented herein.
AU - Gartrell, Sandra
Y1 - 2009/03/01/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Mar 01
SP - 71
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - California
KW - Womens Educational Equity Act
KW - Puerto Rico
KW - Florida
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Two Year Colleges
KW - Science Education
KW - Undergraduate Students
KW - Grants
KW - Professional Development
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Partnerships in Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Federal Legislation
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Colleges
KW - Technology Education
KW - Enrollment
KW - Community Colleges
KW - Hispanic American Students
KW - Awards
KW - Disproportionate Representation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61812023?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Constraints on the depths and temperatures of basaltic magma generation on Earth and other terrestrial planets using new thermobarometers for mafic magmas
AN - 50449915; 2009-044292
AB - Basaltic magmatism is a common feature of dynamically active terrestrial planets. The compositions of basalts reflect the temperatures and pressures of magma generation, providing windows into a planet's thermal state. Here, we present new thermobarometers based on magma Si and Mg contents to estimate the pressures and temperatures of basaltic magma generation on Earth and other terrestrial planets. Melting on Earth is intimately tied to plate tectonics and occurs mostly at plate boundaries: mid-ocean ridges and subduction zones. Beneath ridges, melting is driven by adiabatic decompression of passively upwelling mantle at 1300-1400 degrees C. Similar temperatures of melting are found for some arcs, suggesting that decompression melting is also important in arcs and that enhanced melting by hydrous fluxing is superimposed on this background. However, in arcs where melting temperatures are low (1200 degrees C), hydrous fluxing is required. Temperatures hotter than ridges (>1400 degrees C) are primarily found away from plate boundaries: beneath thick continental lithosphere and oceanic "hotspots" like Hawaii. Oceanic "hotspots" are thought to derive from deep thermal upwellings ("plumes"), but some hot anomalies beneath continents are not associated with deep-seated plumes and hence must have different origins, such as thermal insulation or radioactive heating of metasomatized zones. Melting on Venus, as constrained from spectral data of its surface, occurs at higher temperatures (1500 degrees C) and pressures than on Earth, perhaps because Venus is characterized by a thick and stagnant upper thermal boundary layer that retards convective heat loss. In this regard, Venus' upper thermal boundary layer may be analogous to thick continents on Earth. Mars appears to have cooled off to <1300 degrees C within its first billion years, but considerable controversy exists over the interpretation of young (<500 My) basaltic meteorites that record temperatures of 1550 degrees C. As for the first billion years of Earth's history, its upper mantle was hotter than 1700 degrees C, hence melting commenced at pressures greater than 7 GPa, where melts could have been denser than residual solids, resulting in downward fertilization of the Earth's mantle.
JF - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty A
AU - Luffi, Peter
AU - Plank, Terry
AU - Dalton, Heather
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2009/03//
PY - 2009
DA - March 2009
SP - 20
EP - 33
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 279
IS - 1-2
SN - 0012-821X, 0012-821X
KW - upwelling
KW - plumes
KW - magnesium
KW - geologic thermometry
KW - geologic barometry
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - subduction zones
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Venus
KW - partial melting
KW - mantle
KW - Mars
KW - komatiite
KW - thermal history
KW - silicon
KW - temperature
KW - melting
KW - basalts
KW - continents
KW - P-T conditions
KW - mafic magmas
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Earth
KW - plate boundaries
KW - Moon
KW - magmatism
KW - differentiation
KW - depth
KW - terrestrial planets
KW - planets
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - mid-ocean ridge basalts
KW - intraplate processes
KW - decompression
KW - mid-ocean ridges
KW - 04:Extraterrestrial geology
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50449915?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Earth+and+Planetary+Science+Letters&rft.atitle=Constraints+on+the+depths+and+temperatures+of+basaltic+magma+generation+on+Earth+and+other+terrestrial+planets+using+new+thermobarometers+for+mafic+magmas&rft.au=Lee%2C+Cin-Ty+A%3BLuffi%2C+Peter%3BPlank%2C+Terry%3BDalton%2C+Heather%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=Cin-Ty&rft.date=2009-03-01&rft.volume=279&rft.issue=1-2&rft.spage=20&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Earth+and+Planetary+Science+Letters&rft.issn=0012821X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.epsl.2008.12.020
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0012821X
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 103
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. geol. sketch map
N1 - SuppNotes - Supplemental information/data is available in the online version of this article
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EPSLA2
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; basalts; continents; decompression; depth; differentiation; Earth; geologic barometry; geologic thermometry; igneous rocks; intraplate processes; komatiite; mafic magmas; magmas; magmatism; magnesium; mantle; Mars; melting; metals; mid-ocean ridge basalts; mid-ocean ridges; Moon; P-T conditions; partial melting; planets; plate boundaries; plate tectonics; plumes; silicon; subduction zones; temperature; terrestrial planets; thermal history; upwelling; Venus; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2008.12.020
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Image Analyses-Based Nondisruptive Method to Quantify Algal Growth on Concrete Surfaces
AN - 20865146; 9178502
AB - A global ban on the use of tributyltin has resulted in the need to screen new antifouling agents to control algal growth in aquatic environments. Standard methods for the quantification of algal biomass are disruptive in nature; therefore, they are not applicable for the screening studies requiring successive observations at specified time intervals. The objective of this study was to develop a nondisruptive method to quantify algal growth on a variety of surfaces. Image analyses and chlorophyll extraction methods were used to quantify an algal biomass on a concrete surface containing different additives. For concrete samples containing single additives, the coefficient of determination between both techniques ranged from 0.74 to 0.84. However, for concrete samples containing multiple additives, the coefficient of determination of both methods ranged from 0.72 to 0.75. Results suggest that an image analyses technique can be used to accurately quantify various types of algae growing on a variety of solid surfaces.
JF - Journal of Environmental Engineering
AU - Alum, A
AU - Mobasher, B
AU - Rashid, A
AU - Abbaszadegan, M
AD - National Science Foundation Water Quality Center andcProfessor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Arizona State Univ., P.O. Box 875306, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA, Abbaszadegan@asu.edu
Y1 - 2009/03//
PY - 2009
DA - Mar 2009
SP - 185
EP - 190
VL - 135
IS - 3
SN - 0733-9372, 0733-9372
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Environment Abstracts
KW - Chlorophyll
KW - Image processing
KW - Biomass
KW - Concrete
KW - Aquatic environment
KW - Tributyltin
KW - Growth
KW - Antifouling substances
KW - Additives
KW - Algae
KW - Q2 09282:Materials technology, corrosion, fouling and boring
KW - Q5 08501:General
KW - Q1 08542:Prevention and control
KW - K 03320:Cell Biology
KW - ENA 19:Water Pollution
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20865146?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aasfaaquaticpollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Environmental+Engineering&rft.atitle=Image+Analyses-Based+Nondisruptive+Method+to+Quantify+Algal+Growth+on+Concrete+Surfaces&rft.au=Alum%2C+A%3BMobasher%2C+B%3BRashid%2C+A%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+M&rft.aulast=Alum&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2009-03-01&rft.volume=135&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=185&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Environmental+Engineering&rft.issn=07339372&rft_id=info:doi/10.1061%2F%28ASCE%290733-9372%282009%29135%3A3%28185%29
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-05-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Antifouling substances; Tributyltin; Algae; Chlorophyll; Image processing; Biomass; Aquatic environment; Growth; Additives; Concrete
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9372(2009)135:3(185)
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Materials Research Support at the National Science Foundation
T2 - 138th Annual Meeting and Exhibition of the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS 2009)
AN - 41768104; 5030335
JF - 138th Annual Meeting and Exhibition of the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS 2009)
AU - Ardell, Alan
Y1 - 2009/02/15/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Feb 15
KW - Foundations
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41768104?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=138th+Annual+Meeting+and+Exhibition+of+the+Minerals%2C+Metals+and+Materials+Society+%28TMS+2009%29&rft.atitle=Materials+Research+Support+at+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Ardell%2C+Alan&rft.aulast=Ardell&rft.aufirst=Alan&rft.date=2009-02-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=138th+Annual+Meeting+and+Exhibition+of+the+Minerals%2C+Metals+and+Materials+Society+%28TMS+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.tms.org/Meetings/Annual-09/PDFs/AM09finalProgram.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Results of the U.S. Program in IPY 2007-2008
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2009)
AN - 41911771; 5108141
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2009)
AU - Erb, Karl
Y1 - 2009/02/12/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Feb 12
KW - USA
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41911771?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2009%29&rft.atitle=Results+of+the+U.S.+Program+in+IPY+2007-2008&rft.au=Erb%2C+Karl&rft.aulast=Erb&rft.aufirst=Karl&rft.date=2009-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.abstractsonline.com/viewer/browseOptions.asp?MKey=8AA65090- 37AD-4C29-9CF1-9BCD6EFA2210&AKey=82DF1193-261B-4248-AC6B-CACD0186BD6 B
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - International Research Facilities
T2 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2009)
AN - 41880632; 5108196
JF - 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS 2009)
AU - Bement, Arden
Y1 - 2009/02/12/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Feb 12
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41880632?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2009+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2009%29&rft.atitle=International+Research+Facilities&rft.au=Bement%2C+Arden&rft.aulast=Bement&rft.aufirst=Arden&rft.date=2009-02-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2009+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Association+for+the+Advancement+of+Science+%28AAAS+2009%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.abstractsonline.com/viewer/browseOptions.asp?MKey=8AA65090- 37AD-4C29-9CF1-9BCD6EFA2210&AKey=82DF1193-261B-4248-AC6B-CACD0186BD6 B
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Disaster Research and Social Network Analysis: Examples of the Scientific Understanding of Human Dynamics at the National Science Foundation
AN - 61744602; 200921420
AB - Abstract not available.
JF - Population Research and Policy Review
AU - Suter, Larry
AU - Birkland, Thomas
AU - Larter, Raima
AD - Division of Research, Evaluation and Communication, Education and Human Resources Directorate, The National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230, USA suter@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2009/02//
PY - 2009
DA - February 2009
SP - 1
EP - 10
PB - Springer, Dordrecht The Netherlands
VL - 28
IS - 1
SN - 0167-5923, 0167-5923
KW - Network Analysis
KW - Natural Disasters
KW - article
KW - 2681: environmental interactions; disaster studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61744602?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Population+Research+and+Policy+Review&rft.atitle=Disaster+Research+and+Social+Network+Analysis%3A+Examples+of+the+Scientific+Understanding+of+Human+Dynamics+at+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Suter%2C+Larry%3BBirkland%2C+Thomas%3BLarter%2C+Raima&rft.aulast=Suter&rft.aufirst=Larry&rft.date=2009-02-01&rft.volume=28&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Population+Research+and+Policy+Review&rft.issn=01675923&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11113-008-9109-2
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2010-10-21
N1 - Number of references - 6
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - PRPRE8
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Network Analysis; Natural Disasters
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11113-008-9109-2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Scientific Publishing: the Dilemma of Research Funding Organisations
AN - 57275248; 200912126
AB - Present changes in scientific publishing, especially those summarised by the term "Open Access" (OA), may ultimately lead to the complete replacement of a reader-paid to an author, or funding-paid, publication system. This transformation would shift the financial burden for scientific publishing from the Research Performing Organisations (RPOs), particularly from scientific libraries, universities, etc, to the Research Funding Organisations (RFOs). The transition phase is difficult; it leads to double funding of OA publications (by subscriptions and author-sponsored OA) and may thus increase the overall costs of scientific publishing. This may explain why - with a few exceptions - RFOs have not been at the forefront of the OA paradigm in the past. In 2008, the General Assembly of EUROHORCs, the European organisation of the heads of research councils, agreed to recommend to its member organisations at least a minimal standard of Open Access based on the Berlin Declaration of 2003 (green way of OA). In the long run, the publishing system needs some fundamental changes to reduce the present costs and to keep up its potential. In order to design a new system, all players have to cooperate and be ready to throw overboard some old traditions, lovable as they may be. Adapted from the source document.
JF - European Review
AU - Imboden, Dieter M
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation SNSF, Wildhainweg 3, PO Box 8232, CH-3001 Bern, Switzerland dimboden@snf.ch
Y1 - 2009/02//
PY - 2009
DA - February 2009
SP - 23
EP - 31
PB - Cambridge University Press, UK
VL - 17
IS - 1
SN - 1062-7987, 1062-7987
KW - Scholarly communication
KW - Scientific research
KW - Periodicals
KW - Access
KW - Electronic publishing
KW - article
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/57275248?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aassia&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=European+Review&rft.atitle=Scientific+Publishing%3A+the+Dilemma+of+Research+Funding+Organisations&rft.au=Imboden%2C+Dieter+M&rft.aulast=Imboden&rft.aufirst=Dieter&rft.date=2009-02-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=23&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=European+Review&rft.issn=10627987&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017%2FS1062798709000544
LA - English
DB - Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
N1 - Date revised - 2010-10-21
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Access; Periodicals; Scholarly communication; Electronic publishing; Scientific research
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1062798709000544
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemical analysis in vivo and in vitro by Raman spectroscopy-from single cells to humans
AN - 20599893; 9312293
AB - The gold standard for clinical diagnostics of tissues is immunofluorescence staining. Toxicity of many fluorescent dyes precludes their application in vivo. Raman spectroscopy, a chemically specific, label-free diagnostic technique, is rapidly gaining acceptance as a powerful alternative. It has the ability to probe the chemical composition of biological materials in a non-destructive and mostly non-perturbing manner. We review the most recent developments in Raman spectroscopy in the life sciences, detailing advances in technology that have improved the ability to screen for diseases. Its role in the monitoring of biological function and mapping the cellular chemical microenvironment will be discussed. Applications including endoscopy, surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS), and coherent Raman scattering (CRS) will be reviewed.
JF - Current Opinion in Biotechnology
AU - Wachsmann-Hogiu, Sebastian
AU - Weeks, Tyler
AU - Huser, Thomas
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, 2700 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA, trhuser@ucdavis.edu
Y1 - 2009/02//
PY - 2009
DA - Feb 2009
SP - 63
EP - 73
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:usinfo-f@elsevier.com], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 20
IS - 1
SN - 0958-1669, 0958-1669
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Raman spectroscopy
KW - Reviews
KW - Probes
KW - Fluorescent indicators
KW - Microenvironments
KW - Toxicity
KW - Immunofluorescence
KW - Mapping
KW - Endoscopy
KW - W 30910:Imaging
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20599893?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Current+Opinion+in+Biotechnology&rft.atitle=Chemical+analysis+in+vivo+and+in+vitro+by+Raman+spectroscopy-from+single+cells+to+humans&rft.au=Wachsmann-Hogiu%2C+Sebastian%3BWeeks%2C+Tyler%3BHuser%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Wachsmann-Hogiu&rft.aufirst=Sebastian&rft.date=2009-02-01&rft.volume=20&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=63&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Current+Opinion+in+Biotechnology&rft.issn=09581669&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.copbio.2009.02.006
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Raman spectroscopy; Reviews; Probes; Microenvironments; Fluorescent indicators; Mapping; Immunofluorescence; Toxicity; Endoscopy
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.copbio.2009.02.006
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein A-based antibody immobilization onto polymeric microdevices for enhanced sensitivity of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
AN - 20139619; 10248105
AB - Highly efficient antibody immobilization is extremely crucial for the development of high-performance polymeric microdevices for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In this article, a site-selective tyrosinase (TR)-catalyzed protein A strategy for antibody immobilization was developed to enhance the sensitivity of ELISA in poly-(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) microchannels for interferon- (IFN-) assay. To effectively immobilize the target antibodies, oxygen plasma was first used to activate the inert PMMA. This is followed by poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI) coating, an amine-containing functional polymer. For comparison, protein A was also immobilized through the commonly used amine-glutaraldehyde (GA) chemistry. Oxygen plasma treatment effectively increased the amount of PEI attachment and subsequent binding efficiency of the primary antibody. The antibody immobilized via TR-catalyzed protein A was able to provide much better specific antigen capture efficiency than GA chemistry due to the optimal spacing and orientation. Consequently, by using this new method, the detection signal and the signal-to-noise ratio of the ELISA immunoassay in microdevices were all significantly improved. In comparison to the standard assay carried out in the 96-well microtiter plate, the treated microchannels exhibited a broader detection range and a shorter detection time. And the detection limit was also decreased to 20 pg/mL, much lower than that obtained in other microdevices. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009; 102: 891-901.
JF - Biotechnology and Bioengineering
AU - Yuan, Yuan
AU - He, Hongyan
AU - Lee, L James
AD - Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices, The Ohio State University, 140 West 19th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210; , lee.31@osu.edu
Y1 - 2009/02//
PY - 2009
DA - Feb 2009
SP - 891
EP - 901
PB - John Wiley & Sons, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030 USA, [mailto:custserv@wiley.com], [URL:http://www.wiley.com/]
VL - 102
IS - 3
SN - 0006-3592, 0006-3592
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Interferon
KW - Oxygen
KW - Antibodies
KW - Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
KW - polymethylmethacrylate
KW - Immobilization
KW - Monophenol monooxygenase
KW - Coatings
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20139619?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biotechnology+and+Bioengineering&rft.atitle=Protein+A-based+antibody+immobilization+onto+polymeric+microdevices+for+enhanced+sensitivity+of+enzyme-linked+immunosorbent+assay&rft.au=Yuan%2C+Yuan%3BHe%2C+Hongyan%3BLee%2C+L+James&rft.aulast=Yuan&rft.aufirst=Yuan&rft.date=2009-02-01&rft.volume=102&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=891&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biotechnology+and+Bioengineering&rft.issn=00063592&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fbit.22136
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Oxygen; Interferon; Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; Antibodies; polymethylmethacrylate; Monophenol monooxygenase; Immobilization; Coatings
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bit.22136
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Overview of the Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES)
T2 - 88th Annual Meeting of the Transpotations Research Board
AN - 41745714; 5038511
JF - 88th Annual Meeting of the Transpotations Research Board
AU - Pauschke, Joy
Y1 - 2009/01/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jan 11
KW - Simulation
KW - Structural engineering
KW - Earthquakes
KW - Reviews
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41745714?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=88th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Transpotations+Research+Board&rft.atitle=Overview+of+the+Network+for+Earthquake+Engineering+Simulation+%28NEES%29&rft.au=Pauschke%2C+Joy&rft.aulast=Pauschke&rft.aufirst=Joy&rft.date=2009-01-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=88th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Transpotations+Research+Board&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.trb.org/meeting/2009/PDFs/TRBAM09.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Water in the 21st century--a reality check
T2 - 23rd Conference on Hydrology
AN - 41704546; 5005151
JF - 23rd Conference on Hydrology
AU - Stephens, Pamela
AU - Hooke, W
Y1 - 2009/01/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jan 11
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41704546?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=23rd+Conference+on+Hydrology&rft.atitle=Water+in+the+21st+century--a+reality+check&rft.au=Stephens%2C+Pamela%3BHooke%2C+W&rft.aulast=Stephens&rft.aufirst=Pamela&rft.date=2009-01-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=23rd+Conference+on+Hydrology&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/89annual/techprogram/programexpanded_512.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF and new opportunities in space weather
T2 - Sixth Symposium on Space Weather
AN - 41702481; 5006232
JF - Sixth Symposium on Space Weather
AU - Killeen, Timothy
AU - Behnke, R
Y1 - 2009/01/11/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jan 11
KW - Weather
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41702481?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/89annual/techprogram/programexpanded_514.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Observed Ozone in the Troposphere and Stratosphere in Varying Atmospheric Conditions
T2 - Eighth Annual AMS Student Conference and Career Fair
AN - 41735549; 5022561
JF - Eighth Annual AMS Student Conference and Career Fair
AU - Guerrero, Jessica
Y1 - 2009/01/10/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jan 10
KW - Ozone
KW - Stratosphere
KW - Troposphere
KW - Atmospheric conditions
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41735549?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=Eighth+Annual+AMS+Student+Conference+and+Career+Fair&rft.atitle=Observed+Ozone+in+the+Troposphere+and+Stratosphere+in+Varying+Atmospheric+Conditions&rft.au=Guerrero%2C+Jessica&rft.aulast=Guerrero&rft.aufirst=Jessica&rft.date=2009-01-10&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eighth+Annual+AMS+Student+Conference+and+Career+Fair&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/89annual/techprogram/programexpanded_529.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - First Year Dsp Education in the Context of Ece Curriculum Reform
T2 - 13th IEEE Digital Signal Processing Workshop and 5th Workshop on Signal Processing Education
AN - 41959740; 5129707
JF - 13th IEEE Digital Signal Processing Workshop and 5th Workshop on Signal Processing Education
AU - Wood, Sally
AU - Kemnitzer, Susan
Y1 - 2009/01/04/
PY - 2009
DA - 2009 Jan 04
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41959740?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.2009dsp.org/review/SessionIndex.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Networks of coordination: Swiss business associations as an intermediary between business, politics and administration during the 20th century
AN - 896016916; 4235409
AB - Until the 1990's, Switzerland could be classified as either a corporatist, cooperative or coordinated market economy where non-market mechanisms of coordination among economic and political actors were very important. In this respect, Business Interest Associations (BIAs) played a key role. The aim of this paper is to look at the historical evolution of the five main peak Swiss BIAs through network analysis for five assorted dates during the 20th century (1910, 1937, 1957, 1980 and 2000) while relying on a database that includes more than 12,000 people. First, we examine the logic of membership in these associations, which allows us to analyze their position and function within the network of the Swiss economic elite. Until the 1980's, BIAs took part in the emergence and consolidation of a closely meshed national network, which declined during the two last decades of the 20th century. Second, we investigate the logic of influence of these associations by looking at the links they maintained with the political and administrative worlds through their links to the political parties and Parliament, and to the administration via the extra-parliamentary commissions (corporatist bodies). In both cases, the recent dynamic of globalization called into question the traditional role of BIAs. Reprinted by permission of Berkeley Electronic Press
JF - Business and politics
AU - David, Thomas
AU - Ginalski, Stéphanie
AU - Mach, André
AU - Rebmann, Frédéric
AD - Université de Lausanne ; Swiss National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2009/01//
PY - 2009
DA - Jan 2009
VL - 11
IS - 4
SN - 1369-5258, 1369-5258
KW - Political Science
KW - Business community
KW - Business networks
KW - Globalization
KW - Government-business relations
KW - Political roles
KW - Interest groups
KW - Switzerland
KW - Political parties
KW - Network analysis
KW - Political science
KW - History
KW - Elites
KW - Economic elites
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Business+and+politics&rft.atitle=Networks+of+coordination%3A+Swiss+business+associations+as+an+intermediary+between+business%2C+politics+and+administration+during+the+20th+century&rft.au=David%2C+Thomas%3BGinalski%2C+St%C3%A9phanie%3BMach%2C+Andr%C3%A9%3BRebmann%2C+Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric&rft.aulast=David&rft.aufirst=Thomas&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Business+and+politics&rft.issn=13695258&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - SuppNotes - Online only
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 8631 971 8634; 4178 11935 5837 2360 2688 2449 10404 11936; 5889; 9778; 5587 5581 5205 1841; 1864 8634; 6634 9750 10454; 9750; 1846 2603; 5517 3893 3921 9653 11783; 9775 11099; 3925 4178 11935 5837 2360 2688 2449 10404 11936; 408 462 129
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2009. NSF 09-305
AN - 860370132; ED516939
AB - "Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering" provides statistical information about the participation of women, minorities, and persons with disabilities in science and engineering education and employment. Its primary purpose is to serve as an information source; it offers no endorsement of or recommendations about policies or programs. National Science Foundation reporting on this topic is mandated by the Science and Engineering Equal Opportunities Act (Public Law 96-516). This report contains charts and data tables organized by topic (e.g., undergraduate enrollment, graduate degrees, employment) and also by group (e.g., Hispanics, minority women, persons with disabilities). The charts contain bulleted information describing key points. This report is a dynamic Web-based information source with data updated as they become available. Tables and figures in the report are current as of the Web release date, which appears at the bottom of each table and figure. Presentation slides, which are charts in PowerPoint, graphic, and spreadsheet formats, are provided for easy downloading. A complete update of the report is issued every 2 years for transmittal to Congress and federal agency heads. The Technical Notes section provides information on racial/ethnic and disability reporting categories, on the primary NSF and non-NSF sources of the data, and on sampling errors. (Contains 20 figures and 114 tables.)
Y1 - 2009
PY - 2009
DA - 2009
SP - 295
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Tenure
KW - Graduate Students
KW - Employment Level
KW - Salaries
KW - Unemployment
KW - Males
KW - African Americans
KW - STEM Education
KW - Majors (Students)
KW - Employment
KW - American Indians
KW - Scientists
KW - Minority Groups
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Hispanic Americans
KW - Enrollment Trends
KW - Disabilities
KW - Charts
KW - Alaska Natives
KW - Age Differences
KW - Institutional Characteristics
KW - Geographic Location
KW - Citizenship
KW - Undergraduate Students
KW - Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
KW - Business
KW - Masters Degrees
KW - College Freshmen
KW - Womens Education
KW - Racial Differences
KW - Equal Education
KW - Associate Degrees
KW - Fellowships
KW - Part Time Employment
KW - Bachelors Degrees
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Intention
KW - Females
KW - Disproportionate Representation
KW - Industry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/860370132?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Numeric modeling of plume-lithosphere interaction and the magmatism associated with the Yellowstone Hotspot track
AN - 742875021; 2010-036207
JF - Geophysical Research Abstracts
AU - Manea, V C
AU - Manea, M
AU - Leeman, W
AU - Schutt, D
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009
PY - 2009
DA - 2009
SP - EGU2009
EP - 3871
PB - Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU), Katlenburg-Lindau
VL - 11
SN - 1029-7006, 1029-7006
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - plumes
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - crustal thinning
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - phase transitions
KW - melting
KW - basalts
KW - Archean
KW - mantle plumes
KW - P-T conditions
KW - Idaho
KW - Precambrian
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - lithosphere
KW - depth
KW - models
KW - Wyoming
KW - plate tectonics
KW - magmas
KW - mid-ocean ridge basalts
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 17A:General geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742875021?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.atitle=Numeric+modeling+of+plume-lithosphere+interaction+and+the+magmatism+associated+with+the+Yellowstone+Hotspot+track&rft.au=Manea%2C+V+C%3BManea%2C+M%3BLeeman%2C+W%3BSchutt%2C+D%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Manea&rft.aufirst=V&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.issn=10297006&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.copernicus.org/EGU/gra/gra.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - European Geosciences Union general assembly 2009
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Archean; basalts; crustal thinning; depth; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; lithosphere; magmas; mantle; mantle plumes; melting; mid-ocean ridge basalts; models; P-T conditions; phase transitions; plate tectonics; plumes; Precambrian; Snake River plain; United States; volcanic rocks; Wyoming; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Solving the Puzzle: Researching the Impacts of Climate Change Around the World
AN - 58844315; 2010-477176
AB - This report addresses some of the major questions facing climate change researchers, and how those puzzles are being addressed by NSF-funded activities. Complex computer models are being developed and refined to predict Earth's future climate. Observations of climate conditions from observatory networks distributed in Earth's oceans, polar regions, land masses, and near- Earth orbit improve the accuracy of the climate models. Records of Earth's past climate provide important insights into the mechanisms involved in climate cycles of the past, and can help to refine computational models by allowing researchers to simulate past climate. But understanding climate is only part of the story -- as we improve our knowledge of how Earth's climate is changing, we also improve our ability to cope with the impacts of global climate change and variability. Through social, economic, and behavioral science, researchers are learning how human behavior factors into climate change -- and how human behavior can be modified to ameliorate our impact on Earth's climate. Physical scientists and engineers are developing alternative ways of creating, storing, and using energy to reduce the amount of carbon that human activities contribute to the atmosphere. Researchers are also building the scientific foundation for the tools that humanity may need in the future to counteract the effects of global climate change. Figures.
JF - National Science Foundation, 2009, iv+109 pp.
AU - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2009///0,
PY - 2009
DA - 0, 2009
PB - National Science Foundation
KW - Environment and environmental policy - Weather, climate, and natural disasters
KW - Science and technology policy - Chemistry, geology, and physics
KW - Environment and environmental policy - Ecology and environmental policy
KW - Environment and environmental policy - Oceanography and ocean resources
KW - Science and technology policy - Scientists, engineers, and technical workers
KW - Environment
KW - Scientists
KW - Earth
KW - Ocean
KW - Land
KW - Economics
KW - Climate
KW - Polar regions
KW - Global warming
KW - book
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/58844315?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/PAIS+Index&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=National+Science+Foundation&rft.aulast=National+Science+Foundation&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Solving+the+Puzzle%3A+Researching+the+Impacts+of+Climate+Change+Around+the+World&rft.title=Solving+the+Puzzle%3A+Researching+the+Impacts+of+Climate+Change+Around+the+World&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.nsf.gov/news/nsf09202/nsf09202.pdf
LA - English
DB - PAIS Index
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-07
N1 - Publication note - National Science Foundation, 2009
N1 - SuppNotes - NSF 09-202
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Cooperation at the Poles? Placing the first International Polar Year in the context of nineteenth-century scientific exploration and collaboration
AN - 50402955; 2009-064588
AB - The first International Polar Year (IPY) of 1882-1883 came at the end of a half-century of efforts at collaborative and/or cooperative research among the scientific communities of Europe and the United States. These efforts included the Magnetic Crusade, a cooperative endeavor to solve fundamental questions in terrestrial magnetism; a variety of plans for international cooperation in the gathering of meteorological data; the observations of the transits of Venus; and the establishment of the Smithsonian's international network to alert astronomers of new phenomena. It was also a half century when scientific exploration of the polar regions was still problematic in terms of the safety and survival of the investigator. This paper will look at scientific cooperation and earlier Polar research as the background for the first IPY, with special emphasis on the leadership role taken by the Smithsonian Institution.
JF - Smithsonian at the poles
AU - Rothenberg, Marc
Y1 - 2009
PY - 2009
DA - 2009
PB - Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, Washington, DC
SN - 9780978846015; 097884601X
KW - International Polar Year 1882-83
KW - history
KW - IPY 2007-08 Education, Outreach and Communication Publications
KW - International Polar Year 2007-08
KW - international cooperation
KW - Smithsonian Institution
KW - meteorology
KW - astronomy
KW - magnetic field
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50402955?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/GeoRef&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Rothenberg%2C+Marc&rft.aulast=Rothenberg&rft.aufirst=Marc&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=9780978846015&rft.btitle=Cooperation+at+the+Poles%3F+Placing+the+first+International+Polar+Year+in+the+context+of+nineteenth-century+scientific+exploration+and+collaboration&rft.title=Cooperation+at+the+Poles%3F+Placing+the+first+International+Polar+Year+in+the+context+of+nineteenth-century+scientific+exploration+and+collaboration&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Smithsonian at the poles
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 41
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-09-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Perspective: Plant biology-A quiet pioneer
AN - 20604598; 9321066
AB - The study of plants contributed to establishment of the foundation for modern biology. For example, it was observations first made in plants that led to two fundamental theories of biology-cell theory and genetics. Throughout the 20th century, plant biology continued to make contributions to the conceptual and technological advances in basic biology and biotechnology, although plant biology's contributions were not always recognized by the field of biology at large. Plants have direct applications to today's major societal challenges including food security, climate change, energy, and sustainability. Solutions to these challenges require innovative technologies that are solidly based on science.
JF - Plant Biotechnology
AU - Dilworth, Machi F
AD - National Science Foundation Tokyo Regional Office
Y1 - 2009///0,
PY - 2009
DA - 0, 2009
SP - 183
EP - 187
PB - Japanese Society for Plant Cell and Molecular Biology, Graduate School of Science Hiroshima University Higashi-Hiroshima 739-8526 Japan, [mailto:hmorikaw@sci.hiroshima-u.ac.jp]
VL - 26
IS - 2
SN - 1342-4580, 1342-4580
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Key wordsBiology education
KW - history of plant biology
KW - Nobel Prize and plants
KW - plants and society
KW - Energy
KW - Food
KW - Climatic changes
KW - Food plants
KW - W 30925:Genetic Engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20604598?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Plant+Biotechnology&rft.atitle=Perspective%3A+Plant+biology-A+quiet+pioneer&rft.au=Dilworth%2C+Machi+F&rft.aulast=Dilworth&rft.aufirst=Machi&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=183&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Plant+Biotechnology&rft.issn=13424580&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Food; Energy; Climatic changes; Food plants
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Subfossil Land Snails from Easter Island, Including Hotumatua anakenana, New Genus and Species (Pulmonata: Achatinellidae)
AN - 20266020; 8905907
AB - The depauperate modern terrestrial biota of Easter Island contrasts with that of most other southeastern Polynesian high islands, which characteristically support a number of endemic species of insects, land snails, birds, and plants. We investigated cultural and noncultural late Holocene deposits at Anakena, Easter Island, establishing the former presence of endemic land snails on the island. These include an unidentified helicinid, a Nesopupa species, and a previously undescribed extinct achatinellid land snail, Hotumatua anakenana Kirch, Christensen & Steadman, n. genus and n. sp. A human-introduced achatinellid, Pacificella variabilis, occurs in later stratigraphic contexts of the same site. Prehistoric deforestation may have been the primary cause of the extinction of Hotumatua, although predation by rats or other alien species may have been involved as well. Along with recently discovered extirpated species of angiosperms, sea-birds, and land birds, the extinction of Hotumatua reflects the nearly complete loss of the native biota of Easter Island after Polynesian colonization about 1,000 yr ago.
JF - Pacific Science
AU - Kirch, Patrick V
AU - Christensen, Carl C
AU - Steadman, David W
AD - 1 Financial support was provided by the Instituto de Estudios de Isla de Pascua, Universidad de Chile (Santiago) to P.V.K. and NSF grants BNS-9020750 (to P.V.K. and D.W.S) and EAR-9714819 (to D.W.S.).
Y1 - 2009/01//
PY - 2009
DA - Jan 2009
SP - 105
EP - 122
PB - University of Hawaii Press, 2840 Kolowalu Street
VL - 63
IS - 1
SN - 0030-8870, 0030-8870
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - Predation
KW - insects
KW - Pulmonata
KW - Rats
KW - Biota
KW - Islands
KW - ISE, Chile, Easter I.
KW - extinction
KW - endemic species
KW - holocene
KW - Achatinellidae
KW - colonization
KW - Aves
KW - Angiosperms
KW - culture
KW - Deforestation
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20266020?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Pacific+Science&rft.atitle=Subfossil+Land+Snails+from+Easter+Island%2C+Including+Hotumatua+anakenana%2C+New+Genus+and+Species+%28Pulmonata%3A+Achatinellidae%29&rft.au=Kirch%2C+Patrick+V%3BChristensen%2C+Carl+C%3BSteadman%2C+David+W&rft.aulast=Kirch&rft.aufirst=Patrick&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=63&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=105&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Pacific+Science&rft.issn=00308870&rft_id=info:doi/10.2984%2F1534-6188%282009%29632.0.CO%3B2
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pulmonata; Achatinellidae; ISE, Chile, Easter I.; Islands; Biota; Aves; extinction; Angiosperms; Rats; Deforestation; culture; Predation; insects; holocene; colonization; endemic species
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2984/1534-6188(2009)63[105:SLSFEI]2.0.CO;2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Exceptionally high water, other volatile and LILE concentrations in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the Yellowstone Hot Spot and Columbia River flood basalts
AN - 1464885123; 2013-090375
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Mukasa, S B
AU - Stefano, C
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Shimizu, N
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2009
PY - 2009
DA - 2009
SP - Abstract V51E
EP - 1773
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 90
IS - 52, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - hot spots
KW - flood basalts
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - olivine group
KW - melt inclusions
KW - lithophile elements
KW - Cenozoic
KW - mineral composition
KW - water-rock interaction
KW - olivine
KW - inclusions
KW - basalts
KW - Yellowstone National Park
KW - orthosilicates
KW - water content
KW - chemical composition
KW - mantle plumes
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - Columbia River Basalt Group
KW - North American Plate
KW - Miocene
KW - nesosilicates
KW - volatiles
KW - Tertiary
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Neogene
KW - fluid inclusions
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1464885123?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Exceptionally+high+water%2C+other+volatile+and+LILE+concentrations+in+olivine-hosted+melt+inclusions+from+the+Yellowstone+Hot+Spot+and+Columbia+River+flood+basalts&rft.au=Mukasa%2C+S+B%3BStefano%2C+C%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BShimizu%2C+N%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Mukasa&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=90&rft.issue=52%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/%28ISSN%292324-9250
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2009 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2013-12-05
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; Cenozoic; chemical composition; Columbia River Basalt Group; flood basalts; fluid inclusions; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; inclusions; lithophile elements; mantle; mantle plumes; melt inclusions; mineral composition; Miocene; Neogene; nesosilicates; North American Plate; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; plate tectonics; silicates; Snake River plain; Tertiary; United States; volatiles; volcanic rocks; water content; water-rock interaction; Yellowstone Hot Spot; Yellowstone National Park
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Past climate variability and change in the Arctic and at high latitudes
AN - 1320155143; 2013-029543
JF - Past climate variability and change in the Arctic and at high latitudes
Y1 - 2009/01//
PY - 2009
DA - January 2009
SP - 257
KW - Type: colored site location map
KW - Quaternary
KW - Arctic region
KW - sea ice
KW - Greenland ice sheet
KW - site location maps
KW - atmospheric precipitation
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - climate change
KW - models
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Greenland
KW - Tertiary
KW - maps
KW - paleotemperature
KW - ice
KW - arctic environment
KW - Arctic Ocean
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1320155143?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/GeoRef&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2009-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Past+climate+variability+and+change+in+the+Arctic+and+at+high+latitudes&rft.title=Past+climate+variability+and+change+in+the+Arctic+and+at+high+latitudes&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2013, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 1200
N1 - Availability - U. S. Climate Change Science Program, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - SuppNotes - Final report; Synthesis and Assessment Product 1.2; includes one CD-ROM
N1 - Last updated - 2013-03-28
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Antitumor Activity of G3139 Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs)
AN - 754551124; 13305289
AB - G3139, an antisense oligodeoxyribonucleotide (ODN) against Bcl-2, contains two CpG dinucleotides and has shown immunostimulatory activities in preclinical studies. It has been suggested that immunoactivation, rather than antisense activity, is primarily responsible for the therapeutic efficacy of G3139. Nanoparticle formulations naturally target phagocytic antigen presenting cells and therefore might enhance the immunological effects of G3139. In this study, a novel formulation of lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) encapsulating G3139 was synthesized and evaluated in mice bearing L1210 subcutaneous tumors. Intravenous injection of G3139-LNPs into mice led to increased serum levels of IL-6 and IFN-*g, promoted proliferation of natural killer (NK) cells and dendritic cells (DCs), and triggered a strong antitumor immune response in mice. The observed effects were much greater than those induced by free G3139. Correspondingly, the G3139-LNPs more effectively inhibited tumor growth and induced complete tumor regression in some mice. In contrast, free G3139 was ineffective in tumor growth inhibition and did not prolong survival of the tumor-bearing mice. These results suggest that G3139-LNPs are a potential immunomodulatory agent and may have applications in cancer therapy.
JF - Molecular Pharmaceutics
AU - Pan, Xiaogang
AU - Chen, Li
AU - Liu, Shujun
AU - Yang, Xiaojuan
AU - Gao, Jian-Xin
AU - Lee, Robert J
AD - Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC) for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices (CANPBD), Department of Pathology, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine and Public Health, and NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC), The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
SP - 211
EP - 220
PB - American Chemical Society
VL - 6
IS - 1
SN - 1543-8384, 1543-8384
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Immunology Abstracts
KW - Interleukin 6
KW - Intravenous administration
KW - Lipids
KW - Natural killer cells
KW - Survival
KW - CpG islands
KW - Tumors
KW - Immunomodulation
KW - Oligonucleotides
KW - Cancer
KW - Serum levels
KW - Antisense oligonucleotides
KW - Dendritic cells
KW - Antisense
KW - Phagocytes
KW - Immunostimulation
KW - Antigen-presenting cells
KW - Bcl-2 protein
KW - Cell proliferation
KW - nanoparticles
KW - Antitumor activity
KW - F 06955:Immunomodulation & Immunopharmacology
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754551124?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Molecular+Pharmaceutics&rft.atitle=Antitumor+Activity+of+G3139+Lipid+Nanoparticles+%28LNPs%29&rft.au=Pan%2C+Xiaogang%3BChen%2C+Li%3BLiu%2C+Shujun%3BYang%2C+Xiaojuan%3BGao%2C+Jian-Xin%3BLee%2C+Robert+J&rft.aulast=Pan&rft.aufirst=Xiaogang&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=211&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Molecular+Pharmaceutics&rft.issn=15438384&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fmp800146j
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Interleukin 6; Intravenous administration; Lipids; Natural killer cells; Survival; Tumors; CpG islands; Oligonucleotides; Immunomodulation; Cancer; Serum levels; Dendritic cells; Antisense oligonucleotides; Antisense; Phagocytes; Immunostimulation; Bcl-2 protein; Antigen-presenting cells; Cell proliferation; nanoparticles; Antitumor activity
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/mp800146j
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Transferrin Receptor-Targeted Lipid Nanoparticles for Delivery of an Antisense Oligodeoxyribonucleotide against Bcl-2
AN - 754549980; 13305290
AB - Antisense oligonucleotide G3139-mediated down-regulation of Bcl-2 is a potential strategy for overcoming chemoresistance in leukemia. However, the limited efficacy shown in recent clinical trials calls attention to the need for further development of novel and more efficient delivery systems. In order to address this issue, transferrin receptor (TfR)-targeted, protamine-containing lipid nanoparticles (Tf-LNs) were synthesized as delivery vehicles for G3139. The LNs were produced by an ethanol dilution method, and lipid-conjugated Tf ligand was then incorporated by a postinsertion method. The resulting Tf-LNs had a mean particle diameter of 90 nm and G3139 loading efficiency of 90.4%. Antisense delivery efficiency of Tf-LNs was evaluated in K562, MV4-11, and Raji leukemia cell lines. The results showed that Tf-LNs were more effective than nontargeted LNs and free G3139 (p < 0.05) in decreasing Bcl-2 expression (by up to 62% at the mRNA level in K562 cells) and in inducing caspase-dependent apoptosis. In addition, Bcl-2 down-regulation and apoptosis induced by Tf-LN G3139 were shown to be blocked by excess free Tf and thus were TfR-dependent. Cell lines with higher TfR expression also showed greater Bcl-2 down-regulation. Furthermore, up-regulation of TfR expression in leukemia cells by iron chelator deferoxamine resulted in a further increase in antisense effect (up to 79% Bcl-2 reduction in K562 at the mRNA level) and in caspase-dependent apoptosis (by 3-fold) by Tf-LN. Tf-LN-mediated delivery combined with TfR up-regulation by deferoxamine appears to be a potentially promising strategy for enhancing the delivery efficiency and therapeutic efficacy of antisense oligonucleotides.
JF - Molecular Pharmaceutics
AU - Yang, Xiaojuan
AU - Koh, Chee Guan
AU - Liu, Shujun
AU - Pan, Xiaogang
AU - Santhanam, Ramasamy
AU - Yu, Bo
AU - Peng, Yong
AU - Pang, Jiuxia
AU - Golan, Sharon
AU - Talmon, Yeshayahu
AU - Jin, Yan
AU - Muthusamy, Natarajan
AU - Byrd, John C
AU - Chan, Kenneth K
AU - Lee, L James
AU - Marcucci, Guido
AU - Lee, Robert J
AD - Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC) for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices (CANPBD), Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC), Department of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, and Division of Hematology and Oncology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, and Department of Chemical Engineering, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
SP - 221
EP - 230
PB - American Chemical Society
VL - 6
IS - 1
SN - 1543-8384, 1543-8384
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Apoptosis
KW - Lipids
KW - Chemoresistance
KW - Chelating agents
KW - Clinical trials
KW - mRNA
KW - Antisense oligonucleotides
KW - Tumor cell lines
KW - Transferrin
KW - Transferrin receptors
KW - Bcl-2 protein
KW - Iron
KW - nanoparticles
KW - Deferoxamine
KW - Ethanol
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
KW - N 14810:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754549980?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Molecular+Pharmaceutics&rft.atitle=Transferrin+Receptor-Targeted+Lipid+Nanoparticles+for+Delivery+of+an+Antisense+Oligodeoxyribonucleotide+against+Bcl-2&rft.au=Yang%2C+Xiaojuan%3BKoh%2C+Chee+Guan%3BLiu%2C+Shujun%3BPan%2C+Xiaogang%3BSanthanam%2C+Ramasamy%3BYu%2C+Bo%3BPeng%2C+Yong%3BPang%2C+Jiuxia%3BGolan%2C+Sharon%3BTalmon%2C+Yeshayahu%3BJin%2C+Yan%3BMuthusamy%2C+Natarajan%3BByrd%2C+John+C%3BChan%2C+Kenneth+K%3BLee%2C+L+James%3BMarcucci%2C+Guido%3BLee%2C+Robert+J&rft.aulast=Yang&rft.aufirst=Xiaojuan&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=221&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Molecular+Pharmaceutics&rft.issn=15438384&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fmp800149s
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Apoptosis; Chemoresistance; Lipids; Chelating agents; Clinical trials; mRNA; Antisense oligonucleotides; Transferrin; Tumor cell lines; Transferrin receptors; Bcl-2 protein; nanoparticles; Iron; Deferoxamine; Ethanol
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/mp800149s
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Taming Typhon: Advancing Climate Literacy by Coordinating Federal Earth System Science Education Investments Through the U.S. Climate Change Science Program
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42551527; 5460561
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Karsten, J
AU - Niepold, F
AU - Wei, M
AU - Waple, A
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
KW - USA
KW - Climatic changes
KW - Education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42551527?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.atitle=Taming+Typhon%3A+Advancing+Climate+Literacy+by+Coordinating+Federal+Earth+System+Science+Education+Investments+Through+the+U.S.+Climate+Change+Science+Program&rft.au=Karsten%2C+J%3BNiepold%2C+F%3BWei%2C+M%3BWaple%2C+A&rft.aulast=Karsten&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Solar wind disturbance changes between L1 and Earth's magnetosphere: Modeled series at L1 and real events
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42549873; 5469115
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Papitashvili, V
AU - Kabin, K
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
KW - Disturbance
KW - Wind
KW - Ecosystem disturbance
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42549873?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.atitle=Solar+wind+disturbance+changes+between+L1+and+Earth%27s+magnetosphere%3A+Modeled+series+at+L1+and+real+events&rft.au=Papitashvili%2C+V%3BKabin%2C+K&rft.aulast=Papitashvili&rft.aufirst=V&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Modeling Surface Water Transport in the Central Pacific Ocean With 129I Records From Coral Skeletons
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42547533; 5465885
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Beck, W
AU - Biddulph, D
AU - Russell, J
AU - Burr, G
AU - Jull, T
AU - Correge, T
AU - Roeder, B
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
KW - Central Pacific
KW - Surface water
KW - Ocean circulation
KW - Coral reefs
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42547533?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.atitle=Modeling+Surface+Water+Transport+in+the+Central+Pacific+Ocean+With+129I+Records+From+Coral+Skeletons&rft.au=Beck%2C+W%3BBiddulph%2C+D%3BRussell%2C+J%3BBurr%2C+G%3BJull%2C+T%3BCorrege%2C+T%3BRoeder%2C+B&rft.aulast=Beck&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Earth Science Literacy: Big Ideas and Supporting Concepts
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42547118; 5460566
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - LaDue, N
AU - Wysession, M
AU - Budd, D
AU - Campbell, K
AU - Conklin, M
AU - Lewis, G
AU - Raynolds, R
AU - Ridky, R
AU - Ross, R
AU - Taber, J
AU - Tewksbury, B
AU - Tuddenham, P
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
KW - Earth sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42547118?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.atitle=Earth+Science+Literacy%3A+Big+Ideas+and+Supporting+Concepts&rft.au=LaDue%2C+N%3BWysession%2C+M%3BBudd%2C+D%3BCampbell%2C+K%3BConklin%2C+M%3BLewis%2C+G%3BRaynolds%2C+R%3BRidky%2C+R%3BRoss%2C+R%3BTaber%2C+J%3BTewksbury%2C+B%3BTuddenham%2C+P&rft.aulast=LaDue&rft.aufirst=N&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Charting a Course to Earth System Science Literacy
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42546651; 5460550
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Karsten, J
AU - Koch, L
AU - Ridky, R
AU - Wei, M
AU - LaDue, N
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42546651?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Engaging the Next Generation of Polar Scientists: An NSF Perspective
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42546137; 5460699
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Crain, R
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42546137?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Why Do Atmospheric Jetstreams Move Poleward as Earth Warms?
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42544937; 5457754
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Robinson, W
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42544937?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Climatic Perturbations of Phytoplankton Dynamics in Mid-Atlantic Estuaries
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42542021; 5464823
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Harding, L
AU - Li, M
AU - Paerl, H
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
KW - Phytoplankton
KW - Estuaries
KW - Climate
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Arctic Observing Network (AON): Enhancing Observing, Data Archiving and Data Discovery Capabilities as Arctic Environmental System Change Continues
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AN - 42530496; 5460272
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU 2008)
AU - Jeffries, M
Y1 - 2008/12/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 15
KW - Arctic
KW - Polar environments
KW - Data processing
KW - Climatic changes
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.atitle=Arctic+Observing+Network+%28AON%29%3A+Enhancing+Observing%2C+Data+Archiving+and+Data+Discovery+Capabilities+as+Arctic+Environmental+System+Change+Continues&rft.au=Jeffries%2C+M&rft.aulast=Jeffries&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2008-12-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Fall+Meeting+of+the+American+Geophysical+Union+%28AGU+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/sessions5?meeting=fm08
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-04-06
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - One Biology, One Science
T2 - 48th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology
AN - 41856875; 5089387
JF - 48th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology
AU - Collins, James
Y1 - 2008/12/13/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 13
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41856875?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.ascb.org/files/am08/program08.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Chain of Optimization from Macro to Micro: Examples from Energy Policy, Vehicle Design and Aerospace
T2 - 2008 IEEE/SICE International Symposium on System Integration (SI 2008)
AN - 41895071; 5109373
JF - 2008 IEEE/SICE International Symposium on System Integration (SI 2008)
AU - Werbos, Paul
Y1 - 2008/12/04/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Dec 04
KW - Energy policy
KW - Energy
KW - Policies
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://www.rm.is.tohoku.ac.jp/SIInt08/program.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Coordinate Grammar
AN - 85683147; 200905236
AB - Chomsky (1959a) presented an algorithm for constructing a finite transducer that is strongly equivalent to a Chomsky-normal-form context-free grammar for all sentences generated by that grammar with up to any specified finite degree of center embedding. This article presents a new solution using a variety of COORDINATE GRAMMAR to assign nonembedding (paratactic) structures strongly equivalent to those assigned by an embedding grammar, which can in turn be directly computed by a finite transducer. It proposes that the bound on center embedding is really a consequence of a bound on alternation between right & left embedding, called here ZIGZAG EMBEDDING. Coordinate grammars can also be used to assign nonembedding structures equivalent to those with up to any specified finite degree of coordinate embedding (the occurrence of a coordinate structure as a member of a coordinate structure of the same type). It concludes that coordinate grammars or the finite transducers strongly equivalent to them are psychologically real, & that the existence of a finite bound on the degree of zigzag & coordinate embedding is a consequence of the increasing size & complexity of such grammars or transducers as the bound increases. References. Adapted from the source document
JF - Language
AU - Langendoen, D Terence
AD - National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA dlangend@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - December 2008
SP - 691
EP - 709
VL - 84
IS - 4
SN - 0097-8507, 0097-8507
KW - Embedded Construction (21550)
KW - Grammar Theories (28600)
KW - Transducers (90840)
KW - Context Free Grammar (15450)
KW - Finite State Automata (24380)
KW - Parataxis (62757)
KW - Coordination (Grammatical) (15650)
KW - article
KW - 4710: theory of linguistics; theory of linguistics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Allba&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Language&rft.atitle=Coordinate+Grammar&rft.au=Langendoen%2C+D+Terence&rft.aulast=Langendoen&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=84&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=691&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Language&rft.issn=00978507&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
N1 - Date revised - 2009-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - CODEN - LANGA2
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Grammar Theories (28600); Coordination (Grammatical) (15650); Parataxis (62757); Embedded Construction (21550); Transducers (90840); Finite State Automata (24380); Context Free Grammar (15450)
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Constraints from Li isotope systematics on subduction recycling, arc magmatism, and continent growth; an overview
AN - 840344049; 2011-011075
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Lee, C A
AU - Chan, L H
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - December 2008
SP - Abstract V32A
EP - 01
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 89
IS - 53, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - upper mantle
KW - isotope fractionation
KW - sea water
KW - recycling
KW - isotopes
KW - lithium
KW - magmatism
KW - enrichment
KW - alkali metals
KW - mantle
KW - continental crust
KW - subduction
KW - niobium
KW - island arcs
KW - metals
KW - mass balance
KW - crust
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/meetings/fm08/fm08-sessions/fm08_V32A.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2008 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - SuppNotes - Accessed on Aug. 31, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkali metals; continental crust; crust; enrichment; island arcs; isotope fractionation; isotopes; lithium; magmatism; mantle; mass balance; metals; niobium; recycling; sea water; subduction; upper mantle
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - UV inactivation of Adenovirus Type 4 measured by integrated cell culture qPCR
AN - 831159563; 13840437
AB - Recent changes to water quality regulations may increase the prevalence of ultraviolet (UV) disinfection in water treatment applications. Adenoviruses currently pose a tremendous challenge to UV disinfection due to the high dose requirements for inactivation. This study validates a strategy combining cell culture and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) for direct quantification of infectious adenoviruses in disinfection studies. Using primary liver carcinoma cell monolayers grown in well trays or flasks, post-infection washing, and a 24-hr incubation period, the time and material requirements for the infectivity assays were reduced significantly in comparison to traditional assays based on cytopathogenic effects. With this integrated cell culture quantitative PCR (ICC-qPCR) strategy, a standard curve was used to quantify infectious adenoviruses and ultimately determine relative inactivation for a disinfection study. Using ICC-qPCR, UV doses of approximately 10, 34, 69, and 116 mJ/cm2 corresponded to 1, 2, 3, and 4-log inactivation of adenovirus 4 in water, respectively. The results indicate that the new ICC-qPCR strategy represents a practical alternative for the quantification of adenoviruses in disinfection studies.
JF - Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A: Toxic/Hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering
AU - Gerrity, Daniel
AU - Ryu, Hodon
AU - Crittenden, John
AU - Abbaszadegan, Morteza
AD - National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - Dec 2008
SP - 1628
EP - 1638
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN UK
VL - 43
IS - 14
SN - 1093-4529, 1093-4529
KW - Virology & AIDS Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Environment Abstracts
KW - Adenovirus infectivity
KW - ICC-qPCR
KW - UV
KW - disinfection
KW - inactivation
KW - water quality
KW - Disinfection
KW - Hepatocytes
KW - Adenovirus
KW - Cell culture
KW - Water quality
KW - Carcinoma
KW - Infectivity
KW - U.V. radiation
KW - Water treatment
KW - Ultraviolet radiation
KW - Liver
KW - Polymerase chain reaction
KW - V 22300:Methods
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
KW - W 30945:Fermentation & Cell Culture
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.atitle=UV+inactivation+of+Adenovirus+Type+4+measured+by+integrated+cell+culture+qPCR&rft.au=Gerrity%2C+Daniel%3BRyu%2C+Hodon%3BCrittenden%2C+John%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+Morteza&rft.aulast=Gerrity&rft.aufirst=Daniel&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=14&rft.spage=1628&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.issn=10934529&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F10934520802329919
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-02-01
N1 - Number of references - 22
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Disinfection; Infectivity; U.V. radiation; Water treatment; Hepatocytes; Polymerase chain reaction; Cell culture; Water quality; Carcinoma; inactivation; water quality; Ultraviolet radiation; disinfection; Liver; Adenovirus
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934520802329919
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Crystal zoning and populations in "Mount Shasta" high-magnesian andesite (HMA); key in the reconstruction of a petrogenetic history dominated by magma mixing and contamination
AN - 50143908; 2009-091852
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Streck, M J
AU - Leeman, W L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - December 2008
SP - Abstract V23E
EP - 2176
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 89
IS - 53, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - magnesium
KW - Siskiyou County California
KW - andesites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - magma contamination
KW - Mount Shasta
KW - Cascade Range
KW - California
KW - pyroxene group
KW - mineral composition
KW - lava
KW - crystal zoning
KW - mixing
KW - metals
KW - orthopyroxene
KW - P-T conditions
KW - chain silicates
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50143908?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Crystal+zoning+and+populations+in+%22Mount+Shasta%22+high-magnesian+andesite+%28HMA%29%3B+key+in+the+reconstruction+of+a+petrogenetic+history+dominated+by+magma+mixing+and+contamination&rft.au=Streck%2C+M+J%3BLeeman%2C+W+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Streck&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=89&rft.issue=53%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2008 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; andesites; California; Cascade Range; chain silicates; crystal zoning; igneous rocks; lava; magma contamination; magnesium; metals; mineral composition; mixing; Mount Shasta; orthopyroxene; P-T conditions; pyroxene group; silicates; Siskiyou County California; United States; volcanic rocks
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Record of drainage rearrangement and erosion in a transpressive orogen; relative role of horizontal and vertical rock advection in drainage evolution
AN - 50110862; 2010-007339
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Brocard, G Y
AU - Teyssier, C
AU - Dunlap, W J
AU - Willenbring, J
AU - Simon-Labric, T
AU - Authemayou, C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - December 2008
SP - Abstract T33D
EP - 2099
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 89
IS - 53, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - Polochic Fault
KW - plate boundaries
KW - erosion
KW - Guatemala
KW - uplifts
KW - Chixoy River
KW - Caribbean region
KW - transpression
KW - strike-slip faults
KW - North American Plate
KW - displacements
KW - orogeny
KW - Caribbean Plate
KW - transtension
KW - fluvial features
KW - drainage basins
KW - tectonics
KW - incised valleys
KW - Central America
KW - faults
KW - 23:Geomorphology
KW - 16:Structural geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50110862?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Record+of+drainage+rearrangement+and+erosion+in+a+transpressive+orogen%3B+relative+role+of+horizontal+and+vertical+rock+advection+in+drainage+evolution&rft.au=Brocard%2C+G+Y%3BTeyssier%2C+C%3BDunlap%2C+W+J%3BWillenbring%2C+J%3BSimon-Labric%2C+T%3BAuthemayou%2C+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Brocard&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=89&rft.issue=53%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.agu.org/meetings/fm08/fm08-sessions/fm08_T33D.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2008 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Caribbean Plate; Caribbean region; Central America; Chixoy River; displacements; drainage basins; erosion; faults; fluvial features; Guatemala; incised valleys; North American Plate; orogeny; plate boundaries; Polochic Fault; strike-slip faults; tectonics; transpression; transtension; uplifts
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Interaction of dacitic and basaltic magmas deduced from evolution of phenocrysts and mixing of crystal populations during the Kalama eruptive period at Mount St. Helens
AN - 50096772; 2009-091851
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Carroll, K R
AU - Streck, M J
AU - Pallister, J S
AU - Leeman, W L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - December 2008
SP - Abstract V23E
EP - 2175
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 89
IS - 53, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - Skamania County Washington
KW - silicates
KW - Washington
KW - andesites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - lava flows
KW - Kalama eruptive period
KW - Mount Saint Helens
KW - igneous rocks
KW - olivine group
KW - nesosilicates
KW - Cascade Range
KW - pyroclastics
KW - mixing
KW - magmas
KW - eruptions
KW - olivine
KW - orthosilicates
KW - volcanoes
KW - dacites
KW - basaltic composition
KW - phenocrysts
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50096772?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Interaction+of+dacitic+and+basaltic+magmas+deduced+from+evolution+of+phenocrysts+and+mixing+of+crystal+populations+during+the+Kalama+eruptive+period+at+Mount+St.+Helens&rft.au=Carroll%2C+K+R%3BStreck%2C+M+J%3BPallister%2C+J+S%3BLeeman%2C+W+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Carroll&rft.aufirst=K&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=89&rft.issue=53%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2008 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - andesites; basaltic composition; Cascade Range; dacites; eruptions; igneous rocks; Kalama eruptive period; lava flows; magmas; mixing; Mount Saint Helens; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; phenocrysts; pyroclastics; silicates; Skamania County Washington; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanoes; Washington
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Permeable reactive biobarriers for in situ Cr(VI) reduction: Bench scale tests using Cellulomonas sp. strain ES6
AN - 20690821; 10247991
AB - Chromate (Cr(VI)) reduction studies were performed in bench scale flow columns using the fermentative subsurface isolate Cellulomonas sp. strain ES6. In these tests, columns packed with either quartz sand or hydrous ferric oxide (HFO)-coated quartz sand, were inoculated with strain ES6 and fed nutrients to stimulate growth before nutrient-free Cr(VI) solutions were injected. Results show that in columns containing quartz sand, a continuous inflow of 2 mg/L Cr(VI) was reduced to below detection limits in the effluent for durations of up to 5.7 residence times after nutrient injection was discontinued proving the ability of strain ES6 to reduce chromate in the absence of an external electron donor. In the HFO-containing columns, Cr(VI) reduction was significantly prolonged and effluent Cr(VI) concentrations remained below detectable levels for periods of up to 66 residence times after nutrient injection was discontinued. Fe was detected in the effluent of the HFO-containing columns throughout the period of Cr(VI) removal indicating that the insoluble Fe(III) bearing solids were being continuously reduced to form soluble Fe(II) resulting in prolonged abiotic Cr(VI) reduction. Thus, growth of Cellulomonas within the soil columns resulted in formation of permeable reactive barriers that could reduce Cr(VI) and Fe(III) for extended periods even in the absence of external electron donors. Other bioremediation systems employing Fe(II)-mediated reactions require a continuous presence of external nutrients to regenerate Fe(II). After depletion of nutrients, contaminant removal within these systems occurs by reaction with surface-associated Fe(II) that can rapidly become inaccessible due to formation of crystalline Fe-minerals or other precipitates. The ability of fermentative organisms like Cellulomonas to reduce metals without continuous nutrient supply in the subsurface offers a viable and economical alternative technology for in situ remediation of Cr(VI)-contaminated groundwater through formation of permeable reactive biobarriers (PRBB).
JF - Biotechnology and Bioengineering
AU - Viamajala, Sridhar
AU - Peyton, Brent M
AU - Gerlach, Robin
AU - Sivaswamy, Vaideeswaran
AU - Apel, William A
AU - Petersen, James N
AD - Department of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering, WSU/NSF IGERT, Center for Multiphase Environmental Research, Washington State University, P.O. Box 642719, Pullman, Washington 99164-2719, sviamajala@cc.usu.edu
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - Dec 2008
SP - 1150
EP - 1162
PB - John Wiley & Sons, 111 River Street Hoboken NJ 07030 USA, [mailto:custserv@wiley.com], [URL:http://www.wiley.com/]
VL - 101
IS - 6
SN - 0006-3592, 0006-3592
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Pollutant removal
KW - Metals
KW - Bioremediation
KW - Ferric oxide
KW - Nutrients
KW - Cellulomonas
KW - Effluents
KW - nutrients
KW - Soil
KW - Sand
KW - Quartz
KW - Economics
KW - Ground water
KW - Groundwater
KW - Chromate
KW - Contaminants
KW - W 30945:Fermentation & Cell Culture
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20690821?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biotechnology+and+Bioengineering&rft.atitle=Permeable+reactive+biobarriers+for+in+situ+Cr%28VI%29+reduction%3A+Bench+scale+tests+using+Cellulomonas+sp.+strain+ES6&rft.au=Viamajala%2C+Sridhar%3BPeyton%2C+Brent+M%3BGerlach%2C+Robin%3BSivaswamy%2C+Vaideeswaran%3BApel%2C+William+A%3BPetersen%2C+James+N&rft.aulast=Viamajala&rft.aufirst=Sridhar&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=101&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=1150&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biotechnology+and+Bioengineering&rft.issn=00063592&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fbit.22020
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Soil; Metals; Ferric oxide; Bioremediation; Sand; Quartz; Ground water; Nutrients; Contaminants; Chromate; Effluents; nutrients; Pollutant removal; Economics; Groundwater; Cellulomonas
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bit.22020
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Simplifying Ecological Site Verification, Rangeland Health Assessments, and Monitoring
AN - 20287870; 8905978
JF - Rangelands
AU - Herrick, Jeffrey E
AU - Bestelmeyer, B T
AU - Crossland, Keith
AD - Authors are Research Soil Scientist, jherrick[at]nmsu.edu (Herrick), and Research Ecologist (Bestelmeyer), USDA-ARS Jornada Experimental Range, MSC 3JER, New Mexico State University, Box 30003, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA; and Graduate Student, Dept of Plant and Environmental Science, MSC 3Q, Box 30003, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA (Crossland). This work was supported by the NSF Jornada LTER (DEB 0080412) and the USDA-ARS Jornada Experimental Range. Mention of trade names or commercial products in this article is solely for the purpose of providing specific information and does not imply recommendation or endorsement by the US Department of Agriculture.
Y1 - 2008/12//
PY - 2008
DA - Dec 2008
SP - 24
EP - 26
PB - Society for Range Management
VL - 30
IS - 6
SN - 0190-0528, 0190-0528
KW - Ecology Abstracts
KW - Rangelands
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20287870?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Rangelands&rft.atitle=Simplifying+Ecological+Site+Verification%2C+Rangeland+Health+Assessments%2C+and+Monitoring&rft.au=Herrick%2C+Jeffrey+E%3BBestelmeyer%2C+B+T%3BCrossland%2C+Keith&rft.aulast=Herrick&rft.aufirst=Jeffrey&rft.date=2008-12-01&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=24&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Rangelands&rft.issn=01900528&rft_id=info:doi/10.2111%2F1551-501X-30.6.24
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Rangelands
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2111/1551-501X-30.6.24
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Information systems and intelligence analysis critical to APHIS agricultural safeguarding
T2 - 56th Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AN - 41951109; 5127461
JF - 56th Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AU - Stinner, Ron
AU - Suiter, Karl
Y1 - 2008/11/16/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Nov 16
KW - Intelligence
KW - Information systems
KW - Aphis
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41951109?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=56th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Entomological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.atitle=Information+systems+and+intelligence+analysis+critical+to+APHIS+agricultural+safeguarding&rft.au=Stinner%2C+Ron%3BSuiter%2C+Karl&rft.aulast=Stinner&rft.aufirst=Ron&rft.date=2008-11-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=56th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Entomological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://esa.confex.com/esa/2008/webprogram/start.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Scaling the Science: Volcanic Hazard Analysis Using Hpc, Hazardous Mass Flow Modeling, Statistical Modeling and Paralllel Analytics
T2 - 2008 International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 2008)
AN - 41852279; 5080864
JF - 2008 International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC 2008)
AU - Patra, Abani
AU - Dalbey, Keith
AU - Jones, Matthew
AU - Pitman, E
AU - Calder, Eliza
Y1 - 2008/11/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Nov 15
KW - Volcanoes
KW - Scaling
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Hazards
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41852279?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+International+Conference+for+High+Performance+Computing%2C+Networking%2C+Storage+and+Analysis+%28SC+2008%29&rft.atitle=Scaling+the+Science%3A+Volcanic+Hazard+Analysis+Using+Hpc%2C+Hazardous+Mass+Flow+Modeling%2C+Statistical+Modeling+and+Paralllel+Analytics&rft.au=Patra%2C+Abani%3BDalbey%2C+Keith%3BJones%2C+Matthew%3BPitman%2C+E%3BCalder%2C+Eliza&rft.aulast=Patra&rft.aufirst=Abani&rft.date=2008-11-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+International+Conference+for+High+Performance+Computing%2C+Networking%2C+Storage+and+Analysis+%28SC+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://scyourway.nacse.org/conference/selection?whichdays=1&event_ACM% 20Student%20Poster=1&event_Poster=1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-07-17
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - West Nile Virus Revisited: Consequences for North American Ecology
AN - 20265542; 8905086
AB - It has been nine years since West Nile virus (WNV) emerged in New York, and its initial impacts on avian hosts and humans are evident across North America. The direct effects of WNV on avian hosts include documented population declines, but other, indirect ecological consequences of these changed bird communities, such as changes in seed dispersal, insect abundances, and scavenging services, are probable and demand attention. Furthermore, climate (seasonal precipitation and temperature) and land use are likely to influence the intensity and frequency of disease outbreaks, and research is needed to improve mechanistic understanding of these interacting forces. This article reviews the growing body of research describing the ecology of WNV and highlights critical knowledge gaps that must be addressed if we hope to manage disease risk, implement conservation strategies, and make forecasts in the presence of both climate change and WNV-or the next emergent pathogen.
JF - Bioscience
AU - Ladeau, Shannon L
AU - Marra, Peter P
AU - Kilpatrick, AMarm
AU - Calder, Catherine A
AD - Shannon L. LaDeau (e-mail: ladeaus[at]ecostudies.org) was a National Science Foundation Bioinformatics Fellow at the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center and at the Ohio State University, and is assistant scientist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies.
Y1 - 2008/11//
PY - 2008
DA - November 2008
SP - 937
EP - 946
PB - American Institute of Biological Sciences, 1444 Eye St. N.W.
VL - 58
IS - 10
SN - 0006-3568, 0006-3568
KW - Virology & AIDS Abstracts; Ecology Abstracts; Sustainability Science Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources
KW - West Nile virus
KW - disease ecology
KW - birds
KW - mosquitoes
KW - hierarchical analyses
KW - Resource management
KW - Rainfall
KW - Climatic changes
KW - population decline
KW - seed dispersal
KW - Hosts
KW - insects
KW - Public health
KW - Ecology
KW - Sulfur dioxide
KW - Seasonal variations
KW - Temperature effects
KW - Seed dispersal
KW - Seeds
KW - Temperature
KW - Environmental impact
KW - outbreaks
KW - Precipitation
KW - Pathogens
KW - Pest outbreaks
KW - Population decline
KW - Land use
KW - USA, New York
KW - Aves
KW - Reviews
KW - Nature conservation
KW - Conservation
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
KW - Q1 08484:Species interactions: parasites and diseases
KW - V 22400:Human Diseases
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20265542?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bioscience&rft.atitle=West+Nile+Virus+Revisited%3A+Consequences+for+North+American+Ecology&rft.au=Ladeau%2C+Shannon+L%3BMarra%2C+Peter+P%3BKilpatrick%2C+AMarm%3BCalder%2C+Catherine+A&rft.aulast=Ladeau&rft.aufirst=Shannon&rft.date=2008-11-01&rft.volume=58&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=937&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bioscience&rft.issn=00063568&rft_id=info:doi/10.1641%2FB581007
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Temperature effects; Seeds; Resource management; Climatic changes; Nature conservation; Environmental impact; Pathogens; Hosts; Public health; Seed dispersal; Conservation; Precipitation; Population decline; Pest outbreaks; Land use; Rainfall; Temperature; seed dispersal; population decline; outbreaks; insects; Ecology; Aves; Sulfur dioxide; Reviews; Seasonal variations; West Nile virus; USA, New York
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1641/B581007
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Joint sampling programme--Verification of data obtained in environmental monitoring
AN - 19564228; 8804295
AB - The objective of the Environmental Radiological Monitoring Control programme carried out by the Institute of Radiation Protection and Dosimetry (IRD) in Brazil is to verify the licensee's compliance with the requirements for environmental monitoring of Brazilian facilities. The Joint Sampling Programme (JSP) is just one part of the control programme. In order to verify that the data reported by the licensees is representative and legitimate, this programme verifies sampling procedures, accuracy and precision of the data and the changes in the environmental conditions. This paper discusses the main findings of this programme that allowed IRD to optimize its available resources to control the monitoring of the eight facilities in Brazil.
JF - Applied Radiation and Isotopes
AU - Lauria, D C
AU - Martins, NSF
AU - Vasconcellos, MLH
AU - Zenaro, R
AU - Peres, S S
AU - do Rio, MAP
AD - Instituto de Radioprotecao e Dosimetria, Comissao National de Energia Nuclear, Av. Salvador Allende s/no., CEP 22780-160, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, dejanira@ird.gov.br
Y1 - 2008/11//
PY - 2008
DA - Nov 2008
SP - 1636
EP - 1638
VL - 66
IS - 11
SN - 0969-8043, 0969-8043
KW - Pollution Abstracts
KW - Environmental monitoring
KW - Isotopes
KW - Brazil
KW - Compliance
KW - Environmental conditions
KW - P 8000:RADIATION
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19564228?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Radiation+and+Isotopes&rft.atitle=Joint+sampling+programme--Verification+of+data+obtained+in+environmental+monitoring&rft.au=Lauria%2C+D+C%3BMartins%2C+NSF%3BVasconcellos%2C+MLH%3BZenaro%2C+R%3BPeres%2C+S+S%3Bdo+Rio%2C+MAP&rft.aulast=Lauria&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2008-11-01&rft.volume=66&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=1636&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Radiation+and+Isotopes&rft.issn=09698043&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.apradiso.2007.08.021
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Brazil; Environmental monitoring; Compliance; Environmental conditions; Isotopes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apradiso.2007.08.021
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Overview: Recent Developments and Opportunities in Biobased Polymers
T2 - 2008 Conference on Bio-Based Technologies
AN - 41114073; 4950978
JF - 2008 Conference on Bio-Based Technologies
AU - Gross, R
Y1 - 2008/10/13/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Oct 13
KW - Polymers
KW - Reviews
KW - U 5500:Geoscience
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41114073?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Conference+on+Bio-Based+Technologies&rft.atitle=Overview%3A+Recent+Developments+and+Opportunities+in+Biobased+Polymers&rft.au=Gross%2C+R&rft.aulast=Gross&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2008-10-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Conference+on+Bio-Based+Technologies&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.aocs.org/meetings/ia/content/2008IARRregistration.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-25
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Renewable Highest Capacity Boride/Air Energy Storage
T2 - 2008 Fall Meeting of the Electrochemical Society of Japan and 214th Meeting of the Electrochemical Society (PRiME 2008)
AN - 42086252; 4984082
JF - 2008 Fall Meeting of the Electrochemical Society of Japan and 214th Meeting of the Electrochemical Society (PRiME 2008)
AU - Licht, Stuart
AU - Wu, Huiming
AU - Yu, Xingwen
AU - Wang, Yufei
Y1 - 2008/10/12/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Oct 12
KW - Storage
KW - Energy storage
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42086252?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.electrochem.org/meetings/biannual/214/mas_802/reportSymposi umList.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-05-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Developing a Framework for Earth Science Literacy I: Engaging the Community
T2 - 2008 Joint Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA), Soil Science Society of America (SSSA), American Society of Agronomy (ASA), Crop Science Society of America (CSSA), and the Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies with the Gulf Coast Section of SEPM (GCAGS)
AN - 42057123; 4972748
JF - 2008 Joint Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA), Soil Science Society of America (SSSA), American Society of Agronomy (ASA), Crop Science Society of America (CSSA), and the Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies with the Gulf Coast Section of SEPM (GCAGS)
AU - LaDue, Nicole D
AU - Tuddenham, Peter
AU - Wysession, Michael
AU - Lewis, Gary
AU - Bishop, Kristina
AU - Bragg, William
AU - Carley, Scott
AU - Karsten, Jill
AU - Patino, Lina
Y1 - 2008/10/05/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Oct 05
KW - Earth sciences
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/42057123?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Joint+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA%29%2C+Soil+Science+Society+of+America+%28SSSA%29%2C+American+Society+of+Agronomy+%28ASA%29%2C+Crop+Science+Society+of+America+%28CSSA%29%2C+and+the+Gulf+Coast+Association+of+Geological+Societies+with+the+Gulf+Coast+Section+of+SEPM+%28GCAGS%29&rft.atitle=Developing+a+Framework+for+Earth+Science+Literacy+I%3A+Engaging+the+Community&rft.au=LaDue%2C+Nicole+D%3BTuddenham%2C+Peter%3BWysession%2C+Michael%3BLewis%2C+Gary%3BBishop%2C+Kristina%3BBragg%2C+William%3BCarley%2C+Scott%3BKarsten%2C+Jill%3BPatino%2C+Lina&rft.aulast=LaDue&rft.aufirst=Nicole&rft.date=2008-10-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Joint+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA%29%2C+Soil+Science+Society+of+America+%28SSSA%29%2C+American+Society+of+Agronomy+%28ASA%29%2C+Crop+Science+Society+of+America+%28CSSA%29%2C+and+the+Gulf+Coast+Association+of+Geological+Societies+with+the+Gulf+Coast+Section+of+SEPM+%28GCAGS%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - https://www.acsmeetings.org/2008/programs/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-05-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Developing a framework for Earth science literacy; I, Engaging the community
AN - 859728311; 2011-030349
AB - This is a critical time in the relationship between humanity and planet Earth. With growing demand for finite natural resources, increasing vulnerability of populations expanding into hazardous terrain, escalating global impacts caused by climate change, and the recognition of humans as a significant agent of change on Earth, an Earth Science literate public becomes imperative. It is the geoscience community who must collectively articulate what constitutes Earth science literacy. Recently, literacy frameworks have been developed through community dialog related to ocean sciences, atmospheric sciences, and climate. All have been built through an iterative process between research scientists, educators, and communicators, leading to broad community support and consensus. The most mature of these efforts, the Ocean Literacy framework released in 2005, shows the potential impact of such a document. It has informed development of educational curricula and resources, both for the formal and informal education settings. Importantly, it has also provided a strategic framework for ocean education investments at the Federal agencies and beyond. A committee representing the diverse sub-disciplines associated with the terrestrial geological sciences, including hydrology and geobiology, organized and is leading the Earth Science Literacy Initiative (ESLI). A two-week online workshop, convened in May 2008, engaged more than 300 researchers and educators in identifying important ideas and concepts that should be included. In July, a face-to-face workshop involving a sub-set of these participants incorporated the ideas into a draft literacy framework document that is now open for further community input and comment. While the content of the individual literacy efforts impose artificial boundaries on the inherently connected oceans, atmosphere, and Earth spheres, the long-term goal is to integrate these separate documents into a single cohesive Earth System Science Literacy Framework.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - LaDue, Nicole D
AU - Tuddenham, Peter
AU - Wysession, Michael E
AU - Lewis, Gary
AU - Bishop, Kristina
AU - Bragg, William
AU - Carley, Scott
AU - Karsten, Jill
AU - Patino, Lina
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 390
EP - 391
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 40
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - Earth Science Literacy Initiative
KW - curricula
KW - research
KW - environmental effects
KW - climate change
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Developing+a+framework+for+Earth+science+literacy%3B+I%2C+Engaging+the+community&rft.au=LaDue%2C+Nicole+D%3BTuddenham%2C+Peter%3BWysession%2C+Michael+E%3BLewis%2C+Gary%3BBishop%2C+Kristina%3BBragg%2C+William%3BCarley%2C+Scott%3BKarsten%2C+Jill%3BPatino%2C+Lina%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=LaDue&rft.aufirst=Nicole&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=390&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2008 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - climate change; curricula; Earth Science Literacy Initiative; environmental effects; geology; research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Preliminary results and future plans of the electromagnetic component of EarthScope transportable array experiments
AN - 859727800; 2011-030281
AB - The MT component of EarthScope consists of permanent (Backbone) and transportable long period stations to record naturally occurring, time varying electric and magnetic fields to produce a regional lithospheric/asthensospheric electrical conductivity map of the US. The Backbone MT survey consists of 7 stations spaced throughout the continental US with preliminary installation at Soap Creek, Oregon; Parkfield, California; Braden, Missouri; Blacksburg, Virginia and Socorro, NM. Permitting is either underway or completed at stations in eastern Montana and northern Wisconsin. These stations will be recording for at least five years to determine electrical conductivities at depths that extend into the mantle transition zone. The first transportable array experiment took place in 2006 in central and eastern Oregon. Preliminary 3D inverse models indicate several lithospheric electrical conductivity anomalies, including a linear zone marked by low conductivity transition along the Klamath-Blue Mountain Lineament associated with a linear trend of gravity minima. High electrical conductivity values occur in the upper crust under the accreted terrains in the Blue Mountains and the lower crust of the High Lava Plains. The second transportable array experiment was performed in 2007 and completes coverage of Oregon, Washington, and western Idaho. These stations allowed for the imaging of conductivity structures beneath the High Cascades, Columbia River Plateau (CRP) and Precambrian terranes in western Idaho. The High Cascades are marked by high conductivities and the CRP has higher conductivities in the upper mantle that correspond to lower velocities determined from refraction experiments. The edge of the Precambrian North American margin was imaged beneath the CRP with lower conductivities to the east of 1190 W. The 2008 transportable MT experiment will focus on the Snake River Plain and western Montana. Time series and MT transfer functions are available now from the IRIS Data Management Center cataloged under the network code EM (www.iris.edu/mda/EM).
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Benson, Rick
AU - Egbert, Gary
AU - Evans, Rob L
AU - Livelybrooks, Dean
AU - Mickus, Kevin L
AU - Park, Stephen K
AU - Schultz, Adam
AU - Unsworth, Martyn
AU - Wannamaker, Philip E
AU - Weiss, Chester J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 379
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 40
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - electrical conductivity
KW - Montgomery County Virginia
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - Socorro County New Mexico
KW - Braden Missouri
KW - New Mexico
KW - Socorro New Mexico
KW - California
KW - Oregon
KW - Soap Creek Oregon
KW - electrical anomalies
KW - Monterey County California
KW - electromagnetic methods
KW - Parkfield California
KW - EarthScope
KW - Idaho
KW - Washington
KW - Virginia
KW - Precambrian
KW - Blacksburg Virginia
KW - three-dimensional models
KW - Benton County Oregon
KW - lithosphere
KW - geophysical methods
KW - inverse problem
KW - asthenosphere
KW - western Idaho
KW - High Lava Plains
KW - surveys
KW - Columbia Plateau
KW - Snake River plain
KW - arrays
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Preliminary+results+and+future+plans+of+the+electromagnetic+component+of+EarthScope+transportable+array+experiments&rft.au=Benson%2C+Rick%3BEgbert%2C+Gary%3BEvans%2C+Rob+L%3BLivelybrooks%2C+Dean%3BMickus%2C+Kevin+L%3BPark%2C+Stephen+K%3BSchultz%2C+Adam%3BUnsworth%2C+Martyn%3BWannamaker%2C+Philip+E%3BWeiss%2C+Chester+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Benson&rft.aufirst=Rick&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=379&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2008 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - arrays; asthenosphere; Benton County Oregon; Blacksburg Virginia; Braden Missouri; California; Columbia Plateau; EarthScope; electrical anomalies; electrical conductivity; electromagnetic methods; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; High Lava Plains; Idaho; inverse problem; lithosphere; Monterey County California; Montgomery County Virginia; New Mexico; Oregon; Parkfield California; Precambrian; Snake River plain; Soap Creek Oregon; Socorro County New Mexico; Socorro New Mexico; surveys; three-dimensional models; United States; Virginia; Washington; western Idaho
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolving Markets: Adapting to the New High-Skilled Migration
AN - 58801298; 2008-246676
AB - Discusses the realities of a global labor market for highly skilled workers, asserting that there are benefits for sending & receiving countries as well as the individual migrants. It is argued that countries ought to design laws & procedures to take the most advantage of high-skilled migration. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Harvard International Review
AU - Regets, Mark
AD - Division Science Resources Studies, National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 62
EP - 66
PB - Harvard International Relations Council, Cambridge MA
VL - 30
IS - 3
SN - 0739-1854, 0739-1854
KW - Business and service sector - Markets, marketing, and merchandising
KW - Population groups, population policy, and demographics - Migrants and migration
KW - Labor conditions and policy - Work and labor
KW - Markets
KW - Migration
KW - Migrants
KW - Labor
KW - article
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/58801298?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apais&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Harvard+International+Review&rft.atitle=Evolving+Markets%3A+Adapting+to+the+New+High-Skilled+Migration&rft.au=Regets%2C+Mark&rft.aulast=Regets&rft.aufirst=Mark&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=62&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Harvard+International+Review&rft.issn=07391854&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - PAIS Index
N1 - Date revised - 2009-03-09
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Markets; Migration; Labor; Migrants
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - In memoriam; George A. Sanderson, Jr. (1926-2008)
AN - 50561317; 2008-130718
JF - Journal of Foraminiferal Research
AU - Groves, John R
AU - Brenckle, Paul L
AU - Klapper, Gilbert
AU - Lane, H Richard
AU - Wahlman, Gregory P
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 374
EP - 376
PB - Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research, Ithaca, NY
VL - 38
IS - 4
SN - 0096-1191, 0096-1191
KW - Foraminifera
KW - Sanderson, George A., Jr.
KW - Protista
KW - Invertebrata
KW - Fusulinina
KW - biography
KW - microfossils
KW - 10:Invertebrate paleontology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50561317?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://jfr.geoscienceworld.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research | Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 13
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - port.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JFARAH
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - biography; Foraminifera; Fusulinina; Invertebrata; microfossils; Protista; Sanderson, George A., Jr.
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/gsjfr.38.4.374
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Drilling magma; Kilauea Iki and the little rig that could
AN - 50525416; 2009-014857
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Zur, David M
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 1
EP - 2
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 6
IS - 2
KW - United States
KW - technology
KW - Hawaii Island
KW - Hawaii County Hawaii
KW - Hawaii
KW - East Pacific Ocean Islands
KW - engineering geology
KW - magmas
KW - Oceania
KW - Polynesia
KW - drilling
KW - Kilauea
KW - 30:Engineering geology
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50525416?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=Drilling+magma%3B+Kilauea+Iki+and+the+little+rig+that+could&rft.au=Zur%2C+David+M&rft.aulast=Zur&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - drilling; East Pacific Ocean Islands; engineering geology; Hawaii; Hawaii County Hawaii; Hawaii Island; Kilauea; magmas; Oceania; Polynesia; technology; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Cultivating the next generation geoscience workforce; the view from NSF
AN - 50417171; 2009-056551
AB - The National Science Foundation considers that its mandate "To promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare; to secure the national defense (NSF Act of 1950)" rests on facilitating the development of the workforce needed to meet its mission. Thus, NSF supports a wide range of activities that include building a strong research based knowledge on teaching, learning and evaluation in science and mathematics; developing methods to effectively bridge critical junctures in STEM education pathways; preparing a diverse, globally engaged workforce; building capacity; and, integrating research with education. The commitment to workforce development in the Directorate for Geosciences (GEO) at NSF extends beyond the familiar tradition of support for the training of graduate students and post-doctoral researchers to embrace geoscience education reform at the undergraduate and pre-college levels, as well as active outreach to the public. GEO supports innovative projects that both strengthen the quality of, and access to, geoscience education at all grade levels and facilitate the participation of different audiences in scientific endeavors. Specific focus areas include: creating an effective and knowledgeable geoscience K-12 teacher workforce; providing meaningful research experiences for K-12 and undergraduate students; building capacity in the geosciences at Minority Serving Institutions; conducting research on effective geoscience education practices; preparing a diverse and capable workforce that can pursue the wide variety of geoscience career paths; and, increasing opportunities for learning about the geosciences and NSF supported research in these fields. The next generation geoscience workforce will need the skills to be able to operate in an increasingly interdisciplinary, international, and technologically sophisticated environment. To nurture and sustain a healthy workforce, multiple approaches must be taken. Programs that support individual participation in education and research efforts are as important as those that support partnerships among several institutions.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Karsten, Jill
AU - Patino, Lina C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 89
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 40
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - college-level education
KW - K-12 education
KW - government agencies
KW - education
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50417171?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Cultivating+the+next+generation+geoscience+workforce%3B+the+view+from+NSF&rft.au=Karsten%2C+Jill%3BPatino%2C+Lina+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Karsten&rft.aufirst=Jill&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=89&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2008 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; education; geology; government agencies; K-12 education; NSF
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Natural observatories/laboratories (NLO) at the National Science Foundation
AN - 50415601; 2009-058966
AB - The National Research Council 2001 study termed "Basic Research Opportunities in Earth Science" expressed the need for more emphasis on Natural Laboratories/Observatories (NLOs) in the earth sciences. NSF has a history of supporting natural observatories/laboratories such as, Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) sites, polar observatories and laboratories in both the Arctic and Antarctic, and more recently Critical Zone Observatories (CZO). All of these, as well as other established NLOs, generally focus on modern biological and environmental issues/sites. There has been no effort to evaluate the advantages of establishing similar NLOs to focus on issues related to the evolution and distribution of life in Earth's deep time record. Therefore, the proposal to establish DETELOs to study critical transitions in the history of life is novel and very intriguing. Such NLOs will require "out of the box" thinking for their creation and implementation because their mode of operation seemingly will differ significantly from established modern NLOs. Properly defined and successfully established, deep time NLOs could serve as catalysts in bringing about a needed paradigm shift in how the paleontological research community operates.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Lane, H Richard
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 98
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 40
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - observatories
KW - government agencies
KW - laboratories
KW - DETELO
KW - research
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2008 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - DETELO; geology; government agencies; laboratories; NSF; observatories; research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geoscience diversity in 2008; new challenges
AN - 50234611; 2009-084121
AB - The proportions of women, blacks, and Hispanics in S&E occupations have continued to grow over time, but are still less than their proportions of the population (NSF, 2006). Blacks and Hispanics each constituted 3 to 4 percent of doctoral scientists and 2 to 3 percent of doctoral engineers. American Indians/Alaska Natives were 0.6 percent of doctoral scientists and 0.4 percent of doctoral engineers in 2003. However, "globalization" is impacting the development pathways, possibly reshaping the characteristics that define a marketable geology graduate. How can academic leaders respond in order to manage the impact of these global shifts on their curricula to the benefit of all? The United States remains the predominant destination for foreign students, accounting for 40 percent of internationally mobile students in 2004. The number of S&E graduate students on temporary visas more than doubled between 1983 and 2003, rising from 19 percent to 27 percent of all graduate S&E students over that period (NSF, 2006). Historically, half or more of students on temporary visas have stayed in the United States immediately after degree conferral; however, this percentage has risen in recent years. International S&E labor force data are unavailable, however, the number of people with postsecondary education has grown over two decades from about 73 million in 1980 to 194 million in 2000. Over the period 1980-2000, the US share of the total fell from 31 percent to 27 percent. China's and India's shares doubled to 10 percent and 8 percent, respectively. Among all doctorate holders resident in the United States in 2003, a majority in computer science and several engineering fields were foreign born.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 128
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 40
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - graduate-level education
KW - Far East
KW - education
KW - women
KW - India
KW - history
KW - geology
KW - Indian Peninsula
KW - curricula
KW - minorities
KW - Asia
KW - China
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50234611?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Geoscience+diversity+in+2008%3B+new+challenges&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=128&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2008 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; China; curricula; education; Far East; geology; graduate-level education; history; India; Indian Peninsula; minorities; United States; women
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A chronology of Paleozoic sea-level changes
AN - 50147958; 2009-013058
AB - Sea levels have been determined for most of the Paleozoic Era (542 to 251 million years ago), but an integrated history of sea levels has remained unrealized. We reconstructed a history of sea-level fluctuations for the entire Paleozoic by using stratigraphic sections from pericratonic and cratonic basins. Evaluation of the timing and amplitude of individual sea-level events reveals that the magnitude of change is the most problematic to estimate accurately. The long-term sea level shows a gradual rise through the Cambrian, reaching a zenith in the Late Ordovician, then a short-lived but prominent withdrawal in response to Hirnantian glaciation. Subsequent but decreasingly substantial eustatic highs occurred in the mid-Silurian, near the Middle/Late Devonian boundary, and in the latest Carboniferous. Eustatic lows are recorded in the early Devonian, near the Mississippian/Pennsylvanian boundary, and in the Late Permian. One hundred and seventy-two eustatic events are documented for the Paleozoic, varying in magnitude from a few tens of meters to approximately 125 meters.
JF - Science
AU - Haq, Bilal U
AU - Schutter, Stephen R
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 64
EP - 68
PB - American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, DC
VL - 322
IS - 5898
SN - 0036-8075, 0036-8075
KW - sequence stratigraphy
KW - eustacy
KW - glaciation
KW - chronostratigraphy
KW - Paleozoic
KW - global
KW - paleogeography
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - deglaciation
KW - climate change
KW - Cambrian
KW - models
KW - Ordovician
KW - sea-level changes
KW - paleoenvironment
KW - Devonian
KW - chronology
KW - reconstruction
KW - depositional environment
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50147958?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Science&rft.atitle=A+chronology+of+Paleozoic+sea-level+changes&rft.au=Haq%2C+Bilal+U%3BSchutter%2C+Stephen+R&rft.aulast=Haq&rft.aufirst=Bilal&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=322&rft.issue=5898&rft.spage=64&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Science&rft.issn=00368075&rft_id=info:doi/10.1126%2Fscience.1161648
L2 - http://www.sciencemag.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 37
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - charts
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - SCIEAS
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cambrian; chronology; chronostratigraphy; climate change; deglaciation; depositional environment; Devonian; eustacy; glaciation; global; models; Ordovician; paleoclimatology; paleoenvironment; paleogeography; Paleozoic; reconstruction; sea-level changes; sequence stratigraphy
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1161648
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding the triple point
AN - 50094291; 2009-008651
JF - Elements
AU - Killeen, Timothy L
AU - Abrajano, Teofilo
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - October 2008
SP - 298
PB - Mineralogical Society of America and Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland and Mineralogical Association of Canada and Geochemical Society and Clay Minerals Society
VL - 4
IS - 5
SN - 1811-5209, 1811-5209
KW - water use
KW - soils
KW - hydrology
KW - human activity
KW - water management
KW - prediction
KW - ecosystems
KW - decision-making
KW - climate change
KW - models
KW - hydrologic cycle
KW - observatories
KW - geologists
KW - policy
KW - ecology
KW - landscapes
KW - water resources
KW - land use
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50094291?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Elements&rft.atitle=Understanding+the+triple+point&rft.au=Killeen%2C+Timothy+L%3BAbrajano%2C+Teofilo&rft.aulast=Killeen&rft.aufirst=Timothy&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=298&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Elements&rft.issn=18115209&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.elementsmagazine.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, copyright, Mineralogical Society of America | Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - climate change; decision-making; ecology; ecosystems; geologists; human activity; hydrologic cycle; hydrology; land use; landscapes; models; observatories; policy; prediction; soils; water management; water resources; water use
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Nano-Biophotonics: new tools for chemical nano-analytics
AN - 19573012; 8858025
AB - The nondestructive chemical analysis of biological processes in the crowded intracellular environment, at cellular membranes, and between cells with a spatial resolution well beyond the diffraction limit is made possible through Nano-Biophotonics. A number of sophisticated schemes employing nanoparticles, nano-apertures, or shaping of the probe volume in the far field have significantly extended our knowledge about lipid rafts, macromolecular complexes, such as chromatin, vesicles, and cellular organelles, and their interactions and trafficking within the cell. Here, I review some of the most recent developments in Nano-Biophotonics that already are or soon will become relevant to the analysis of intracellular processes. The pros and cons of the various techniques will be discussed and an outlook of their prospects for the near future will be provided.
JF - Current Opinion in Chemical Biology
AU - Huser, T
AD - Department of Internal Medicine, and NSF Center for Biophotonlcs Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, 2700 Stockton Boulevard, Suite 1400, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA, trhuser@ucdavis.edu
A2 - Kelley, SO (ed)
A2 - Walt, D (ed)
Y1 - 2008/10//
PY - 2008
DA - Oct 2008
SP - 497
EP - 504
VL - 12
IS - 5
SN - 1367-5931, 1367-5931
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Macromolecules
KW - Chromatin
KW - Reviews
KW - Probes
KW - Vesicles
KW - spatial discrimination
KW - Diffraction
KW - Organelles
KW - nanoparticles
KW - Lipid rafts
KW - N 14820:DNA Metabolism & Structure
KW - W 30900:Methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19573012?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Current+Opinion+in+Chemical+Biology&rft.atitle=Nano-Biophotonics%3A+new+tools+for+chemical+nano-analytics&rft.au=Huser%2C+T&rft.aulast=Huser&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2008-10-01&rft.volume=12&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=497&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Current+Opinion+in+Chemical+Biology&rft.issn=13675931&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.cbpa.2008.08.012
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Macromolecules; Chromatin; Reviews; Probes; spatial discrimination; Vesicles; Diffraction; Organelles; nanoparticles; Lipid rafts
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2008.08.012
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Occurrence and Mammalian Cell Toxicity of Iodinated Disinfection Byproducts in Drinking Water
AN - 754542366; 13266398
AB - An occurrence study was conducted to measure five iodo-acids (iodoacetic acid, bromoiodoacetic acid, (Z)-3-bromo-3-iodo-propenoic acid, (E)-3-bromo-3-iodo-propenoic acid, and (E)-2-iodo-3-methylbutenedioic acid) and two iodo-trihalomethanes (iodo-THMs), (dichloroiodomethane and bromochloroiodomethane) in chloraminated and chlorinated drinking waters from 23 cities in the United States and Canada. Since iodoacetic acid was previously found to be genotoxic in mammalian cells, the iodo-acids and iodo-THMs were analyzed for toxicity. A gas chromatography (GC)/negative chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (MS) method was developed to measure the iodo-acids; iodo-THMs were measured using GC/high resolution electron ionization-MS with isotope dilution. The iodo-acids and iodo-THMs were found in waters from most plants, at maximum levels of 1.7 *mg/L (iodoacetic acid), 1.4 *mg/L (bromoiodoacetic acid), 0.50 *mg/L ((Z)-3-bromo-3-iodopropenoic acid), 0.28 *mg/L ((E)-3-bromo-3-iodopropenoic acid), 0.58 *mg/L ((E)-2-iodo-3-methylbutenedioic acid), 10.2 *mg/L (bromochloroiodomethane), and 7.9 *mg/L (dichloroiodomethane). Iodo-acids and iodo-THMs were highest at plants with short free chlorine contact times (45 min). Iodide levels in source waters ranged from 0.4 to 104.2 *mg/L (when detected), but there was not a consistent correlation between bromide and iodide. The rank order for mammalian cell chronic cytotoxicity of the compounds measured in this study, plus other iodinated compounds, was iodoacetic acid > (E)-3-bromo-2-iodopropenoic acid > iodoform > (E)-3-bromo-3-iodo-propenoic acid > (Z)-3-bromo-3-iodo-propenoic acid > diiodoacetic acid > bromoiodoacetic acid > (E)-2-iodo-3-methylbutenedioic acid > bromodiiodomethane > dibromoiodomethane > bromochloroiodomethane #~ chlorodiiodomethane > dichloroiodomethane. With the exception of iodoform, the iodo-THMs were much less cytotoxic than the iodo-acids. Of the 13 compounds analyzed, 7 were genotoxic; their rank order was iodoacetic acid diiodoacetic acid > chlorodiiodomethane > bromoiodoacetic acid > E-2-iodo-3-methylbutenedioic acid > (E)-3-bromo-3-iodo-propenoic acid > (E)-3-bromo-2-iodopropenoic acid. In general, compounds that contain an iodo-group have enhanced mammalian cell cytotoxicity and genotoxicity as compared to their brominated and chlorinated analogues.
JF - Environmental Science & Technology
AU - Richardson, Susan D
AU - Fasano, Francesca
AU - Ellington, J Jackson
AU - Crumley, F Gene
AU - Buettner, Katherine M
AU - Evans, John J
AU - Blount, Benjamin C
AU - Silva, Lalith K
AU - Waite, Tim J
AU - Luther, George W
AU - McKague, A Bruce
AU - Miltner, Richard J
AU - Wagner, Elizabeth D
AU - Plewa, Michael J
AD - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Athens, Georgia 30605, Division of Laboratory Sciences, National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30341, College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware, Lewes, Delaware 19958, CanSyn Chem. Corp., 200 College Street, Toronto, Canada M5S 3E5, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268, and College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences, Department of Crop Sciences, and the NSF WaterCAMPWS Center, University of Illinois--at Urbana--Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Y1 - 2008/09/24/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Sep 24
SP - 8330
EP - 8338
PB - American Chemical Society, 1155 16th St., NW Washington DC 20036 USA
VL - 42
IS - 22
SN - 0013-936X, 0013-936X
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Iodides
KW - Disinfection
KW - Isotopes
KW - Byproducts
KW - iodoacetic acid
KW - Chlorine
KW - bromides
KW - Drinking Water
KW - Mammalian cells
KW - Gas chromatography
KW - Urban areas
KW - iodides
KW - Genotoxicity
KW - Toxicity
KW - Spectrometry
KW - USA
KW - Cytotoxicity
KW - Canada
KW - Analytical Methods
KW - Acids
KW - Water Pollution Effects
KW - disinfection
KW - Chlorination
KW - Drinking water
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - SW 3060:Water treatment and distribution
KW - ENA 16:Renewable Resources-Water
KW - X 24360:Metals
KW - AQ 00003:Monitoring and Analysis of Water and Wastes
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/754542366?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Science+%26+Technology&rft.atitle=Occurrence+and+Mammalian+Cell+Toxicity+of+Iodinated+Disinfection+Byproducts+in+Drinking+Water&rft.au=Richardson%2C+Susan+D%3BFasano%2C+Francesca%3BEllington%2C+J+Jackson%3BCrumley%2C+F+Gene%3BBuettner%2C+Katherine+M%3BEvans%2C+John+J%3BBlount%2C+Benjamin+C%3BSilva%2C+Lalith+K%3BWaite%2C+Tim+J%3BLuther%2C+George+W%3BMcKague%2C+A+Bruce%3BMiltner%2C+Richard+J%3BWagner%2C+Elizabeth+D%3BPlewa%2C+Michael+J&rft.aulast=Richardson&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2008-09-24&rft.volume=42&rft.issue=22&rft.spage=8330&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Science+%26+Technology&rft.issn=0013936X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fes801169k
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Disinfection; Isotopes; Cytotoxicity; Mammalian cells; Gas chromatography; Genotoxicity; Chlorine; iodoacetic acid; Toxicity; bromides; Drinking water; Spectrometry; iodides; disinfection; Byproducts; Chlorination; Urban areas; Iodides; Drinking Water; Analytical Methods; Water Pollution Effects; Acids; USA; Canada
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es801169k
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Ciguatera Fish Poisoning: Treatment, Prevention and Management
AN - 893283486; 15670006
AB - Ciguatera Fish Poisoning (CFP) is the most frequently reported seafood-toxin illness in the world, and it causes substantial physical and functional impact. It produces a myriad of gastrointestinal, neurologic and/or cardiovascular symptoms which last days to weeks, or even months. Although there are reports of symptom amelioration with some interventions (e.g. IV mannitol), the appropriate treatment for CFP remains unclear to many physicians. We review the literature on the treatments for CFP, including randomized controlled studies and anecdotal reports. The article is intended to clarify treatment options, and provide information about management and prevention of CFP, for emergency room physicians, poison control information providers, other health care providers, and patients.
JF - Marine Drugs
AU - Friedman, MA
AU - Fleming, LE
AU - Fernandez, M
AU - Bienfang, P
AU - Schrank, K
AU - Dickey, R
AU - Bottein, M-Y
AU - Backer, L
AU - Ayyar, R
AU - Weisman, R
AU - Watkins, S
AU - Granade, R
AU - Reich, A
AD - University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, NSF/NIEHS Oceans & Human Health Center, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, East Grosvenor Building, #E211, Key Biscayne, FL 33149, USA, melissafried@yahoo.com
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - September 2008
SP - 456
EP - 479
VL - 6
IS - 3
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; ASFA Marine Biotechnology Abstracts
KW - Marine
KW - Symptoms
KW - Literature reviews
KW - Fishery management
KW - Mannitol
KW - Aquatic drugs
KW - Fish poisoning
KW - Poisoning
KW - Emergencies
KW - Ciguatera
KW - O 4020:Pollution - Organisms/Ecology/Toxicology
KW - Q4 27790:Fish
KW - X 24320:Food Additives & Contaminants
KW - Q1 08485:Species interactions: pests and control
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/893283486?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxicologyabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+Drugs&rft.atitle=Ciguatera+Fish+Poisoning%3A+Treatment%2C+Prevention+and+Management&rft.au=Friedman%2C+MA%3BFleming%2C+LE%3BFernandez%2C+M%3BBienfang%2C+P%3BSchrank%2C+K%3BDickey%2C+R%3BBottein%2C+M-Y%3BBacker%2C+L%3BAyyar%2C+R%3BWeisman%2C+R%3BWatkins%2C+S%3BGranade%2C+R%3BReich%2C+A&rft.aulast=Friedman&rft.aufirst=MA&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=456&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+Drugs&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/10.3390%2Fmd20080022
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-29
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Symptoms; Fishery management; Literature reviews; Aquatic drugs; Fish poisoning; Emergencies; Ciguatera; Mannitol; Poisoning; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md20080022
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing the competitiveness of international financial services in particular locations: a survey of methods and perspectives
AN - 37113043; 3854125
AB - The International Financial Services (IFS) industry is restructing internally and by location. This paper outlines the economic forces and analytical methods that may be applied to examine the economic drivers of these processes as ever more cities, particularly in East Asia, are vying to attract IFS providers and their clients. The ICT revolution has made those IFS that can be commoditized footloose in search of cost efficiency. High value-added financial services, however, will continue to be developed and coordinated in a few major IFS centers that have invested in, or capitalized on, regional or global advantages for themselves and their clients. The resulting pattern of functional fragmentation and geographic dispersal may facilitate analyses of the competitiveness of different lines of the financial services business in a particular location by methods such as Data Envelopment and Stochastic Frontier Analysis. These forms of comparative efficiency analysis have recently been questioned and their results reinterpreted. Reprinted by permission of Springer
JF - Open economies review
AU - von Furstenberg, George M
AD - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - Sep 2008
SP - 539
EP - 556
VL - 19
IS - 4
SN - 0923-7992, 0923-7992
KW - Economics
KW - Location of industry
KW - East Asia
KW - International finance
KW - Financial services
KW - Information and communication technologies
KW - Competitiveness
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/37113043?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Open+economies+review&rft.atitle=Assessing+the+competitiveness+of+international+financial+services+in+particular+locations%3A+a+survey+of+methods+and+perspectives&rft.au=von+Furstenberg%2C+George+M&rft.aulast=von+Furstenberg&rft.aufirst=George&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=19&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=539&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Open+economies+review&rft.issn=09237992&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11079-007-9067-z
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 6727 4908 6725 4025; 4957; 7521 5469 12092 6431; 2661 2649; 6518; 116 30
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11079-007-9067-z
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sensors, smart structures technology and steel structures
AN - 20907450; 8428343
AB - This paper deals with civil infrastructures in general, sensor and smart structure technology, and smart steel structures in particular. Smart structures technology, an integrated engineering field comprising sensor technology, structural control, smart materials and structural health monitoring, could dramatically transform and revolutionize the design, construction and maintenance of civil engineering structures. The central core of this technology is sensor and sensor networks that provide the essential data input in real time for condition assessment and decision making. Sensors and robust monitoring algorithms that can reliably detect the occurrence, location, and severity of damages such as crack and corrosion in steel structures will lead to increased levels of safety for civil infrastructure, and may significantly cut maintenance or repair cost through early detection. The emphasis of this paper is on sensor technology with a potential use in steel structures.
JF - Smart Structures and Systems
AU - Liu, S-C
AD - Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation, National Science Foundation 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA, sliu@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - Sep 2008
SP - 517
EP - 530
VL - 4
IS - 5
SN - 1738-1584, 1738-1584
KW - Health & Safety Science Abstracts
KW - Sensors
KW - Civil engineering
KW - Maintenance
KW - safety engineering
KW - Corrosion
KW - Steel
KW - infrastructure
KW - Technology
KW - H 15000:Civil/Structural Engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20907450?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ahealthsafetyabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Smart+Structures+and+Systems&rft.atitle=Sensors%2C+smart+structures+technology+and+steel+structures&rft.au=Liu%2C+S-C&rft.aulast=Liu&rft.aufirst=S-C&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=517&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Smart+Structures+and+Systems&rft.issn=17381584&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sensors; Technology; Steel; Maintenance; infrastructure; Corrosion; safety engineering; Civil engineering
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Cell and Tissue Engineering--Taking Cues from Nature's Engineering Paradigm for Developing, Growing, and Repairing Tissues
AN - 20045716; 8552507
AB - In late October 2007, developmental biologists, systems biologists, cell and tissue engineers, and computational modelers convened at the National Science Foundation (NSF) Mathematical Biosciences Institute in Columbus, Ohio. The joint forum, called "Cell and Tissue Engineering--Taking Cues from Nature's Engineering Paradigm for Developing, Growing, and Repairing Tissues," bridged across specific cell and tissue types as well as model platforms, to recognize common challenges and relevant strategies for addressing these challenges in tissues from diverse organisms, including plants, Drosophila, planaria, salamanders, zebrafish, mice, rats, sheep, and humans. Particular emphasis was placed on the promise of predictive modeling and systems biology approaches to accelerate advances in the field of tissue engineering.
JF - Tissue Engineering, Part A: Tissue Engineering
AU - Tate, MLK
AU - Shvartsman, S
AU - Friedman, A
AD - NSF Mathematical Biosciences Institute, Columbus, OH, USA
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - Sep 2008
SP - 1459
EP - 1460
VL - 14
IS - 9
SN - 1937-3341, 1937-3341
KW - Entomology Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Mathematical models
KW - Computer applications
KW - Tissue engineering
KW - Danio rerio
KW - Caudata
KW - Planaria
KW - Drosophila
KW - Z 05300:General
KW - W 30920:Tissue Engineering
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20045716?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Tissue+Engineering%2C+Part+A%3A+Tissue+Engineering&rft.atitle=Cell+and+Tissue+Engineering--Taking+Cues+from+Nature%27s+Engineering+Paradigm+for+Developing%2C+Growing%2C+and+Repairing+Tissues&rft.au=Tate%2C+MLK%3BShvartsman%2C+S%3BFriedman%2C+A&rft.aulast=Tate&rft.aufirst=MLK&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=14&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=1459&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Tissue+Engineering%2C+Part+A%3A+Tissue+Engineering&rft.issn=19373341&rft_id=info:doi/10.1089%2Ften.tea.2008.0333
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Drosophila; Danio rerio; Caudata; Planaria; Tissue engineering; Mathematical models; Computer applications
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ten.tea.2008.0333
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Photocatalytic inactivation of viruses using titanium dioxide nanoparticles and low-pressure UV light
AN - 1777168533; 13841459
AB - The carcinogenic potential of chlorine disinfection by-products and recent changes in water quality regulations have led to a greater emphasis on alternative disinfection mechanisms. In this study, the efficacy of bench-scale and pilot-scale titanium dioxide (TiO2) photocatalytic disinfection was explored using four bacteriophages (MS2, PRD1, phi-X174, and fr). The optimized bench-scale experiments indicated that 1 mg/L of Degussa P25 TiO2 irradiated by low-pressure ultraviolet (UV) light reduced the dose requirements for viral inactivation in comparison to UV light alone. The highest UV dose reductions for 4-log inactivation of PRD1, MS2, phi-X174, and fr were 19%, 15%, 6%, and 0%, respectively. Bench-scale photocatalysis was inhibited by limited adsorption of the viruses onto the TiO2 nanoparticles, as indicated by the poor results for high TiO2 concentrations. Subsequently, pilot-scale experiments were completed using the Photo-Cat Lab from Purifics. The annular reactor configuration and increased viral adsorption dramatically improved photocatalytic inactivation for samples with high TiO2 concentrations. Using the Photo-Cat Lab, 2-log inactivation of the bacteriophages was achieved with 400 mg/L of Degussa P25 TiO2 and a UV dose of approximately 34 mJ/cm2 (energy consumption of 0.33 kWh/m3)--a 700-fold decrease in energy use compared to bench-scale photocatalysis.
JF - Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A: Toxic/Hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering
AU - Gerrity, Daniel
AU - Ryu, Hodon
AU - Crittenden, John
AU - Abbaszadegan, Morteza
AD - National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - September 2008
SP - 1261
EP - 1270
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN UK
VL - 43
IS - 11
SN - 1093-4529, 1093-4529
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - Disinfection
KW - UV
KW - photocatalysis
KW - titanium dioxide
KW - PRD1
KW - MS2
KW - phi-X174
KW - fr
KW - Inactivation
KW - Bacteriophages
KW - Titanium dioxide
KW - Viruses
KW - Byproducts
KW - Photocatalysis
KW - Adsorption
KW - Water quality
KW - Nanoparticles
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1777168533?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.atitle=Photocatalytic+inactivation+of+viruses+using+titanium+dioxide+nanoparticles+and+low-pressure+UV+light&rft.au=Gerrity%2C+Daniel%3BRyu%2C+Hodon%3BCrittenden%2C+John%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+Morteza&rft.aulast=Gerrity&rft.aufirst=Daniel&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=1261&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.issn=10934529&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F10934520802177813
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 29
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934520802177813
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Limnology and Oceanography
AN - 1648909140; 2015-010101
JF - Limnology and Oceanography
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - September 2008
SP - 2057
EP - 2360
PB - American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Ann Arbor, MI
VL - 53
IS - 5, Part 2
SN - 0024-3590, 0024-3590
KW - hydrology
KW - autonomous platforms
KW - limnology
KW - sampling
KW - Lagrangian platforms
KW - techniques
KW - synthesis
KW - samplers
KW - instruments
KW - oceanography
KW - measurement
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1648909140?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.atitle=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.au=&rft.aulast=&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=53&rft.issue=5%2C+Part+2&rft.spage=2057&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.issn=00243590&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://aslo.org/lo/toc/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - PubXState - MI
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - SuppNotes - Individual papers within scope are cited separately
N1 - Last updated - 2015-01-29
N1 - CODEN - LIOCAH
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - autonomous platforms; hydrology; instruments; Lagrangian platforms; limnology; measurement; oceanography; samplers; sampling; synthesis; techniques
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping bathymetric and hydrographic features of Glover's Reef, Belize, with a REMUS autonomous underwater vehicle
AN - 1648908671; 2015-010103
JF - Limnology and Oceanography
AU - Shcherbina, Andrey Y
AU - Gawarkiewicz, Glen G
AU - Linder, Christopher A
AU - Thorrold, Simon R
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - September 2008
SP - 2264
EP - 2272
PB - American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Ann Arbor, MI
VL - 53
IS - 5, Part 2
SN - 0024-3590, 0024-3590
KW - Belize
KW - Glover's Reef
KW - reefs
KW - techniques
KW - mapping
KW - autonomous underwater vehicles
KW - oceanography
KW - fluorescence
KW - REMUS autonomous underwater vehicles
KW - velocity
KW - applications
KW - porphyrins
KW - water masses
KW - pigments
KW - Remote Environmental Monitoring Units
KW - chlorophyll
KW - organic compounds
KW - stratification
KW - atolls
KW - bathymetry
KW - North Atlantic
KW - Central America
KW - Caribbean Sea
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - remote sensing
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1648908671?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.atitle=Mapping+bathymetric+and+hydrographic+features+of+Glover%27s+Reef%2C+Belize%2C+with+a+REMUS+autonomous+underwater+vehicle&rft.au=Shcherbina%2C+Andrey+Y%3BGawarkiewicz%2C+Glen+G%3BLinder%2C+Christopher+A%3BThorrold%2C+Simon+R&rft.aulast=Shcherbina&rft.aufirst=Andrey&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=53&rft.issue=5%2C+Part+2&rft.spage=2264&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.issn=00243590&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_53/issue_5_part_2/2264.pdf http://aslo.org/lo/toc/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 24
N1 - PubXState - MI
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sketch maps
N1 - SuppNotes - Accessed on April 4, 2012
N1 - Last updated - 2015-01-29
N1 - CODEN - LIOCAH
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - applications; Atlantic Ocean; atolls; autonomous underwater vehicles; bathymetry; Belize; Caribbean Sea; Central America; chlorophyll; fluorescence; Glover's Reef; mapping; North Atlantic; oceanography; organic compounds; pigments; porphyrins; reefs; Remote Environmental Monitoring Units; remote sensing; REMUS autonomous underwater vehicles; stratification; techniques; velocity; water masses
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Glider observations of sediment resuspension in a Middle Atlantic Bight fall transition storm
AN - 1648908618; 2015-010102
JF - Limnology and Oceanography
AU - Glenn, Scott
AU - Jones, Clayton
AU - Twardowski, Michael
AU - Bowers, Louis
AU - Kerfoot, John
AU - Kohut, Josh
AU - Webb, Doug
AU - Schofield, Oscar
Y1 - 2008/09//
PY - 2008
DA - September 2008
SP - 2180
EP - 2196
PB - American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Ann Arbor, MI
VL - 53
IS - 5, Part 2
SN - 0024-3590, 0024-3590
KW - United States
KW - optical spectra
KW - geotraverses
KW - techniques
KW - suspended materials
KW - Tuckerton New Jersey
KW - salinity
KW - marine sedimentation
KW - temperature
KW - observations
KW - marine sediments
KW - mixing
KW - sediments
KW - autonomous underwater gliders
KW - velocity
KW - storms
KW - spectra
KW - Ocean County New Jersey
KW - Middle Atlantic Bight
KW - Northwest Atlantic
KW - time series analysis
KW - statistical analysis
KW - sedimentation
KW - suspension
KW - cyclones
KW - seasonal variations
KW - New Jersey
KW - continental shelf
KW - North Atlantic
KW - hurricanes
KW - backscattering
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1648908618?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.atitle=Glider+observations+of+sediment+resuspension+in+a+Middle+Atlantic+Bight+fall+transition+storm&rft.au=Glenn%2C+Scott%3BJones%2C+Clayton%3BTwardowski%2C+Michael%3BBowers%2C+Louis%3BKerfoot%2C+John%3BKohut%2C+Josh%3BWebb%2C+Doug%3BSchofield%2C+Oscar&rft.aulast=Glenn&rft.aufirst=Scott&rft.date=2008-09-01&rft.volume=53&rft.issue=5%2C+Part+2&rft.spage=2180&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Limnology+and+Oceanography&rft.issn=00243590&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_53/issue_5_part_2/2180.pdf http://aslo.org/lo/toc/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2015, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2015-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 46
N1 - PubXState - MI
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sketch maps
N1 - SuppNotes - Accessed on April 4, 2012
N1 - Last updated - 2015-01-29
N1 - CODEN - LIOCAH
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; autonomous underwater gliders; backscattering; continental shelf; cyclones; geotraverses; hurricanes; marine sedimentation; marine sediments; Middle Atlantic Bight; mixing; New Jersey; North Atlantic; Northwest Atlantic; observations; Ocean County New Jersey; optical spectra; salinity; seasonal variations; sedimentation; sediments; spectra; statistical analysis; storms; suspended materials; suspension; techniques; temperature; time series analysis; Tuckerton New Jersey; United States; velocity
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - A General Theory of Ecology
T2 - 93rd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AN - 41077479; 4919302
JF - 93rd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AU - Scheiner, Samuel M
AU - Willig, Michael R
Y1 - 2008/08/03/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Aug 03
KW - Ecology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41077479?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=93rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.atitle=A+General+Theory+of+Ecology&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel+M%3BWillig%2C+Michael+R&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2008-08-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=93rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2008/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-25
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Broader Impacts: Linking Research, Education, and Outreach
T2 - 93rd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AN - 41069106; 4919611
JF - 93rd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AU - Ortega, Sonia
Y1 - 2008/08/03/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Aug 03
KW - Education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41069106?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=93rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.atitle=Broader+Impacts%3A+Linking+Research%2C+Education%2C+and+Outreach&rft.au=Ortega%2C+Sonia&rft.aulast=Ortega&rft.aufirst=Sonia&rft.date=2008-08-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=93rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2008/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-25
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Landscape and Food Web Interactions of a North Pacific Hunter-gatherer Society
T2 - 93rd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AN - 41067869; 4919416
JF - 93rd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America (ESA 2008)
AU - Huntly, Nancy J
AU - Finney, Bruce
AU - Jordan, James
AU - Maschner, Herb
AU - Reedy-Maschner, Katherine
AU - Rudebusch, Faith
AU - Schoen, Sarah
AU - Sheridan, Peter
AU - Widmer, Michael Gene
Y1 - 2008/08/03/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Aug 03
KW - North Pacific
KW - Food webs
KW - Landscape
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41067869?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=93rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.atitle=Landscape+and+Food+Web+Interactions+of+a+North+Pacific+Hunter-gatherer+Society&rft.au=Huntly%2C+Nancy+J%3BFinney%2C+Bruce%3BJordan%2C+James%3BMaschner%2C+Herb%3BReedy-Maschner%2C+Katherine%3BRudebusch%2C+Faith%3BSchoen%2C+Sarah%3BSheridan%2C+Peter%3BWidmer%2C+Michael+Gene&rft.aulast=Huntly&rft.aufirst=Nancy&rft.date=2008-08-03&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=93rd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+%28ESA+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2008/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-25
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Early vocabulary inventory for Mandarin Chinese
AN - 85706132; 201000122
AB - Early vocabulary development is a reliable predictor of children's later language skills. The MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory (CDI) has provided a powerful tool to assess early vocabulary development in English and other languages. However, there have been no published CDI norms for Mandarin Chinese. Given the importance of large-scale comparative data sets for understanding the early childhood lexicon, we have developed an early vocabulary inventory for Mandarin. In this article, we report our efforts in developing this instrument, and discuss the data collected from 884 Chinese families in Beijing over a period of 12-30 months, based on our instrument. Chinese children's receptive and expressive lexicons as assessed by our inventory match well with those reported for English on the basis of CDI. In particular, our data indicate comprehension-production differences, individual differences in early comprehension and in later production, and different lexical development profiles among infants versus toddlers. We also make the checklists and norms of our inventory available to the research community via the Internet; they may be accessed from the Psychonomic Society's Archive of Norms, Stimuli, and Data, at www.psychonomic.org/archive. Adapted from the source document
JF - Behavior Research Methods
AU - Hao, Meiling
AU - Shu, Hua
AU - Xing, Ailing
AU - Li, Ping
AD - Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22230 p-li@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2008/08//
PY - 2008
DA - August 2008
SP - 728
EP - 733
VL - 40
IS - 3
SN - 1554-351X, 1554-351X
KW - Language Acquisition (41600)
KW - Comprehension (13950)
KW - English (21900)
KW - Language Comparison (41950)
KW - Mandarin (50900)
KW - Speech Production (82780)
KW - Language Proficiency (43570)
KW - Communicative Competence (13650)
KW - Children (11850)
KW - Vocabulary Learning (94855)
KW - article
KW - 4015: psycholinguistics; child language acquisition
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/85706132?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Allba&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Behavior+Research+Methods&rft.atitle=Early+vocabulary+inventory+for+Mandarin+Chinese&rft.au=Hao%2C+Meiling%3BShu%2C+Hua%3BXing%2C+Ailing%3BLi%2C+Ping&rft.aulast=Hao&rft.aufirst=Meiling&rft.date=2008-08-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=728&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Behavior+Research+Methods&rft.issn=1554351X&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Vocabulary Learning (94855); Mandarin (50900); Language Acquisition (41600); Children (11850); Communicative Competence (13650); Language Proficiency (43570); Language Comparison (41950); Comprehension (13950); Speech Production (82780); English (21900)
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Role of HBCUs as Baccalaureate-Origin Institutions of Black S&E Doctorate Recipients. InfoBrief. NSF 08-319
AN - 61984179; ED502482
AB - This InfoBrief investigates the role and relevance of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in enhancing educational opportunities for African Americans by examining the role of HBCUs as baccalaureate-origin institutions of black science and engineering (S&E) doctorate recipients. It examines trends primarily during the past two decades and compares HBCUs to non-HBCU institutions, to different Carnegie types of institutions, and to a select group of baccalaureate colleges--the Oberlin 50 (minus Hampton University which is an HBCU). The InfoBrief also examines differences between public and private institutions. The analysis focuses on two types of output variables: the absolute number of doctorates and the institutional yield--the number of S&E doctorates in a given year per thousand bachelor's degrees awarded in all fields 9 years (the median time from bachelor's--to-doctorate receipt for S&E doctorates) prior to that year. (Contains 3 tables, 4 figures, and 7 notes.)
AU - Burrelli, Joan
AU - Rapoport, Alan
Y1 - 2008/08//
PY - 2008
DA - August 2008
SP - 8
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Institutional Characteristics
KW - Black Colleges
KW - Private Colleges
KW - Public Colleges
KW - African Americans
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - College Role
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Bachelors Degrees
KW - Educational Opportunities
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Trend Analysis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61984179?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The evolution of excellence: Policies, paradigms, and practices shaping US research and development
AN - 61683172; 200832073
AB - An ongoing interest in the history of US technological advancement exists due to its influence on US economic growth, productivity, and international competitiveness. Federal government policy and investments have fostered a collaborative culture between the main supporters and performers of US research and development: the government, academia, and industry. At present, a full two-thirds of our nation's research and development spending comes from the private sector, and research and development is closely linked to the marketplace. The US government tracks key international science and technology metrics in order to inform its priority-setting process. The latest trends indicate that a broad expansion of science and technology capabilities is underway in many countries, both policy- and market-driven. In today's economic landscape, the US is confronting a host of new challenges on the global scientific and economic competitive fronts. [Copyright 2008 Elsevier Ltd.]
JF - Technology in Society
AU - Olsen, Kathie L
AU - Call, Neysa M
AU - Summers, Melissa A
AU - Carlson, Ann B
AD - c/o Call -- National Science Foundation (NSF), 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 1205N, Arlington, VA 22230, USA
Y1 - 2008/08//
PY - 2008
DA - August 2008
SP - 309
EP - 318
PB - Elsevier Science, Amsterdam The Netherlands
VL - 30
IS - 3-4
SN - 0160-791X, 0160-791X
KW - Basic research, Competitiveness, Federal investment, National Science Foundation, Public policy, Research and development, Science and engineering indicators, Technology
KW - Science and Technology
KW - United States of America
KW - Economic Development
KW - Research and Development
KW - Public Policy
KW - Government Spending
KW - Competition
KW - Economic Policy
KW - Development Policy
KW - article
KW - 1772: sociology of science; sociology of technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61683172?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Asocabs&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Technology+in+Society&rft.atitle=The+evolution+of+excellence%3A+Policies%2C+paradigms%2C+and+practices+shaping+US+research+and+development&rft.au=Olsen%2C+Kathie+L%3BCall%2C+Neysa+M%3BSummers%2C+Melissa+A%3BCarlson%2C+Ann+B&rft.aulast=Olsen&rft.aufirst=Kathie&rft.date=2008-08-01&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=3-4&rft.spage=309&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Technology+in+Society&rft.issn=0160791X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.techsoc.2008.04.010
LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2008-11-06
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - TESODY
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - United States of America; Research and Development; Government Spending; Economic Policy; Development Policy; Science and Technology; Economic Development; Public Policy; Competition
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.techsoc.2008.04.010
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking the temperature of rhyolites from the Yellowstone Hotspot track; evaluation of the Ti-in-quartz method
AN - 50452575; 2009-076080
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Leeman, William L
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/07//
PY - 2008
DA - July 2008
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 72
IS - 12S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - hot spots
KW - geologic thermometry
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - silica minerals
KW - igneous rocks
KW - continental crust
KW - TitaniQ
KW - Yellowstone National Park
KW - framework silicates
KW - thermodynamic properties
KW - geochemistry
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - ignimbrite
KW - pyroclastics
KW - plate tectonics
KW - titanium
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - quartz
KW - crystal chemistry
KW - Snake River plain
KW - crust
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50452575?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=Taking+the+temperature+of+rhyolites+from+the+Yellowstone+Hotspot+track%3B+evaluation+of+the+Ti-in-quartz+method&rft.au=Leeman%2C+William+L%3BLee%2C+Cin-Ty+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2008-07-01&rft.volume=72&rft.issue=12S&rft.spage=A530&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 18th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - continental crust; crust; crystal chemistry; framework silicates; geochemistry; geologic thermometry; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; magmas; metals; plate tectonics; pyroclastics; quartz; rhyolites; silica minerals; silicates; Snake River plain; thermodynamic properties; TitaniQ; titanium; United States; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone Hot Spot; Yellowstone National Park
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Complex crustal assembly of "Mt. Shasta" high-Mg andesite (HMA); evidence from mineral componentry
AN - 50114879; 2010-007237
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Leeman, William L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008/07//
PY - 2008
DA - July 2008
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 72
IS - 12S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - magnesium
KW - Siskiyou County California
KW - andesites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - crystal growth
KW - California
KW - pyroxene group
KW - mineral composition
KW - clinopyroxene
KW - mixing
KW - geochemical anomalies
KW - shield volcanoes
KW - rare earths
KW - trace elements
KW - hybridization
KW - geochemistry
KW - chain silicates
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - matrix
KW - overgrowths
KW - Mount Shasta
KW - Cascade Range
KW - Whaleback
KW - lava
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - volcanoes
KW - xenocrysts
KW - phenocrysts
KW - crust
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50114879?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=Complex+crustal+assembly+of+%22Mt.+Shasta%22+high-Mg+andesite+%28HMA%29%3B+evidence+from+mineral+componentry&rft.au=Streck%2C+Martin+J%3BLeeman%2C+William+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Streck&rft.aufirst=Martin&rft.date=2008-07-01&rft.volume=72&rft.issue=12S&rft.spage=A906&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 18th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 1
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; andesites; California; Cascade Range; chain silicates; clinopyroxene; crust; crystal growth; geochemical anomalies; geochemistry; hybridization; igneous rocks; lava; magmas; magnesium; matrix; metals; mineral composition; mixing; Mount Shasta; overgrowths; phenocrysts; pyroxene group; rare earths; shield volcanoes; silicates; Siskiyou County California; trace elements; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanoes; Whaleback; xenocrysts
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Radionuclide studies of meteorites from Ramlat al Wahibah and other Omani desert locations
AN - 50085933; 2010-017326
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J Timothy
AU - Leclerc, M D
AU - Biddulph, D L
AU - McHargue, L R
AU - Burr, G S
AU - Al-Kathiri, A
AU - Gnos, E
AU - Hofmann, B
A2 - Jull, A. J. Timothy
Y1 - 2008/07//
PY - 2008
DA - July 2008
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 43, Suppl.
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - terrestrial environment
KW - isotopes
KW - Ramlat al Wahibah Meteorites
KW - halogens
KW - Qarat al Milh Meteorites
KW - exposure age
KW - QaM 001
KW - meteorites
KW - iodine
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - I-129
KW - carbon
KW - age
KW - Sayh al Uhaymir Meteorites
KW - Asia
KW - Ramlat al Sahmah Meteorites
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Be-10
KW - oxidation
KW - Oman
KW - terrestrial age
KW - weathering
KW - new methods
KW - Arabian Peninsula
KW - metals
KW - SaU 033
KW - C-14
KW - beryllium
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50085933?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Radionuclide+studies+of+meteorites+from+Ramlat+al+Wahibah+and+other+Omani+desert+locations&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+Timothy%3BLeclerc%2C+M+D%3BBiddulph%2C+D+L%3BMcHargue%2C+L+R%3BBurr%2C+G+S%3BAl-Kathiri%2C+A%3BGnos%2C+E%3BHofmann%2C+B&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2008-07-01&rft.volume=43%2C+Suppl.&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A69&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 71st annual meeting of the Meteoritical Society
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 6
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - MERTAW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - age; alkaline earth metals; Arabian Peninsula; Asia; Be-10; beryllium; C-14; carbon; exposure age; halogens; I-129; iodine; isotopes; metals; meteorites; new methods; Oman; oxidation; QaM 001; Qarat al Milh Meteorites; radioactive isotopes; Ramlat al Sahmah Meteorites; Ramlat al Wahibah Meteorites; SaU 033; Sayh al Uhaymir Meteorites; terrestrial age; terrestrial environment; weathering
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - (super 14) C terrestrial ages of meteorites from the Atacama Desert (Chile)
AN - 50085600; 2010-017356
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Leclerc, M D
AU - Valenzuela, E M
AU - Jull, A J Timothy
A2 - Jull, A. J. Timothy
Y1 - 2008/07//
PY - 2008
DA - July 2008
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 43, Suppl.
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - eolian features
KW - ordinary chondrites
KW - terrestrial environment
KW - stony meteorites
KW - isotopes
KW - terrestrial age
KW - H chondrites
KW - Chile
KW - carbonaceous chondrites
KW - L chondrites
KW - iron
KW - deserts
KW - meteorites
KW - South America
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - Atacama Desert
KW - metals
KW - carbon
KW - age
KW - C-14
KW - chondrites
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50085600?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=%28super+14%29+C+terrestrial+ages+of+meteorites+from+the+Atacama+Desert+%28Chile%29&rft.au=Leclerc%2C+M+D%3BValenzuela%2C+E+M%3BJull%2C+A+J+Timothy&rft.aulast=Leclerc&rft.aufirst=M&rft.date=2008-07-01&rft.volume=43%2C+Suppl.&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A84&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 71st annual meeting of the Meteoritical Society
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 9
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - MERTAW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - age; Atacama Desert; C-14; carbon; carbonaceous chondrites; Chile; chondrites; deserts; eolian features; H chondrites; iron; isotopes; L chondrites; metals; meteorites; ordinary chondrites; radioactive isotopes; South America; stony meteorites; terrestrial age; terrestrial environment
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Oxidative Stress as a Screening Metric of Potential Toxicity by Nanoparticles and Ariborne Particulate Matter
AN - 20883634; 10310442
AB - Abstract not available.
JF - Inhalation Toxicology
AU - Rogers, Eugene
AU - Bello, Dhimiter
AU - Hsieh, Shufeng
AD - Department of Clinical Laboratory and Nutritional Science and NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for High Rate Nanomanufacturing, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, Massachusetts, USA
Y1 - 2008/07//
PY - 2008
DA - Jul 2008
SP - 895
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Milton Park, Abingdon Oxford OX14 4RN UK, [URL:http://www.taylorandfrancis.co.uk/]
VL - 20
IS - 9
SN - 0895-8378, 0895-8378
KW - Toxicology Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts
KW - Inhalation
KW - Oxidative stress
KW - Particulate matter
KW - Particulates
KW - Toxicity
KW - nanoparticles
KW - oxidative stress
KW - H 14000:Toxicology
KW - X 24490:Other
KW - P 6000:TOXICOLOGY AND HEALTH
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20883634?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxicologyabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Inhalation+Toxicology&rft.atitle=Oxidative+Stress+as+a+Screening+Metric+of+Potential+Toxicity+by+Nanoparticles+and+Ariborne+Particulate+Matter&rft.au=Rogers%2C+Eugene%3BBello%2C+Dhimiter%3BHsieh%2C+Shufeng&rft.aulast=Rogers&rft.aufirst=Eugene&rft.date=2008-07-01&rft.volume=20&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=895&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Inhalation+Toxicology&rft.issn=08958378&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F08958370802020828
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-09-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-30
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Inhalation; Oxidative stress; Particulate matter; Toxicity; nanoparticles; Particulates; oxidative stress
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08958370802020828
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Dissecting Arabidopsis Immune Responses using Molecular and Chemical Genomics
T2 - 2008 Joint Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists and the Sociedad Mexicana De Bioquimica Rama: Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular de Plantas (Plant Biology 2008)
AN - 41010712; 4893150
JF - 2008 Joint Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists and the Sociedad Mexicana De Bioquimica Rama: Bioquimica y Biologia Molecular de Plantas (Plant Biology 2008)
AU - Knoth, Colleen
AU - Salus, Melinda
AU - Girke, Thomas
AU - Eulgem, Thomas
Y1 - 2008/06/26/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Jun 26
KW - Genomics
KW - Arabidopsis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/41010712?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Joint+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+of+Plant+Biologists+and+the+Sociedad+Mexicana+De+Bioquimica+Rama%3A+Bioquimica+y+Biologia+Molecular+de+Plantas+%28Plant+Biology+2008%29&rft.atitle=Dissecting+Arabidopsis+Immune+Responses+using+Molecular+and+Chemical+Genomics&rft.au=Knoth%2C+Colleen%3BSalus%2C+Melinda%3BGirke%2C+Thomas%3BEulgem%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Knoth&rft.aufirst=Colleen&rft.date=2008-06-26&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Joint+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+of+Plant+Biologists+and+the+Sociedad+Mexicana+De+Bioquimica+Rama%3A+Bioquimica+y+Biologia+Molecular+de+Plantas+%28Plant+Biology+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://abstracts.aspb.org/pb2008/public/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-02-25
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-term study of Cryptosporidium and Giardia occurrence and quantitative microbial risk assessment in surface waters of Arizona in the USA
AN - 20227973; 8271064
AB - A four-year systematic study of microbial water quality in the surface waters of central Arizona was performed. The objectives of this study were to investigate the occurrence of microbial pathogens and indicators in the waters. A total of 192 water samples from five sites were analyzed for Cryptosporidium, Giardia, and various microbial and physical indicators. Ten percent (16/162) of the samples collected using EnviroChek filters were positive for Cryptosporidium oocysts, whereas no oocysts (< 1 in 5 L) were detected in the grab samples (0/30). Giardia cysts were detected in 10% (3/30) of the grab samples and in 27% (44/162) samples collected using EnviroChek filters. Mean concentrations of oocysts in the source waters at the treatment plants were lower than the Bin 1 category of the USEPA Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule; therefore no additional treatment is required by the plants. The annual risks of infection from Cryptosporidium met the annual acceptable risk of 10 super(-4) at all sampling sites, whereas the risks of Giardia infection at the Verde River and the Salt River were 5.70E-04 and 2.66E-04, respectively.
JF - Journal of Water and Health
AU - Ryu, H
AU - Abbaszadegan, M
AD - Arizona State University, National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, ECG 252, Tempe, AZ 85287-5306, USA, abbaszadegan@asu.edu
Y1 - 2008/06//
PY - 2008
DA - Jun 2008
SP - 263
EP - 274
VL - 6
IS - 2
SN - 1477-8920, 1477-8920
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Aqualine Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Pollution Abstracts; Environment Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Spain, Granada, Almunecar, Verde R.
KW - Risk
KW - Surface water
KW - Cryptosporidium
KW - A 01360:Plant Diseases
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - SW 3060:Water treatment and distribution
KW - AQ 00004:Water Treatment
KW - ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety
KW - K 03420:Plant Diseases
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20227973?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Water+and+Health&rft.atitle=Long-term+study+of+Cryptosporidium+and+Giardia+occurrence+and+quantitative+microbial+risk+assessment+in+surface+waters+of+Arizona+in+the+USA&rft.au=Ryu%2C+H%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+M&rft.aulast=Ryu&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2008-06-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=263&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Water+and+Health&rft.issn=14778920&rft_id=info:doi/10.2166%2Fwh.2008.030
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-11
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Surface water; Risk; Cryptosporidium; Spain, Granada, Almunecar, Verde R.
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wh.2008.030
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Airborne Nanoparticle Release Associated with the Compounding of Nanocomposites using Nanoalumina as Fillers
AN - 19585394; 8760398
AB - Twin screw extrusion is the preferred process to commercially produce nanocomposites by compounding the nanoparticles and polymer melts. Polymer nanocomposites, which contain nanoparticles dispersed in a polymer matrix, provide improved properties at low filler loadings. Nanoalumina particles recently have been used as fillers to polymer matrix that contributed enhanced physical properties of nanocomposites. Recently, concerns had been expressed that airborne nanoparticles particularly of nanoalumina released during compounding might present serious contamination of the air in the workplace. Researchers with experience in environmental health and polymer manufacturing monitored the compounding process for a model nanoalumina-containing nanocomposite using a TSI Fast Mobility Particle Spectrometer (FMPS). FMPS measurements were taken at background locations, source locations, and operators' breathing zones; in parallel to the FMPS real time measurement, airborne nanoparticles were collected using polycarbonate filters fitted with filmed grids driven by a personal air sampling pump. Filter samples were analyzed for particle morphology and elemental composition. It was found that the nanoparticle number concentration was elevated during processing. The released nanoparticles are a complex mixture of the individual nanoalumina particles, agglomerates of those particles, polymer fume particles, and perhaps others.
JF - Aerosol and Air Quality Resarch
AU - Tsai, S-J
AU - Ashter, A
AU - Ada, E
AU - Mead, J L
AU - Barry, C F
AU - Ellenbecker, MJ
AD - NSF Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing (CHN), University of Massachusetts Lowel, l One University Avenue, Lowell MA 01854 USA, candace.umass@gmail.com
Y1 - 2008/06//
PY - 2008
DA - Jun 2008
SP - 160
EP - 177
VL - 8
IS - 2
SN - 1680-8584, 1680-8584
KW - Pollution Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts
KW - Mobility
KW - Environmental health
KW - Air quality
KW - Particulates
KW - Nanoparticles
KW - Air sampling
KW - Aerosols
KW - Atmospheric pollution
KW - Fumes
KW - Chemical composition
KW - Filters
KW - Morphology
KW - Pumps
KW - Polymers
KW - M2 551.510.42:Air Pollution (551.510.42)
KW - P 0000:AIR POLLUTION
KW - H 12000:Epidemiology and Public Health
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19585394?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Apollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Aerosol+and+Air+Quality+Resarch&rft.atitle=Airborne+Nanoparticle+Release+Associated+with+the+Compounding+of+Nanocomposites+using+Nanoalumina+as+Fillers&rft.au=Tsai%2C+S-J%3BAshter%2C+A%3BAda%2C+E%3BMead%2C+J+L%3BBarry%2C+C+F%3BEllenbecker%2C+MJ&rft.aulast=Tsai&rft.aufirst=S-J&rft.date=2008-06-01&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=160&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Aerosol+and+Air+Quality+Resarch&rft.issn=16808584&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Polymers; Particulates; Air quality; Filters; Aerosols; Pumps; Air sampling; Mobility; Environmental health; Chemical composition; Fumes; Morphology; Nanoparticles; Atmospheric pollution
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Non-linear conjugate gradient inversion for global EM induction; resolution studies
AN - 51004065; 2008-093367
JF - Geophysical Journal International
AU - Kelbert, Anna
AU - Egbert, Gary D
AU - Schultz, Adam
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 365
EP - 381
PB - Blackwell Science for the Royal Astronomical Society, the Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft and the European Geophysical Society
VL - 173
IS - 2
SN - 0956-540X, 0956-540X
KW - upper mantle
KW - three-dimensional models
KW - finite difference analysis
KW - induction
KW - geophysical methods
KW - mantle
KW - algorithms
KW - electromagnetic induction
KW - depth
KW - seismic methods
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51004065?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Journal+International&rft.atitle=Non-linear+conjugate+gradient+inversion+for+global+EM+induction%3B+resolution+studies&rft.au=Kelbert%2C+Anna%3BEgbert%2C+Gary+D%3BSchultz%2C+Adam&rft.aulast=Kelbert&rft.aufirst=Anna&rft.date=2008-05-01&rft.volume=173&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=365&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Journal+International&rft.issn=0956540X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1365-246X.2008.03717.x
L2 - http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=0956-540X
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 66
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - algorithms; depth; electromagnetic induction; finite difference analysis; geophysical methods; induction; mantle; seismic methods; three-dimensional models; upper mantle
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2008.03717.x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - PASADO; deep lake drilling at Laguna Potrok Aike, southern Argentina
AN - 50552577; 2008-132647
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Zolitschka, Bernd
AU - Corbella, Hugo
AU - Ohlendorf, Christian
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 1
EP - 4
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 6
IS - 1
KW - Quaternary
KW - lakes
KW - crater lakes
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Cenozoic
KW - South America
KW - Argentina
KW - deep drilling
KW - maars
KW - Pleistocene
KW - reconstruction
KW - drilling
KW - Laguna Potrok Aike
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50552577?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=PASADO%3B+deep+lake+drilling+at+Laguna+Potrok+Aike%2C+southern+Argentina&rft.au=Zolitschka%2C+Bernd%3BCorbella%2C+Hugo%3BOhlendorf%2C+Christian&rft.aulast=Zolitschka&rft.aufirst=Bernd&rft.date=2008-05-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Argentina; Cenozoic; crater lakes; deep drilling; drilling; Laguna Potrok Aike; lakes; maars; paleoclimatology; Pleistocene; Quaternary; reconstruction; South America
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Drilling Lake E; a logistical challenge
AN - 50549567; 2008-132648
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Schnurrenberger, Doug
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 5
EP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 6
IS - 1
KW - engineering geology
KW - technology
KW - Commonwealth of Independent States
KW - Lake El'gygytgyn
KW - ice
KW - Russian Federation
KW - drilling
KW - 30:Engineering geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50549567?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=Drilling+Lake+E%3B+a+logistical+challenge&rft.au=Schnurrenberger%2C+Doug&rft.aulast=Schnurrenberger&rft.aufirst=Doug&rft.date=2008-05-01&rft.volume=6&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=5&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Commonwealth of Independent States; drilling; engineering geology; ice; Lake El'gygytgyn; Russian Federation; technology
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The impacts of indirect soil moisture assimilation and direct surface temperature and humidity assimilation on a mesoscale model simulation of an Indian monsoon depression
AN - 50477409; 2009-030181
JF - Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
AU - Vinodkumar
AU - Chandrasekar, A
AU - Alapaty, K
AU - Niyogi, Dev
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 1393
EP - 1412
PB - American Meteorological Society, Boston, MA
VL - 47
IS - 5
SN - 1558-8424, 1558-8424
KW - soils
KW - experimental studies
KW - weather observations
KW - heat flux
KW - numerical models
KW - moisture
KW - data processing
KW - atmospheric precipitation
KW - satellite methods
KW - temperature
KW - India
KW - monsoons
KW - humidity
KW - errors
KW - Indian Peninsula
KW - digital simulation
KW - atmospheric pressure
KW - land-atmosphere interaction
KW - data assimilation
KW - weather prediction
KW - Asia
KW - winds
KW - remote sensing
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50477409?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Applied+Meteorology+and+Climatology&rft.atitle=The+impacts+of+indirect+soil+moisture+assimilation+and+direct+surface+temperature+and+humidity+assimilation+on+a+mesoscale+model+simulation+of+an+Indian+monsoon+depression&rft.au=Vinodkumar%3BChandrasekar%2C+A%3BAlapaty%2C+K%3BNiyogi%2C+Dev&rft.aulast=Vinodkumar&rft.aufirst=&rft.date=2008-05-01&rft.volume=47&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=1393&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Applied+Meteorology+and+Climatology&rft.issn=15588424&rft_id=info:doi/10.1175%2F2007JAMC1599.1
L2 - http://journals.ametsoc.org/loi/apme
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 42
N1 - PubXState - MA
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 3 tables
N1 - SuppNotes - Includes appendices
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JAMOAX
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Asia; atmospheric precipitation; atmospheric pressure; data assimilation; data processing; digital simulation; errors; experimental studies; heat flux; humidity; India; Indian Peninsula; land-atmosphere interaction; moisture; monsoons; numerical models; remote sensing; satellite methods; soils; temperature; weather observations; weather prediction; winds
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/2007JAMC1599.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Special issue on the political coordination of knowledge and innovation policies
AN - 37052629; 3812793
JF - Science and public policy
AU - Pelkonen, Antti
AU - Teräväinen, Tuula
AU - Waltari, Suvi-Tuuli
AU - Koch, Christian
AU - Edler, Jakob
AU - Kuhlmann, Stefan
AU - Griessen, Thomas
AU - Braun, Dietmar
AD - University of Helsinki ; Aarhus University ; University of Manchester ; University of Twente ; Swiss National Science Foundation ; Université de Lausanne
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 227
EP - 298
VL - 35
IS - 4
SN - 0302-3427, 0302-3427
KW - Political Science
KW - Policy co-ordination
KW - Administrative organization
KW - Policy making
KW - Knowledge
KW - Innovation policy
KW - Decision making
KW - Federalism
KW - Higher education
KW - Governance
KW - Science and technology
KW - Central-local government relations
KW - Cross-national analysis
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/37052629?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Science+and+public+policy&rft.atitle=Special+issue+on+the+political+coordination+of+knowledge+and+innovation+policies&rft.au=Pelkonen%2C+Antti%3BTer%C3%A4v%C3%A4inen%2C+Tuula%3BWaltari%2C+Suvi-Tuuli%3BKoch%2C+Christian%3BEdler%2C+Jakob%3BKuhlmann%2C+Stefan%3BGriessen%2C+Thomas%3BBraun%2C+Dietmar&rft.aulast=Pelkonen&rft.aufirst=Antti&rft.date=2008-05-01&rft.volume=35&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=227&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Science+and+public+policy&rft.issn=03023427&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - SuppNotes - Collection of 6 articles
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 9618; 7073; 6569 2536 2523 4577 3872 554 971 3977 5574 10472; 3322 6071 1542 11325; 583 9003; 9625 9628; 4848 2119 2116 5551 7506 5586 9792; 2119 2116 5551 7506 5586 9792; 11326 11325 12622; 5850 4049; 5549; 3060 971
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The political coordination of knowledge and innovation policies in Switzerland
AN - 37050206; 3812754
AB - The article highlights the main problems Switzerland faces in engaging in a more encompassing knowledge and innovation policy, an objective that is widely shared by the political elites. Two 'coordination gaps' are highlighted in the context of Switzerland: the 'federal divide' that structures political governance in the knowledge space in manifold ways and the 'utilitarian divide' that is institutionalised within the federal administration. It is demonstrated that Swiss policy-makers have taken great pains to overcome the obstacles in the wake of the federal divide with some success, but have failed to do so with regard to the utilitarian divide. The lack of guiding and reflexive capacities at the cabinet level will make it difficult to overcome this divide in the future, though planned reforms at the agency level may help to build some bridges between at least basic and technological research.
JF - Science and public policy
AU - Griessen, Thomas
AU - Braun, Dietmar
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation ; Université de Lausanne
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 277
EP - 288
VL - 35
IS - 4
SN - 0302-3427, 0302-3427
KW - Political Science
KW - Policy co-ordination
KW - Scientific research
KW - Administrative organization
KW - Federalism
KW - Policy making
KW - Governance
KW - Switzerland
KW - Knowledge
KW - Innovation policy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/37050206?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Science+and+public+policy&rft.atitle=The+political+coordination+of+knowledge+and+innovation+policies+in+Switzerland&rft.au=Griessen%2C+Thomas%3BBraun%2C+Dietmar&rft.aulast=Griessen&rft.aufirst=Thomas&rft.date=2008-05-01&rft.volume=35&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=277&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Science+and+public+policy&rft.issn=03023427&rft_id=info:doi/10.3152%2F030234208X310338
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 9618; 7073; 6569 2536 2523 4577 3872 554 971 3977 5574 10472; 4848 2119 2116 5551 7506 5586 9792; 583 9003; 5549; 9625 9628; 11347 10902; 408 462 129
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3152/030234208X310338
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Impact of Transformative Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education on Academic Institutions. Workshop Report
AN - 1011397335; ED530821
AB - In May 2008, a two-day workshop was held in Arlington, Virginia with the goal of defining the progress of interdisciplinary research and graduate education and their impacts on academic institutions. The workshop was sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Directorate of Education and Human Resources, Division of Graduate Education, Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) Program. The workshop was convened because of the growing acknowledgment of the importance of discoveries and outcomes of interdisciplinary, cutting-edge science and technology for economic and societal growth and vitality. Recognizing the many impacts of interdisciplinary research can catalyze a change in the landscape of U.S. universities to value and increase interdisciplinary graduate education. Eight working groups addressed questions focused on four critical impact areas of interdisciplinary institutional change: (1) Research; (2) Faculty; (3) Graduate Education; and (4) Academic Institutions. Each of the working groups, four comprising PIs and co-PIs of active IGERT projects and four comprising leading administrators at IGERT institutions, was asked to consider and summarize central questions on the four impact areas that addressed the following topics: (1) Progress and impacts made to date; (2) What works and what does not; (3) Opportunities and challenges going forward; and (4) Metrics for success of interdisciplinary research and graduate education. Discussion of the theme of interdisciplinarity for each topic frequently touched upon one or more of the other topics. Therefore, the summaries of the workshop themes in this report present key thoughts, contributions, and recommendations derived from both the working groups who specifically chose to focus on that topic and from other discussions on that topic that occurred during the two-day workshop. Appended are: (1) List of Workshop Participants Organized by Working Groups; (2) Workshop Agenda; (3) Question Templates for Working Groups; and (4) Overview of Work Process. [Funding for this paper was provided by the Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) Program.]
AU - Van Hartesveldt, Carol
AU - Giordan, Judith
Y1 - 2008/05//
PY - 2008
DA - May 2008
SP - 52
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Workshops
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Grants
KW - Teamwork
KW - STEM Education
KW - Research
KW - Interdisciplinary Approach
KW - Organizational Change
KW - Institutions
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1011397335?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Status of Women Scientists in Knowledge-Based Biotechnology Firms.
T2 - 2008 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG 2008)
AN - 40869689; 4828749
JF - 2008 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG 2008)
AU - Smith-Doerr, Laurel
Y1 - 2008/04/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Apr 15
KW - Biotechnology
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40869689?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Association+of+American+Geographers+%28AAG+2008%29&rft.atitle=The+Status+of+Women+Scientists+in+Knowledge-Based+Biotechnology+Firms.&rft.au=Smith-Doerr%2C+Laurel&rft.aulast=Smith-Doerr&rft.aufirst=Laurel&rft.date=2008-04-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Association+of+American+Geographers+%28AAG+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://communicate.aag.org/eseries/aag_org/program/index.cfm?mtgID=53
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Magnitude of Sea Level Changes: A Perspective from the Paleozoic
T2 - 2008 European Geosciences Union General Assembly
AN - 40889416; 4836837
JF - 2008 European Geosciences Union General Assembly
AU - Haq, B
Y1 - 2008/04/13/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Apr 13
KW - Paleozoic
KW - Sea level changes
KW - Paleo studies
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40889416?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+European+Geosciences+Union+General+Assembly&rft.atitle=Magnitude+of+Sea+Level+Changes%3A+A+Perspective+from+the+Paleozoic&rft.au=Haq%2C+B&rft.aulast=Haq&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2008-04-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+European+Geosciences+Union+General+Assembly&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.cosis.net/members/meetings/programme/session_programme.php? m_id=49&p_id=325&day=2&view=session
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Observing the Earth: A Catalog of Capabilities.
T2 - 2008 European Geosciences Union General Assembly
AN - 40886401; 4831331
JF - 2008 European Geosciences Union General Assembly
AU - Jacobs, Clifford A
Y1 - 2008/04/13/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Apr 13
KW - Catalogs
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40886401?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+European+Geosciences+Union+General+Assembly&rft.atitle=Observing+the+Earth%3A+A+Catalog+of+Capabilities.&rft.au=Jacobs%2C+Clifford+A&rft.aulast=Jacobs&rft.aufirst=Clifford&rft.date=2008-04-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+European+Geosciences+Union+General+Assembly&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.cosis.net/members/meetings/programme/session_programme.php? m_id=49&p_id=325&day=2&view=session
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Cyberinfrastructure Vision for the 21st Century Discovery.
T2 - 2008 European Geosciences Union General Assembly
AN - 40875020; 4830838
JF - 2008 European Geosciences Union General Assembly
AU - Jacobs, Clifford A
Y1 - 2008/04/13/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Apr 13
KW - Vision
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40875020?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+European+Geosciences+Union+General+Assembly&rft.atitle=Cyberinfrastructure+Vision+for+the+21st+Century+Discovery.&rft.au=Jacobs%2C+Clifford+A&rft.aulast=Jacobs&rft.aufirst=Clifford&rft.date=2008-04-13&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+European+Geosciences+Union+General+Assembly&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.cosis.net/members/meetings/programme/session_programme.php? m_id=49&p_id=325&day=2&view=session
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A statistic-thermodynamic model for the DOM degradation in the estuary
AN - 21020267; 8126615
AB - This study aims to clarify the role of dissolved salts playing in the degradation process of terrestrial dissolved organic matter (DOM) at a scale of molecular movement. The molecular thermal movement is perpetual motion. In a multi- molecular system, this random motion also causes collision between the molecules. Seawater is a multi-molecular system consisting from water, salt, and terrestrial DOM molecules. This study attributes the DOM degradation in the estuary to the inelastic collision of DOM molecule with charged salt ions. From statistic-thermodynamic theories of molecular collision, the DOM degradation model and the DOM distribution model are derived. The models are validated by the field observations and satellite data. Thus, we conclude that the inelastic collision between the terrestrial DOM molecules and dissolved salt ions in seawater is a decisive dynamic mechanism for rapid loss of terrestrial DOM.
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
AU - Zheng, Quanan
AU - Chen, Qin
AU - Zhao, Haihong
AU - Shi, Jiuxin
AU - Cao, Yong
AU - Wang, Dan
AD - Division of Ocean Sciences, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia, USA
Y1 - 2008/04//
PY - 2008
DA - April 2008
PB - American Geophysical Union, 2000 Florida Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20009 USA, [mailto:service@agu.org]
VL - 35
IS - 6
SN - 0094-8276, 0094-8276
KW - Water Resources Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts
KW - Citation No. L06604
KW - DOM
KW - ocean color
KW - thermodynamic model
KW - molecule inelastic collision
KW - estuarine sedimentation
KW - salinity.
KW - 4219 Oceanography: General: Continental shelf and slope processes (3002)
KW - 4235 Oceanography: General: Estuarine processes (0442)
KW - 4271 Oceanography: General: Physical and chemical properties of seawater
KW - 4863 Oceanography: Biological and Chemical: Sedimentation (1861).
KW - Remote Sensing
KW - Ions
KW - Dissolved Solids
KW - Satellite Technology
KW - Degradation
KW - Estuaries
KW - Statistical analysis
KW - Model Studies
KW - Salts
KW - Satellite data
KW - Dissolved organic matter
KW - Statistical Analysis
KW - Dissolved salts
KW - Modelling
KW - M2 556.54:Estuaries (556.54)
KW - SW 0890:Estuaries
KW - Q2 09261:General
KW - O 2050:Chemical Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21020267?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awaterresources&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.atitle=A+statistic-thermodynamic+model+for+the+DOM+degradation+in+the+estuary&rft.au=Zheng%2C+Quanan%3BChen%2C+Qin%3BZhao%2C+Haihong%3BShi%2C+Jiuxin%3BCao%2C+Yong%3BWang%2C+Dan&rft.aulast=Zheng&rft.aufirst=Quanan&rft.date=2008-04-01&rft.volume=35&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Letters&rft.issn=00948276&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2007GL033150
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Dissolved organic matter; Estuaries; Dissolved salts; Modelling; Satellite data; Statistical analysis; Remote Sensing; Satellite Technology; Dissolved Solids; Ions; Salts; Degradation; Statistical Analysis; Model Studies
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007GL033150
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Teaching Students About Biodiversity by Studying the Correlation Between Plants & Arthropods
AN - 19344233; 8698787
JF - American Biology Teacher
AU - Richardson, Matthew L
AU - Hari, Janice
AD - Matthew L. Richardson is a doctoral student in the Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Illinois, Vrbana, Illinois 61801 and is also a National Science Foundation GK-12 Fellow; e-mail: mlrichar[at]uiuc.edu. Janice Hari is an eighth grade teacher and science coordinator at Urbana Middle School, Urbana, IL 61801; e-mail: ihari[at]usdll6.org.
Y1 - 2008/04//
PY - 2008
DA - Apr 2008
SP - 217
EP - 220
PB - Allen Press, Inc., 810 East Tenth St.
VL - 70
IS - 4
SN - 0002-7685, 0002-7685
KW - Ecology Abstracts
KW - Arthropoda
KW - Biodiversity
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Biology+Teacher&rft.atitle=Teaching+Students+About+Biodiversity+by+Studying+the+Correlation+Between+Plants+%26amp%3B+Arthropods&rft.au=Richardson%2C+Matthew+L%3BHari%2C+Janice&rft.aulast=Richardson&rft.aufirst=Matthew&rft.date=2008-04-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=217&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Biology+Teacher&rft.issn=00027685&rft_id=info:doi/10.1662%2F0002-7685%282008%29702.0.CO%3B2
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Biodiversity; Arthropoda
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1662/0002-7685(2008)70[217:TSABBS]2.0.CO;2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Regulating continent growth and composition by chemical weathering
AN - 1124738958; 2012-093309
AB - Continents ride high above the ocean floor because they are underlain by thick, low-density, Si-rich, and Mg-poor crust. However, the parental magmas of continents were basaltic, which means they must have lost Mg relative to Si during their maturation into continents. Igneous differentiation followed by lower crustal delamination and chemical weathering followed by subduction recycling are possible solutions, but the relative magnitudes of each process have never been quantitatively constrained because of the lack of appropriate data. Here, we show that the relative contributions of these processes can be obtained by simultaneous examination of Mg and Li (an analog for Mg) on the regional and global scales in arcs, delaminated lower crust, and river waters. At least 20% of Mg is lost from continents by weathering, which translates into >20% of continental mass lost by weathering (40% by delamination). Chemical weathering leaves behind a more Si-rich and Mg-poor crust, which is less dense and hence decreases the probability of crustal recycling by subduction. Net continental growth is thus modulated by chemical weathering and likely influenced by secular changes in weathering mechanisms.
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty Aeolus
AU - Morton, Douglas M
AU - Little, Mark G
AU - Kistler, Ronald
AU - Horodyskyj, Ulyana N
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Agranier, Arnaud
Y1 - 2008/04/01/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Apr 01
SP - 4981
EP - 4986
PB - National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC
VL - 105
IS - 13
SN - 0027-8424, 0027-8424
KW - magmatic differentiation
KW - mechanism
KW - continental crust
KW - California
KW - mixing
KW - mass balance
KW - continents
KW - exhumation
KW - batholiths
KW - basaltic composition
KW - North America
KW - chemical weathering
KW - accretion
KW - lithium
KW - global
KW - surface water
KW - equations
KW - felsic composition
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - Tertiary
KW - intrusions
KW - plate tectonics
KW - delamination
KW - niobium
KW - upper Miocene
KW - North American Cordillera
KW - strontium
KW - crust
KW - United States
KW - magnesium
KW - Li/Nb
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - fluid phase
KW - Peninsular Ranges Batholith
KW - extension tectonics
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - quantitative analysis
KW - Sierra Nevada Batholith
KW - tracers
KW - tectonics
KW - juvenile crust
KW - geochemistry
KW - water
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - recycling
KW - incompatible elements
KW - isotope ratios
KW - alkali metals
KW - subduction
KW - weathering
KW - Miocene
KW - genesis
KW - case studies
KW - regional
KW - Neogene
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - 23:Geomorphology
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
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L2 - http://www.pnas.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 48
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table
N1 - SuppNotes - Supplemental information/data is available in the online version of this article
N1 - Last updated - 2012-11-01
N1 - CODEN - PNASA6
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - accretion; alkali metals; alkaline earth metals; basaltic composition; batholiths; California; case studies; Cenozoic; chemical weathering; continental crust; continents; crust; delamination; equations; exhumation; extension tectonics; felsic composition; fluid phase; genesis; geochemistry; global; igneous rocks; incompatible elements; intrusions; isotope ratios; isotopes; juvenile crust; Li/Nb; lithium; magmas; magmatic differentiation; magnesium; mass balance; mechanism; metals; Miocene; mixing; Neogene; niobium; North America; North American Cordillera; Peninsular Ranges Batholith; plate tectonics; quantitative analysis; recycling; regional; Sierra Nevada Batholith; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; subduction; surface water; tectonics; Tertiary; tracers; United States; upper Miocene; water; weathering
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0711143105
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Science and technology for water purification in the coming decades
AN - 21025907; 8112416
AB - One of the most pervasive problems afflicting people throughout the world is inadequate access to clean water and sanitation. Problems with water are expected to grow worse in the coming decades, with water scarcity occurring globally, even in regions currently considered water-rich. Addressing these problems calls out for a tremendous amount of research to be conducted to identify robust new methods of purifying water at lower cost and with less energy, while at the same time minimizing the use of chemicals and impact on the environment. Here we highlight some of the science and technology being developed to improve the disinfection and decontamination of water, as well as efforts to increase water supplies through the safe re-use of wastewater and efficient desalination of sea and brackish water.
JF - Nature
AU - Shannon, Mark A
AU - Bohn, Paul W
AU - Elimelech, Menachem
AU - Georgiadis, John G
AU - Marinas, Benito J
AU - page, Anne MMayesTop of
AD - NSF STC WaterCAMPWS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA
Y1 - 2008/03/20/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Mar 20
SP - 301
EP - 310
PB - Nature Publishing Group, The Macmillan Building 4 Crinan Street London N1 9XW UK, [mailto:feedback@nature.com]
VL - 452
IS - 7185
SN - 0028-0836, 0028-0836
KW - Pollution Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Oceanic Abstracts
KW - Chemicals
KW - Disinfection
KW - scarcity
KW - Decontamination
KW - Desalination
KW - Water supplies
KW - Water purification
KW - Water supply
KW - Sanitation
KW - brackish water
KW - disinfection
KW - Water wells
KW - Brackish water
KW - Wastewater
KW - Technology
KW - O 4095:Instruments/Methods
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - Q5 08505:Prevention and control
KW - Q2 09162:Methods and instruments
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21025907?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aasfaaquaticpollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature&rft.atitle=Science+and+technology+for+water+purification+in+the+coming+decades&rft.au=Shannon%2C+Mark+A%3BBohn%2C+Paul+W%3BElimelech%2C+Menachem%3BGeorgiadis%2C+John+G%3BMarinas%2C+Benito+J%3Bpage%2C+Anne+MMayesTop+of&rft.aulast=Shannon&rft.aufirst=Mark&rft.date=2008-03-20&rft.volume=452&rft.issue=7185&rft.spage=301&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature&rft.issn=00280836&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fnature06599
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Disinfection; Brackish water; Desalination; Water purification; Water supply; Chemicals; Sanitation; brackish water; disinfection; Decontamination; Water wells; scarcity; Water supplies; Wastewater; Technology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature06599
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Health Risk Assessment of Bisphenol a (BPA) in Drinking Water.
T2 - 47th Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2008)
AN - 40842585; 4812547
JF - 47th Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2008)
AU - McLellan, C J
AU - Ball, G L
AU - Willhite, C
Y1 - 2008/03/16/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Mar 16
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Drinking water
KW - Bisphenol A
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40842585?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=47th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2008%29&rft.atitle=Health+Risk+Assessment+of+Bisphenol+a+%28BPA%29+in+Drinking+Water.&rft.au=McLellan%2C+C+J%3BBall%2C+G+L%3BWillhite%2C+C&rft.aulast=McLellan&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2008-03-16&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=47th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2008%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/ai/meet/am2008/it_planner.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Hide and Go Seek: What Does Presence Mean in the Fossil Record
AN - 21232326; 8701701
AB - Our efforts to reconstruct accurate, complete records of events in vegetation history and in plant evolutionary history depend on accuracy in dating sediments, interpretation of structures preserved, reconstruction of whole organisms or communities from the preserved material, and interpretation of the interaction between past abundance and fossil presence. This contribution examines the interaction between past abundance of a target plant and the probability of retrieval of that species in the fossil record. By examining records of recolonization in volcanic areas, records of invasive species spread, succession in disturbed habitats, and historical migration patterns, we can provide estimates of the likelihood of appearance in the potential fossil record of newly evolved and reasonably successful species. The lag in discovery, recognition, and publication of a fossil as an important representative of a critical clade is also evaluated and is highlighted as a more important constraint on the use of fossils in testing evolutionary and ecological hypotheses than the recolonization rate. The lag between discovery and publication is particularly relevant in areas of the modern world where fossil plant-bearing deposits are either rare or inaccessible. Greater awareness of the density and reliability of the plant record should allow evolutionary biologists and paleoecologists to bracket not only time intervals but also geographic regions where the fossil record can be interpreted largely at face value. At the same time, more effort should be focused on intense collecting efforts and training in areas where fossil deposits are potentially present, but poorly collected and evaluated.
JF - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
AU - Burnham, Robyn J
AD - 1 I acknowledge helpful critique of the manuscript and ideas from Shanan E. Peters; literature searches by Susu Yuan and Marko Melymuka were instrumental to data collection; Bonnie Miljour rendered the final drafts of the figures; financial support from the National Science Foundation ADVANCE Project Crosby Funds is gratefully acknowledged.
Y1 - 2008/03/11/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Mar 11
SP - 51
EP - 71
PB - Missouri Botanical Garden
VL - 95
IS - 1
SN - 0026-6493, 0026-6493
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21232326?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.atitle=Hide+and+Go+Seek%3A+What+Does+Presence+Mean+in+the+Fossil+Record&rft.au=Burnham%2C+Robyn+J&rft.aulast=Burnham&rft.aufirst=Robyn&rft.date=2008-03-11&rft.volume=95&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=51&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.issn=00266493&rft_id=info:doi/10.3417%2F2007002
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3417/2007002
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Community Engagement: A Critical Role in Ocean Observatories
T2 - 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting
AN - 40806801; 4797650
JF - 2008 Ocean Sciences Meeting
AU - Rom, E L
AU - Elthon, D
Y1 - 2008/03/02/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Mar 02
KW - Oceans
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40806801?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2008+Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.atitle=Community+Engagement%3A+A+Critical+Role+in+Ocean+Observatories&rft.au=Rom%2C+E+L%3BElthon%2C+D&rft.aulast=Rom&rft.aufirst=E&rft.date=2008-03-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2008+Ocean+Sciences+Meeting&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.aslo.org/orlando2008/sessionlist.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Photocatalytic inactivation of Cryptosporidium parvum with TiO sub(2) and low-pressure ultraviolet irradiation
AN - 20814568; 8185221
AB - This study investigated the efficacy of low-pressure ultraviolet (UV) irradiation and the synergistic effect of UV/titanium dioxide (TiO sub(2)) photocatalysis on Cryptosporidium parvum oocyst inactivation. At UV doses of 2.7, 8.0, and 40mJ/cm super(2), oocyst inactivation was 1.3, 2.6, and 3.3log sub(1) sub(0), respectively. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by longwave UV radiation (>315nm) and TiO sub(2) achieved less than 0.28-log inactivation. However, the synergistic effect of germicidal (254nm) UV and TiO sub(2) resulted in 2-log and 3-log oocyst inactivation with 4.0 and 11.0mJ/cm super(2), respectively. Therefore, using TiO sub(2) in combination with UV reduced the dose requirement for 3-log inactivation by 56%. An approximate 1-log decrease in inactivation of oocysts was observed with nanopure water in comparison to buffered water, whereas changes in pH from 6 to 8 had little effect on the photocatalytic inactivation of oocysts in either matrix (P>0.1).
JF - Water Research
AU - Ryu, H
AU - Gerrity, D
AU - Crittenden, J C
AU - Abbaszadegan, M
AD - National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Arizona State University, ECG 252, Tempe, AZ 85287-5306, USA, abbaszadegan@asu.edu
Y1 - 2008/03//
PY - 2008
DA - Mar 2008
SP - 1523
EP - 1530
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 42
IS - 6-7
SN - 0043-1354, 0043-1354
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Titanium
KW - Oocysts
KW - Synergistic Effects
KW - Hydrogen Ion Concentration
KW - Cryptosporidium parvum
KW - Ultraviolet Radiation
KW - Oxygen
KW - U.V. radiation
KW - Titanium dioxide
KW - Reactive oxygen species
KW - Irradiation
KW - Cryptosporidium
KW - pH effects
KW - K 03340:Effects of Physical & Chemical Factors
KW - AQ 00001:Water Resources and Supplies
KW - SW 0810:General
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20814568?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Research&rft.atitle=Photocatalytic+inactivation+of+Cryptosporidium+parvum+with+TiO+sub%282%29+and+low-pressure+ultraviolet+irradiation&rft.au=Ryu%2C+H%3BGerrity%2C+D%3BCrittenden%2C+J+C%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+M&rft.aulast=Ryu&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2008-03-01&rft.volume=42&rft.issue=6-7&rft.spage=1523&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Research&rft.issn=00431354&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.watres.2007.10.037
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Titanium dioxide; U.V. radiation; Reactive oxygen species; Oocysts; pH effects; Oxygen; Titanium; Irradiation; Cryptosporidium; Synergistic Effects; Hydrogen Ion Concentration; Ultraviolet Radiation; Cryptosporidium parvum
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2007.10.037
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A general theory of ecology
AN - 19723340; 9088419
AB - Ecologists bemoan the dearth of theory In ecology, In particular, the lack of an overarching, general theory. These complaints largely are unjustified. The components of a general theory of ecology have existed for the past half century; ecologists simply have failed to explicitly recognize them. We present a general theory of ecology and show how it relates to ecology's numerous constituent theories and models. The general theory consists of a description of the domain of ecology and a set of fundamental principles. The domain of ecology is the spatial and temporal patterns of the distribution and abundance of organisms, Including causes and consequences. Fundamental principles are broad statements about the patterns that exist and the processes that operate within a domain. The seven fundamental principles of the theory of ecology are: the heterogeneous distribution of organisms, interactions of organisms, contingency, environmental heterogeneity, finite and heterogeneous resources, the mortality of organisms, and the evolutionary cause of ecological properties. These principles are the necessary and sufficient elements for a general theory of ecology. The propositions of any constituent theory of ecology can be shown to be a consequence of these fundamental principles along with principles from other science domains. The general theory establishes relationships among constituent theories through shared fundamental principles. The next challenge is to develop and integrate unified, constituent theories and to establish the relationships among them within the framework established by the general theory.
JF - Theoretical Ecology
AU - Scheiner, S M
AU - Willig, M R
AD - Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22230, USA, sscheine@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2008/03//
PY - 2008
DA - Mar 2008
SP - 21
EP - 28
VL - 1
IS - 1
SN - 1874-1738, 1874-1738
KW - Ecology Abstracts
KW - Mortality
KW - Abundance
KW - Evolution
KW - Contingency
KW - Models
KW - D 04030:Models, Methods, Remote Sensing
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19723340?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Theoretical+Ecology&rft.atitle=A+general+theory+of+ecology&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+S+M%3BWillig%2C+M+R&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2008-03-01&rft.volume=1&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=21&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Theoretical+Ecology&rft.issn=18741738&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2FS12080-007-0002-0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Contingency; Mortality; Abundance; Evolution; Models
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/S12080-007-0002-0
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Mica, Bioenergetics, and the Origin of Life
T2 - Joint 52nd Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society and 16th International Biophysics Congress
AN - 40731637; 4766735
JF - Joint 52nd Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society and 16th International Biophysics Congress
AU - Hansma, Helen
Y1 - 2008/02/02/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Feb 02
KW - Bioenergetics
KW - Micas
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40731637?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=Joint+52nd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Biophysical+Society+and+16th+International+Biophysics+Congress&rft.atitle=Mica%2C+Bioenergetics%2C+and+the+Origin+of+Life&rft.au=Hansma%2C+Helen&rft.aulast=Hansma&rft.aufirst=Helen&rft.date=2008-02-02&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Joint+52nd+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Biophysical+Society+and+16th+International+Biophysics+Congress&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.abstractsonline.com/viewer/?mkey={F7AD318F-5F5D-4B68-A4CF-B 490CC7227CE}
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Marine chronology based on (super 14) C dating on diatom proteins
AN - 872122876; 2011-050559
AB - We present a new method of obtaining radiocarbon dates for proteins intrinsic to diatom frustules (sillafin). By asserting age models for sediment core samples that lack calcium carbonate, this method will improve interpretations of diatom-based paleoproxies for either marine or lacustrine. In preparation for radiocarbon dating by Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, diatoms were concentrated from core sediment samples. The diatoms frustules were freed of any surface-bound organic matter, through chemical and physical treatments that will be discussed later in this paper. Compounds intrinsic to diatoms frustules were released from their opal matrix by HF dissolution. This method differs from approaches based on specific compound extractions from complex organic mixture by preparative chromatography because we eliminated most of the contaminated organic matter. The advantage of our method is that it does not require heavy cost investment and it can be added to a preparative chromatography protocol to ensure dating reliability. This method was applied to samples from a marine core collected in the Southern Ocean, that spans the last climatic cycle. We report on the radiocarbon dating results obtained on organic matter at each step of the chemical treatment, from bulk to sillafin and their interpretation.
JF - Marine Chemistry
AU - Hatte, Christine
AU - Hodgins, Gregory
AU - Jull, A J Timothy
AU - Bishop, Bongi
AU - Tesson, Benoit
Y1 - 2008/02//
PY - 2008
DA - February 2008
SP - 143
EP - 151
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 109
IS - 1-2
SN - 0304-4203, 0304-4203
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - isotopes
KW - algae
KW - stable isotopes
KW - cores
KW - Cariaco Basin
KW - Cenozoic
KW - laboratory studies
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - diatoms
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - absolute age
KW - Plantae
KW - experimental studies
KW - Quaternary
KW - isotope ratios
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - new methods
KW - case studies
KW - sample preparation
KW - organic compounds
KW - upper Quaternary
KW - C-14
KW - North Atlantic
KW - proteins
KW - Caribbean Sea
KW - microfossils
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
KW - 03:Geochronology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/872122876?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03044203
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 17
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - MRCHBD
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - absolute age; algae; Atlantic Ocean; C-13/C-12; C-14; carbon; Cariaco Basin; Caribbean Sea; case studies; Cenozoic; cores; diatoms; experimental studies; isotope ratios; isotopes; laboratory studies; marine sediments; microfossils; new methods; North Atlantic; organic compounds; Plantae; proteins; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; sample preparation; sediments; Southern Ocean; stable isotopes; upper Quaternary
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2007.12.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Removal of adenovirus, calicivirus, and bacteriophages by conventional drinking water treatment.
AN - 70180640; 18172809
AB - This study was conducted to evaluate the removal of adenovirus, feline calicivirus (FCV), and bacteriophages MS-2, fr, PRD-1, and Phi X-174 during conventional drinking water treatment using ferric chloride as a coagulant. Adenovirus and FCV were removed to a greater extent than PRD-1 and Phi X-174, indicating that these bacteriophages may be appropriate surrogates for both adenovirus and FCV. Of the four bacteriophages studied in the pilot plant, MS-2 was removed to the greatest extent (5.1 log), followed by fr (4.9 log), PRD-1 (3.5 log), and Phi X-174 (1.3 log). The virus removal trend in the pilot-scale testing was similar to the bench-scale testing; however, the bench-scale testing seemed to provide a conservative estimate of the pilot plant performance. In the pilot-scale testing, MS-2 and fr were removed with the greatest efficiency during filtration, whereas PRD-1 and Phi X-174 showed the greatest removal during sedimentation.
JF - Journal of environmental science and health. Part A, Toxic/hazardous substances & environmental engineering
AU - Abbaszadegan, Morteza
AU - Monteiro, Patricia
AU - Nwachuku, Nena
AU - Alum, Absar
AU - Ryu, Hodon
AD - National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-5306, USA. abbaszadegan@asu.edu
Y1 - 2008/02//
PY - 2008
DA - February 2008
SP - 171
EP - 177
VL - 43
IS - 2
SN - 1093-4529, 1093-4529
KW - Water Pollutants
KW - 0
KW - Index Medicus
KW - United States
KW - Water Supply -- standards
KW - Pilot Projects
KW - Facility Design and Construction
KW - Water Pollutants -- analysis
KW - Fresh Water -- virology
KW - Water Purification -- instrumentation
KW - Adenoviridae -- isolation & purification
KW - Calicivirus, Feline -- isolation & purification
KW - Bacteriophages -- isolation & purification
KW - Water Purification -- methods
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/70180640?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+environmental+science+and+health.+Part+A%2C+Toxic%2Fhazardous+substances+%26+environmental+engineering&rft.atitle=Removal+of+adenovirus%2C+calicivirus%2C+and+bacteriophages+by+conventional+drinking+water+treatment.&rft.au=Abbaszadegan%2C+Morteza%3BMonteiro%2C+Patricia%3BNwachuku%2C+Nena%3BAlum%2C+Absar%3BRyu%2C+Hodon&rft.aulast=Abbaszadegan&rft.aufirst=Morteza&rft.date=2008-02-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=171&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+environmental+science+and+health.+Part+A%2C+Toxic%2Fhazardous+substances+%26+environmental+engineering&rft.issn=10934529&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F10934520701781541
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2008-04-09
N1 - Date created - 2008-01-03
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934520701781541
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Micro-Satellites for Space Weather Research: Plans for a NSF Program
T2 - 5th Space Weather Symposium (SWS)
AN - 40735615; 4770018
JF - 5th Space Weather Symposium (SWS)
AU - Jorgensen, Therese Moretto
AU - Robinson, R M
AU - Behnke, R A
Y1 - 2008/01/20/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Jan 20
KW - Weather
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40735615?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=5th+Space+Weather+Symposium+%28SWS%29&rft.atitle=Micro-Satellites+for+Space+Weather+Research%3A+Plans+for+a+NSF+Program&rft.au=Jorgensen%2C+Therese+Moretto%3BRobinson%2C+R+M%3BBehnke%2C+R+A&rft.aulast=Jorgensen&rft.aufirst=Therese&rft.date=2008-01-20&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=5th+Space+Weather+Symposium+%28SWS%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/88Annual/techprogram/programexpanded_446.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - New Space Weather Initiatives from the National Science Foundation
T2 - 5th Space Weather Symposium (SWS)
AN - 40735334; 4769994
JF - 5th Space Weather Symposium (SWS)
AU - Behnke, Richard
Y1 - 2008/01/20/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Jan 20
KW - Foundations
KW - Weather
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40735334?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=5th+Space+Weather+Symposium+%28SWS%29&rft.atitle=New+Space+Weather+Initiatives+from+the+National+Science+Foundation&rft.au=Behnke%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Behnke&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2008-01-20&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=5th+Space+Weather+Symposium+%28SWS%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/88Annual/techprogram/programexpanded_446.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Digest of Key Science and Engineering Indicators, 2008. NSB-08-2
AN - 61966102; ED499645
AB - This digest of key science and engineering indicators draws primarily from the National Science Board's two-volume "Science and Engineering Indicators, 2008" report. The digest serves two purposes: (1) to draw attention to important trends and data points from across the chapters and volumes of "Science and Engineering Indicators, 2008," and (2) to introduce readers to the data resources available in the main volumes of "Science and Engineering Indicators, 2008" and its associated products. The appendix of this digest provides a detailed catalog of subjects included in "Science and Engineering Indicators, 2008."
Y1 - 2008/01/15/
PY - 2008
DA - 2008 Jan 15
SP - 36
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - High Schools
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Federal Aid
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Secondary School Teachers
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Intellectual Property
KW - Engineering
KW - Sciences
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Economics
KW - Enrollment
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Competition
KW - Global Approach
KW - Industry
KW - International Trade
KW - Technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61966102?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Magnitude of sea level changes; a perspective from the Paleozoic
AN - 904459755; 2011-101739
JF - Geophysical Research Abstracts
AU - Haq, B
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - EGU2008
EP - A-02269
PB - Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU), Katlenburg-Lindau
VL - 10
SN - 1029-7006, 1029-7006
KW - oceanic crust
KW - Paleozoic
KW - global
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - signals
KW - models
KW - sea-level changes
KW - errors
KW - tectonics
KW - reconstruction
KW - corrections
KW - synthesis
KW - eustasy
KW - crust
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/904459755?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.atitle=Magnitude+of+sea+level+changes%3B+a+perspective+from+the+Paleozoic&rft.au=Haq%2C+B%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Haq&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.issn=10297006&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.copernicus.org/EGU/gra/gra.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - European Geoscience Union general assembly 2008
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2014, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - corrections; crust; errors; eustasy; global; models; oceanic crust; paleo-oceanography; Paleozoic; reconstruction; sea-level changes; signals; synthesis; tectonics
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Rhyolitic ignimbrites in the Rogerson Graben, southern Snake River Plain volcanic province; volcanic stratigraphy, eruption history and basin evolution
AN - 849007777; 2011-017602
AB - A 200 m thick succession of late-Miocene rhyolitic pyroclastics in the 80 km long NNE-trending Rogerson Graben, Idaho, USA, records a history of large-volume explosive eruptions from the Snake River Plain volcanic province, and contemporaneous extension. The seven member Rogerson Formation records at least eight large explosive eruptions. Five high-grade and extremely high-grade ignimbrites (two of which are dominantly rheomorphic and lava-like although with subordinate non-welded pyroclastic layers) are intercalated with three non-welded ignimbrites and two volcaniclastic deposits; periods of repose are marked by palaeosols. The ignimbrites are typical Snake River Plain, high-silica rhyolites wih anhydrous crystal assemblages and inferred magmatic temperatures # 1025 degrees C. It is tentatively inferred, from flow lineation trends, crystal assemblage and radiometric ages that the Jackpot and Rabbit Springs Members were emplaced from the Bruneau-Jarbidge eruptive centre. Kinematic indicators (from the E) and crystal assemblage suggests that the overlying Brown's View, Grey's Landing and Sand Springs Members may have been emplaced from the Twin Falls eruptive centre. The contemporaneous evolution of the Rogerson Graben from emplacement of the Jackpot Member onwards is established; it is inferred to be similar to the younger half-graben along the S margin of the Snake River Plain formed by local reactivation of Basin and Range structures by migration of the Yellowstone hot spot towards the NE.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Andrews, Graham D M
AU - Branney, Michael J
AU - Bonnichsen, Bill
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 269
EP - 291
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - systems
KW - North America
KW - Idaho
KW - hot spots
KW - rhyolites
KW - geologic thermometry
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Basin and Range Province
KW - ignimbrite
KW - igneous rocks
KW - grabens
KW - pyroclastics
KW - Jackpot Member
KW - plate tectonics
KW - eruptions
KW - Yellowstone National Park
KW - Rogerson Formation
KW - petrography
KW - Rogerson Graben
KW - Rabbit Springs Member
KW - Snake River plain
KW - faults
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849007777?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.atitle=Rhyolitic+ignimbrites+in+the+Rogerson+Graben%2C+southern+Snake+River+Plain+volcanic+province%3B+volcanic+stratigraphy%2C+eruption+history+and+basin+evolution&rft.au=Andrews%2C+Graham+D+M%3BBranney%2C+Michael+J%3BBonnichsen%2C+Bill%3BMcCurry%2C+Michael%3BChristiansen%2C+Eric+H%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Andrews&rft.aufirst=Graham+D&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=269&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.issn=02588900&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00445-007-0139-0
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 67
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Basin and Range Province; eruptions; faults; geologic thermometry; grabens; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; Jackpot Member; North America; petrography; plate tectonics; pyroclastics; Rabbit Springs Member; rhyolites; Rogerson Formation; Rogerson Graben; Snake River plain; systems; United States; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone National Park
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0139-0
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Miocene silicic volcanism in southwestern Idaho; geochronology, geochemistry, and evolution of the central Snake River Plain
AN - 849007200; 2011-017606
AB - A combination of (super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar geochronology, bulk rock chemistry and physical characteristics of representative stratigraphic sections of rhyolitic ignimbrites and lavas is used to develop a stratigraphic framework for Miocene silicic magmatism in the W-central Snake River Plain (SRP) part of the Yellowstone 'hotspot track'. The unusually large extrusive volume, broad lateral scale and extended duration of the activity distingushes this part of the SRP from areas to the E and W. It is infered that the magmatic systems developed in response to large-scale, repeated injections of basaltic magma into the crust resulting in extensive crustal reconstitution, wide distribution of crustal melt zones and the creation of complex eruption feeder systems. Some eruptive events appear to have been contemporaneous with major normal faulting, and perhaps catastrophic crustal foundering and the triggering of concurrent evacuations of individual silicic magma reservoirs. This complex history is difficult to relate to simple caldera-style single-source feeder systems. It implies complex temporal-spatial development of the silicic magma systems and a significant component of lithospheric extension on NNW-trending Basin and range style faults (roughly parallel to the SW-NE orientation of the eastern SRP) to accommodate basaltic inputs at crustal levels. The anomalously high production of magma may require additional sub-lithospheric processes.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Bonnichsen, Bill
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Honjo, Norio
AU - McIntosh, William C
AU - Godchaux, Martha M
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 315
EP - 342
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - rifting
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Ar-40/Ar-39
KW - volcanic features
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - southwestern Idaho
KW - major elements
KW - dates
KW - noble gases
KW - absolute age
KW - Ar/Ar
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - lava flows
KW - acidic magmas
KW - isotope ratios
KW - ignimbrite
KW - Miocene
KW - argon
KW - calderas
KW - pyroclastics
KW - Tertiary
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Neogene
KW - magmas
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849007200?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.atitle=Miocene+silicic+volcanism+in+southwestern+Idaho%3B+geochronology%2C+geochemistry%2C+and+evolution+of+the+central+Snake+River+Plain&rft.au=Bonnichsen%2C+Bill%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BHonjo%2C+Norio%3BMcIntosh%2C+William+C%3BGodchaux%2C+Martha+M%3BMcCurry%2C+Michael%3BChristiansen%2C+Eric+H&rft.aulast=Bonnichsen&rft.aufirst=Bill&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=315&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.issn=02588900&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00445-007-0141-6
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 97
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - absolute age; acidic magmas; Ar-40/Ar-39; Ar/Ar; argon; calderas; Cenozoic; dates; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; isotope ratios; isotopes; lava flows; magmas; major elements; Miocene; Neogene; noble gases; plate tectonics; pyroclastics; radioactive isotopes; rhyolites; rifting; Snake River plain; southwestern Idaho; stable isotopes; Tertiary; United States; volcanic features; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0141-6
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Genesis of post-hotspot, A-type rhyolite of the eastern Snake River Plain volcanic field by extreme fractional crystallization of olivine tholeiite
AN - 849007171; 2011-017604
AB - Post-hotspot rhyolites that occur as a subordinate component of the basalt-dominated Eastern Snake River Plain volcanic field occur as approximately 15 km (super 3) of high-silica, A-type crytodomes, domes and lava flows. They have high whole-rock FeO (sub tot) /(FeO (sub tot) +MgO), high Rb/Sr, low Sr (0.5-10 ppm) and are either aphyric or contain an anhydrous phenocryst assemblage of sodic sanidine + or - plagioclase + quartz > fayaliote + ferroagite > magnetite > ilmenite + accessory zircon + apatite + chevkenite. Nd- and Sr-isotope compositions overlap with coeval olivine tholeiites (epsilon (sub Nd) = -4 to -6; (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr (sub i) = 0.7080-0.7102) and contrast markedly with isotopically evolved Archaean country rocks. In at least two cases the rhyolite lavas are cogenetic parts of compositionally zoned ( approximately 55-75% SiO (sub 2) ) shield volcanoes. There are two distinct compositonal trends: 1) at Ceder Butte (0.4 Ma) prominant curvilinear patterns of whole-rock chemical variation correlate systematically with changes in phenocryst compositions and assemblages; 2) at Unnamed Butte (1.4 Ma) linear patterns of whole-rock chemical covariation are accompanied by disequilibrium phenocryst assemblages and magmatic enclaves, with intermediate compositions resulting from variable amounts of mixing and hybridization of olivine tholeiite and rhyolite magmas. Rhyolite genesis does not appear to have involved large amounts of melting of Archean crust or previously emplaced Tertiary intrusions. Least-squares mass-balance, energy constrained assimilation and fractional crystallisation modelling, and mineral thermobarometry can explain rhyolite production by 77% low-pressure fractional crystallisation of a basaltic trachyandesite parent magma ( approximately 55% SiO (sub 2) ) accompanied by minor (0.03-7%) assimilation of Archaean upper crust. A physical model links the rhyolites and parental intermediate magmas to primitive olivine tholeiite by fractional crystallisation. Assimilation, recharge, mixing and fractional melting are not essential parts of the rhyolite formational process.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Hayden, Karl P
AU - Morse, Lee H
AU - Mertzman, Stan
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 361
EP - 383
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - granites
KW - Cenozoic
KW - olivine tholeiite
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - basalts
KW - Yellowstone National Park
KW - rare earths
KW - A-type granites
KW - Idaho
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - rhyolites
KW - acidic magmas
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - Unnamed Butte
KW - Miocene
KW - Tertiary
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Cedar Butte
KW - Neogene
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - Pliocene
KW - petrography
KW - fractional crystallization
KW - neodymium
KW - Snake River plain
KW - strontium
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849007171?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 120
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - A-type granites; acidic magmas; alkaline earth metals; basalts; Cedar Butte; Cenozoic; fractional crystallization; granites; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotopes; magmas; metals; Miocene; neodymium; Neogene; olivine tholeiite; petrography; plate tectonics; Pliocene; plutonic rocks; rare earths; rhyolites; Snake River plain; strontium; Tertiary; United States; Unnamed Butte; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone Hot Spot; Yellowstone National Park
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0143-4
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Can crystallization of olivine tholeiite give rise to potassic rhyolites? An experimental investigation
AN - 849007143; 2011-017603
AB - Experiments using the 'piston out' method were used to study the effects of extreme crystallisation of a high-MgO (10.62 wt %) olivine tholeiite from the Snake River Plain, Idaho, USA. At an initial bulk water content of 0.4 wt % and mid-crustal pressure of 4.3 kbar, 96-97% crystallisation generated residual potassic, rhyolitic liquids similar in major element geochemistry to Quaternary rhyolitic domes of the Snake River Plain and their plutonic equivalents in the Proterozoic Lamerie Anorthositic Complex. Residual liquids comparable in composition to intermediate rocks from the Craters of the Moon and Ceder Butte eruptive centres in the Snake River Plain were also generated along this crystallisation path. Chemical analyses of starting material, residual liquids and representative olivine, plagioclase and augite are tabulated.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Whitaker, Matthew L
AU - Nekvasil, Hanna
AU - Lindsley, Donald H
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 417
EP - 434
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - magmatic differentiation
KW - Idaho
KW - experimental studies
KW - tholeiite
KW - rhyolites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - potassic composition
KW - olivine group
KW - nesosilicates
KW - laboratory studies
KW - magmas
KW - olivine
KW - basalts
KW - orthosilicates
KW - crystallization
KW - intraplate processes
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849007143?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.atitle=Can+crystallization+of+olivine+tholeiite+give+rise+to+potassic+rhyolites%3F+An+experimental+investigation&rft.au=Whitaker%2C+Matthew+L%3BNekvasil%2C+Hanna%3BLindsley%2C+Donald+H%3BMcCurry%2C+Michael%3BChristiansen%2C+Eric+H%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Whitaker&rft.aufirst=Matthew&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=417&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.issn=02588900&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00445-007-0146-1
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 60
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; crystallization; experimental studies; Idaho; igneous rocks; intraplate processes; laboratory studies; magmas; magmatic differentiation; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; potassic composition; rhyolites; silicates; Snake River plain; tholeiite; United States; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0146-1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Diverse mid-Miocene silicic volcanism associated with the Yellowstone-Newberry thermal anomaly
AN - 849007090; 2011-017605
AB - Volcanism at the Santa Rosa-Calico volcanic field (SC) northern Nevada, a complex, multi-vent mid-Miocene eruptive complex that formed in response to regional lithospheric extension and eruption of flood basalts, started at approximately 16.7Ma concurrent with regional Steens-Columbia River flood basalt activity. The SC displays a complete compositonal spectrum of basalt to high-slilica rhyolite. This first comprehensive study of the SC, including detailed stratigraphic-based field sampling and mapping shows that silicic activity was primarily focused along its E and W margins. Five or more texturally distinct silicic units occur in the western SC; these include abundant lava flows, near-vent deposits and shallow intrusions. Similar features occur in the eastern SC where four distinct units are present. Both the E and W SC units are characterised by abundant macro- and microscopic disequilibium textures reflecting a complex petrogenetic history. Unlike other mid-Miocene Oregon Plateau volcanic fields there is a paucity of caldera-forming volcanism apart from the Cold Springs tuff which outcrops in the central portion of the volcanic field. Major and trace element data throughout the SC silicic units coupled with the evidence of disequilibrium indicate open-system petrogenesis and melt derivation from heterogeneous source materials. The primary factors at work included: 1) local focusing of thermal and material contributions from the regional flood basalt event; 2) lithospheric extension within the northern portion of the Northern Nevada Rift; and 3) interaction of mid-Miocene silicic magmas with pre-Santa Rosa-Calico lithosphere. Similar processes and styles of mid-Miocene silicic volcanism are likely to have occurred in regions of the Oregon Plateau where focused lithospheric extension coincided with localized mafic magmatism.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Brueseke, Matthew E
AU - Hart, William K
AU - Heizler, Matthew T
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 343
EP - 360
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - lava flows
KW - acidic magmas
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Steens Basalt
KW - Humboldt County Nevada
KW - Owyhee Mountains
KW - Miocene
KW - volcanic fields
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Oregon
KW - Tertiary
KW - trap rocks
KW - Oregon Plateau
KW - Yellowstone-Newberry thermal anomaly
KW - major elements
KW - Neogene
KW - magmas
KW - basalts
KW - Santa Rosa Range
KW - Santa Rosa-Calico volcanic field
KW - Nevada
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 69
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidic magmas; basalts; Cenozoic; Humboldt County Nevada; igneous rocks; lava flows; magmas; major elements; Miocene; Neogene; Nevada; Oregon; Oregon Plateau; Owyhee Mountains; Santa Rosa Range; Santa Rosa-Calico volcanic field; Steens Basalt; Tertiary; trap rocks; United States; volcanic fields; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone-Newberry thermal anomaly
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0142-5
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - 'Snake River (SR)-type' volcanism at the Yellowstone hotspot track; distinctive products from unusual, high-temperature silicic super-eruptions
AN - 849006976; 2011-017601
AB - A new category of large-scale volcanism, Snake River (SR)-type, is defined. This distinctive facies association, which contrasts with those typical of silicic volcanism elsewhere, is displayed by Miocene rocks in the central Snake River Plain area of southern Idaho and Northern Nevada, USA. It is typified by unusual, voluminous and particularly environmentally devastating types of eruption that remain poorly understood. Characteristics include: 1) large-volume, lithic-poor rhyolitic ignimbrites with scarce pumice lapilli; 2) extensive parallel-laminated, medium to coarse-grained ashfall deposits with large cuspate shards, crystals and a paucity of pumice lapilli -many are fused to black vitrophyre; 3) unusually extensive, large-volume rhyolite lavas; 4) unusually intense welding, rheomorphism, and widespread development of lava-like facies in the ignimbrites; 5) extensive fines-rich ash deposits with abundant ash aggregates (pellets and accretionary lapilli); 6) the ashfall layers and ignimbrites contain abundant clasts of dense obsidian and vitrophyre: 7) a bimodal association between the rhyolitic rocks and numerous, coalescing low-profile basalt lava shields; and 8) widespread evidence of emplacement in lacustrine-alluvial environments, as revealed by intercalated lake sediments, ignimbrite peperites, rhyolitic and basaltic hyaloclastites, basalt pillow-lava deltas, rhyolitic and basaltic phreatomagmatic tuffs, alluvial sands and palaeosols. Many rhyolitic eruptions were high mass-flux, large volume, explosive (VEI 6-8), with H (sub 2) O-poor, low delta (super 18) O, metaluminous magmas and unusually low viscosities due to high magmatic T (900-1051 degrees C). SR-volcanism is unlike many other examples of silicic activity where fall deposits are typically Plinian with pumice lapilli, ignimbrites low to medium grade (non-welded to eutaxitic) with abundant pumice lapilli or fiamme, and the rhyolite extrusions are small volume silicic domes and coulees. SR-type volcanism appears to have occurred many times in Earth history as elements of the facies association occur in volcanic fields including Trans-pecos Texas, Etendeka-Parana, Lebombo, English Lake District, the Proterozoic Keewanawan volcanics of Minnesota and the Yardea Dacite of Australia.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Branney, Michael J
AU - Bonnichsen, Bill
AU - Andrews, Graham D M
AU - Ellis, B
AU - Barry, T L
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 293
EP - 314
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - northern Nevada
KW - igneous rocks
KW - temperature
KW - Cenozoic
KW - acidic composition
KW - Snake-River type volcanism
KW - Nevada
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - welded tuff
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - ignimbrite
KW - lapilli
KW - Miocene
KW - pyroclastics
KW - Tertiary
KW - plate tectonics
KW - southern Idaho
KW - Neogene
KW - magmas
KW - eruptions
KW - petrography
KW - intraplate processes
KW - Snake River plain
KW - high temperature
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849006976?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.atitle=%27Snake+River+%28SR%29-type%27+volcanism+at+the+Yellowstone+hotspot+track%3B+distinctive+products+from+unusual%2C+high-temperature+silicic+super-eruptions&rft.au=Branney%2C+Michael+J%3BBonnichsen%2C+Bill%3BAndrews%2C+Graham+D+M%3BEllis%2C+B%3BBarry%2C+T+L%3BMcCurry%2C+Michael%3BChristiansen%2C+Eric+H%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Branney&rft.aufirst=Michael&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=293&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.issn=02588900&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00445-007-0140-7
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 120
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidic composition; Cenozoic; eruptions; high temperature; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; intraplate processes; lapilli; magmas; Miocene; Neogene; Nevada; northern Nevada; petrography; plate tectonics; pyroclastics; rhyolites; Snake River plain; Snake-River type volcanism; southern Idaho; temperature; Tertiary; United States; volcanic rocks; welded tuff; Yellowstone Hot Spot
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0140-7
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-scale silicic alkalic magmatism associated with the Buckhorn Caldera, Trans-Pecos Texas, USA; comparison with Pantelleria, Italy
AN - 849006960; 2011-017599
AB - This study deals with pantelleritic formations in the Trans-Pecos Texas, USA. What may be the largest known strongly peralkaline ignimbrite, the pantelleritic, approximately 220 km (super 3) , Gomez Tuff (K/Ar date 36.6Ma, (super 39) Ar/ (super 40) Ar 36.74Ma), was erupted from the 18x24 km Buckthorn Caldera. Associated activity in the NE Davis and adjacent Barilla Mountains formed the extensive silicic lava shields of the Star Mountain Formation (K/Ar date 37.2Ma, (super 39) Ar/ (super 40) Ar 36.84Ma) and the Adobe Canyon Formation (K/Ar date 37.1Ma, (super 39) Ar/ (super 40) Ar 36.51Ma). The Gomez Tuff, typically <100m thick but ponding up to 500m thick within the caldera, has a pyroclastic top and base but the interior is commonly rheomorphic, flow banded, displays ramp structures and generally consists of a single cooling unit. The Gomez Tuff is fairly homogeneous but more evolved than early pantellerirtic domes. Trace element patterns in the Buckthorn magmas are similar to those of the Pleistocene Pantelleria volcano (Italy) except for lower Nb, Th and La in the Buckthorn silicic units and higher incompatible element contents in the Davis Mountains basalts. There is only limited evidence of involvement of ancient silicic crust in the geneisis of the Buckthron magmas. Open systems processes probably account for differences between the silicic units; evolution appears to have been dominated by crystal fractionation. The Daly gap between basalt and trachyte on Pantelleria is mimicked by a false gap between Davis Mountain mafic volcanic units and unrelated trachyte and rhyolite of the Buckthorn Caldera.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Parker, Don F
AU - White, John C
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 403
EP - 415
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - Europe
KW - Davis Mountains
KW - Italy
KW - Southern Europe
KW - Cenozoic
KW - assimilation
KW - Buckhorn Caldera
KW - volcanic features
KW - Barrilla Mountains
KW - acidic composition
KW - tuff
KW - Gomez Tuff
KW - rhyolites
KW - Eocene
KW - acidic magmas
KW - ignimbrite
KW - Pantelleria
KW - Texas
KW - Paleogene
KW - Star Mountain Formation
KW - calderas
KW - pyroclastics
KW - pantellerite
KW - Tertiary
KW - Sicily Italy
KW - Adobe Canyon Formation
KW - magmas
KW - fractional crystallization
KW - Trans-Pecos
KW - Oligocene
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849006960?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.atitle=Large-scale+silicic+alkalic+magmatism+associated+with+the+Buckhorn+Caldera%2C+Trans-Pecos+Texas%2C+USA%3B+comparison+with+Pantelleria%2C+Italy&rft.au=Parker%2C+Don+F%3BWhite%2C+John+C%3BMcCurry%2C+Michael%3BChristiansen%2C+Eric+H%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Parker&rft.aufirst=Don&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=403&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bulletin+of+Volcanology&rft.issn=02588900&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00445-007-0145-2
L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 70
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidic composition; acidic magmas; Adobe Canyon Formation; assimilation; Barrilla Mountains; Buckhorn Caldera; calderas; Cenozoic; Davis Mountains; Eocene; Europe; fractional crystallization; Gomez Tuff; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; Italy; magmas; Oligocene; Paleogene; Pantelleria; pantellerite; pyroclastics; rhyolites; Sicily Italy; Southern Europe; Star Mountain Formation; Tertiary; Texas; Trans-Pecos; tuff; United States; volcanic features; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0145-2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Phenocryst-poor rhyolites of bimodal, tholeiitic provinces; the Rattlesnake Tuff and implications for mush extraction models
AN - 849006711; 2011-017600
AB - The Rattlesnake Tuff of the High Lava Plains, E Oregon, is compared with rhyolites associated with calcalkaline suites in the light of models of rhyolite extraction from crystal mush (Hildreth 2004 [04M/4137], Bachmann & Bergantz 2004 [04M/3422]). The strongly bimodal High Lava Plains tholeiite-rhyolite suite is spatially and compositionally related to the Snake River Plain and Yellowstone Plateau. New isotopic data and compositional zoning profiles in phenocrysts in the rhyolites confirm that crystal fractionation dominated the generation of progressively more evolved rhyolites in the Rattlesnake Tuff, consistent with an origin of the least evolved high-silica rhyolites by partial melting of a mafic crust. Oxygen isotope thermometry yields pre-eruptive T of 860 degrees C, in keeping with 800-880 degrees C zircon saturation temperatures. Such high magmatic temperatures in rhyolites of bimodal suites distinguish them from the cooler rhyolites of calcalkaline suites. Crystal mushes produced by syenitic and alkali (A-type) granitic magmas are chemically viable parents for the more evolved Rattlesnake Tuff rhyolites; for the least-evolved, parental Rattlesnake Tuff rhyolite a ferro-dioritic mush is required but the paucity of such compositions in tholeiitic bimodal suites argues against the mush extraction model. Furthermore, rhyolites of bimodal suites lack associated voluminous eruptions of crystal-rich ignimbrite that might represent a parental mush. It is concluded that extensive fractionation is common among rhyolites and may obscure their ancestry. Fe-rich parental rhyolites common in bimodal tholeiite suites (as represented by the Rattlesnake Tuff) may often result from partial melting of mafic to intermediate crust. This contrasts with calcalkaline high-silica rhyolites that are related to voluminous suites of intermediate intrusive rocks where the pre-plutonic mush-extraction model works better. Major and trace element analyses, and isotopic data for silicic rocks from western Harney Basin, High Lava Plains, are tabulated.
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Grunder, Anita L
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 385
EP - 401
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - partial melting
KW - iron
KW - tholeiitic composition
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Oregon
KW - eastern Oregon
KW - barium
KW - tuff
KW - rare earths
KW - europium
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - rhyolites
KW - Rattlesnake Tuff
KW - Miocene
KW - pyroclastics
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - High Lava Plains
KW - fractional crystallization
KW - strontium
KW - Rattlesnake Mountain
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849006711?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 77
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; barium; Cenozoic; eastern Oregon; europium; fractional crystallization; High Lava Plains; igneous rocks; iron; isotopes; magmas; metals; Miocene; Neogene; Oregon; oxygen; partial melting; pyroclastics; rare earths; Rattlesnake Mountain; Rattlesnake Tuff; rhyolites; strontium; Tertiary; tholeiitic composition; tuff; United States; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0144-3
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Contrasting origins of Cenozoic silicic volcanic rocks from the western Cordillera of the United States
AN - 849006288; 2011-017607
AB - Large volumes of dacite and rhyolite, mostly ignimbrites, erupted in Oligocene times in the western Cordillera of the USA in what is now the Great Basin, contrast with late Cenozoic rhyolites erupted along the Snake River Plain. The Great basin dacites and rhyolites (generally calc-alkaline, magnesian, oxidised, wet, cool (< 850 degrees C), Si- and Al-rich and Fe poor) are interpreted as derivitives of mafic parent magmas generated by dehydration of oceanic lithosphere and melting in the mantle wedge above a subduction zone. Plagioclase fractionation was minimised by high f(H (sub 2) O) and oxide precipitation enhanced by high f(O (sub 2) ) leading to Si-, Al- and Sr-rich differentiates with low Fe/Mg ratios, relatively low temperatures and declining densities. Magma mixing, crustal assimilation and polybaric crystal fractionation featured strongly in their generation. By contrast, most of the Snake River Plain rhyolites are alkaline to calc-alkaline, ferroan, reduced, dry, hot (830-1050 degrees C), Sr- and Al-poor, Nb- and Fe-rich, and form a bimodal sequence with tholeiitic basalt. It is considered that they were derived from a low f(H (sub 2) O) and low f(O (sub 2) ) parent basalt formed by partial melting in or above a mantle plume. Differences in intensive parameters caused early precipitaion of plagioclase and retarded crystallisation of Fe-Ti oxides. Fractionation led to higher density magmas and mid-crustal entrapment. Renewed intrusion of mafic magma caused varying degrees of partial melting which, with minor assimilation led to an array of A-type rhyolite compositions. Very small volumes of distinctive rhyolite were derived from fractional crystallisation of Fe-rich intermediate magmas. [This is the first of a set of 9 papers on Petrogenesis and Volcanology of Anorogenic Rhyolites - dedicated to Bill Bonnichsen. Supplementary material is available to authorised users from the online versions of these papers.]
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 251
EP - 267
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Basin and Range Province
KW - igneous rocks
KW - granites
KW - Cenozoic
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - major elements
KW - dacites
KW - acidic composition
KW - A-type granites
KW - North America
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - ignimbrite
KW - Great Basin
KW - magmatism
KW - subduction
KW - Paleogene
KW - genesis
KW - pyroclastics
KW - Tertiary
KW - Snake River plain
KW - Oligocene
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849006288?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Mineralogical Abstracts, United Kingdom, Twickenham, United Kingdom | Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 91
N1 - Last updated - 2012-09-14
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - A-type granites; acidic composition; Basin and Range Province; Cenozoic; dacites; genesis; granites; Great Basin; Idaho; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; magmatism; major elements; North America; Oligocene; Paleogene; plutonic rocks; pyroclastics; rhyolites; Snake River plain; subduction; Tertiary; United States; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-007-0138-1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Petrogenesis and volcanology of anorogenic rhyolites; a special issue dedicated to Bill Bonnichsen
AN - 849006279; 2011-017598
JF - Bulletin of Volcanology
AU - McCurry, Michael
AU - Christiansen, Eric H
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 247
EP - 434
PB - Springer International [for the] International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI), Heidelberg
VL - 70
IS - 3
SN - 0258-8900, 0258-8900
KW - rhyolites
KW - petrology
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/849006279?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.springerlink.com/(1k1tfmmpjinass550lg0zy55)/app/home/journal.asp?referrer=parent&backto=linkingpublicationresults,1:100402,1
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Geoline, Bundesanstalt fur Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe, Hanover, Germany
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Individual papers are cited separately
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - BUVOEW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - igneous rocks; petrology; rhyolites; volcanic rocks
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Modelling magnetospheric currents and their effect on the near Earth magnetic field
AN - 742937837; 563897-56
JF - Geophysical Research Abstracts
AU - Vennerstrom, S
AU - Moretto, T
AU - Lu, G
AU - Christiansen, F
AU - Rastaetter, L
AU - Raeder, J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - EGU2008
EP - A-07632
PB - Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU), Katlenburg-Lindau
VL - 10
SN - 1029-7006, 1029-7006
KW - patterns
KW - magnetohydrodynamics
KW - Earth
KW - solar wind
KW - mapping
KW - ring currents
KW - satellite methods
KW - magnetic field
KW - models
KW - tail currents
KW - magnetospheric currents
KW - remote sensing
KW - field-aligned currents
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/742937837?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefinprocess&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.atitle=Modelling+magnetospheric+currents+and+their+effect+on+the+near+Earth+magnetic+field&rft.au=Vennerstrom%2C+S%3BMoretto%2C+T%3BLu%2C+G%3BChristiansen%2C+F%3BRastaetter%2C+L%3BRaeder%2C+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Vennerstrom&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geophysical+Research+Abstracts&rft.issn=10297006&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.copernicus.org/EGU/gra/gra.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - European Geosciences Union general assembly 2008
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef in Process, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. After editing and indexing, this record will be added to Georef.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-07-20
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Earth; field-aligned currents; magnetic field; magnetohydrodynamics; magnetospheric currents; mapping; models; patterns; remote sensing; ring currents; satellite methods; solar wind; tail currents
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators, 2008. Volume 1. NSB-08-01
AN - 61969588; ED499643
AB - This report contains analyses of key aspects of the scope, quality, and vitality of the Nation's science and engineering enterprise and global science and technology. The report presents information on science, mathematics, and engineering education at all levels; the scientific and engineering workforce; U.S. and international and development performance of competitiveness in high technology; and public attitudes and understanding of science and engineering. A chapter on state-level science and engineering presents state comparisons on selected indicators. An Overview chapter of this report distills selected key themes emerging from the eight chapters of Volume 1 of the two-volume publications. Volume 1 provides the main text content and Volume 2 presents the detailed tabular data. Chapters in Volume 1 include: Overview (Robert K. Bell, Rolf Lehming, and Alan I. Rapoport); (1) Elementary and Secondary Education (Martha Naomi Alt, Xianglei Chen and Jennifer Laird); (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering (Joanne S. Burreli and Terry S. Woodin); (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force (Mark C. Regets); (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Linkages (John E. Jankowski, Francisco A. Moris, Brandon Shackeflord, and Raymond M. Wolfe); (5) Academic Research and Development (Ronda Britt, Joanne S. Burreli, Lawrence Burton, Leslie Christovitch, and Alan I. Rapoport); (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace; (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding (Robert K. Bell); and (8) State Indicators (Paula C. Dunnigan and Craig A. Palovchik). An appendix contains methodology and statistics. Each chapter consists of front matter (tables of contents and lists of sidebars, text tables, and figures), highlights, an introduction (chapter overview and organization), a narrative synthesis of data and related contextual information, a conclusion, notes, a glossary, and references). [For Volume II, see ED499644.]
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 588
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - State Programs
KW - Science Education
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Research Methodology
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Outcomes of Education
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Attitudes
KW - Engineering
KW - Sciences
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Economics
KW - Statistical Analysis
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Competition
KW - Global Approach
KW - Industry
KW - International Trade
KW - Technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61969588?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Science and Engineering Indicators 2008. Volume 2. Appendix Tables. NSB-08-01A
AN - 61969500; ED499644
AB - Volume 1 of this two-volume report contains analyses of key aspects of the scope, quality, and vitality of the Nation's science and engineering enterprise and global science and technology. The report presents information on science, mathematics, and engineering education at all levels; the scientific and engineering workforce; U.S. and international and development performance of competitiveness in high technology; and public attitudes and understanding of science and engineering. This volume presents the detailed tabular data appended to the chapters in the first volume. These chapters are: (1) Elementary and Secondary Education; (2) Higher Education in Science and Engineering; (3) Science and Engineering Labor Force; (4) Research and Development: National Trends and International Linkages; (5) Academic Research and Development; (6) Industry, Technology, and the Global Marketplace; (7) Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding; and (8) State Indicators. [For Volume 1, see ED499643.]
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 576
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Mathematics Education
KW - Outcomes of Education
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Attitudes
KW - Engineering
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Economics
KW - Statistical Data
KW - Competition
KW - Trend Analysis
KW - Global Approach
KW - International Trade
KW - State Programs
KW - Technological Advancement
KW - Labor Force
KW - Research and Development
KW - Sciences
KW - Public Opinion
KW - Industry
KW - Technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61969500?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Earth sciences at the National Science Foundation; understanding earthquake processes and hazards through science, facilities and computation
AN - 50492914; 2009-026296
JF - Open-File Report - U. S. Geological Survey
AU - Zanzerkia, Eva
AU - Detweiler, Shane T
AU - Ellsworth, William L
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 4
PB - U. S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA
SN - 0196-1497, 0196-1497
KW - programs
KW - monitoring
KW - geologic hazards
KW - government agencies
KW - slip rates
KW - research
KW - information management
KW - neotectonics
KW - dynamics
KW - volcanism
KW - eruptions
KW - seismic risk
KW - risk assessment
KW - tectonics
KW - active faults
KW - USGS
KW - earthquakes
KW - NSF
KW - faults
KW - 19:Seismology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50492914?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Open-File+Report+-+U.+S.+Geological+Survey&rft.atitle=Earth+sciences+at+the+National+Science+Foundation%3B+understanding+earthquake+processes+and+hazards+through+science%2C+facilities+and+computation&rft.au=Zanzerkia%2C+Eva%3BDetweiler%2C+Shane+T%3BEllsworth%2C+William+L&rft.aulast=Zanzerkia&rft.aufirst=Eva&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=4&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Open-File+Report+-+U.+S.+Geological+Survey&rft.issn=01961497&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2008/1335/ https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/browse/usgs-publications/OFR
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 7th U.S./Japan Natural Resources Panel on Earthquake research
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - VA
N1 - SuppNotes - Accessed on Jan. 28, 2009
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-16
N1 - CODEN - XGROAG
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - active faults; dynamics; earthquakes; eruptions; faults; geologic hazards; government agencies; information management; monitoring; neotectonics; NSF; programs; research; risk assessment; seismic risk; slip rates; tectonics; USGS; volcanism
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Snake River plain-Yellowstone silicic volcanism; implications for magma genesis and magma fluxes
AN - 50437017; 2009-046788
AB - The origin of large-volume, high-temperature silicic volcanism associated with onset of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) hotspot track is addressed based on evolution of the well-characterized Miocene Bruneau-Jarbidge (BJ) eruptive centre. Although O-Sr-Pb isotopic and bulk compositions of BJ rhyolites exhibit strong crustal affinity, including strong (super 18) O-depletion, Nd isotopic data preclude wholesale melting of ancient basement rocks and implicate involvement of a juvenile component--possibly derived from contemporaneous basaltic magmas. Several lines of evidence, including limits on (super 18) O-depletion of the rhyolite source rocks due to influx of meteoric/hydrothermal fluids, constrain rhyolite generation to depths shallower than mid-upper crust (<20 km depth). For crustal melting driven by basaltic intrusions, sustenance of temperatures exceeding 900 degrees C at such depths over the life of the BJ eruptive centre requires incremental intrusion of approximately 16 km of basalt into the crust. This minimum basaltic flux (c. 4 mm year (super -1) ) is about one-tenth that at Kilauea. Nevertheless, emplacement of such volumes of magma in the crust creates a serious room problem, requiring that the crust must undergo significant extensional deformation--seemingly exceeding present estimates of extensional strain for the SRPY province.
JF - Geological Society Special Publications
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Annen, Catherine
AU - Dufek, Josef
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
SP - 235
EP - 259
PB - Geological Society of London, London
VL - 304
SN - 0305-8719, 0305-8719
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - lead
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - volcanic features
KW - rare earths
KW - Pb-207/Pb-206
KW - Idaho
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - rhyolites
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - isotope ratios
KW - magmatism
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - felsic composition
KW - volcanic centers
KW - Miocene
KW - Nd-144/Nd-143
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - Bruneau-Jarbidge volcanic center
KW - neodymium
KW - Snake River plain
KW - strontium
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50437017?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geological+Society+Special+Publications&rft.atitle=Snake+River+plain-Yellowstone+silicic+volcanism%3B+implications+for+magma+genesis+and+magma+fluxes&rft.au=Leeman%2C+William+P%3BAnnen%2C+Catherine%3BDufek%2C+Josef&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=304&rft.issue=&rft.spage=235&rft.isbn=9781862392588&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geological+Society+Special+Publications&rft.issn=03058719&rft_id=info:doi/10.1144%2FSP304.12
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from The Geological Society, London, London, United Kingdom
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 93
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-07-19
N1 - CODEN - GSLSBW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Bruneau-Jarbidge volcanic center; Cenozoic; felsic composition; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; lead; magmas; magmatism; metals; Miocene; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; Neogene; O-18/O-16; oxygen; Pb-207/Pb-206; rare earths; rhyolites; Snake River plain; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; Tertiary; United States; volcanic centers; volcanic features; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone Hot Spot
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/SP304.12
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Paleozoic eustasy and the nature, amplitude and causes of sea-level changes
AN - 50429609; 2009-049468
AB - A global synthesis of Paleozoic sequence-stratigraphic data has led to new insights into the nature, amplitude and causes of base-level changes for that Era. A "global mean" Paleozoic sea-level curve is proposed based on "reference districts" from around the world. Estimating the amplitude of base-level changes in the Paleozoic involves two separate measures: 1) The long term envelope of the sea-level changes driven by long-term tectonic processes; and 2) the third- and higher-order eustatic sea-level changes (driven by glacial and other, unknown, processes) that can be documented widely (i.e., gleaned from the world-wide data). Although individually each data-set on which the long-term envelope can be based is relative, a long-term curve based on global continental flooding estimates (with epeirogenic corrections) and stacked regional sea-level data, as well modeling results for mean age of the oceanic crust seem to yield consistent results. For the shorter-term eustatic changes, estimates from "reference districts" for various time slices (at localities where tectonic quiescence prevails or corrections can be made for local tectonics and where the "global mean" signal is thus more likely to be preserved) seem to be the best approach. In addition, categorizing third-order sea-level changes as major, medium and minor may be the only meaningful solution, considering the margin of errors involved. As for the causes for sea-level changes, almost 40% of the Paleozoic time suffered from some or significant glaciation and thus a glacio-eustatic cause can be invoked. These intervals are also more likely to show eustatic cycles of higher frequency and greater amplitude. For the remaining time (when there is no known evidence of ice accumulation) the trigger for sea-level changes is as yet unknown and remains one of the major mysteries of Earth Sciences.
JF - International Geological Congress, Abstracts = Congres Geologique International, Resumes
AU - Haq, Bilal
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
EP - Abstract 1303668
PB - [International Geological Congress], [location varies]
VL - 33
KW - sequence stratigraphy
KW - sea-level changes
KW - eustacy
KW - Paleozoic
KW - global
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50429609?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+Geological+Congress%2C+Abstracts+%3D+Congres+Geologique+International%2C+Resumes&rft.atitle=Paleozoic+eustasy+and+the+nature%2C+amplitude+and+causes+of+sea-level+changes&rft.au=Haq%2C+Bilal%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Haq&rft.aufirst=Bilal&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+Geological+Congress%2C+Abstracts+%3D+Congres+Geologique+International%2C+Resumes&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 33rd international geological congress
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by International Geological Congress Organizational Committee
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - IGABBY
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - eustacy; global; Paleozoic; sea-level changes; sequence stratigraphy
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Thickness distribution of Antarctic sea ice
AN - 50084842; 2010-017021
AB - Ship-based observations are used to describe regional and seasonal changes in the thickness distribution and characteristics of sea ice and snow cover thickness around Antarctica. The data set comprises 23,373 observations collected over more than 2 decades of activity and has been compiled as part of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) Antarctic Sea Ice Processes and Climate (ASPeCt) program. The results show the seasonal progression of the ice thickness distribution for six regions around the continent together with statistics on the mean thickness, surface ridging, snow cover, and local variability for each region and season. A simple ridge model is used to calculate the total ice thickness from the observations of level ice and surface topography, to provide a best estimate of the total ice mass, including the ridged component. The long-term mean and standard deviation of total sea ice thickness (including ridges) is reported as 0.87 + or - 0.91 m, which is 40% greater than the mean level ice thickness of 0.62 m. Analysis of the structure function along north/south and east/west transects revealed lag distances over which sea ice thickness decorrelates to be of the order of 100-300 km, which we use as a basis for presenting near-continuous maps of sea ice and snow cover thickness plotted on a 2.5 degrees X 5.0 degrees grid.
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
AU - Worby, Anthony P
AU - Geiger, Cathleen A
AU - Paget, Matthew J
AU - Van Woert, Michael L
AU - Ackley, Stephen F
AU - DeLiberty, Tracy L
Y1 - 2008
PY - 2008
DA - 2008
EP - Citation C05S92
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 113
IS - C5
SN - 0148-0227, 0148-0227
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - snow cover
KW - sea ice
KW - statistical analysis
KW - standard deviation
KW - spatial distribution
KW - melting
KW - Antarctica
KW - ice
KW - snow
KW - thickness
KW - seasonal variations
KW - 07:Oceanography
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50084842?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.atitle=Thickness+distribution+of+Antarctic+sea+ice&rft.au=Worby%2C+Anthony+P%3BGeiger%2C+Cathleen+A%3BPaget%2C+Matthew+J%3BVan+Woert%2C+Michael+L%3BAckley%2C+Stephen+F%3BDeLiberty%2C+Tracy+L&rft.aulast=Worby&rft.aufirst=Anthony&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=113&rft.issue=C5&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.issn=01480227&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2007JC004254
L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/jgr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by, and/or abstract, Copyright, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 71
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 3 tables, sketch map
N1 - SuppNotes - Includes appendix, NSF Grant OPP-oo88040
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Antarctica; ice; melting; sea ice; seasonal variations; snow; snow cover; Southern Ocean; spatial distribution; standard deviation; statistical analysis; thickness
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007JC004254
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Candida antarctica Lipase B Chemically Immobilized on Epoxy-Activated Micro- and Nanobeads: Catalysts for Polyester Synthesis
AN - 20843769; 8110315
AB - Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB) was covalently immobilized onto epoxy-activated macroporous poly(methyl methacrylate) Amberzyme beads (235 mu m particle size, 220 Aa pore size) and nanoparticles (nanoPSG, diameter 68 nm) with a poly(glycidyl methacrylate) outer region. Amberzyme beads allowed CALB loading up to 0.16 g of enzyme per gram of support. IR microspectroscopy generated images of Amberzyme-CALB beads showed CALB is localized within a 50 mu m thick loading front. IR microspectroscopy images, recorded prior to and after treatment of Amberzyme-CALB with DMSO/aqueous Triton X-100, are similar, confirming that CALB is largely chemically linked to Amberzyme. The activity of CALB immobilized on Amberzyme, Lewatit (i.e., Novozym 435 catalyst), and nanoPSG was assessed for lactone ring-opening and step- condensation polymerizations. For example, the percent conversion of epsilon - caprolactone using the same amount of enzyme catalyzed by Amberzym-CALB, Novozym 435, and nanoPSG-CALB for 20 min was 7.0, 16, and 65%, respectively. Differences in CALB reactivity were discussed based on resin physical parameters and availability of active sites determined by active site titrations. Regardless of the matrix used and chemical versus physical immobilization, epsilon -CL ring-opening polymerizations occur by a chain growth mechanism without chain termination. To test Amberzyme-CALB stability, the catalyst was reused over three reaction cycles for epsilon -CL ring-opening polymerization (70 degree C, 70 min reactions) and glycerol/1,8-octanediol/adipic acid polycondensation reactions (90 degree C, 64 h). Amberzyme-CALB was found to have far better stability for reuse relative to Novozym 435 for the polycondensation reaction.
JF - Biomacromolecules
AU - Chen, Bo
AU - Hu, Jun
AU - Miller, Elizabeth M
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Cai, Minmin
AU - Gross, Richard A
AD - NSF I/UCRC for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Polytechnic University, 6 Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201, Rohm and Haas Company, P.O. Box 904, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477
Y1 - 2008///0,
PY - 2008
DA - 0, 2008
SP - 463
EP - 471
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 USA, [mailto:service@acs.org]
VL - 9
IS - 2
SN - 1525-7797, 1525-7797
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Particle size
KW - polyesters
KW - Resins
KW - Polymerization
KW - Candida antarctica
KW - Enzymes
KW - lactones
KW - Triacylglycerol lipase
KW - Pores
KW - Glycerol
KW - Titration
KW - adipic acid
KW - Condensation
KW - Catalysts
KW - nanoparticles
KW - Immobilization
KW - W 30935:Food Biotechnology
KW - K 03320:Cell Biology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20843769?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomacromolecules&rft.atitle=Candida+antarctica+Lipase+B+Chemically+Immobilized+on+Epoxy-Activated+Micro-+and+Nanobeads%3A+Catalysts+for+Polyester+Synthesis&rft.au=Chen%2C+Bo%3BHu%2C+Jun%3BMiller%2C+Elizabeth+M%3BXie%2C+Wenchun%3BCai%2C+Minmin%3BGross%2C+Richard+A&rft.aulast=Chen&rft.aufirst=Bo&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=463&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomacromolecules&rft.issn=15257797&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbm700949x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Particle size; Resins; polyesters; Polymerization; Enzymes; lactones; Triacylglycerol lipase; Pores; Glycerol; adipic acid; Titration; Condensation; Catalysts; nanoparticles; Immobilization; Candida antarctica
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bm700949x
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Humicola insolens Cutinase-Catalyzed Lactone Ring-Opening Polymerizations: Kinetic and Mechanistic Studies
AN - 20015626; 8110323
AB - This paper explores reaction kinetics and mechanism for immobilized Humicola insolenscutinase (HIC), an important new biocatalyst that efficiently catalyzes non-natural polyester synthetic reactions. HIC, immobilized on Lewatit, was used as catalyst for epsilon -caprolactone (CL) and [Omega]-pentadecalactone (PDL) ring-opening polymerizations (ROPs). Plots of percent CL conversion vs time were obtained in the temperature range from 50 to 90 degree C. The kinetic plot of ln([M] sub(0)/[M] sub(t)) vs time (r super(2) = 0.99) for HIC-catalyzed bulk ROP of CL was linear, indicating that chain termination did not occur and the propagation rate is first order with respect to monomer concentration. Furthermore, linearity to 90% conversion for M sub(n) vs fractional CL conversion is consistent with a chain-end propagation mechanism. Deviation from linearity above 90% conversion indicates that a competition between ring-opening chain-end propagation and chain growth by steplike polycondensations takes place at high monomer conversion. HIC was inactive for catalysis of L-lactide and (R,S)- beta -butyrolactone ROP. HIC-catalyzed ROP of epsilon -CL and PDL in toluene were successfully performed, giving high molecular weight poly( epsilon - caprolactone) and [Omega]-poly(pentadecalactone). In addition, the relative activities of immobilized Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) and HIC for epsilon -CL and PDL polymerizations are reported herein.
JF - Biomacromolecules
AU - Hunsen, Mo
AU - Abul, Azim
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Gross, Richard
AD - Department of Chemistry, Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio 43022, NSF-I/UCRC Center for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Polytechnic University, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201
Y1 - 2008///0,
PY - 2008
DA - 0, 2008
SP - 518
EP - 522
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 USA, [mailto:service@acs.org]
VL - 9
IS - 2
SN - 1525-7797, 1525-7797
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology
KW - Temperature effects
KW - polyesters
KW - Polymerization
KW - biocatalysts
KW - Toluene
KW - Candida antarctica
KW - lactones
KW - Monomers
KW - Triacylglycerol lipase
KW - Humicola insolens
KW - Kinetics
KW - Catalysts
KW - Competition
KW - Manganese
KW - Catalysis
KW - W 30935:Food Biotechnology
KW - K 03320:Cell Biology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20015626?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomacromolecules&rft.atitle=Humicola+insolens+Cutinase-Catalyzed+Lactone+Ring-Opening+Polymerizations%3A+Kinetic+and+Mechanistic+Studies&rft.au=Hunsen%2C+Mo%3BAbul%2C+Azim%3BXie%2C+Wenchun%3BGross%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Hunsen&rft.aufirst=Mo&rft.date=2008-01-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=518&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomacromolecules&rft.issn=15257797&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbm701269p
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Temperature effects; polyesters; Polymerization; Toluene; biocatalysts; lactones; Monomers; Triacylglycerol lipase; Kinetics; Catalysts; Manganese; Competition; Catalysis; Humicola insolens; Candida antarctica
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bm701269p
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluation of harmful algal bloom outreach activities.
AN - 733698625; 18463727
AB - With an apparent increase of harmful algal blooms (HABs) worldwide, healthcare providers, public health personnel and coastal managers are struggling to provide scientifically-based appropriately-targeted HAB outreach and education. Since 1998, the Florida Poison Information Center-Miami, with its 24 hour/365 day/year free Aquatic Toxins Hotline (1-888-232-8635) available in several languages, has received over 25,000 HAB-related calls. As part of HAB surveillance, all possible cases of HAB-related illness among callers are reported to the Florida Health Department. This pilot study evaluated an automated call processing menu system that allows callers to access bilingual HAB information, and to speak directly with a trained Poison Information Specialist. The majority (68%) of callers reported satisfaction with the information, and many provided specific suggestions for improvement. This pilot study, the first known evaluation of use and satisfaction with HAB educational outreach materials, demonstrated that the automated system provided useful HAB-related information for the majority of callers, and decreased the routine informational call workload for the Poison Information Specialists, allowing them to focus on callers needing immediate assistance and their healthcare providers. These results will lead to improvement of this valuable HAB outreach, education and surveillance tool. Formal evaluation is recommended for future HAB outreach and educational materials.
JF - Marine drugs
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AU - Jerez, Eva
AU - Stephan, Wendy Blair
AU - Cassedy, Amy
AU - Bean, Judy A
AU - Reich, Andrew
AU - Kirkpatrick, Barbara
AU - Backer, Lorraine
AU - Nierenberg, Kate
AU - Watkins, Sharon
AU - Hollenbeck, Julie
AU - Weisman, Richard
AD - NSF NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33136 USA. lfleming@med.miami.edu
Y1 - 2007/12/14/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Dec 14
SP - 208
EP - 219
VL - 5
IS - 4
KW - cyanobacteria
KW - Poison Information Centers
KW - paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP)
KW - neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP)
KW - Solutions to Avoid Red Tide (START)
KW - Harmful algal bloom (HAB)
KW - ciguatera fish poisoning
KW - blue green algae
KW - ciguatoxins
KW - human health effects
KW - Karenia brevis
KW - Florida red tide
KW - brevetoxins
KW - outreach and education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/733698625?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+drugs&rft.atitle=Evaluation+of+harmful+algal+bloom+outreach+activities.&rft.au=Fleming%2C+Lora+E%3BJerez%2C+Eva%3BStephan%2C+Wendy+Blair%3BCassedy%2C+Amy%3BBean%2C+Judy+A%3BReich%2C+Andrew%3BKirkpatrick%2C+Barbara%3BBacker%2C+Lorraine%3BNierenberg%2C+Kate%3BWatkins%2C+Sharon%3BHollenbeck%2C+Julie%3BWeisman%2C+Richard&rft.aulast=Fleming&rft.aufirst=Lora&rft.date=2007-12-14&rft.volume=5&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=208&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+drugs&rft.issn=1660-3397&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2011-08-17
N1 - Date created - 2008-05-08
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
Mar Pollut Bull. 2006;53(10-12):545-60 [16996542]
Chest. 2007 Jan;131(1):187-94 [17218574]
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Swiss foreign service and Bernese reform politics in the late eighteenth century
AN - 59790511; 200809039
AB - The political system of Berne during the enlightenment era was dominated by landowning patricians who represented a 'republican type of gentry.' These landowners promoted agriculture, traded in grain, wood, wine, invested in cottage industries, and also were involved in foreign military service. In the debates about republican political economy in the 1760s, there was a cleavage within the Bernese aristocracy. On one side, conservatives defended the mercenary service as part of existing political obligations, above all towards France. Against this, the Economic Patriots combated corrupting influences from abroad and censured military service. Socio-moralistic principles, condensed in the term 'civic virtue,' ranked higher in the patriots' eyes than economic or political interests; in a virtuous and frugal republic, there should have been no place for mercenaries. The paper reconstructs these arguments over key decades in the eighteenth century. [Copyright 2007 Elsevier Ltd.]
JF - History of European Ideas
AU - Bolzern, Rudolf
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation, P.O. Box 8232, Bern CH-3001, Switzerland rbolzern@snf.ch
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - 463
EP - 475
PB - Elsevier Science, Amsterdam The Netherlands
VL - 33
IS - 4
SN - 0191-6599, 0191-6599
KW - Switzerland
KW - Bern
KW - Mercenaries
KW - Eighteenth-century reform politics
KW - Republicanism
KW - Political Economy
KW - Aristocracy
KW - Armed Forces
KW - Elites
KW - Reform
KW - Eighteenth Century
KW - article
KW - 9085: government/political systems; national governments/political systems
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/59790511?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=History+of+European+Ideas&rft.atitle=The+Swiss+foreign+service+and+Bernese+reform+politics+in+the+late+eighteenth+century&rft.au=Bolzern%2C+Rudolf&rft.aulast=Bolzern&rft.aufirst=Rudolf&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=463&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=History+of+European+Ideas&rft.issn=01916599&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.histeuroideas.2007.07.008
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2008-04-02
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - HEIDDN
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Switzerland; Aristocracy; Elites; Armed Forces; Reform; Political Economy; Republicanism; Eighteenth Century
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.histeuroideas.2007.07.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Hafnium isotope composition of Archean zircons from xenoliths of the Snake River plain, Idaho
AN - 50442090; 2009-041502
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - DuFrane, S A
AU - Vervoort, J D
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Wolf, D E
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - Abstract V43B
EP - 1375
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 52, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - zircon group
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - Idaho
KW - Precambrian
KW - isotopes
KW - lithosphere
KW - zircon
KW - phase transitions
KW - nesosilicates
KW - hafnium
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - inclusions
KW - orthosilicates
KW - Archean
KW - Snake River plain
KW - crust
KW - xenoliths
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50442090?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Hafnium+isotope+composition+of+Archean+zircons+from+xenoliths+of+the+Snake+River+plain%2C+Idaho&rft.au=DuFrane%2C+S+A%3BVervoort%2C+J+D%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BWolf%2C+D+E%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=DuFrane&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=52%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Archean; crust; hafnium; Idaho; inclusions; isotopes; lithosphere; magmas; metals; nesosilicates; orthosilicates; phase transitions; Precambrian; silicates; Snake River plain; United States; xenoliths; zircon; zircon group
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Continental arc subduction zone processes; insights from quartz-bearing high Mg# metasomatic selvages in mantle xenoliths
AN - 50431298; 2009-041512
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Dyer, B
AU - Lee, C A
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - Abstract V43C
EP - 1556
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 52, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - processes
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - magnesium
KW - subduction zones
KW - silica minerals
KW - lithosphere
KW - Owens Valley
KW - mantle
KW - phase transitions
KW - continental crust
KW - Big Pine volcanic field
KW - metasomatism
KW - California
KW - metals
KW - inclusions
KW - slabs
KW - quartz
KW - framework silicates
KW - crust
KW - xenoliths
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50431298?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Continental+arc+subduction+zone+processes%3B+insights+from+quartz-bearing+high+Mg%23+metasomatic+selvages+in+mantle+xenoliths&rft.au=Dyer%2C+B%3BLee%2C+C+A%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Dyer&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=52%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Big Pine volcanic field; California; continental crust; crust; framework silicates; inclusions; lithosphere; magnesium; mantle; metals; metasomatism; Owens Valley; phase transitions; processes; quartz; silica minerals; silicates; slabs; subduction zones; United States; xenoliths
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Magmatic evolution of the Coso geothermal area, California
AN - 50370025; 2009-070826
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Glazner, A F
AU - Miller, J S
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Johnson, B R
AU - Monastero, F C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - Abstract V53F
EP - 01
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 52, SUPPL.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Cenozoic
KW - California
KW - Inyo County California
KW - basalts
KW - rare earths
KW - basaltic composition
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Coso Hot Springs KGRA
KW - magmatism
KW - Nd-144/Nd-143
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - geothermal fields
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - metals
KW - Pliocene
KW - neodymium
KW - strontium
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50370025?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Magmatic+evolution+of+the+Coso+geothermal+area%2C+California&rft.au=Glazner%2C+A+F%3BMiller%2C+J+S%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BJohnson%2C+B+R%3BMonastero%2C+F+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Glazner&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=52%2C+SUPPL.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; basaltic composition; basalts; California; Cenozoic; Coso Hot Springs KGRA; geothermal fields; igneous rocks; Inyo County California; isotope ratios; isotopes; magmatism; metals; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; Neogene; Pliocene; rare earths; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; Tertiary; United States; volcanic rocks
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Scope of silicic magmatism associated with the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) "hotspot" track
AN - 50118239; 2010-007103
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - Abstract V41F
EP - 07
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 52, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - Idaho
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - igneous rocks
KW - magmatism
KW - siliceous composition
KW - plate tectonics
KW - volcanism
KW - basalts
KW - acidic composition
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50118239?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Scope+of+silicic+magmatism+associated+with+the+Snake+River+Plain-Yellowstone+%28SRPY%29+%22hotspot%22+track&rft.au=Leeman%2C+W+P%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=52%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidic composition; basalts; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; magmatism; plate tectonics; siliceous composition; Snake River plain; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanism; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Dynamical constraints on the life cycle of voluminous silicic systems; how to build, maintain, and destroy shallow silicic magma bodies
AN - 50117323; 2010-007104
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Dufek, J
AU - Karlstrom, L
AU - Bachmann, O
AU - Bergantz, G W
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Annen, C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - Abstract V41F
EP - 08
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 52, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - shallow depth
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - dynamics
KW - magmas
KW - isotope ratios
KW - acidic composition
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - stable isotopes
KW - melts
KW - crust
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50117323?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Dynamical+constraints+on+the+life+cycle+of+voluminous+silicic+systems%3B+how+to+build%2C+maintain%2C+and+destroy+shallow+silicic+magma+bodies&rft.au=Dufek%2C+J%3BKarlstrom%2C+L%3BBachmann%2C+O%3BBergantz%2C+G+W%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BAnnen%2C+C%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Dufek&rft.aufirst=J&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=52%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acidic composition; crust; dynamics; isotope ratios; isotopes; magmas; melts; O-18/O-16; oxygen; shallow depth; stable isotopes
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Lithium isotopic composition of mantle xenoliths from the Western U.S.; implications for metasomatic and delamination events of the North American lithosphere
AN - 50108465; 2010-009553
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Chan, L
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Lee, C A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - Abstract V34A
EP - 03
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 52, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - North America
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Colorado Plateau
KW - isotopes
KW - lithosphere
KW - lithium
KW - isotope ratios
KW - igneous rocks
KW - enrichment
KW - alkali metals
KW - mantle
KW - metasomatism
KW - stable isotopes
KW - delamination
KW - Western U.S.
KW - metals
KW - mid-ocean ridge basalts
KW - inclusions
KW - basalts
KW - xenoliths
KW - Li-7/Li-6
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50108465?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Lithium+isotopic+composition+of+mantle+xenoliths+from+the+Western+U.S.%3B+implications+for+metasomatic+and+delamination+events+of+the+North+American+lithosphere&rft.au=Chan%2C+L%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BLee%2C+C+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Chan&rft.aufirst=L&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=52%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 2
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkali metals; basalts; Colorado Plateau; delamination; enrichment; igneous rocks; inclusions; isotope ratios; isotopes; Li-7/Li-6; lithium; lithosphere; mantle; metals; metasomatism; mid-ocean ridge basalts; North America; stable isotopes; United States; volcanic rocks; Western U.S.; xenoliths
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Diversity in the geosciences and successful strategies for increasing diversity
AN - 50061289; 2008-091518
AB - Data available from the National Science Foundation Division of Science Resources Statistics demonstrate that since 1966 fewer bachelor's, master's, and Ph.D. degrees have been awarded in the geosciences than in any other STEM field. Data spanning the time period from 1995-2001 indicate that the percentage of bachelor's and master's degrees awarded to members of racial and ethnic groups that are underrepresented in STEM fields was lower in the geosciences than in other STEM fields. The percentage of Ph.D. degrees awarded in the geosciences to students drawn from underrepresented groups from 1995-2001 was similar to the percentage awarded in math and computer science, physical science, and engineering. It appears that the geosciences retain a greater number of students drawn from underrepresented groups during the transition from master's to Ph.D. degree programs, and/or recruit underrepresented students into Ph.D. programs from other STEM fields. The geosciences have had success recruiting and retaining women since 1966, and the lessons learned in increasing gender diversity in the field may help the geoscience community increase its racial and ethnic diversity in the future. Four strategies that consistently appear to be effective in increasing diversity are: demonstrating the relevance of the field and opportunities for high-paying careers in it; developing partnerships among multiple stakeholders to reduce "leaks" from the educational pipeline; promoting strong mentoring relationships among students and geoscience professionals, including opportunities for students to conduct research prior to graduate school; and providing financial assistance when necessary.
JF - Journal of Geoscience Education
AU - Huntoon, Jacqueline E
AU - Lane, Melissa J
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - December 2007
SP - 447
EP - 457
PB - National Association of Geoscience Teachers, Bellingham, WA
VL - 55
IS - 6
SN - 1089-9995, 1089-9995
KW - geology
KW - programs
KW - graduate-level education
KW - college-level education
KW - government agencies
KW - curricula
KW - demographics
KW - education
KW - information management
KW - NSF
KW - data management
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50061289?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Geoscience+Education&rft.atitle=Diversity+in+the+geosciences+and+successful+strategies+for+increasing+diversity&rft.au=Huntoon%2C+Jacqueline+E%3BLane%2C+Melissa+J&rft.aulast=Huntoon&rft.aufirst=Jacqueline&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=55&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=447&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Geoscience+Education&rft.issn=10899995&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.nagt.org/files/nagt/jge/abstracts/huntoon-v55p447.pdf http://www.nagt.org/nagt/jge/issues.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 9
N1 - PubXState - WA
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - college-level education; curricula; data management; demographics; education; geology; government agencies; graduate-level education; information management; NSF; programs
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Mica and the Origin of Life: Cells without Membranes
T2 - 47th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB 2007)
AN - 39585027; 4740078
JF - 47th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB 2007)
AU - Hansma, H
Y1 - 2007/12/01/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Dec 01
KW - Membranes
KW - Micas
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39585027?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=47th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+for+Cell+Biology+%28ASCB+2007%29&rft.atitle=Mica+and+the+Origin+of+Life%3A+Cells+without+Membranes&rft.au=Hansma%2C+H&rft.aulast=Hansma&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=47th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+for+Cell+Biology+%28ASCB+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.ascb.org/meetings/index.cfm?ID=103
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Designing a spatially-explicit nature reserve network based on ecological functions: An integer programming approach
AN - 20469734; 7919345
AB - An effective nature reserve network design should reflect the ecological requirements of target species, while simultaneously considering costs. In this study, we propose a design method that considers the ecological role of the spatial arrangement of reserve sites in relation to the long-term persistence of metapopulations of the target species. We apply our design method to an amphibian metapopulation, which illustrates how varying the emphasis on the importance of design factors can affect estimated metapopulation persistence. Comparisons among reserve design methods show that considering the ecological function, rather than generic spatial rules, of the spatial location of reserve sites may be more likely to support species survival. A piecemeal treatment or mechanistic application of spatial rules in reserve design may be subject to the risk of not producing the most effective reserve network, and in some cases may even compromise the conservation objective which could be achieved otherwise.
JF - Biological Conservation
AU - Jiang, Y
AU - Swallow, S K
AU - Paton, PWC
AD - University of Rhode Island, Kingston Coastal Institute, 1 Greenhouse Road, Kingston, RI 02881, USA, yojiang@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2007/12//
PY - 2007
DA - Dec 2007
SP - 236
EP - 249
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 140
IS - 3-4
SN - 0006-3207, 0006-3207
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Conservation
KW - Survival
KW - Nature reserves
KW - Metapopulations
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04060:Management and Conservation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20469734?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biological+Conservation&rft.atitle=Designing+a+spatially-explicit+nature+reserve+network+based+on+ecological+functions%3A+An+integer+programming+approach&rft.au=Jiang%2C+Y%3BSwallow%2C+S+K%3BPaton%2C+PWC&rft.aulast=Jiang&rft.aufirst=Y&rft.date=2007-12-01&rft.volume=140&rft.issue=3-4&rft.spage=236&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biological+Conservation&rft.issn=00063207&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.biocon.2007.08.009
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Survival; Conservation; Nature reserves; Metapopulations
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2007.08.009
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Moving Forward to Improve Engineering Education. NSB-07-122
AN - 851225241; ED514058
AB - This report of the National Science Board (Board) lays out the findings and recommendations for the National Science Foundation (NSF) to support innovations in engineering education programs. The Board, established by Congress in 1950, provides oversight for, and establishes the policies of, NSF. In March 2005, the Board undertook an examination of recent recommendations addressing changes in engineering education and implications for the engineering workforce. This effort built upon the work of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in its report, "The Engineer of 2020: Visions of Engineering in the New Century", as well as recent Board policy reports that identified issues of concern for the domestic engineering workforce. This paper synthesizes the results of two Board-sponsored workshops and significant Board deliberations. The first workshop was held at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in October 2005 and included a range of experts representing broad interests in engineering education. For the second workshop, held at the Georgia Institute of Technology in November 2006, 23 leading deans of engineering (or equivalent) and the NSF Assistant Director for Engineering participated in discussions that identified needs for change in engineering education and model programs to address those needs. Throughout the process, the Board maintained a dialogue with NAE and coordinated with the NAE "Engineer of 2020" project. The recommendations in this final report address issues of public perception of engineering, retention of students in engineering majors, responsiveness of engineering education to change in the global environment, and needs for additional data to support policy and planning. Appendices include: (1) Workshop--Engineering Employment and Engineering Education: What are the Linkages? (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 20, 2005); (2) Workshop--Moving Forward to Improve Engineering Education (Georgia Institute of Technology, November 7, 2006); (3) Charge for Workshop I; and (4) Workplan for Workshop II. A bibliography is included.
Y1 - 2007/11/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Nov 19
SP - 58
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - High Schools
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Secondary Education
KW - Workshops
KW - Engineering
KW - Engineering Education
KW - School Holding Power
KW - Labor Force
KW - Technical Occupations
KW - Academic Persistence
KW - Majors (Students)
KW - Educational Improvement
KW - Global Approach
KW - Public Opinion
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/851225241?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Introducing Young Children to the Role of Assumptions in Proving
AN - 62063718; EJ780697
AB - The notion of assumptions permeates school mathematics, but instruction tends to highlight this notion only in the advanced grades. In this article, I argue that it is important for even young children to develop a sense of the role of assumptions in proving, and I investigate what it might mean and look like for instruction to promote this goal. Toward this end, I study an episode from third grade that describes the first time that the students in the class were introduced in a deliberate and explicit way to the role of assumptions in proving. The central role of the mathematical task in the episode is identified, and features of mathematical tasks that can generate rich mathematical activity in the intersection of assumptions and proving are discussed. In addition, issues of the role of teachers in fostering productive interactions between students and mathematical tasks that have those features are considered. (Contains 4 footnotes and 3 figures.)
JF - Mathematical Thinking and Learning: An International Journal
AU - Stylianides, Andreas J.
Y1 - 2007/11//
PY - 2007
DA - November 2007
SP - 361
EP - 385
PB - Lawrence Erlbaum. , 325 Chestnut Street Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
VL - 9
IS - 4
SN - 1098-6065, 1098-6065
KW - ERIC, Current Index to Journals in Education (CIJE)
KW - Elementary Education
KW - Grade 3
KW - Elementary School Mathematics
KW - Teacher Role
KW - Mathematical Logic
KW - Mathematics Instruction
KW - Young Children
KW - Validity
KW - Mathematics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aeric&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Mathematical+Thinking+and+Learning%3A+An+International+Journal&rft.atitle=Introducing+Young+Children+to+the+Role+of+Assumptions+in+Proving&rft.au=Stylianides%2C+Andreas+J.&rft.aulast=Stylianides&rft.aufirst=Andreas&rft.date=2007-11-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=361&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Mathematical+Thinking+and+Learning%3A+An+International+Journal&rft.issn=10986065&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 11655 1474 316 8016 4542; 4420 5264; 6419 5242; 6410 5964; 6403; 11210 3627 2416 10031; 10565 9015; 3360 6416 2515 3357
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - U.S. Doctoral Awards in Science and Engineering Continue Upward Trend in 2006. Info Brief. NSF 08-301
AN - 62051265; ED499157
AB - U.S. institutions awarded 29,854 science and engineering (S&E) doctorates in 2006, a record high. The 2006 rise in S&E doctoral awards, 6.7% over 2005, is the fourth consecutive increase. S&E fields reaching all-time high counts in 2006 were biological sciences, computer sciences, mathematics, chemistry, social sciences, and engineering. A total of 15,742 doctorates in non-S&E fields were awarded in 2006, an increase over the 2005 count but a slight decline from the record number of 15,848 in 2004. Awards in health fields increased to their highest point in the last 10 years (1,906), whereas the count in education was at an all-time low in the same period (6,124). From 1997 to 2006, awards of S&E doctorates grew by 9.6%, with increases concentrated in the last 4 years of the period. In the same 10-year period, awards of doctorates in all fields grew by 7.2%, whereas awards in non-S&E fields remained relatively level; thus, increases in S&E fields account for most of the growth in doctorates awarded. (Contains 4 tables and 2 figures.)
AU - Falkenheim, Jaquelina C.
Y1 - 2007/11//
PY - 2007
DA - November 2007
SP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Engineering
KW - Sciences
KW - Educational Trends
KW - Doctoral Degrees
KW - Educational Attainment
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/62051265?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Fluid-mobile element budgets in serpentinized oceanic lithospheric mantle; insights from B, As, Li, Pb, PGEs and Os isotopes in the Feather River Ophiolite, California
AN - 51301837; 2008-013825
AB - Serpentinized oceanic lithosphere may be an important source for boron and other fluid-mobile elements that are anomalously enriched in arc volcanic rocks. However, the integrated water/rock ratios associated with different styles of serpentinization may be variable. For example, large water/rock ratios are involved in the serpentinization of abyssal peridotites exhumed to the seafloor, whereas much lower water/rock ratios are likely to dictate serpentinization along deep faults and fractures. To address how fluid-mobile element enrichments vary with serpentinization at different settings, we investigated serpentinized harzburgites from the Feather River Ophiolite (FRO) in northern California. Major and trace element systematics indicate that serpentinization of the FRO ultramafics involved seawater. However, FRO serpentinites have unradiogenic Os isotopic compositions and near-chondritic platinum group element relative abundances, contrasting with serpentinized abyssal peridotites, which have radiogenic Os isotopic compositions and disturbed platinum group element systematics. These observations indicate that the integrated water/rock ratio involved in FRO serpentinization was smaller than that involved in abyssal peridotite serpentinization. B concentrations in the FRO (5-15 ppm), while substantially higher than primitive mantle (<0.1 ppm), are still lower than in abyssal peridotites (10-170 ppm). These low values are not due to metamorphic loss as there is no petrographic evidence for prograde metamorphism (the serpentine minerals are low temperature forms like chrysotile and lizardite) and there is no consistency between observed fluid-mobile element (B, As, Pb, and Li) contents and depletions predicted from metamorphic dehydration models. Low B and fluid-mobile element contents in the FRO may thus be an intrinsic feature of low water/rock ratio serpentinization. Such values may be more representative of serpentinized oceanic lithospheric mantle rather than abyssal peridotites, which sample only the top veneer of the lithosphere.
JF - Chemical Geology
AU - Agranier, Arnaud
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty A
AU - Li, Zheng-Xue A
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2007/11//
PY - 2007
DA - November 2007
SP - 230
EP - 241
PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam
VL - 245
IS - 3-4
SN - 0009-2541, 0009-2541
KW - United States
KW - serpentinization
KW - sea water
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - oceanic lithosphere
KW - mass spectra
KW - mantle
KW - lead
KW - fluid phase
KW - platinum group
KW - metasomatism
KW - California
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - water-rock interaction
KW - spectra
KW - chemical composition
KW - Northern California
KW - geochemistry
KW - lithosphere
KW - lithium
KW - arsenic
KW - alkali metals
KW - ophiolite
KW - ultramafics
KW - models
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - Feather River Ophiolite
KW - platinum
KW - metals
KW - peridotites
KW - osmium
KW - boron
KW - trace metals
KW - mobilization
KW - dehydration
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Chemical+Geology&rft.atitle=Fluid-mobile+element+budgets+in+serpentinized+oceanic+lithospheric+mantle%3B+insights+from+B%2C+As%2C+Li%2C+Pb%2C+PGEs+and+Os+isotopes+in+the+Feather+River+Ophiolite%2C+California&rft.au=Agranier%2C+Arnaud%3BLee%2C+Cin-Ty+A%3BLi%2C+Zheng-Xue+A%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Agranier&rft.aufirst=Arnaud&rft.date=2007-11-01&rft.volume=245&rft.issue=3-4&rft.spage=230&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Chemical+Geology&rft.issn=00092541&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.chemgeo.2007.08.008
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00092541
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 41
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - CHGEAD
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkali metals; arsenic; boron; California; chemical composition; dehydration; Feather River Ophiolite; fluid phase; geochemistry; ICP mass spectra; igneous rocks; isotopes; lead; lithium; lithosphere; mantle; mass spectra; metals; metasomatism; mobilization; models; Northern California; oceanic lithosphere; ophiolite; osmium; peridotites; platinum; platinum group; plutonic rocks; sea water; serpentinization; spectra; trace metals; ultramafics; United States; water-rock interaction
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2007.08.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of organic complexation on the toxicity of Cu to the earthworm Eisenia fetida
AN - 51088347; 2008-079958
AB - The relationship between Cu speciation in solution and mortality and tissue Cu concentrations in Eisenia fetida was investigated. E. fetida were exposed to solutions containing 0.009, 0.049 and 0.125 mg CuL (super -1) and 0, 0.15, 0.35 and 50 mg EDTAL (super -1) . Mortalities of 100, 60, 50 and 25% were recorded in the 0.125 mg CuL (super -1) solutions containing 0, 0.15, 0.35 and 50 mg EDTAL (super -1) , respectively. Similarly tissue body burden decreased with increasing EDTA concentration. Complexation capacity of the solution increased with EDTA concentration. In the 0.125 mg CuL (super -1) solution labile Cu concentration decreased with increasing EDTA concentration. These trends are attributed to complexation of free Cu ions with EDTA molecules, and the non-bioavailable nature of the resultant Cu-EDTA complex.
JF - Applied Geochemistry
AU - Arnold, R E
AU - Hodson, Mark E
AU - Comber, S
Y1 - 2007/11//
PY - 2007
DA - November 2007
SP - 2397
EP - 2405
PB - Elsevier, Oxford-New York-Beijing
VL - 22
IS - 11
SN - 0883-2927, 0883-2927
KW - toxic materials
KW - Eisenia
KW - copper
KW - biochemistry
KW - Vermes
KW - complexing
KW - pollution
KW - ecosystems
KW - Eisenia fetida
KW - environmental effects
KW - organic compounds
KW - organic acids
KW - toxicity
KW - metals
KW - EDTA
KW - carboxylic acids
KW - Invertebrata
KW - ecology
KW - geochemistry
KW - chemical fractionation
KW - 22:Environmental geology
KW - 02A:General geochemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Applied+Geochemistry&rft.atitle=Effect+of+organic+complexation+on+the+toxicity+of+Cu+to+the+earthworm+Eisenia+fetida&rft.au=Arnold%2C+R+E%3BHodson%2C+Mark+E%3BComber%2C+S&rft.aulast=Arnold&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2007-11-01&rft.volume=22&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=2397&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Applied+Geochemistry&rft.issn=08832927&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.apgeochem.2007.05.008
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/08832927
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Based on Publisher-supplied data
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - biochemistry; carboxylic acids; chemical fractionation; complexing; copper; ecology; ecosystems; EDTA; Eisenia; Eisenia fetida; environmental effects; geochemistry; Invertebrata; metals; organic acids; organic compounds; pollution; toxic materials; toxicity; Vermes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeochem.2007.05.008
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Adakitic dacites formed by intracrustal crystal fractionation of water-rich parent magmas at Nevado de Longavi Volcano (36.2 degrees S; Andean southern volcanic zone, central Chile)
AN - 50867038; 2008-073808
AB - The mid-Holocene eruptive products of Nevado de Longavi volcano (36.2 degrees , Chile) are the only reported occurrence of adakitic volcanic rocks in the Quaternary Andean Southern Volcanic Zone (33-46 degrees S). Dacites of this volcano are chemically distinct from other evolved magmas of the region in that they have high La/Yb (15-20) and Sr/Y (60-90) ratios and systematically lower incompatible element contents. An origin by partial melting of high-pressure crustal sources seems unlikely from isotopic and trace element considerations. Mafic enclaves quenched into one of the dacites, on the other hand, constitute plausible parental magmas. Dacites and mafic enclaves share several characteristics such as mineral chemistry, whole-rock isotope and trace element ratios, highly oxidizing conditions (NNO+1.5 to >NNO+2, where NNO is the nickel-nickel oxide buffer), and elevated boron contents. A two-stage mass-balance crystal fractionation model that matches both major and trace elements is proposed to explain magmatic evolution from the least evolved mafic enclave to the dacites. Amphibole is the main ferromagnesian phase in both stages of this model, in agreement with the mineralogy of the magmas. We also describe cumulate-textured xenoliths that correspond very closely to the solid assemblages predicted by the model. We conclude that Nevado de Longavi adakitic dacites are the products of polybaric fractional crystallization from exceptionally water-rich parent magmas. These basaltic magmas are inferred to be related to an exceptionally high, but transient input of slab-derived fluids released from serpentinite bodies hosted in the oceanic Mocha Fracture Zone, which projects beneath Nevado de Longavi. Fractional crystallization that is modally dominated by amphibole, with very minor garnet extraction, is a mechanism for generating adakitic magmas in cold subduction zones where a high flux of slab-derived fluids is present.
JF - Journal of Petrology
AU - Rodriguez, Carolina
AU - Selles, Daniel
AU - Dungan, Michael
AU - Langmuir, Charles H
AU - Leeman, William
Y1 - 2007/11//
PY - 2007
DA - November 2007
SP - 2033
EP - 2061
PB - Oxford University Press, Oxford
VL - 48
IS - 11
SN - 0022-3530, 0022-3530
KW - silicates
KW - Andes
KW - adakites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Quaternary
KW - Nevado de Longavi
KW - middle Holocene
KW - igneous rocks
KW - amphibole group
KW - Chile
KW - alkalic amphibole
KW - Holocene
KW - Cenozoic
KW - South America
KW - central Chile
KW - magmas
KW - Mocha fracture zone
KW - volcanoes
KW - dacites
KW - lithogeochemistry
KW - crystal fractionation
KW - geochemistry
KW - chain silicates
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://petrology.oxfordjournals.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 135
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 plate, 8 tables, geol. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - JPTGAD
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - adakites; alkalic amphibole; amphibole group; Andes; Cenozoic; central Chile; chain silicates; Chile; crystal fractionation; dacites; geochemistry; Holocene; igneous rocks; lithogeochemistry; magmas; middle Holocene; Mocha fracture zone; Nevado de Longavi; Quaternary; silicates; South America; volcanic rocks; volcanoes
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egm049
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Role of Research Science in Rapid Response to Natural Disasters
T2 - 2007 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2007)
AN - 40723332; 4759319
JF - 2007 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2007)
AU - Rice, Donald L
AU - Fossani, Cheryl L
Y1 - 2007/10/28/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Oct 28
KW - Natural disasters
KW - Disasters
KW - U 5500:Geoscience
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40723332?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2007%29&rft.atitle=The+Role+of+Research+Science+in+Rapid+Response+to+Natural+Disasters&rft.au=Rice%2C+Donald+L%3BFossani%2C+Cheryl+L&rft.aulast=Rice&rft.aufirst=Donald&rft.date=2007-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Broadening Diverse Participation in S&E for Workforce and Society
T2 - 2007 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2007)
AN - 40721181; 4757844
JF - 2007 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2007)
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
Y1 - 2007/10/28/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Oct 28
KW - Education
KW - U 5500:Geoscience
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40721181?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2007%29&rft.atitle=Broadening+Diverse+Participation+in+S%26amp%3BE+for+Workforce+and+Society&rft.au=Suiter%2C+Marilyn+J&rft.aulast=Suiter&rft.aufirst=Marilyn&rft.date=2007-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Snake River Plain-Yellowstone Silicic Volcanism: Implications for Magma Genesis and Crustal Evolution
T2 - 2007 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2007)
AN - 40705836; 4759024
JF - 2007 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2007)
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Annen, Catherine
AU - Dufek, Josef
Y1 - 2007/10/28/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Oct 28
KW - USA, Snake R.
KW - Snakes
KW - Rivers
KW - Evolution
KW - Magma
KW - Volcanism
KW - U 5500:Geoscience
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40705836?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2007%29&rft.atitle=Snake+River+Plain-Yellowstone+Silicic+Volcanism%3A+Implications+for+Magma+Genesis+and+Crustal+Evolution&rft.au=Leeman%2C+William+P%3BAnnen%2C+Catherine%3BDufek%2C+Josef&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2007-10-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Geological+Society+of+America+%28GSA+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of research science in rapid response to natural disasters
AN - 815955052; 2011-001529
AB - Whether natural or man-made, unavoidable or intentional, environmental hazards that progress to the point of becoming natural disasters necessarily evoke rapid responses from multiple sectors of society. Although the most acute needs for rapid response are arguably in the realms of disaster relief, assessment of property damage and health impacts and needs, and the restoration of civil normalcy, the scientific research community also has an important role to play as rapid-responder. In the immediate aftermath of natural disasters, geoscientists, ecologists, and public health researchers working together have a unique opportunity--and responsibility--to work together to investigate the detailed etiology of disaster endpoints. But just as importantly, rapid-response basic research offers the prospect of formulating a sound scientific basis for ameliorating or even eliminating morbidity, mortality, and property damage in the wake of future disasters. In this presentation we will focus specifically on lessons learned from a set of NSF-sponsored rapid-response studies mounted in the New Orleans metropolitan area following the landfall of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Rice, Donald L
AU - Fossani, Cheryl L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 508
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - Hurricane Katrina
KW - New Orleans Louisiana
KW - geologic hazards
KW - damage
KW - Gulf Coastal Plain
KW - research
KW - cyclones
KW - Hurricane Rita
KW - Orleans Parish Louisiana
KW - storms
KW - Louisiana
KW - hurricanes
KW - 22:Environmental geology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=The+role+of+research+science+in+rapid+response+to+natural+disasters&rft.au=Rice%2C+Donald+L%3BFossani%2C+Cheryl+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Rice&rft.aufirst=Donald&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=508&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2007 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - cyclones; damage; geologic hazards; Gulf Coastal Plain; Hurricane Katrina; Hurricane Rita; hurricanes; Louisiana; New Orleans Louisiana; Orleans Parish Louisiana; research; storms; United States
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Boron isotopic variations in NW USA rhyolites; Yellowstone, Snake River plain, eastern Oregon
AN - 742925709; 2010-055963
AB - Boron isotopic composition was determined in rhyolites from the Snake River plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) hotspot track and the High Lava Plains (HLP) of eastern Oregon to explore its utility in understanding magmatic sources and processes. Because B is strongly fluid-mobile element absent in the upper mantle and enriched in sediments and crust, it is an excellent tracer for interactions between hotspot-related melts, crustal fluids and metamorphic basement. Compositions of NW USA rhyolites correlate strongly with geography and the nature of the underlying basement terranes. Those from the SRPY province have higher (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr, (super 207) Pb/ (super 206) Pb, and lower (super 143) Nd/ (super 144) Nd than those from the HLP, reflecting a dominant influence of Precambrian cratonic crust east of the western Idaho suture zone versus accreted oceanic terranes to the west. Rhyolites from the cratonic domain also show significant enrichments of Th, U, and LREE/HREE. However, B contents and especially B/Nb and B/Rb are systematically higher west of the tectonic boundary. Decoupling between B and the other incompatible elements is significant, because it requires processes other than normal magmatic differentiation. B isotopic measurements were made on natural and synthetic glasses via Multiple Multiplier Multi Collector Laser Ablation-ICP-MS at DTM. B isotopic compositions are lighter in SRPY rhyolites (delta (super 11) B range: -5.6 to -8.9ppm) compared to HLP (delta (super 11) B range: -0.8 to -3.1ppm); these data are consistent with strongly fluid-depleted and/or metamorphosed sources for SRPY, whereas HLP sources resemble those of MORB. B isotope ratios of low-delta (super 18) O rhyolites are indistinct from those with normal delta (super 18) O, suggesting that delta (super 11) B values are not strongly affected by hydrothermal processes, but rather inherited from the melt source regions. Although low delta (super 11) B is also observed in mantle-derived basalts (i.e. OIBs), in the SRPY rhyolites it is associated with enrichments of U, Th, Rb, LREE typical for continental crust, and thus light delta (super 11) B must be characteristic of the old metamorphosed continental crust as well. Accordingly, SRPY protoliths are inferred to be high-grade metamorphic rocks. If they represent metasediments, it is likely that bulk B and (super 11) B were selectively removed by metamorphic dehydration reactions and transported to the surface via (super 11) B-enriched fluids.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Savov, Ivan
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 457
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mass spectra
KW - stable isotopes
KW - melts
KW - variations
KW - Oregon
KW - suture zones
KW - eastern Oregon
KW - spectra
KW - rare earths
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - measurement
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - B-11/B-10
KW - High Lava Plains
KW - boron
KW - Snake River plain
KW - crust
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2007 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - B-11/B-10; boron; crust; eastern Oregon; High Lava Plains; hot spots; ICP mass spectra; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotopes; mass spectra; measurement; melts; metals; Oregon; plate tectonics; rare earths; rhyolites; Snake River plain; spectra; stable isotopes; suture zones; United States; variations; volcanic rocks; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Snake River plain-Yellowstone silicic volcanism; implications for magma genesis and crustal evolution
AN - 742916710; 2010-055957
AB - Energetics and physical processes associated with bimodal basalt-rhyolite magmatism of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) hotspot track are investigated from the perspective of the voluminous rhyolites that comprise the initial eruptive phase. Because rhyolite compositions correlate strongly with geography and the nature of the underlying basement, and considering strong crustal affinity of O-Sr-Pb isotopic compositions, it is evident that these magmas are dominantly of crustal origin. Yet Nd isotopic data preclude wholesale melting of the underlying Archean basement and point to involvement of a juvenile component--taken here to be derived by fractionation or remelting of contemporaneous basaltic magmas. Following the work of Annen and coworkers, we assume that energy for melting is provided by massive input of basalt into the crust. Several lines of evidence suggest that this occurs in the upper crust (<20 km depth) and involved a relatively infertile protolith. Published and new Ti-in-quartz thermometry indicates that temperatures of the rhyolite magmas commonly approached 1000 degrees C. To sustain such high Ts in the upper crust for several m.y. requires intermittent intrusion of a large volume of basaltic magma, effectively equivalent to at least 10 km thickness. In this type of scenario, remelting of earlier mafic intrusions is inevitable. Melting of crustal lithologies depends in detail on frequency and depths of basaltic intrusion, but locally approximates a fractional fusion process--leading to eruption of progressively less evolved rhyolite over the duration of a specific magma system. This behavior is exemplified by products of the large Bruneau-Jarbidge center that erupted ca. 10,000 cubic km of rhyolite between 12.7-8.0 Ma in the central SRP (Bonnichsen, Leeman et al., 2007). This scale of magmatic activity requires significant modification of the underlying crust.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Annen, Catherine
AU - Dufek, Josef
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 456
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - isotope fractionation
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - siliceous composition
KW - lead
KW - stable isotopes
KW - temperature
KW - melting
KW - volcanism
KW - basalts
KW - composition
KW - Archean
KW - chemical composition
KW - processes
KW - Idaho
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - rhyolites
KW - protoliths
KW - Precambrian
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - isotope ratios
KW - magmatism
KW - basement
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - genesis
KW - Sr-87/Sr-86
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - eruptions
KW - Snake River plain
KW - strontium
KW - crust
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Snake+River+plain-Yellowstone+silicic+volcanism%3B+implications+for+magma+genesis+and+crustal+evolution&rft.au=Leeman%2C+William+P%3BAnnen%2C+Catherine%3BDufek%2C+Josef%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=456&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2007 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Archean; basalts; basement; chemical composition; composition; crust; eruptions; genesis; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotope fractionation; isotope ratios; isotopes; lead; magmas; magmatism; melting; metals; O-18/O-16; oxygen; Precambrian; processes; protoliths; rhyolites; siliceous composition; Snake River plain; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; strontium; temperature; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanism; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mantle source provinces beneath the Pacific Northwest revealed by helium isotope variations in basaltic lavas
AN - 742913176; 2010-054503
AB - Helium isotope variations in continental basalts provide valuable constraints on mantle source relationships. (super 3) He/ (super 4) He ratios of 7 to 9 R (sub A) (where R (sub A) is the air ratio) are typical of mid-ocean ridge basalts and indicate a source within the convecting upper mantle. Lower (more radiogenic) (super 3) He/ (super 4) He reflects additional contributions from the lithospheric mantle or continental crust. Elevated (super 3) He/ (super 4) He, above 10 R (sub A) , indicates derivation from a region with lower time-integrated (U+Th)/ (super 3) He, usually taken to be a deep mantle (thermochemical plume) source. Helium isotope results for Quaternary basalts from the eastern Snake River Plain (SRP), the Owyhee Plateau and the Oregon High Lava Plains (HLP), along with published data for Yellowstone and the Cascades volcanic arc, provide insight to the different mantle sources beneath these regions. The westward-migrating silicic volcanism of the HLP enigmatically mirrors the eastward progression of volcanism along the SRP, and is sometimes taken as evidence against the YSRP system as a hotspot track produced by a mantle plume currently located beneath Yellowstone. However, all basalts from the eastern SRP have high (super 3) He/ (super 4) He. Furthermore, they display a gradient over a lateral distance of 400 km, from >13 R (sub A) in the west to >19 R (sub A) adjacent to Yellowstone. Such high ratios are absent elsewhere in the Western US. The high (super 3) He/ (super 4) He ratios along the SRP indicate the presence of mantle plume-derived material, either in the shallow asthenosphere or emplaced within the continental lithosphere downstream from Yellowstone. The gradient suggests that the proportion of Yellowstone plume material decreases westward. In contrast, basalts from the HLP and the Owyhee Plateau have lower (super 3) He/ (super 4) He and a narrow range of 8.8-9.3 R (sub A) . Basalts from Newberry Volcano have (super 3) He/ (super 4) He = 7.6-8.3 R (sub A) and overlap the range for the Cascades arc (7.0-8.4 R (sub A) ). Basalts from the HLP therefore have (super 3) He/ (super 4) He similar to mid-ocean ridge basalts, reflecting a shallow asthenospheric source with no discernible influence from the Yellowstone hotspot. Collectively, these (super 3) He/ (super 4) He variations reveal three distinct tectono-magmatic provinces in the northwestern US; 1) the Cascades volcanic arc, 2) the High Lava Plains-Owyhee Plateau, and 3) the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain system.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Graham, D W
AU - Reid, M R
AU - Jordan, B T
AU - Grunder, A L
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Lupton, J E
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 455
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - stable isotopes
KW - variations
KW - Cenozoic
KW - (U-Th)/He
KW - Owyhee Plateau
KW - Oregon
KW - Newberry Volcano
KW - volcanism
KW - noble gases
KW - basalts
KW - Pacific Coast
KW - helium
KW - basaltic composition
KW - mantle plumes
KW - upper mantle
KW - Idaho
KW - Quaternary
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - lithosphere
KW - isotope ratios
KW - convection
KW - Cascade Range
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Deschutes County Oregon
KW - lava
KW - mid-ocean ridge basalts
KW - High Lava Plains
KW - He-4/He-3
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Mantle+source+provinces+beneath+the+Pacific+Northwest+revealed+by+helium+isotope+variations+in+basaltic+lavas&rft.au=Graham%2C+D+W%3BReid%2C+M+R%3BJordan%2C+B+T%3BGrunder%2C+A+L%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BLupton%2C+J+E%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Graham&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=455&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2007 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - (U-Th)/He; basaltic composition; basalts; Cascade Range; Cenozoic; convection; Deschutes County Oregon; He-4/He-3; helium; High Lava Plains; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; lava; lithosphere; mantle; mantle plumes; mid-ocean ridge basalts; Newberry Volcano; noble gases; Oregon; Owyhee Plateau; Pacific Coast; plate tectonics; Quaternary; Snake River plain; stable isotopes; United States; upper mantle; variations; volcanic rocks; volcanism; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The rise and fall of sea level over the past 100 million years
AN - 51230732; 2008-075860
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Miller, Kenneth G
AU - Browning, James V
AU - Sugarman, Peter J
AU - Kominz, Michelle A
AU - Mountain, Gregory S
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 1
EP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 5
IS - 2
KW - United States
KW - Leg 150X
KW - offshore
KW - Cretaceous
KW - global
KW - West Indies
KW - regression
KW - Leg 174AX
KW - Caribbean region
KW - Mesozoic
KW - models
KW - sea-level changes
KW - Bahamas
KW - transgression
KW - reconstruction
KW - Ocean Drilling Program
KW - New Jersey
KW - drilling
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=The+rise+and+fall+of+sea+level+over+the+past+100+million+years&rft.au=Miller%2C+Kenneth+G%3BBrowning%2C+James+V%3BSugarman%2C+Peter+J%3BKominz%2C+Michelle+A%3BMountain%2C+Gregory+S&rft.aulast=Miller&rft.aufirst=Kenneth&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=5&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 9
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sect., strat. cols., sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2016-04-14
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Ocean; Bahamas; Caribbean region; Cretaceous; drilling; global; Leg 150X; Leg 174AX; Mesozoic; models; New Jersey; Ocean Drilling Program; offshore; reconstruction; regression; sea-level changes; transgression; United States; West Indies
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - What is GeoSystems?
AN - 51230326; 2008-075861
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Soreghan, Lynn
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 7
EP - 8
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 5
IS - 2
KW - Cenozoic
KW - programs
KW - Quaternary
KW - GeoSystems
KW - education
KW - research
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - concepts
KW - climate
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51230326?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=What+is+GeoSystems%3F&rft.au=Soreghan%2C+Lynn&rft.aulast=Soreghan&rft.aufirst=Lynn&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=5&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=7&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cenozoic; climate; concepts; education; GeoSystems; paleoclimatology; programs; Quaternary; research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The birth of the International Geophysical Year
AN - 50875112; 2007-128561
AB - In his essay "Six Cautionary Tales for Scientists," Freeman Dyson warns against "the game of status seeking, organized around committees." (Dyson, 1992). It is not that committees are the root of evil, he writes, but that when presented with a choice between incremental, practical solutions and grand schemes that attract attention, committees have every incentive to choose the latter--even if the choice has a high probability of failure. Often the committees present the grand scheme as the only choice, an all-or-nothing proposition.
JF - Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK)
AU - Korsmo, Fae L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 1312
EP - 1316
PB - Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK
VL - 26
IS - 10
SN - 1070-485X, 1070-485X
KW - scale factor
KW - experimental studies
KW - International Geophysical Year
KW - geophysical methods
KW - atmosphere
KW - satellite methods
KW - history
KW - continents
KW - applications
KW - satellites
KW - world ocean
KW - remote sensing
KW - field studies
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Leading+Edge+%28Tulsa%2C+OK%29&rft.atitle=The+birth+of+the+International+Geophysical+Year&rft.au=Korsmo%2C+Fae+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Korsmo&rft.aufirst=Fae&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=1312&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Leading+Edge+%28Tulsa%2C+OK%29&rft.issn=1070485X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1190%2F1.2794395
L2 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1745-6592
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States | Reference includes data supplied by Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - PubXState - OK
N1 - Document feature - port.
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - applications; atmosphere; continents; experimental studies; field studies; geophysical methods; history; International Geophysical Year; remote sensing; satellite methods; satellites; scale factor; world ocean
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.2794395
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - (super 3) He, (super 20,21,22) Ne, (super 14) C, (super 10) Be, (super 26) Al, and (super 36) Cl in magnetic fractions of cosmic dust from Greenland and Antarctica
AN - 50653742; 2008-091467
AB - We report on studies of the concentrations of cosmogenic nuclides in the magnetic fraction of cosmic dust particles recovered from the South Pole Water Well (SPWW) and from Greenland. Our results confirm that cosmic dust material from these locations contains measurable amounts of cosmogenic nuclides. The Antarctic particles (and possibly those from Greenland as well) also contain minor amounts of solar Ne. Concentrations of cosmogenic nuclides are consistent with irradiation of this material as small objects in space, with exposure ages similar to the expected Poynting-Robertson (P-R) lifetimes of 50-200 kyr for particles 25-100 mu m in size.
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Lal, D
AU - Taylor, Susan
AU - Wieler, R
AU - Grimberg, A
AU - Vacher, L
AU - McHargue, L R
AU - Freeman, S P H T
AU - Maden, C
AU - Schnabel, C
AU - Xu, S
AU - Finkel, R C
AU - Kim, K J
AU - Marti, K
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 1831
EP - 1840
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 42
IS - 10
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - Ne-21
KW - Ne-20
KW - Ne-22
KW - irradiation
KW - isotopes
KW - halogens
KW - cosmogenic elements
KW - He-3
KW - meteoroids
KW - interplanetary dust
KW - exposure age
KW - stable isotopes
KW - meteorites
KW - Greenland
KW - Al-26
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - magnetic minerals
KW - noble gases
KW - neon
KW - carbon
KW - aluminum
KW - South Pole Water Well
KW - oxides
KW - Poynting-Robertson effect
KW - helium
KW - chlorine
KW - Arctic region
KW - Cl-36
KW - size
KW - micrometeorites
KW - cosmic dust
KW - Antarctica
KW - metals
KW - C-14
KW - magnetite
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50653742?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=%28super+3%29+He%2C+%28super+20%2C21%2C22%29+Ne%2C+%28super+14%29+C%2C+%28super+10%29+Be%2C+%28super+26%29+Al%2C+and+%28super+36%29+Cl+in+magnetic+fractions+of+cosmic+dust+from+Greenland+and+Antarctica&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+T%3BLal%2C+D%3BTaylor%2C+Susan%3BWieler%2C+R%3BGrimberg%2C+A%3BVacher%2C+L%3BMcHargue%2C+L+R%3BFreeman%2C+S+P+H+T%3BMaden%2C+C%3BSchnabel%2C+C%3BXu%2C+S%3BFinkel%2C+R+C%3BKim%2C+K+J%3BMarti%2C+K&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=42&rft.issue=10&rft.spage=1831&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 59
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - MERTAW
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Al-26; aluminum; Antarctica; Arctic region; C-14; carbon; chlorine; Cl-36; cosmic dust; cosmogenic elements; exposure age; Greenland; halogens; He-3; helium; interplanetary dust; irradiation; isotopes; magnetic minerals; magnetite; metals; meteorites; meteoroids; micrometeorites; Ne-20; Ne-21; Ne-22; neon; noble gases; oxides; Poynting-Robertson effect; radioactive isotopes; size; South Pole Water Well; stable isotopes
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Broadening diverse participation in S&E for workforce and society
AN - 50448816; 2009-039242
AB - The Division of Human Resources Development (HRD) in the National Science Foundation's Directorate for Education and Human Resources (NSF/EHR) serves as a focal point for NSF's agency-wide commitment to enhance the quality and excellence of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and research through broadening participation by historically underrepresented groups and institutions. The Division's programs aim to increase the participation and advancement of underrepresented minorities and minority-serving institutions, women and girls, and persons with disabilities at every level of the science and engineering enterprise. Projects in the HRD portfolio address multiple STEM disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields. Currently funded HRD projects that are geoscience-aligned are in geographically diverse locations, such as Connecticut, North Carolina, West Virginia, South Dakota, and Hawai'i, and are supported by various HRD programs such as the Louis Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation (LSAMP) program, ADVANCE: Increasing the Participation and Advancement of Women in Academic Science and Engineering Careers, and Historically Black Colleges and Universities Undergraduate Program (HBCU-UP). Also, many NSF programs have developed strategies for partnering across divisions and directorates to leverage available resources to meet NSF's strategic goals and to benefit the (geo)science community. For example, the GEO directorate's Opportunities for Enhancing Diversity in the Geosciences (OEDG) program also provides support for increasing diversity and has partnered with HRD in co-funding a number of projects.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Suiter, Marilyn J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 251
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - programs
KW - government agencies
KW - minorities
KW - education
KW - research
KW - NSF
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2007 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - education; geology; government agencies; minorities; NSF; programs; research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Geodynamic modeling of plume-lithosphere interaction beneath the Yellowstone Hotspot track
AN - 50095654; 2009-073112
AB - Although commonly attributed to a mantle plume, time-transgressive magmatism of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone (SRPY) Province differs in important ways from that associated with typical oceanic hotspots. A fundamental question concerns the relative contributions of lithosphere vs. upwelling sub-lithospheric mantle to formation of SRPY basaltic magmas. Specifically, association of this province with initially thick and cold Archean lithosphere (Wyoming Craton) poses a problem in that this lid will hinder and possibly prevent melting of rising plume material. Melting can only occur if (1) the lid can be substantially thinned over geologically reasonable time and/or (2) the upwelling material is exceptionally warm. Petrologic modeling indicates that SRPY primitive basalts last segregated from mantle at approximately 1450 degrees C and approximately 100 km depth, suggesting that their source is only slightly warmer than MORB-source mantle and significantly cooler than sources of oceanic hotspot magmas. Geodynamic models were developed to evaluate lithospheric thinning processes. If the lithosphere is initially more than 200 km thick, attenuation by at least a factor of two is required to allow decompression melting of an ascending plume, assuming low volatile content and high excess temperature (Tp >1500 degrees C). Fully dynamic models were applied to investigate the extent and rate of lithosphere thinning assuming an initial structure representative of the Wyoming Craton. Thermal erosion by plume impingement alone appears incapable of providing the required lithospheric thinning. Alternative models (e.g., low-angle Laramide subduction, delamination) also conflict with geochemical evidence that SRPY basalts contain a dominant contribution of old, isotopically evolved mantle material--presumably derived from subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM). Our tentative conclusions are that SCLM is likely to be preserved, that the thick SCLM lid prevents substantial melting of rising plume material (tomographically imaged), and SRPY basalts are predominantly derived by melting of lithospheric mantle.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Manea, Vlad Constantin
AU - Manea, Marina
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Schutt, Derek L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/10//
PY - 2007
DA - October 2007
SP - 292
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 6
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - temperature
KW - continental lithosphere
KW - melting
KW - materials
KW - Western U.S.
KW - basalts
KW - Wyoming Province
KW - thickness
KW - applications
KW - basaltic composition
KW - mantle plumes
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - lithosphere
KW - magmatism
KW - models
KW - geodynamics
KW - plate tectonics
KW - delamination
KW - magmas
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50095654?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Geodynamic+modeling+of+plume-lithosphere+interaction+beneath+the+Yellowstone+Hotspot+track&rft.au=Manea%2C+Vlad+Constantin%3BManea%2C+Marina%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BSchutt%2C+Derek+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Manea&rft.aufirst=Vlad&rft.date=2007-10-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=292&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2007 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - applications; basaltic composition; basalts; continental lithosphere; delamination; geodynamics; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; lithosphere; magmas; magmatism; mantle; mantle plumes; materials; melting; models; plate tectonics; Snake River plain; temperature; thickness; United States; volcanic rocks; Western U.S.; Wyoming Province; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Electronic Game Research Methodologies: Studying Religious Implications
AN - 61677958; 200801563
AB - A collection of pilot studies is described, illustrating how the religious implications of video games can be studied electronically by content analysis, natural language processing. ethnography or participant observation, and online interviewing. Many popular games for the Nintendo, PlayStation, and Xbox platforms either mock accepted religion or present heterodox, exotic, or imagined alternatives to it. Online games and virtual environments, like World of War craft and Second Life, offer inhabitants emotionally compelling experiences connected to spirituality and the supernatural. The methods employed here emphasize qualitative approaches, but connect them to quantitative approaches as well. Methods like these can be useful to study a variety of religion-related topics online. Electronic games are an especially good example to illustrate these methods because they, like the World Wide Web itself are a commercially successful vanguard of the new technologies that may be transforming human culture. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Review of Religious Research
AU - Bainbridge, William Sims
AU - Bainbridge, Wilma Alice
AD - Division of Information and Intelligent Systems, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230
Y1 - 2007/09//
PY - 2007
DA - September 2007
SP - 35
EP - 53
PB - Religious Research Association, Galva, IL
VL - 49
IS - 1
SN - 0034-673X, 0034-673X
KW - Sociology of Religion
KW - Electronic Technology
KW - Computer Assisted Research
KW - Human Technology Relationship
KW - Research Methodology
KW - Sociological Research
KW - Games
KW - Qualitative Methods
KW - Internet
KW - article
KW - 0104: methodology and research technology; research methods/tools
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/61677958?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2008-02-04
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - RVRRAU
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Games; Electronic Technology; Internet; Sociological Research; Research Methodology; Sociology of Religion; Human Technology Relationship; Qualitative Methods; Computer Assisted Research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Expanding the Use of the Internet in Religious Research
AN - 61661527; 200803402
AB - This article illustrates and discusses the merits of four Internet-based methods of research on religion: online questionnaires, recommender systems, website link analysis, and social geography based on variables culled from Internet. These methods are solidly rooted in traditional social-science quantitative methodologies, but they offer new opportunities, notably the ability to chart the contours and dimensions of religious cultures and subcultures in the modern world. Adapted from the source document.
JF - Review of Religious Research
AU - Bainbridge, William Sims
AD - Division of Information and Intelligent Systems, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington VA 22230 wbainbri@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2007/09//
PY - 2007
DA - September 2007
SP - 7
EP - 20
PB - Religious Research Association, Galva, IL
VL - 49
IS - 1
SN - 0034-673X, 0034-673X
KW - Sociology of Religion
KW - Computer Assisted Research
KW - Research Methodology
KW - Sociological Research
KW - Internet
KW - article
KW - 1535: sociology of religion; sociology of religion
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LA - English
DB - Sociological Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2008-02-04
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - RVRRAU
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Computer Assisted Research; Sociology of Religion; Internet; Research Methodology; Sociological Research
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving Healthcare Accessibility through Point-of-Care Technologies
AN - 214004368; 17660275
AB - The NIH is committed to improving healthcare quality in the US and has set up initiatives to address problems such as the fragmented nature of healthcare provision. A hypothesis has been developed that testing closer to the point at which care is delivered may reduce fragmentation of care and improve outcomes. The National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB), the NIH's National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and the National Science Foundation sponsored a workshop, "Improving Health Care Accessibility through Point-of-Care Technologies," in April 2006. The workshop assessed the clinical needs and opportunities for point-of-care (POC) technologies in primary care, the home, and emergency medical services and reviewed minimally invasive and noninvasive testing, including imaging, and conventional testing based on sensor and lab-on-a-chip technologies. Emerging needs of informatics and telehealth and healthcare systems engineering were considered in the POC testing context. Additionally, implications of evidence-based decision-making were reviewed, particularly as it related to the challenges in producing reliable evidence, undertaking regulation, implementing evidence responsibly, and integrating evidence into health policy. Many testing procedures were considered to be valuable in the clinical settings discussed. Technological solutions were proposed to meet these needs, as well as the practical requirements around clinical process change and regulation. From these considerations, a series of recommendations was formulated for development of POC technologies based on input from the symposium attendees. NIBIB has developed a funding initiative to establish a Point-of-Care Technologies Research Network that will work to bridge the technology/clinical gap and provide the partnerships necessary for the application of technologies to pressing clinical needs in POC testing.
JF - Clinical Chemistry
AU - Price, Christopher P
AU - Kricka, Larry J
Y1 - 2007/09//
PY - 2007
DA - Sep 2007
SP - 1665
EP - 75
CY - Washington
PB - American Association for Clinical Chemistry
VL - 53
IS - 9
SN - 00099147
KW - Medical Sciences
KW - Health care
KW - Emergency medical care
KW - Hospitals
KW - Quality of care
KW - Personal health
KW - Family physicians
KW - Technological change
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Research methodology
KW - Neurological disorders
KW - Multiple sclerosis
KW - Heart failure
KW - Health services
KW - Families & family life
KW - Clinical trials
KW - Blood pressure
KW - Primary care
KW - United States
KW - Biomedical Technology -- trends
KW - Evidence-Based Medicine
KW - Telemedicine -- trends
KW - Humans
KW - Computational Biology -- trends
KW - Clinical Laboratory Techniques
KW - National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
KW - Point-of-Care Systems -- organization & administration
KW - Diagnostic Techniques & Procedures
KW - Health Services Accessibility
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Central
N1 - Copyright - Copyright American Association for Clinical Chemistry Sep 2007
N1 - Document feature - Tables; Diagrams; References
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Enzymatic Synthesis and Microstructure Analysis of Silicone Polyesteramides
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39444261; 4631032
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Sharma, Bhaskar
AU - Azim, Abul
AU - Azim, Himanshu
AU - Gross, Richard
AU - Zini, Elisa
AU - Focarete, Maria Letzia
AU - Scandola, Mariastella
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Silicone
KW - Enzymatic synthesis
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39444261?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Nsf Course, Curriculum, and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) Program
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39432729; 4632819
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Hixson, Susan
AU - Lewis, Eileen L
AU - Richtol, Herbert H
AU - Varma-Nelson, Pratibha
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Innovations
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39432729?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Nsf+Course%2C+Curriculum%2C+and+Laboratory+Improvement+%28CCLI%29+Program&rft.au=Hixson%2C+Susan%3BLewis%2C+Eileen+L%3BRichtol%2C+Herbert+H%3BVarma-Nelson%2C+Pratibha&rft.aulast=Hixson&rft.aufirst=Susan&rft.date=2007-08-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Study of Interactions between Surfactants and Liposomes/Proteins
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39426650; 4637001
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Deo, Namita
AU - Somasundaran, P
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Surfactants
KW - Liposomes
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39426650?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Study+of+Interactions+between+Surfactants+and+Liposomes%2FProteins&rft.au=Deo%2C+Namita%3BSomasundaran%2C+P&rft.aulast=Deo&rft.aufirst=Namita&rft.date=2007-08-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Time-Gated Single Photon Counting Enables Separation of Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering (CARS) Microscopy Data from Multiphoton-Excited Tissue Autofluorescence
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39420276; 4632415
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Ly, Sonny
AU - McNerney, Gregory
AU - Fore, Samantha
AU - Chan, James
AU - Huser, Thomas
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Microscopy
KW - Enumeration
KW - Photons
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39420276?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Panel Discussion on Opportunities and Challenges in Crystalline Polymers
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39419615; 4638257
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Lovinger, Andrew J
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Polymers
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Life after Graduate School: Working at a National Laboratory
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39372376; 4629795
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Peterson, Eric S
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Graduate schools
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39372376?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Life+after+Graduate+School%3A+Working+at+a+National+Laboratory&rft.au=Peterson%2C+Eric+S&rft.aulast=Peterson&rft.aufirst=Eric&rft.date=2007-08-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Conformation of Hybrid Silicone Polymers at Interfaces
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39371596; 4637092
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Mehta, Somil C
AU - Somasundaran, P
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Hybrids
KW - Polymers
KW - Silicone
KW - Conformation
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39371596?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Conformation+of+Hybrid+Silicone+Polymers+at+Interfaces&rft.au=Mehta%2C+Somil+C%3BSomasundaran%2C+P&rft.aulast=Mehta&rft.aufirst=Somil&rft.date=2007-08-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Enzyme-catalyzed Polymer Synthesis and Modification Reactions
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39366520; 4631029
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Polymers
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39366520?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Enzyme-catalyzed+Polymer+Synthesis+and+Modification+Reactions&rft.au=Gross%2C+Richard+A&rft.aulast=Gross&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2007-08-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Ethical Issues and Practices in Federal Funding
T2 - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 39335955; 4635361
JF - 234th National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Echegoyen, Luis
Y1 - 2007/08/19/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 19
KW - Ethics
KW - Training
KW - Financing
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39335955?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Ethical+Issues+and+Practices+in+Federal+Funding&rft.au=Echegoyen%2C+Luis&rft.aulast=Echegoyen&rft.aufirst=Luis&rft.date=2007-08-19&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=234th+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/234nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Response of an Obligate Plant-Pollinator Mutualism to Fire: Years 2 and 3
T2 - 92nd International Joint Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America and Society for Ecological Restoration
AN - 39437478; 4655696
JF - 92nd International Joint Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America and Society for Ecological Restoration
AU - Udovic, Daniel
AU - Bronstein, Judith L
Y1 - 2007/08/05/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 05
KW - Mutualism
KW - Fires
KW - Symbiosis
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39437478?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=92nd+International+Joint+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+and+Society+for+Ecological+Restoration&rft.atitle=The+Response+of+an+Obligate+Plant-Pollinator+Mutualism+to+Fire%3A+Years+2+and+3&rft.au=Udovic%2C+Daniel%3BBronstein%2C+Judith+L&rft.aulast=Udovic&rft.aufirst=Daniel&rft.date=2007-08-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=92nd+International+Joint+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America+and+Society+for+Ecological+Restoration&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://eco.confex.com/eco/2007/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Studies of (super 14) C and (super 10) Be in iron meteorites and (super 129) I in chondrites
AN - 51010360; 2008-091185
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Biddulph, D L
AU - Zahn, D
AU - Cheng, L
AU - Burr, G S
AU - McHargue, L R
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/08//
PY - 2007
DA - August 2007
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 42, Supplement
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - stony meteorites
KW - isotopes
KW - tellurium
KW - halogens
KW - exposure age
KW - meteorites
KW - iodine
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - I-129
KW - iron meteorites
KW - carbon
KW - chondrites
KW - Shisr 033
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - Be-10
KW - terrestrial age
KW - octahedrite
KW - carbonaceous chondrites
KW - metals
KW - residence time
KW - Odessa Meteorite
KW - C-14
KW - Canyon Diablo Meteorite
KW - beryllium
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51010360?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Studies+of+%28super+14%29+C+and+%28super+10%29+Be+in+iron+meteorites+and+%28super+129%29+I+in+chondrites&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+T%3BBiddulph%2C+D+L%3BZahn%2C+D%3BCheng%2C+L%3BBurr%2C+G+S%3BMcHargue%2C+L+R%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2007-08-01&rft.volume=42%2C+Supplement&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A79&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 70th annual meeting of the Meteoritical Society
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 9
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - alkaline earth metals; Be-10; beryllium; C-14; Canyon Diablo Meteorite; carbon; carbonaceous chondrites; chondrites; exposure age; halogens; I-129; iodine; iron meteorites; isotopes; metals; meteorites; octahedrite; Odessa Meteorite; radioactive isotopes; residence time; Shisr 033; stony meteorites; tellurium; terrestrial age
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The law of the World Trade Organization and the communications law of the European community: on a path of harmony or discord?
AN - 36725108; 3451565
AB - This article presents an overview of the law of the World Trade Organization (WTO) relevant to telecommunications services and correlates this body of law with the current regulatory framework for electronic communications networks and services in the European Community (EC). The latter has been adapted to meet the challenges of technological and market developments in communications, epitomized by the processes of digitization, enhanced transport networks and convergence. The novel solutions embodied in the EC electronic communications regime, notably, a new design of the Significant Market Power mechanism, a projected withdrawal of sector specific regulation and an affirmation of the principle of technological neutrality, pose interesting questions as to the conformity of this reformed EC communications law with the WTO rules on telecommunications services and the obligations of the European Communities and their Member States. Looking beyond the WTO legal compatibility test, essential questions regarding the need for evolution of the WTO telecommunications rules are raised. The present paper contributes to the ongoing debate in that context in light of the EC experience. Reprinted by permission of Kluwer Law International
JF - Journal of world trade
AU - Nenova, Mira Burri
AD - Swiss National Science Foundation 'Trade Regulation'
Y1 - 2007/08//
PY - 2007
DA - Aug 2007
SP - 833
EP - 878
VL - 41
IS - 4
SN - 1011-6702, 1011-6702
KW - Economics
KW - Information
KW - European Union
KW - Networks
KW - World Trade Organization
KW - Europe
KW - Law
KW - Regulation
KW - Telecommunications
KW - Technology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/36725108?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+world+trade&rft.atitle=The+law+of+the+World+Trade+Organization+and+the+communications+law+of+the+European+community%3A+on+a+path+of+harmony+or+discord%3F&rft.au=Nenova%2C+Mira+Burri&rft.aulast=Nenova&rft.aufirst=Mira&rft.date=2007-08-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=833&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+world+trade&rft.issn=10116702&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 13738 6772 9030; 12622; 6515; 10742; 4529 4534 10721 6737 4539 10727 9030; 7253; 12641 2572; 8634; 129
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Gene Transfection of Mammalian Cells Using Membrane Sandwich Electroporation
AN - 19888857; 7646497
AB - To avoid safety issues such as immune response and cytotoxicity associated with viruses and liposomes, physical methods have been widely used for either in vivo or ex vivo gene delivery. They are, however, very invasive and often provide limited efficiency. Using pEGFP and pSEAP plasmids and NIH 3T3 fibroblasts as models, we demonstrate a new electroporation-based gene delivery method, called membrane sandwich electroporation (MSE). The MSE method is able to provide better gene confinement near the cell surface to facilitate gene transport into the cells and thus shows significant improvement over transgene expression of mammalian cells compared to current electroporation techniques.
JF - Analytical Chemistry (Washington)
AU - Fei, Z
AU - Wang, S
AU - Xie, Y
AU - Henslee, B E
AU - Koh, C G
AU - Lee, L J
AD - Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymer Biomedical Devices, The Ohio State University, 140 West 19th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA
Y1 - 2007/08/01/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Aug 01
SP - 5719
EP - 5722
VL - 79
IS - 15
SN - 0003-2700, 0003-2700
KW - Genetics Abstracts; Virology & AIDS Abstracts; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Cell surface
KW - Cytotoxicity
KW - Electroporation
KW - Mammalian cells
KW - Gene transfer
KW - Transfection
KW - Immune response
KW - Plasmids
KW - Liposomes
KW - Fibroblasts
KW - W 30905:Medical Applications
KW - V 22350:Immunology
KW - G 07730:Development & Cell Cycle
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19888857?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Analytical+Chemistry+%28Washington%29&rft.atitle=Gene+Transfection+of+Mammalian+Cells+Using+Membrane+Sandwich+Electroporation&rft.au=Fei%2C+Z%3BWang%2C+S%3BXie%2C+Y%3BHenslee%2C+B+E%3BKoh%2C+C+G%3BLee%2C+L+J&rft.aulast=Fei&rft.aufirst=Z&rft.date=2007-08-01&rft.volume=79&rft.issue=15&rft.spage=5719&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Analytical+Chemistry+%28Washington%29&rft.issn=00032700&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fac070482y
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Cell surface; Cytotoxicity; Mammalian cells; Electroporation; Transfection; Gene transfer; Immune response; Plasmids; Liposomes; Fibroblasts
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac070482y
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Induction and Suppression of RNA Silencing in Plant-Virus Interactions.
T2 - 46th Annual Meeting of the Society of Nematologists and Annual Meeting of the American Phytopathological Society (SON/APS 2007)
AN - 39424275; 4616752
JF - 46th Annual Meeting of the Society of Nematologists and Annual Meeting of the American Phytopathological Society (SON/APS 2007)
AU - Vance, Vicki
Y1 - 2007/07/28/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jul 28
KW - RNA-mediated interference
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39424275?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=46th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Nematologists+and+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Phytopathological+Society+%28SON%2FAPS+2007%29&rft.atitle=Induction+and+Suppression+of+RNA+Silencing+in+Plant-Virus+Interactions.&rft.au=Vance%2C+Vicki&rft.aulast=Vance&rft.aufirst=Vicki&rft.date=2007-07-28&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=46th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Nematologists+and+Annual+Meeting+of+the+American+Phytopathological+Society+%28SON%2FAPS+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.nematologists.org/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Systemic Immune Response of Mice to Mucosal Immunisation with a Heterologous Protein Expressed on Lactic Acid Bacteria
T2 - 13th International Congress of Mucosal Immunology (ICMI 2007)
AN - 39438218; 4650652
JF - 13th International Congress of Mucosal Immunology (ICMI 2007)
AU - Anavarathavinayagamoorthy, Sivagowry
AU - Ramasamy, Ranjan
Y1 - 2007/07/09/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jul 09
KW - Immune response
KW - Mice
KW - Mucosa
KW - Immunization
KW - Lactic acid bacteria
KW - Immunity
KW - Defense mechanisms
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39438218?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=13th+International+Congress+of+Mucosal+Immunology+%28ICMI+2007%29&rft.atitle=Systemic+Immune+Response+of+Mice+to+Mucosal+Immunisation+with+a+Heterologous+Protein+Expressed+on+Lactic+Acid+Bacteria&rft.au=Anavarathavinayagamoorthy%2C+Sivagowry%3BRamasamy%2C+Ranjan&rft.aulast=Anavarathavinayagamoorthy&rft.aufirst=Sivagowry&rft.date=2007-07-09&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=13th+International+Congress+of+Mucosal+Immunology+%28ICMI+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www2.convention.co.jp/icmi2007/sp.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Harmonizing GAPs and Audits at the Farm Level: Food Safety Leadership Council
T2 - 94th Annual Meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP 2007)
AN - 39449467; 4647616
JF - 94th Annual Meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP 2007)
AU - Chestnut, Tom
Y1 - 2007/07/08/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jul 08
KW - Farms
KW - Councils
KW - Food
KW - Public health
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39449467?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=94th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+International+Association+for+Food+Protection+%28IAFP+2007%29&rft.atitle=Harmonizing+GAPs+and+Audits+at+the+Farm+Level%3A+Food+Safety+Leadership+Council&rft.au=Chestnut%2C+Tom&rft.aulast=Chestnut&rft.aufirst=Tom&rft.date=2007-07-08&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=94th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+International+Association+for+Food+Protection+%28IAFP+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.foodprotection.org/meetingsEducation/IAFP%202007/2007%20Pro gram.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Novel Approach for Assessing the Efficacy of In-place Cleaning Methods for Food Equipment
T2 - 94th Annual Meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP 2007)
AN - 39430125; 4647903
JF - 94th Annual Meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP 2007)
AU - Donofrio, Robert S
AU - Davis, Lisa
AU - Vantine, Julie
AU - Lori, L
Y1 - 2007/07/08/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jul 08
KW - Food
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39430125?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=94th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+International+Association+for+Food+Protection+%28IAFP+2007%29&rft.atitle=Novel+Approach+for+Assessing+the+Efficacy+of+In-place+Cleaning+Methods+for+Food+Equipment&rft.au=Donofrio%2C+Robert+S%3BDavis%2C+Lisa%3BVantine%2C+Julie%3BLori%2C+L&rft.aulast=Donofrio&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2007-07-08&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=94th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+International+Association+for+Food+Protection+%28IAFP+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.foodprotection.org/meetingsEducation/IAFP%202007/2007%20Pro gram.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Ferns of Northeastern Illinois
T2 - 2007 Joint Congress of the Botanical Society of America and American Society of Plant Biologists (Botany 2007 - Plant Biology 2007)
AN - 39396908; 4609156
JF - 2007 Joint Congress of the Botanical Society of America and American Society of Plant Biologists (Botany 2007 - Plant Biology 2007)
AU - Taylor, W Carl
Y1 - 2007/07/07/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jul 07
KW - USA, Illinois
KW - Ferns
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39396908?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.2007.botanyconference.org/engine/search/index.php?func=Abst ractTitle<r=All
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - La mano dura and the violence of civil society in Bolivia
AN - 36794697; 3490127
AB - Vigilante violence has become a common practice of creating 'security' in the marginal barrios that surround the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia. Surprisingly, this violence and the human rights violations it entails are appearing simultaneously with the expansion of civil society in Bolivia. This apparent contradiction, it is argued here, suggests that analysts must expand their definition of 'civil society' to include violent social groups and actors as well as peaceful ones. This article suggests that a fuller understanding of the nature of civil society in Bolivia and other Latin American countries requires us to broaden our understanding of what civil society includes, and so recognize that some acts originating in civil society may restrict rather than deepen and expand individual rights in neo-liberal democracies.
JF - Social analysis [Adelaide]
AU - Goldstein, Daniel M
AU - Achá, Gloria
AU - Hinojosa, Eric
AU - Roncken, Theo
AD - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2007/07//
PY - 2007
DA - Jul 2007
SP - 43
EP - 63
VL - 51
IS - 2
SN - 0155-977X, 0155-977X
KW - Political Science
KW - Anthropology
KW - Sociology
KW - Vigilantism
KW - Democratization
KW - Individual rights
KW - Human rights violations
KW - Social movements
KW - Civil society
KW - Violence
KW - Bolivia
KW - Collective security
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/36794697?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Social+analysis+%5BAdelaide%5D&rft.atitle=La+mano+dura+and+the+violence+of+civil+society+in+Bolivia&rft.au=Goldstein%2C+Daniel+M%3BAch%C3%A1%2C+Gloria%3BHinojosa%2C+Eric%3BRoncken%2C+Theo&rft.aulast=Goldstein&rft.aufirst=Daniel&rft.date=2007-07-01&rft.volume=51&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=43&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Social+analysis+%5BAdelaide%5D&rft.issn=0155977X&rft_id=info:doi/10.3167%2Fsa.2007.510203
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 13325; 2313 11979; 6109 6103 11032 9705; 11871 11869; 6327 11032 9705; 3403 9653; 2490; 58 386 14
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/sa.2007.510203
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Indigenous peoples, civil society, and the neoliberal state in Latin America
AN - 36794358; 3490536
JF - Social analysis [Adelaide]
AU - Fischer, Edward F
AU - Baud, Michiel
AU - Goldstein, Daniel M
AU - Achá, Gloria
AU - Hinojosa, Eric
AU - Roncken, Theo
AU - Sawyer, Suzana
AU - Colloredo-Mansfeld, Rudi
AU - Rappaport, Joanne
AU - Cuxil, Demetrio Cojtí
AU - Arzú, Marta Elena Casaús
AU - Dickins, Avery
AU - Pitarch, Pedro
AD - Vanderbilt University ; University of Amsterdam ; National Science Foundation ; University of California ; University of Iowa ; Georgetown University ; Universidad de San Carlos ; Universidad Autónoma de Madrid ; Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Y1 - 2007/07//
PY - 2007
DA - Jul 2007
SP - 1
EP - 206
VL - 51
IS - 2
SN - 0155-977X, 0155-977X
KW - Political Science
KW - Anthropology
KW - Sociology
KW - Democratization
KW - Identity politics
KW - Neoliberalism
KW - Latin America
KW - Traditional medicine
KW - State-society relations
KW - Discrimination
KW - Cultural diversity
KW - Civil society
KW - Violence
KW - Community development
KW - Political mobilization
KW - Indigenous populations
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/36794358?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Social+analysis+%5BAdelaide%5D&rft.atitle=Indigenous+peoples%2C+civil+society%2C+and+the+neoliberal+state+in+Latin+America&rft.au=Fischer%2C+Edward+F%3BBaud%2C+Michiel%3BGoldstein%2C+Daniel+M%3BAch%C3%A1%2C+Gloria%3BHinojosa%2C+Eric%3BRoncken%2C+Theo%3BSawyer%2C+Suzana%3BColloredo-Mansfeld%2C+Rudi%3BRappaport%2C+Joanne%3BCuxil%2C+Demetrio+Cojt%C3%AD%3BArz%C3%BA%2C+Marta+Elena+Casa%C3%BAs%3BDickins%2C+Avery%3BPitarch%2C+Pedro&rft.aulast=Fischer&rft.aufirst=Edward&rft.date=2007-07-01&rft.volume=51&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Social+analysis+%5BAdelaide%5D&rft.issn=0155977X&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - SuppNotes - Collection of 10 articles
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 6314 9846; 2313 11979; 8620 7371 9713 6203; 3403 9653; 3612 3549 2688 2449 10404; 9735 9787 11977; 13325; 12214 12168 9008 12092 9720 6590 11979; 3127 3121 3198 3549 2688 2449 10404; 2606 11813 3483; 12880 7894; 6197 9809; 210 14
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Remarkable Loop Flexibility in Avian Influenza N1 and Its Implications for Antiviral Drug Design
AN - 19883375; 7590240
AB - The emergence and continuing global spread of the highly virulent avian influenza H5N1 has raised concerns of a possible human pandemic. Several approved anti-influenza drugs effectively target the neuraminidase (NA), a surface glycoprotein that cleaves terminal sialic acid residues and facilitates the release of viral progeny from infected cells. The first crystal structures of group-1 NAs revealed that although the binding pose of oseltamivir was similar to that seen in previous crystallographic complexes, the 150-loop adopted a distinct conformation, opening a new cavity adjacent to the active site. Here we show that the 150-loop is able to open into significantly wider conformations than seen in the crystal structures, through explicitly solvated MD simulations of the apo and oseltamivir-bound forms of tetrameric N1. We find that motion in the 150-loop is coupled to motion in the neighboring 430-loop, which expands the active site cavity even further. Furthermore, in simulations of the oseltamivir-bound system, the 150-loop approaches the closed conformation, suggesting that the loop switching motion may be more rapid than previously observed.
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
AU - Amaro, R E
AU - Minh, DDL
AU - Cheng, L S
AU - Lindstrom, WM Jr
AU - Olson, A J
AU - Lin, J-H
AU - Li, W W
AU - McCammon, JA
AD - Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry and Department of Pharmacology and NSF Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0365, USA, ramaro@mccammon.ucsd.edu
Y1 - 2007/06/27/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jun 27
SP - 7764
EP - 7765
VL - 129
IS - 25
SN - 1272-7863, 1272-7863
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Virology & AIDS Abstracts
KW - Fowl plague
KW - pandemics
KW - Antiviral agents
KW - Crystal structure
KW - Drug development
KW - Progeny
KW - Exo- alpha -sialidase
KW - Glycoproteins
KW - Sialic acids
KW - Conformation
KW - Oseltamivir
KW - A 01340:Antibiotics & Antimicrobials
KW - V 22320:Replication
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19883375?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Remarkable+Loop+Flexibility+in+Avian+Influenza+N1+and+Its+Implications+for+Antiviral+Drug+Design&rft.au=Amaro%2C+R+E%3BMinh%2C+DDL%3BCheng%2C+L+S%3BLindstrom%2C+WM+Jr%3BOlson%2C+A+J%3BLin%2C+J-H%3BLi%2C+W+W%3BMcCammon%2C+JA&rft.aulast=Amaro&rft.aufirst=R&rft.date=2007-06-27&rft.volume=129&rft.issue=25&rft.spage=7764&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=12727863&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fja0723535
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Fowl plague; pandemics; Antiviral agents; Crystal structure; Progeny; Drug development; Glycoproteins; Exo- alpha -sialidase; Sialic acids; Oseltamivir; Conformation
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja0723535
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Membrane Product Specific Testing under the Long Term Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule and ETV Protocols.
T2 - 2007 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 07)
AN - 39375946; 4602788
JF - 2007 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 07)
AU - Bartley, Clayton
AU - Blumenstein, Michael
AU - Adams, Jeffrey
Y1 - 2007/06/24/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jun 24
KW - Surface water
KW - Membranes
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39375946?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+07%29&rft.atitle=Membrane+Product+Specific+Testing+under+the+Long+Term+Enhanced+Surface+Water+Treatment+Rule+and+ETV+Protocols.&rft.au=Bartley%2C+Clayton%3BBlumenstein%2C+Michael%3BAdams%2C+Jeffrey&rft.aulast=Bartley&rft.aufirst=Clayton&rft.date=2007-06-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+07%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.awwa.org/conferences/ace/sessions/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Emergency Response Water Treatment Technologies Results and Potential Applications to Water Utilities
T2 - 2007 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 07)
AN - 39353756; 4602713
JF - 2007 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 07)
AU - Bartley, Clayton
Y1 - 2007/06/24/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jun 24
KW - Utilities
KW - Water treatment
KW - Technology
KW - Emergencies
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39353756?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+07%29&rft.atitle=Emergency+Response+Water+Treatment+Technologies+Results+and+Potential+Applications+to+Water+Utilities&rft.au=Bartley%2C+Clayton&rft.aulast=Bartley&rft.aufirst=Clayton&rft.date=2007-06-24&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+07%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.awwa.org/conferences/ace/sessions/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Boron and oxygen isotope evidence for recycling of subducted components over the past 2.5 Gyr
AN - 759303730; 2010-087159
JF - Nature (London)
AU - Turner, Simon
AU - Tonarini, Sonia
AU - Bindeman, Ilya
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Schaefer, Bruce F
Y1 - 2007/06//
PY - 2007
DA - June 2007
SP - 702
EP - 705
PB - Macmillan Journals, London
VL - 447
IS - 7145
SN - 0028-0836, 0028-0836
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - Os-188/Os-187
KW - platinum group
KW - stable isotopes
KW - basalts
KW - Archean
KW - geochemistry
KW - mantle plumes
KW - Azores
KW - Precambrian
KW - isotope ratios
KW - subduction
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - convection
KW - Atlantic Ocean Islands
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - B-11/B-10
KW - mid-ocean ridge basalts
KW - osmium
KW - boron
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/759303730?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Nature+%28London%29&rft.atitle=Boron+and+oxygen+isotope+evidence+for+recycling+of+subducted+components+over+the+past+2.5+Gyr&rft.au=Turner%2C+Simon%3BTonarini%2C+Sonia%3BBindeman%2C+Ilya%3BLeeman%2C+William+P%3BSchaefer%2C+Bruce+F&rft.aulast=Turner&rft.aufirst=Simon&rft.date=2007-06-01&rft.volume=447&rft.issue=7145&rft.spage=702&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Nature+%28London%29&rft.issn=00280836&rft_id=info:doi/10.1038%2Fnature05898
L2 - http://www.nature.com/nature/index.html
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 31
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Archean; Atlantic Ocean Islands; Azores; B-11/B-10; basalts; boron; convection; geochemistry; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; mantle; mantle plumes; metals; mid-ocean ridge basalts; O-18/O-16; Os-188/Os-187; osmium; oxygen; plate tectonics; platinum group; Precambrian; stable isotopes; subduction; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature05898
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - U-series disequilibria in Guatemalan lavas, crustal contamination, and implications for magma genesis along the Central American subduction zone
AN - 51282504; 2008-032292
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
AU - Walker, James A
AU - Mickelson, J Erik
AU - Thomas, Rebecca B
AU - Patino, Lina C
AU - Cameron, Barry
AU - Carr, Michael
AU - Feigenson, Mark D
AU - Edwards, R Lawrence
Y1 - 2007/06//
PY - 2007
DA - June 2007
EP - B06205
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 112
IS - B6
SN - 0148-0227, 0148-0227
KW - andesites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Th-230
KW - subduction zones
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mafic composition
KW - volcanic features
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - sampling
KW - Central American subduction zone
KW - lava flows
KW - plate boundaries
KW - Th-232/Th-230
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Guatemala
KW - subduction
KW - cinder cones
KW - Cerro Quemado
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - thorium
KW - uranium
KW - U-238
KW - Central America
KW - actinides
KW - crust
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51282504?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.atitle=U-series+disequilibria+in+Guatemalan+lavas%2C+crustal+contamination%2C+and+implications+for+magma+genesis+along+the+Central+American+subduction+zone&rft.au=Walker%2C+James+A%3BMickelson%2C+J+Erik%3BThomas%2C+Rebecca+B%3BPatino%2C+Lina+C%3BCameron%2C+Barry%3BCarr%2C+Michael%3BFeigenson%2C+Mark+D%3BEdwards%2C+R+Lawrence&rft.aulast=Walker&rft.aufirst=James&rft.date=2007-06-01&rft.volume=112&rft.issue=B6&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.issn=01480227&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2006JB004589
L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/jgr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 147
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 3 tables, geol. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - actinides; andesites; Central America; Central American subduction zone; Cerro Quemado; cinder cones; crust; Guatemala; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; lava flows; mafic composition; magmas; metals; plate boundaries; plate tectonics; radioactive isotopes; sampling; subduction; subduction zones; Th-230; Th-232/Th-230; thorium; U-238; uranium; volcanic features; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2006JB004589
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Along-strike trace element and isotopic variation in Aleutian Island arc basalt; subduction melts sediments and dehydrates serpentine
AN - 51282322; 2008-032293
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
AU - Singer, Brad S
AU - Jicha, Brian R
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Rogers, Nick W
AU - Thirlwall, Matthew F
AU - Ryan, Jeff
AU - Nicolaysen, Kirsten E
Y1 - 2007/06//
PY - 2007
DA - June 2007
EP - B06206
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 112
IS - B6
SN - 0148-0227, 0148-0227
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - oceanic crust
KW - serpentine
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - lead
KW - metasomatism
KW - stable isotopes
KW - melts
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - whole rock
KW - major elements
KW - serpentine group
KW - basalts
KW - sediments
KW - tectonics
KW - rare earths
KW - trace elements
KW - Pb-207/Pb-204
KW - recycling
KW - isotope ratios
KW - subduction
KW - Nd-144/Nd-143
KW - plate tectonics
KW - metals
KW - sheet silicates
KW - Alaska
KW - Southwestern Alaska
KW - dehydration
KW - Aleutian Islands
KW - neodymium
KW - crust
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51282322?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/jgr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 100
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. geol. sketch map, 3 tables, sect.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Alaska; Aleutian Islands; basalts; crust; dehydration; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; lead; major elements; melts; metals; metasomatism; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; oceanic crust; Pb-207/Pb-204; plate tectonics; radioactive isotopes; rare earths; recycling; sediments; serpentine; serpentine group; sheet silicates; silicates; Southwestern Alaska; stable isotopes; subduction; tectonics; trace elements; United States; volcanic rocks; whole rock
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2006JB004897
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Pulsed-Interleaved Excitation FRET Measurements on Single Duplex DNA Molecules Inside C-Shaped Nanoapertures
AN - 20368435; 7599092
AB - Single-molecule fluorescence resonant energy transfer (FRET) is a widely accepted method for determining the spatial separation between molecules. In combination with pulsed interleaved excitation (PIE), additional information about the stoichiometry of molecular interactions is obtained. PIE-FRET, however, as implemented with standard confocal optics, requires the dilution of the sample to biologically low concentrations. Here, we show that PIE-FRET measurements inside nanometer-sized apertures yield meaningful biochemical data at 1000x higher concentrations.
JF - Nano Letters
AU - Fore, S
AU - Yuen, Y
AU - Hesselink, L
AU - Huser, T
AD - NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California at Davis, 2700 Stockton Boulevard, Suite 1400, Sacramento, California 95817, USA
Y1 - 2007/06//
PY - 2007
DA - Jun 2007
SP - 1749
EP - 1756
VL - 7
IS - 6
SN - 1530-6984, 1530-6984
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - DNA
KW - fluorescence resonance energy transfer
KW - N 14810:Methods
KW - W 30900:Methods
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-13
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - fluorescence resonance energy transfer; DNA
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl070822v
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Study of galactomannose interaction with solids using AFM, IR and allied techniques.
AN - 70376656; 17316669
AB - Guar gum (GG) and locust bean gum (LBG) are two galactomannose polysaccharides with different mannose/galactose ratio which is widely used in many industrial sectors including food, textiles, paper, adhesive, paint, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and mineral processing. They are natural nonionic polymers that are non-toxic and biodegradable. These properties make them ideal for industrial applications. However, a general lack of understanding of the interactions between the polysaccharides and solid surfaces has hindered wider application of these polymers. In this work, adsorption of locust bean gum and guar gum at the solid-liquid interface was investigated using adsorption tests, electrophoretic mobility measurements, FTIR, fluorescence spectroscopy, AFM and molecular modeling. Electrokinetic studies showed that the adsorption of GG and LBG on talc do not change its isoelectric point. In addition, GG and LBG adsorption on talc was found not to be affected by changes in solution conditions such as pH and ionic strength, which suggests a minor role of electrostatic force in adsorption. On the other hand, fluorescence spectroscopy studies conducted to investigate the role of hydrophobic bonding using pyrene probe showed no evidence of the formation of hydrophobic domains at talc-aqueous interface. Moreover, urea, a hydrogen bond breaker, markedly reduced the adsorption of LBG and GG on talc, supporting hydrogen bonding as an important role. In FTIR study, the changes in the infrared bands, associated with the CO stretch coupled to the CC stretch and OH deformation, were significant and therefore also supporting hydrogen bonding of GG and LBG to the solid surface. In addition, Langmuir modeling of adsorption isotherm further suggested that hydrogen bonding is the dominant force for polysaccharide adsorption since the adsorption free energy of these polymers is close to that for hydrogen bond formation. From molecular modeling, different helical structures are observed for LBG and GG because of their different galactose/mannose ratio and these polymers were found to adsorb flat on solid to let more of its OH groups in contact with the surface. All of the above results suggest that the main driving force for adsorption both of GG and LBG on talc is hydrogen bonding rather than hydrophobic force even though there is difference in G/M ratio between them.
JF - Journal of colloid and interface science
AU - Wang, Jing
AU - Somasundaran, Ponisseril
AD - NSF Industrial/University Cooperative Research Center for Advanced Studies in Novel Surfactants, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Y1 - 2007/05/15/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 May 15
SP - 373
EP - 383
VL - 309
IS - 2
SN - 0021-9797, 0021-9797
KW - Galactans
KW - 0
KW - Mannans
KW - Plant Gums
KW - guar gum
KW - E89I1637KE
KW - locust bean gum
KW - V4716MY704
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Sensitivity and Specificity
KW - Osmolar Concentration
KW - Models, Molecular
KW - Particle Size
KW - Kinetics
KW - Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
KW - Molecular Sequence Data
KW - Carbohydrate Sequence
KW - Adsorption
KW - Electrochemistry
KW - Surface Properties
KW - Carbohydrate Conformation
KW - Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared -- methods
KW - Mannans -- chemistry
KW - Plant Gums -- chemistry
KW - Microscopy, Atomic Force -- methods
KW - Galactans -- chemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+colloid+and+interface+science&rft.atitle=Study+of+galactomannose+interaction+with+solids+using+AFM%2C+IR+and+allied+techniques.&rft.au=Wang%2C+Jing%3BSomasundaran%2C+Ponisseril&rft.aulast=Wang&rft.aufirst=Jing&rft.date=2007-05-15&rft.volume=309&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=373&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+colloid+and+interface+science&rft.issn=00219797&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2007-07-30
N1 - Date created - 2007-04-16
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Prediction of mass flux emission from DNAPL source zones using up-scaled models of mass transfer
AN - 759302516; 2010-085593
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Illangasekare, T H
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/05//
PY - 2007
DA - May 2007
SP - Abstract H22C
EP - 01
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 23, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - soils
KW - concentration
KW - degradation
KW - statistical analysis
KW - prediction
KW - pollution
KW - geostatistics
KW - chemical waste
KW - preferential flow
KW - dense nonaqueous phase liquids
KW - simulation
KW - nonaqueous phase liquids
KW - models
KW - mass transfer
KW - discharge
KW - kinetics
KW - point sources
KW - soil management
KW - 22:Environmental geology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Prediction+of+mass+flux+emission+from+DNAPL+source+zones+using+up-scaled+models+of+mass+transfer&rft.au=Illangasekare%2C+T+H%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Illangasekare&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2007-05-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=23%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 joint assembly
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - chemical waste; concentration; degradation; dense nonaqueous phase liquids; discharge; geostatistics; kinetics; mass transfer; models; nonaqueous phase liquids; point sources; pollution; prediction; preferential flow; simulation; soil management; soils; statistical analysis
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - RBS characterization of arsenic(III) partitioning from aqueous phase into the active layers of thin-film composite NF/RO membranes.
AN - 70556593; 17539539
AB - The main objective of this study was to apply Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) for characterizing the partitioning of arsenic(III) from aqueous phase into the active layer of NF/RO membranes. NF/RO membranes with active layer materials including polyamide (PA), PA-polyvinyl alcohol derivative (PVA), and sulfonated-polyethersulfone (SPES) were investigated. The partition coefficient was found to be constant in the investigated As-(III) concentration range of 0.005-0.02 M at each pH investigated. The partitioning of As(III) when predominantly present as H3AsO3 (pH 3.5-8.0) was not affected by pH. In contrast, the partition coefficient of As(III) at pH 10.5, when it was predominantly present as H2AsO3-, was found to be approximately 33-49% lower than that of H3AsO3. The partition coefficients of H3AsO3 and H2AsO3- for membranes containing PA in their active layers were within the respective ranges of 6.2-8.1 and 3.6-5.4, while the corresponding values (4.8 and 3.0, respectively) for the membrane with SPES active layer were approximately 30% lower than the average values for the PA membranes.
JF - Environmental science & technology
AU - Mi, Baoxia
AU - Mariñas, Benito J
AU - Cahill, David G
AD - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center of Advanced Materials for the Purification of Water with Systems, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 61801, USA.
Y1 - 2007/05/01/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 May 01
SP - 3290
EP - 3295
VL - 41
IS - 9
SN - 0013-936X, 0013-936X
KW - Membranes, Artificial
KW - 0
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical
KW - Arsenic
KW - N712M78A8G
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Ultrafiltration
KW - Spectrum Analysis
KW - Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
KW - Water Purification -- methods
KW - Osmosis
KW - Arsenic -- analysis
KW - Water Pollutants, Chemical -- analysis
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2007-06-29
N1 - Date created - 2007-06-01
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Role of aquifer heterogeneity in salinity persistence in tsunami affected coastal aquifers; need for better characterization
AN - 50107768; 2010-010805
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Illangasekare, T H
AU - Vithanage, M
AU - Jensen, K H
AU - Engesgaard, P
AU - Obeysekera, J
AU - Villholth, K G
AU - Perera, L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/05//
PY - 2007
DA - May 2007
SP - Abstract B43B
EP - 01
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 88
IS - 23, Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - tsunamis
KW - plumes
KW - sea water
KW - salt-water intrusion
KW - Indian Ocean tsunami 2004
KW - pollution
KW - salinity
KW - simulation
KW - ground water
KW - aquifers
KW - laboratory studies
KW - infiltration
KW - heterogeneity
KW - coastal aquifers
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
KW - 22:Environmental geology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Role+of+aquifer+heterogeneity+in+salinity+persistence+in+tsunami+affected+coastal+aquifers%3B+need+for+better+characterization&rft.au=Illangasekare%2C+T+H%3BVithanage%2C+M%3BJensen%2C+K+H%3BEngesgaard%2C+P%3BObeysekera%2C+J%3BVillholth%2C+K+G%3BPerera%2C+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Illangasekare&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2007-05-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=23%2C+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2007 joint assembly
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aquifers; coastal aquifers; ground water; heterogeneity; Indian Ocean tsunami 2004; infiltration; laboratory studies; plumes; pollution; salinity; salt-water intrusion; sea water; simulation; tsunamis
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mucosal immunisation of mice with malaria protein on lactic acid bacterial cell walls
AN - 20729085; 7640678
AB - Mice were orally and nasally immunised with a malaria parasite protein, MSA2, expressed in Lactococcus lactis, covalently attached to the peptidoglycan (MSA2cP), or non-covalently rebound to L. lactis cell walls, live Lactobacillus reuteri and Lb. salivarius (MSA2cA). Although there was marked variation within mice of the same inbred strain, the data suggest that the characteristics of serum IgG antibodies formed against MSA2 are influenced by the mouse strain and mode of MSA2 presentation. MSA2-specific IgA antibodies in sera and faecal pellets, and IFN gamma -secreting spleen cells were detectable in some immunised animals. MSA2cA on lactobacilli, although not effective in eliciting serum IgG antibodies, showed a potential for eliciting IgA antibodies in the gut. The presence of MSA2 in L. lactis tended to divert the antibody response from lactococcal antigens. The data suggest that anti-MSA2 and anti-lactococcal antibody responses are not necessarily associated in the mice. The findings are related to the use of lactic acid bacteria expressing heterologous proteins for therapy and vaccination.
JF - Vaccine
AU - Moorthy, G
AU - Ramasamy, R
AD - National Science Foundation, Maitland Place, Colombo, Sri Lanka, ramasamy@im.ubd.edu.bn
Y1 - 2007/05//
PY - 2007
DA - May 2007
SP - 3636
EP - 3645
PB - Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:usinfo-f@elsevier.com], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 25
IS - 18
SN - 0264-410X, 0264-410X
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Immunology Abstracts
KW - Lactobacillus
KW - Lactococcus lactis
KW - Lactic acid bacteria
KW - Malaria
KW - MSA2
KW - Mucosal immunisation
KW - Vaccines
KW - Bacteria
KW - Parasites
KW - Data processing
KW - Mucosa
KW - Spleen
KW - peptidoglycans
KW - Antibody response
KW - Vaccination
KW - Immunization
KW - Immunoglobulin A
KW - Lactobacillus reuteri
KW - Digestive tract
KW - Lactic acid
KW - Immunoglobulin G
KW - Inbreeding
KW - Cell walls
KW - K 03350:Immunology
KW - F 06905:Vaccines
KW - A 01490:Miscellaneous
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-11-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Parasites; Data processing; Mucosa; peptidoglycans; Spleen; Malaria; Lactic acid bacteria; Antibody response; Vaccination; Immunization; Immunoglobulin A; Digestive tract; Immunoglobulin G; Lactic acid; Inbreeding; Cell walls; Bacteria; Lactococcus lactis; Lactobacillus reuteri; Lactobacillus
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2007.01.070
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Impacts of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on the microbial landscape of the New Orleans area
AN - 19982576; 7421349
AB - Floodwaters in New Orleans from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita were observed to contain high levels of fecal indicator bacteria and microbial pathogens, generating concern about long-term impacts of these floodwaters on the sediment and water quality of the New Orleans area and Lake Pontchartrain. We show here that fecal indicator microbe concentrations in offshore waters from Lake Pontchartrain returned to prehurricane concentrations within 2 months of the flooding induced by these hurricanes. Vibrio and Legionella species within the lake were more abundant in samples collected shortly after the floodwaters had receded compared with samples taken within the subsequent 3 months; no evidence of a long-term hurricane-induced algal bloom was observed. Giardia and Cryptosporidium were detected in canal waters. Elevated levels of fecal indicator bacteria observed in sediment could not be solely attributed to impacts from floodwaters, as both flooded and nonflooded areas exhibited elevated levels of fecal indicator bacteria. Evidence from measurements of Bifidobacterium and bacterial diversity analysis suggest that the fecal indicator bacteria observed in the sediment were from human fecal sources. Epidemiologic studies are highly recommended to evaluate the human health effects of the sediments deposited by the floodwaters.
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA
AU - Sinigalliano, C D
AU - Gidley, M L
AU - Shibata, T
AU - Whitman, D
AU - Dixon, TH
AU - Laws, E
AU - Hou, A
AU - Bachoon, D
AU - Brand, L
AU - Amaral-Zettler, L
AU - Gast, R J
AU - Steward, G F
AU - Nigro, O D
AU - Fujioka, R
AU - Betancourt, W Q
AU - Vithanage, G
AU - Mathews, J
AU - Fleming, LE
AU - Solo-Gabriele, H M
AD - National Science Foundation-National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Oceans and Human Health Center, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33149
Y1 - 2007/05//
PY - 2007
DA - May 2007
SP - 9029
EP - 9034
PB - National Academy of Sciences, 2101 Constitution Ave. Washington DC 20418 USA
VL - 104
IS - 21
SN - 0027-8424, 0027-8424
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Pollution Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Ecology Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - water quality
KW - Algal blooms
KW - Freshwater
KW - Water quality
KW - Bifidobacterium
KW - Public health
KW - Giardia
KW - Lakes
KW - Biological pollutants
KW - Legionella
KW - Sediment pollution
KW - Fecal coliforms
KW - Pathogenic bacteria
KW - Landscape
KW - Brackish
KW - Pathogens
KW - USA, Louisiana, New Orleans
KW - Sediments
KW - Canals
KW - Hurricanes
KW - Vibrio
KW - Cryptosporidium
KW - USA, Louisiana, Pontchartrain L.
KW - Flooding
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - A 01490:Miscellaneous
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
KW - K 03450:Ecology
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
KW - J 02450:Ecology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aasfaaquaticpollution&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Proceedings+of+the+National+Academy+of+Sciences%2C+USA&rft.atitle=Impacts+of+Hurricanes+Katrina+and+Rita+on+the+microbial+landscape+of+the+New+Orleans+area&rft.au=Sinigalliano%2C+C+D%3BGidley%2C+M+L%3BShibata%2C+T%3BWhitman%2C+D%3BDixon%2C+TH%3BLaws%2C+E%3BHou%2C+A%3BBachoon%2C+D%3BBrand%2C+L%3BAmaral-Zettler%2C+L%3BGast%2C+R+J%3BSteward%2C+G+F%3BNigro%2C+O+D%3BFujioka%2C+R%3BBetancourt%2C+W+Q%3BVithanage%2C+G%3BMathews%2C+J%3BFleming%2C+LE%3BSolo-Gabriele%2C+H+M&rft.aulast=Sinigalliano&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2007-05-01&rft.volume=104&rft.issue=21&rft.spage=9029&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Proceedings+of+the+National+Academy+of+Sciences%2C+USA&rft.issn=00278424&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Algal blooms; Hurricanes; Pathogenic bacteria; Flooding; Biological pollutants; Water quality; Public health; Canals; Lakes; Landscape; Pathogens; Sediments; water quality; Sediment pollution; Fecal coliforms; Vibrio; Giardia; Cryptosporidium; Legionella; Bifidobacterium; USA, Louisiana, Pontchartrain L.; USA, Louisiana, New Orleans; Freshwater; Brackish
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Modeling Step-Pool Sequences in Mountain Watersheds
T2 - 2007 Meeting of the Association of American Geographers
AN - 39403236; 4606348
JF - 2007 Meeting of the Association of American Geographers
AU - Chin, Anne
AU - Gao, Peng
Y1 - 2007/04/17/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Apr 17
KW - Watersheds
KW - Mountains
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39403236?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Meeting+of+the+Association+of+American+Geographers&rft.atitle=Modeling+Step-Pool+Sequences+in+Mountain+Watersheds&rft.au=Chin%2C+Anne%3BGao%2C+Peng&rft.aulast=Chin&rft.aufirst=Anne&rft.date=2007-04-17&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Meeting+of+the+Association+of+American+Geographers&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://communicate.aag.org/eseries/aag_org/program/index.cfm?mtgID=52
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-12-18
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Potential for Extension of the Radiocarbon Calibration Based on Terrestrial Records
T2 - 2007 General Assembly of the European Geosciences Union
AN - 40605373; 4554352
JF - 2007 General Assembly of the European Geosciences Union
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Hodgins, G W L
AU - Burr, G S
AU - Beck, J W
AU - Quade, J
AU - Pigati, J
Y1 - 2007/04/15/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Apr 15
KW - Quaternary
KW - Paleo studies
KW - Geochronometry
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40605373?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+General+Assembly+of+the+European+Geosciences+Union&rft.atitle=Potential+for+Extension+of+the+Radiocarbon+Calibration+Based+on+Terrestrial+Records&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+T%3BHodgins%2C+G+W+L%3BBurr%2C+G+S%3BBeck%2C+J+W%3BQuade%2C+J%3BPigati%2C+J&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2007-04-15&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+General+Assembly+of+the+European+Geosciences+Union&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.cosis.net/members/meetings/programme/session_programme.php? m_id=40&p_id=233&day=0&view=session
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Earthscope Backbone Magnetotelluric Station at Branden, Missouri
T2 - 41st Annual Meeting of the South-Central and North-Central Sections, Geological Society of America
AN - 40623838; 4565302
JF - 41st Annual Meeting of the South-Central and North-Central Sections, Geological Society of America
AU - Schultz, Adam
AU - Mickus, Kevin
Y1 - 2007/04/12/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Apr 12
KW - USA, Missouri
KW - Geophysics
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40623838?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=41st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+South-Central+and+North-Central+Sections%2C+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Earthscope+Backbone+Magnetotelluric+Station+at+Branden%2C+Missouri&rft.au=Schultz%2C+Adam%3BMickus%2C+Kevin&rft.aulast=Schultz&rft.aufirst=Adam&rft.date=2007-04-12&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=41st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+South-Central+and+North-Central+Sections%2C+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007SC/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultrasound, gravimetric, and SEM studies of inorganic fouling in spiral-wound membrane modules
AN - 20135572; 7485241
AB - Ultrasonic time-domain reflectometry (UTDR) is combined with permeate-flux, gravimetric, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) measurements for studying calcium-sulfate dihydrate fouling in a commercial spiral-wound reverse osmosis membrane module. The UTDR amplitude response is shown to be more sensitive than permeate-flux decline for detecting the early stages of fouling because it is a local rather than integral measurement. Hence, appropriately located acoustic transducers can be used to detect the onset of fouling well before it impairs module performance so that appropriate remediation can be undertaken. The UTDR arrival-time response in principle can be used to determine the fouling layer thickness. However, this study indicates that arrival-time measurements in a spiral-wound module can be compromised by movement of the membrane envelope layers as is the case for the Koch 2521 spiral-wound module used in this study. The estimated module expansion of 210 approximately equal to m inferred from the UTDR measurements exceeds the thickness of the fouling layer deposits estimated from the gravimetric measurements. The gravimetric studies reveal a 6 to 10-fold increase in the thickness of the fouling layer deposits in the feed-flow direction owing to concentration polarization. A particularly interesting result of the gravimetric studies is a 16 to 27-fold increase in the thickness of the fouling layer deposits in the permeate-flow direction presumably owing to expansion of the outer relative to the inner feed channels. The SEM studies indicate that fouling is initiated along the feed-spacer mesh presumably due to dead-flow regions behind mesh elements transverse to the flow. Overall, the present study demonstrates that when UTDR is combined with other independent measurement techniques, it can provide significant insights regarding fundamental fouling and membrane module behavior.
JF - Desalination
AU - Chai, G Y
AU - Greenberg, A R
AU - Krantz, W B
AD - NSF Center for Membrane Applied Science and Technology, University of Colorado Boulder, CO 80309-0427, USA, alan.greenberg@colorado.edu
Y1 - 2007/04/05/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Apr 05
SP - 277
EP - 293
PB - Elsevier Science B.V., P.O. Box 211 Amsterdam 1000 AE Netherlands, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl/]
VL - 208
IS - 1-3
SN - 0011-9164, 0011-9164
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Acoustics
KW - Fouling
KW - W 30910:Imaging
KW - SW 1010:Saline water conversion
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20135572?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Desalination&rft.atitle=Ultrasound%2C+gravimetric%2C+and+SEM+studies+of+inorganic+fouling+in+spiral-wound+membrane+modules&rft.au=Chai%2C+G+Y%3BGreenberg%2C+A+R%3BKrantz%2C+W+B&rft.aulast=Chai&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2007-04-05&rft.volume=208&rft.issue=1-3&rft.spage=277&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Desalination&rft.issn=00119164&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.desal.2006.06.018
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-07-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-11
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Fouling
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.desal.2006.06.018
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - High-magnesian andesite from Mount Shasta; a product of magma mixing and contamination, not a primitive mantle melt
AN - 51459786; 2007-037425
AB - It has been proposed that high-Mg andesites (HMAs) from the Mount Shasta area may represent near-primary mantle melts, carrying signatures of slab melt interaction with the Cascadia mantle wedge. We present strong evidence that their formation involved mixing of dacitic and basaltic magmas and entrainment of ultramafic crystal material, and thus they cannot represent primitive magmas. The rocks contain (1) low-Mg65-72) clinopyroxene (cpx) and orthopyroxene (opx) phenocryst cores containing dacitic melt inclusions, and (2) high-Mg# opx and olivine xenocrysts, all of which are rimmed by euhedral overgrowths of cpx or opx similar in Mg87) to skeletal olivine phenocrysts. Textural relations indicate that ultramafic xenocrysts reacted with dacitic liquid, after which the contaminated magma mixed with basaltic liquid to produce a hybrid HMA bulk composition. High Mg, Cr, and Ni derive from the latter inputs, whereas high Sr/Y and overall adakite affinity is inherited from the dacite end member, which is arguably crustal in origin. We suggest that open system processes may be more important in the petrogenesis of HMAs than generally recognized, and that their magnesian compositions do not necessarily imply that they are primitive mantle melts.
JF - Geology (Boulder)
AU - Streck, Martin J
AU - Leeman, William P
AU - Chesley, John
Y1 - 2007/04//
PY - 2007
DA - April 2007
SP - 351
EP - 354
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 35
IS - 4
SN - 0091-7613, 0091-7613
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - magnesium
KW - Siskiyou County California
KW - andesites
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - olivine group
KW - ultramafic composition
KW - melt inclusions
KW - California
KW - pyroxene group
KW - clinopyroxene
KW - open systems
KW - volcanism
KW - mixing
KW - olivine
KW - inclusions
KW - orthosilicates
KW - hybridization
KW - basaltic composition
KW - geochemistry
KW - chain silicates
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - adakites
KW - dacitic composition
KW - textures
KW - magma contamination
KW - nesosilicates
KW - Mount Shasta
KW - Cascade Range
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - xenocrysts
KW - fluid inclusions
KW - orthopyroxene
KW - phenocrysts
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://www.gsajournals.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States | Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 31
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 1 table
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GLGYBA
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - adakites; alkaline earth metals; andesites; basaltic composition; California; Cascade Range; chain silicates; clinopyroxene; dacitic composition; fluid inclusions; geochemistry; hybridization; igneous rocks; inclusions; magma contamination; magmas; magnesium; melt inclusions; metals; mixing; Mount Shasta; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; open systems; orthopyroxene; orthosilicates; phenocrysts; pyroxene group; silicates; Siskiyou County California; textures; ultramafic composition; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanism; xenocrysts
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G23286A.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - EarthScope backbone magnetotelluric station at Branden, Missouri
AN - 51364776; 2007-111159
AB - The Earthscope program is a multiyear program to study the four-dimensional structure of the North American continent. A vital component of this program is USArray, which consists of a series of permanent and portable seismic, magnetotelluric and GPS recorders. The magnetotelluric portion consists of seven backbone (permanent) and twenty transportable systems. The transportable systems will be deployed in various regions of the US throughout the duration of Earthscope for a period of approximately one month and at a station spacing of approximately seventy kilometers. The backbone stations consist of a long period magnetotelluric system recording time-varying electrical and magnetic signals between 2 and 100,000 seconds. The seven backbone stations are located throughout the US with one being in the south-central US at Branden, Missouri. The Branden, Missouri station was partially installed in June, 2007 with two perpendicular electric field sensors with each dipole being approximately 300 meters long. A fluxgate magnetometer and data recording system (NIMS) were buried in separate 2 m deep vaults. Four hours of data were recorded to determine the noise levels at the site, which were found to be satisfactory. The installation of the permanent magnetotelluric recording equipment will occur in the Spring of 2007, and by the Fall of 2007 all backbone sites will be installed and running. The systems will telemeter data to a quality control and processing group, and then the processed data will be transmitted to the IRIS Data Management Center, where they will be freely available. These transportable and backbone magnetotelluric stations will provide the first systematic, continental-scale imaging of the electrical conductivity structure of the lower crust and upper-to-mid mantle in the US. When combined with the seismic array results, they will aid in determining the thermal, mineralogical and fluid makeup of the mantle and crust in the US. More information of the Branden site can be found at http://geosciences.missouristate.edu/faculty/Mickus/mtsparta.htm.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Schultz, Adam
AU - Mickus, Kevin L
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/04//
PY - 2007
DA - April 2007
SP - 70
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 39
IS - 3
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - United States
KW - programs
KW - geophysical surveys
KW - Missouri
KW - geophysical methods
KW - Branden Missouri
KW - surveys
KW - EarthScope
KW - crust
KW - magnetotelluric methods
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51364776?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=EarthScope+backbone+magnetotelluric+station+at+Branden%2C+Missouri&rft.au=Schultz%2C+Adam%3BMickus%2C+Kevin+L%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Schultz&rft.aufirst=Adam&rft.date=2007-04-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=70&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts+with+Programs+-+Geological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=00167592&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, South-Central Section, 41st annual meeting; Geological Society of America, North-Central Section, 41st annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Branden Missouri; crust; EarthScope; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; magnetotelluric methods; Missouri; programs; surveys; United States
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Funding Opportunities at the NSF for Faculty at Predominantly Undergraduate Institutions (PUIs)
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40587949; 4546105
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Pibel, Charles D
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Financing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40587949?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Funding+Opportunities+at+the+NSF+for+Faculty+at+Predominantly+Undergraduate+Institutions+%28PUIs%29&rft.au=Pibel%2C+Charles+D&rft.aulast=Pibel&rft.aufirst=Charles&rft.date=2007-03-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - DUE: Supporting Undergraduate Education at NSF
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40584825; 4540555
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Lewis, Eileen L
AU - Hixson, Susan H
AU - Richtol, H H
AU - Varma-Nelson, Pratibha
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40584825?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=DUE%3A+Supporting+Undergraduate+Education+at+NSF&rft.au=Lewis%2C+Eileen+L%3BHixson%2C+Susan+H%3BRichtol%2C+H+H%3BVarma-Nelson%2C+Pratibha&rft.aulast=Lewis&rft.aufirst=Eileen&rft.date=2007-03-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - National Science Foundation: Funding Opportunities for Community Colleges
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40580824; 4540444
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Lewis, Eileen L
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Foundations
KW - Financing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40580824?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=National+Science+Foundation%3A+Funding+Opportunities+for+Community+Colleges&rft.au=Lewis%2C+Eileen+L&rft.aulast=Lewis&rft.aufirst=Eileen&rft.date=2007-03-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Testing Residential Water Treatment Technologies for Contaminant Reduction Performance
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40579984; 4540454
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Andrew, Richard N
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Water treatment
KW - Contaminants
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40579984?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Testing+Residential+Water+Treatment+Technologies+for+Contaminant+Reduction+Performance&rft.au=Andrew%2C+Richard+N&rft.aulast=Andrew&rft.aufirst=Richard&rft.date=2007-03-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=233rd+National+Meeting+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Hydration Structure of Na@@u+@ and Cl@@u-@ Ions from Ambient to Supercritical Conditions
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40577873; 4541404
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Kalinichev, Andrey G
AU - Gorbaty, Yuri E
AU - Bondarenko, Galina V
AU - Kirkpatrick, R James
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Ions
KW - Hydration
KW - Chloride
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - First-Principles Studies of Sila-Diamondoids
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40577871; 4540163
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Richardson, Steven L
AU - Zope, Rajendra R
AU - Baruah, Tunna
AU - Pederson, Mark R
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Quantum chemistry
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Organic Delivery Vehicles for Probing and Treating Biological Systems: Adapting Fabrication Processes from the Electronics Industry for use in Nanomedicine
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40572863; 4542918
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - DeSimone, Joseph M
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Electronics industry
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Modification in Rheological Properties due to Charged Network of Ionic Silicone Surfactants at Water-Oil Interface
T2 - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40569161; 4541562
JF - 233rd National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society
AU - Mehta, Somil C
AU - Somasundaran, P
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Surfactants
KW - Silicone
KW - Oil-water interface
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/233nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Health Risk Assessment of 4-Chlorobenzotriflouride in Drinking Water
T2 - 46th Annual Meeting and ToxExpo of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2007)
AN - 40556960; 4536230
JF - 46th Annual Meeting and ToxExpo of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2007)
AU - Lee, C J
AU - Bhat, V S
AU - Ball, G L
AU - McLellan, C J
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Drinking water
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40556960?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=46th+Annual+Meeting+and+ToxExpo+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2007%29&rft.atitle=Health+Risk+Assessment+of+4-Chlorobenzotriflouride+in+Drinking+Water&rft.au=Lee%2C+C+J%3BBhat%2C+V+S%3BBall%2C+G+L%3BMcLellan%2C+C+J&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2007-03-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=46th+Annual+Meeting+and+ToxExpo+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/ai/meet/am2007/it_planner.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Health Risk Assessment of Methyl Isobutyl Ketone in Drinking Water
T2 - 46th Annual Meeting and ToxExpo of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2007)
AN - 40556868; 4536228
JF - 46th Annual Meeting and ToxExpo of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2007)
AU - De France, J
AU - Bhat, V S
AU - Ball, G L
AU - McLellan, C J
Y1 - 2007/03/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Mar 25
KW - Ketones
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Drinking water
KW - Methyl isobutyl ketone
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/ai/meet/am2007/it_planner.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Federal Science and Engineering Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions: FY 2004. Detailed Statistical Tables. NSF 07-316
AN - 62034631; ED496323
AB - Institutions of higher education, the major source of the nation's scientists and engineers, perform about one-half of the nation's basic research. Therefore, the level, distribution, and characteristics of federal academic support are of much interest to officials at federal, state, and local levels and in nongovernmental sectors. The data presented in these tables cover all categories of direct federal science and engineering (S&E) support to institutions of higher education in the United States for S&E activities. The 19 agencies listed in these tables provide virtually all the federal funding for S&E research and development (R&D) at U.S. universities and colleges. Data are also reported on these agencies' obligations to nonprofit institutions. (Contains 32 tables and technical notes.)
Y1 - 2007/03//
PY - 2007
DA - March 2007
SP - 305
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Data
KW - Engineering
KW - Scientists
KW - Federal Aid
KW - Colleges
KW - Technical Occupations
KW - Research and Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/62034631?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Anatomy of the recurrent coastal sediment plume in Lake Michigan and its impacts on light climate, nutrients, and plankton
AN - 51378383; 2007-101611
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
AU - Vanderploeg, H A
AU - Johengen, T H
AU - Lavrentyev, P J
AU - Chen, C
AU - Lang, G A
AU - Agy, M A
AU - Bundy, M H
AU - Cavaletto, J F
AU - Eadie, B J
AU - Liebig, J R
AU - Miller, G S
AU - Ruberg, S A
AU - McCormick, M J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007/03//
PY - 2007
DA - March 2007
EP - C03S90
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 112
IS - C3
SN - 0148-0227, 0148-0227
KW - plumes
KW - suspended materials
KW - plankton
KW - AVHRR
KW - marine sediments
KW - Lake Michigan
KW - infrared methods
KW - sediments
KW - Great Lakes
KW - depositional environment
KW - productivity
KW - North America
KW - concentration
KW - pigments
KW - geophysical methods
KW - suspension
KW - satellite methods
KW - chlorophyll
KW - nutrients
KW - organic compounds
KW - lacustrine environment
KW - coastal environment
KW - seasonal variations
KW - zooplankton
KW - remote sensing
KW - 20:Applied geophysics
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51378383?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.atitle=Anatomy+of+the+recurrent+coastal+sediment+plume+in+Lake+Michigan+and+its+impacts+on+light+climate%2C+nutrients%2C+and+plankton&rft.au=Vanderploeg%2C+H+A%3BJohengen%2C+T+H%3BLavrentyev%2C+P+J%3BChen%2C+C%3BLang%2C+G+A%3BAgy%2C+M+A%3BBundy%2C+M+H%3BCavaletto%2C+J+F%3BEadie%2C+B+J%3BLiebig%2C+J+R%3BMiller%2C+G+S%3BRuberg%2C+S+A%3BMcCormick%2C+M+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Vanderploeg&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2007-03-01&rft.volume=112&rft.issue=C3&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Geophysical+Research&rft.issn=01480227&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2004JC002379
L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/jgr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 49
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 3 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - AVHRR; chlorophyll; coastal environment; concentration; depositional environment; geophysical methods; Great Lakes; infrared methods; lacustrine environment; Lake Michigan; marine sediments; North America; nutrients; organic compounds; pigments; plankton; plumes; productivity; remote sensing; satellite methods; seasonal variations; sediments; suspended materials; suspension; zooplankton
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2004JC002379
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Composite forces shape population dynamics of copepod crustaceans
AN - 19647392; 7383201
AB - Understanding the processes that control species abundance and distribution is a major challenge in ecology, yet for a large number of potentially important organisms, we know little about the biotic and abiotic factors that influence population size. One group of aquatic organisms that defies traditional demographic analyses is the Crustacea, particularly those with complex life cycles. We used likelihood techniques and information theoretics to evaluate a suite of models representing alternative hypotheses on factors controlling the abundance of two copepod crustaceans in a small, tropical floodplain lake. Quantitative zooplankton samples were collected at three stations in a Venezuelan floodplain lake from June through December 1984; the average sampling interval was two days. We constructed a series of models with stage structure that incorporated six biotic and abiotic covariates in various combinations to account for temporal changes in abundance of these target species and in their population growth rates. Our analysis produced several novel insights into copepod population dynamics. We found that multiple forces affected the abundance of particular stages, that these factors differed between species as well as among stages within each species, and that biotic processes had the largest effects on copepod population dynamics. Density dependence had a large effect on the survival of Oithona amazonica copepodites and on population growth rate of Diaptomus negrensis.
JF - Ecology
AU - Twombly, S
AU - Wang, G
AU - Hobbs, N T
AD - National Science Foundation, Division of Environmental Biology, 4201 Wilson Boulevard Suite 635, Arlington, Virginia 22230 USA, stwombly@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2007/03//
PY - 2007
DA - Mar 2007
SP - 658
EP - 670
VL - 88
IS - 3
SN - 0012-9658, 0012-9658
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Oithona amazonica
KW - Plankton surveys
KW - Diaptomus negrensis
KW - Quantitative distribution
KW - Temporal variations
KW - Density dependence
KW - Population growth
KW - Abundance
KW - Survival
KW - Oithona
KW - Freshwater
KW - Population dynamics
KW - Models
KW - Diaptomus
KW - Lakes
KW - Flood plains
KW - Freshwater crustaceans
KW - Sampling
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
KW - Q1 08442:Population dynamics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19647392?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Ecology&rft.atitle=Composite+forces+shape+population+dynamics+of+copepod+crustaceans&rft.au=Twombly%2C+S%3BWang%2C+G%3BHobbs%2C+N+T&rft.aulast=Twombly&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2007-03-01&rft.volume=88&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=658&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Ecology&rft.issn=00129658&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Plankton surveys; Lakes; Flood plains; Density dependence; Temporal variations; Quantitative distribution; Freshwater crustaceans; Population dynamics; Population growth; Abundance; Survival; Sampling; Models; Oithona amazonica; Diaptomus; Diaptomus negrensis; Oithona; Freshwater
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Improving Public Understanding: Risk Assessments, Perceptions, and Communication
T2 - 33rd Annual Conference on Waste Management (WM 2007)
AN - 40531941; 4524783
JF - 33rd Annual Conference on Waste Management (WM 2007)
AU - O'Connor, Robert
AU - Bassett, Gilbert
Y1 - 2007/02/25/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Feb 25
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Communication
KW - Perception
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40531941?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=33rd+Annual+Conference+on+Waste+Management+%28WM+2007%29&rft.atitle=Improving+Public+Understanding%3A+Risk+Assessments%2C+Perceptions%2C+and+Communication&rft.au=O%27Connor%2C+Robert%3BBassett%2C+Gilbert&rft.aulast=O%27Connor&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2007-02-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=33rd+Annual+Conference+on+Waste+Management+%28WM+2007%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.wmsym.org/pdf/PrelimnaryProgram07.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Advective and diffusive contributions to reactive gas transport during pyritic oxidation in the unsaturated zone
AN - 51432164; 2007-059544
JF - Water Resources Research
AU - Binning, P J
AU - Postma, D
AU - Russell, T F
AU - Wesselingh, J A
AU - Boulin, P F
Y1 - 2007/02//
PY - 2007
DA - February 2007
EP - W02414
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 43
IS - 2
SN - 0043-1397, 0043-1397
KW - soils
KW - mines
KW - numerical models
KW - waste rock
KW - oxidation
KW - unsaturated zone
KW - ground water
KW - gases
KW - transport
KW - reactive transport
KW - pyrite
KW - sulfides
KW - abandoned mines
KW - 21:Hydrogeology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51432164?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Water+Resources+Research&rft.atitle=Advective+and+diffusive+contributions+to+reactive+gas+transport+during+pyritic+oxidation+in+the+unsaturated+zone&rft.au=Binning%2C+P+J%3BPostma%2C+D%3BRussell%2C+T+F%3BWesselingh%2C+J+A%3BBoulin%2C+P+F&rft.aulast=Binning&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2007-02-01&rft.volume=43&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Water+Resources+Research&rft.issn=00431397&rft_id=info:doi/10.1029%2F2005WR004474
L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/wr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 42
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - WRERAQ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - abandoned mines; gases; ground water; mines; numerical models; oxidation; pyrite; reactive transport; soils; sulfides; transport; unsaturated zone; waste rock
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2005WR004474
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Evidence of Philopatry in Ringed Seals
T2 - 2007 Symposium on Marine Science
AN - 39342020; 4538038
JF - 2007 Symposium on Marine Science
AU - Kelly, Brendan P
AU - Moran, John R
AU - Sell, Stephanie
AU - Boveng, Peter
AU - Ponce, Micaela
AU - Snyder, Rex
AU - Swanson, Bradley J
Y1 - 2007/01/21/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jan 21
KW - Seals
KW - Philopatry
KW - Marine mammals
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39342020?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2007+Symposium+on+Marine+Science&rft.atitle=Evidence+of+Philopatry+in+Ringed+Seals&rft.au=Kelly%2C+Brendan+P%3BMoran%2C+John+R%3BSell%2C+Stephanie%3BBoveng%2C+Peter%3BPonce%2C+Micaela%3BSnyder%2C+Rex%3BSwanson%2C+Bradley+J&rft.aulast=Kelly&rft.aufirst=Brendan&rft.date=2007-01-21&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2007+Symposium+on+Marine+Science&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://doc.nprb.org/web/symposium/2007/Abstract%20book_2007.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Value for the Money: The Case for Accredited GHG Validation or Verification Bodies
T2 - 10th Annual Conference on Clean Air, Mercury, Global Warming and Renewable Energy
AN - 39250365; 4508961
JF - 10th Annual Conference on Clean Air, Mercury, Global Warming and Renewable Energy
AU - Shideler, John
Y1 - 2007/01/21/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jan 21
KW - Greenhouse gases
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39250365?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.euec.com/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The NSF and Emerging Opportunities in Space Weather
T2 - Fourth Symposium on Space Weather
AN - 39262850; 4509869
JF - Fourth Symposium on Space Weather
AU - Behnke, Richard
Y1 - 2007/01/14/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jan 14
KW - Weather
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
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L2 - http://ams.confex.com/ams/87ANNUAL/techprogram/programexpanded_405.htm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - US Activities
T2 - XV Conference on Plant and Animal Genome (PAG-XV)
AN - 39346054; 4507340
JF - XV Conference on Plant and Animal Genome (PAG-XV)
AU - Silverthorne, Jane
Y1 - 2007/01/13/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jan 13
KW - Genomics
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://www.intl-pag.org/15/15-workshops.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Selaginella Whole Genome Sequence Project
T2 - XV Conference on Plant and Animal Genome (PAG-XV)
AN - 39262268; 4507312
JF - XV Conference on Plant and Animal Genome (PAG-XV)
AU - Banks, Jody
Y1 - 2007/01/13/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jan 13
KW - Genomes
KW - Nucleotide sequence
KW - Selaginella
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://www.intl-pag.org/15/15-workshops.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - Hurricane Warning: the Critical Need for a National Hurricane Research Initiative
AN - 62028592; ED496326
AB - The United States possesses the most capable research enterprise, the largest economy, and the most sophisticated societal infrastructure in the world, yet it remains notably vulnerable to catastrophic damage and loss of life from natural hazards. Among weather hazards, hurricanes account for over half of the total damage inflicted. Despite their destructive power, certainty of future occurrence, and advances made during the past decade in meteorological understanding and prediction, still relatively little is known about the most important aspects of hurricanes from an integrative perspective, including their internal dynamics and interactions with the larger-scale atmosphere and ocean; methods for quantifying and conveying uncertainty and mitigating hurricane impacts; associated short and long term consequences on the natural and built environment; and the manner in which society responds before, during, and after landfall. In this document, the Board presents an agenda for action--a National Hurricane Research Initiative (NHRI)--that will provide urgently needed hurricane science and engineering research and education that engages relevant agencies across the Federal government; involves industry, academia, and other levels of government; establishes highly focused priorities; strengthens disciplinary research; creates multidisciplinary frameworks for studying the hurricane in an integrative fashion; and stimulates the efficient transfer of research outcomes to operational practice. The following are appended: (1) U.S. Hurricane and Earthquake Research Funding (2001-2006); (2) Proposed New Investments for the National Hurricane Research Initiative; and (3) National Hurricane Research Initiative Research Programs. (Includes 5 photos, a list of acronyms used, 55 endnotes, and a list of photo captions.)
Y1 - 2007/01/12/
PY - 2007
DA - 2007 Jan 12
SP - 40
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - United States
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Policymakers
KW - Weather
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Meteorology
KW - Natural Disasters
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/62028592?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative evaluation of bacteria released by bathers in a marine water.
AN - 68366310; 17113123
AB - Enterococci, a common fecal indicator, and Staphylococcus aureus, a common skin pathogen, can be shed by bathers affecting the quality of recreational waters and resulting in possible human health impacts. Due to limited information available concerning human shedding of these microbes, this study focused on estimating the amounts of enterococci and S. aureus shed by bathers directly off their skin and indirectly via sand adhered to skin. Two sets of experiments were conducted at a marine beach located in Miami-Dade County, Florida. The first study, referred to as the "large pool" study, involved 10 volunteers who immersed their bodies in 4700L during four 15min cycles with exposure to beach sand in cycles 3 and 4. The "small pool" study involved 10 volunteers who were exposed to beach sand for 30min before they individually entered a small tub. After each individual was rinsed with off-shore marine water, sand and rinse water were collected and analyzed for enterococci. Results from the "large pool" study showed that bathers shed concentrations of enterococci and S. aureus on the order of 6x10(5) and 6x10(6) colony forming units (CFU) per person in the first 15min exposure period, respectively. Significant reductions in the bacteria shed per bather (50% reductions for S. aureus and 40% for enterococci) were observed in the subsequent bathing cycles. The "small pool" study results indicated that the enterococci contribution from sand adhered to skin was small (about 2% of the total) in comparison with the amount shed directly from the bodies of the volunteers. Results indicated that bathers transport significant amounts of enterococci and S. aureus to the water column, and thus human microbial bathing load should be considered as a non-point source when designing recreational water quality models.
JF - Water research
AU - Elmir, Samir M
AU - Wright, Mary E
AU - Abdelzaher, Amir
AU - Solo-Gabriele, Helena M
AU - Fleming, Lora E
AU - Miller, Gary
AU - Rybolowik, Michael
AU - Peter Shih, Meng-Ta
AU - Pillai, Segaran P
AU - Cooper, Jennifer A
AU - Quaye, Elesi A
AD - NSF-NIEHS Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami, Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Sciences,1801 NW 9 Avenue, Suite 200 (R-669), Miami, Florida 33136, USA.
Y1 - 2007/01//
PY - 2007
DA - January 2007
SP - 3
EP - 10
VL - 41
IS - 1
SN - 0043-1354, 0043-1354
KW - Water
KW - 059QF0KO0R
KW - Silicon Dioxide
KW - 7631-86-9
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Bacteria
KW - Humans
KW - Environmental Monitoring -- methods
KW - Bathing Beaches
KW - Enterococcus -- isolation & purification
KW - Staphylococcus aureus -- isolation & purification
KW - Seawater -- microbiology
KW - Water Microbiology
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2007-05-10
N1 - Date created - 2006-12-06
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - SuppNotes - Cited By:
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2002 Mar;68(3):1165-72 [11872464]
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2003 Sep;69(9):5555-62 [12957945]
Water Res. 2004 Jul;38(13):3119-31 [15261551]
MMWR Surveill Summ. 2004 Oct 22;53(8):1-22 [15499306]
J Hyg (Lond). 1966 Dec;64(4):489-99 [5224767]
Am J Public Health Nations Health. 1962 Dec;52:2001-8 [13932583]
Public Health Rep. 1964 Jan;79:61-70 [14105731]
J Appl Microbiol. 1998 Dec;85 Suppl 1:83S-89S [21182696]
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Models and Mechanisms for Evaluating Government-Funded Research: An International Comparison
AN - 62048403; EJ779652
AB - This research describes, classifies, and comparatively evaluates national models and mechanisms used to evaluate research and allocate research funding in 16 countries. Although these models and mechanisms vary widely in terms of how research is evaluated and financed, nearly all share the common characteristic of relating funding to some measure of past performance. Each of these 16 national models and mechanisms were rated by independent, blinded panels of professional researchers and evaluators in two countries on more than 25 quality indicators. The national models were then ranked using the panels' ratings, in terms of their validity, credibility, utility, cost-effectiveness, and ethicality. The highest ratings were received by nations using large-scale research assessment exercises. Bulk funding and indicator-driven models received substantially lower ratings. Implications for research evaluation practice and policy are considered and discussed. (Contains 4 tables, 3 figures and 2 notes.)
JF - American Journal of Evaluation
AU - Coryn, Chris L.
AU - Hattie, John A.
AU - Scriven, Michael
AU - Hartmann, David J.
Y1 - 2007
PY - 2007
DA - 2007
SP - 437
EP - 457
PB - SAGE Publications. 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320.
VL - 28
IS - 4
SN - 1098-2140, 1098-2140
KW - ERIC, Current Index to Journals in Education (CIJE)
KW - Financial Support
KW - Government Role
KW - Validity
KW - Resource Allocation
KW - Evaluators
KW - Models
KW - Evaluation Methods
KW - Comparative Analysis
KW - Classification
KW - Scientific Research
KW - Ethics
KW - Cost Effectiveness
KW - Credibility
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aeric&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Journal+of+Evaluation&rft.atitle=Models+and+Mechanisms+for+Evaluating+Government-Funded+Research%3A+An+International+Comparison&rft.au=Coryn%2C+Chris+L.%3BHattie%2C+John+A.%3BScriven%2C+Michael%3BHartmann%2C+David+J.&rft.aulast=Coryn&rft.aufirst=Chris&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=28&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=437&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Journal+of+Evaluation&rft.issn=10982140&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 3592 7807 4918 5964; 3629 6582; 1955 3629 6582; 8906; 11210 3627 2416 10031; 2281 3629 6582; 6752 9651 6582; 9365 8836; 4005; 3639 8016 4542; 1595 7404; 2393 8768; 4408 9015
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering. NSF 07-315
AN - 62019934; ED496396
AB - This document provides information about the participation of women, minorities, and persons with disabilities in science and engineering education and employment. It includes figures and tables displaying a variety of statistical information about each of these groups, and its primary purpose is to serve as an information source It offers no endorsement of or recommendations about policies or programs. (Contains 20 figures, 114 tables, technical notes, a list of related reports from NSF, and a list of additional sources of information.)
Y1 - 2007
PY - 2007
DA - 2007
SP - 316
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Science Education
KW - Graduate Study
KW - Undergraduate Study
KW - Employment
KW - Academic Degrees
KW - Engineering
KW - Scientists
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Minority Groups
KW - Ethnic Groups
KW - Disabilities
KW - Enrollment
KW - Technical Occupations
KW - Females
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/62019934?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Extension of lattice strain theory to mineral/mineral rare-earth element partitioning; an approach for assessing disequilibrium and developing internally consistent partition coefficients between olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene and basaltic melt
AN - 51442149; 2007-052618
AB - Olivine/melt and orthopyroxene/melt rare-earth element (REE) partition coefficients consistent with clinopyroxene/melt partition coefficients were determined indirectly from subsolidus partitioning between olivine, orthopyroxene, and clinopyroxene after suitable correction for temperature. Heavy- and middle-REE ratios for olivine/clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene/clinopyroxene pairs correlate negatively with effective cationic radius, whereas those for the light REEs correlate positively with cationic radius, generating a U-shaped pattern in apparent mineral/clinopyroxene partition coefficients versus cationic radius. Lattice strain models of partitioning modified for subsolidus conditions yield negative correlations of olivine/clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene/clinopyroxene with respect to cationic radii, predicting well the measured partitioning behaviors of the heavy and middle REEs but not that of the light REEs. The light-REE systematics cannot be explained with lattice strain theory and, instead, can be explained by disequilibrium enrichment of the light REEs in melt inclusions or on the rims of olivine and orthopyroxene. Realistic light-REE partition coefficients were thus extrapolated from the measured heavy- and middle-REE partition coefficients using the lattice strain model. Light REE olivine/melt and orthopyroxene/melt partition coefficients calculated in this manner are lower than most published values, but agree reasonably well with partitioning experiments using the most recent in situ analytical techniques (secondary-ionization mass spectrometry and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry). These new olivine/melt and orthopyroxene/melt partition coefficients are useful for accurate modeling of the REE contents of clinopyroxene-poor to -free lithologies, such as harzburgitic residues of melting. Finally, the application of the lattice strain theory to subsolidus conditions represents a framework for assessing the degree of REE disequilibrium in a rock.
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty Aeolus
AU - Harbert, Artemis
AU - Leeman, William P
Y1 - 2007/01//
PY - 2007
DA - January 2007
SP - 481
EP - 496
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 71
IS - 2
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - silicates
KW - lattice
KW - laser methods
KW - ion probe data
KW - strain
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mass spectra
KW - olivine group
KW - lattice strain theory
KW - harzburgite
KW - elastic strain
KW - melts
KW - melt inclusions
KW - temperature
KW - partitioning
KW - pyroxene group
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - clinopyroxene
KW - olivine
KW - inclusions
KW - orthosilicates
KW - spectra
KW - rare earths
KW - trace elements
KW - basaltic composition
KW - chain silicates
KW - silicate melts
KW - laser ablation
KW - equilibrium
KW - ultramafics
KW - nesosilicates
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - partition coefficients
KW - metals
KW - peridotites
KW - fluid inclusions
KW - orthopyroxene
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=Extension+of+lattice+strain+theory+to+mineral%2Fmineral+rare-earth+element+partitioning%3B+an+approach+for+assessing+disequilibrium+and+developing+internally+consistent+partition+coefficients+between+olivine%2C+orthopyroxene%2C+clinopyroxene+and+basaltic+melt&rft.au=Lee%2C+Cin-Ty+Aeolus%3BHarbert%2C+Artemis%3BLeeman%2C+William+P&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=Cin-Ty&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=71&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=481&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.gca.2006.09.014
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 63
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 4 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basaltic composition; chain silicates; clinopyroxene; elastic strain; equilibrium; fluid inclusions; harzburgite; ICP mass spectra; igneous rocks; inclusions; ion probe data; laser ablation; laser methods; lattice; lattice strain theory; mass spectra; melt inclusions; melts; metals; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; orthopyroxene; orthosilicates; partition coefficients; partitioning; peridotites; plutonic rocks; pyroxene group; rare earths; silicate melts; silicates; spectra; strain; temperature; trace elements; ultramafics
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2006.09.014
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Characterizing sediment acid volatile sulfide concentrations in European streams
AN - 50622197; 2008-111690
AB - Sediment acid volatile sulfide (AVS) concentrations were measured in wadeable streams of a wide variety of ecoregions of western Europe (84 sites in 10 countries and nine ecoregions) to better understand spatial distribution and ecoregion relationships. Acid volatile sulfide has been shown to be a major factor controlling the bioavailability and toxicity of many common trace metals, such as Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Zn. Sediment characteristics varied widely. The ratio of the sum of the simultaneously extracted metals (SEM) to AVS ranged from 0.03 to 486.59. The Sigma SEM-AVS ranged from -40.02 to 17.71 mu mol/g. On a regional scale, sediment characteristics such as dominant parent soil material showed significant trends in AVS distribution and variation by ecoregion. Total Fe and Mn were correlated weakly with SEM concentrations. Three AVS model approaches (i.e., the SEM:AVS ratio, SEM-AVS difference, and carbon normalization) were compared at threshold exceedance levels of SEM/AVS>9, SEM-AVS>2, and SEM-AVS/f (sub OC) 150 mu mol/g organic carbon (OC). Only 4.76% of the sediments exceeded all three AVS thresholds; 22.6% of the sediments exceeded two models; and 13% of the sediments exceeded one model only. Using the SEM:AVS, SEM-AVS, and fraction of organic carbon models, and including site-specific data and regional soil characteristics, ecoregions 1 (Portugal), 3 (Italy), 4 (Switzerland), and 9 (Belgium/Germany) had the highest potential metals toxicity; ecoregions 13 and 8 (Belgium/France) showed the lowest potential toxicity. However, because AVS can vary widely spatially and temporally, these data should not be considered as representative of the sampled ecoregions. The general relationship between AVS levels and sediment characteristics provides some predictive capability for wadeable streams in the European ecoregions.
JF - Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
AU - Burton, G Allen
AU - Green, Andrew
AU - Baudo, Renato
AU - Forbes, Valery
AU - Nguyen, Lien T H
AU - Janssen, Colin R
AU - Kukkonen, Jussi
AU - Leppanen, Matti
AU - Maltby, Lorraine
AU - Soares, Amadeu
AU - Kapo, Katherine
AU - Smith, Preston
AU - Dunning, John
Y1 - 2007/01//
PY - 2007
DA - January 2007
SP - 1
EP - 12
PB - SETAC, Pensacola, FL
VL - 26
IS - 1
SN - 0730-7268, 0730-7268
KW - zinc
KW - copper
KW - rivers and streams
KW - data processing
KW - lead
KW - techniques
KW - Europe
KW - bioavailability
KW - acid volatile sulfides
KW - toxicity
KW - sampling
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - data bases
KW - cadmium
KW - organic carbon
KW - soils
KW - hydrology
KW - concentration
KW - Western Europe
KW - pollution
KW - volatiles
KW - metals
KW - quality control
KW - parent materials
KW - nickel
KW - trace metals
KW - sulfides
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 22:Environmental geology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Toxicology+and+Chemistry&rft.atitle=Characterizing+sediment+acid+volatile+sulfide+concentrations+in+European+streams&rft.au=Burton%2C+G+Allen%3BGreen%2C+Andrew%3BBaudo%2C+Renato%3BForbes%2C+Valery%3BNguyen%2C+Lien+T+H%3BJanssen%2C+Colin+R%3BKukkonen%2C+Jussi%3BLeppanen%2C+Matti%3BMaltby%2C+Lorraine%3BSoares%2C+Amadeu%3BKapo%2C+Katherine%3BSmith%2C+Preston%3BDunning%2C+John&rft.aulast=Burton&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Toxicology+and+Chemistry&rft.issn=07307268&rft_id=info:doi/10.1897%2F05-708R.1
L2 - http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/122563640/home?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 23
N1 - PubXState - FL
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 7 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - acid volatile sulfides; bioavailability; cadmium; carbon; concentration; copper; data bases; data processing; Europe; hydrology; lead; metals; nickel; organic carbon; parent materials; pollution; quality control; rivers and streams; sampling; sediments; soils; sulfides; techniques; toxicity; trace metals; volatiles; Western Europe; zinc
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1897/05-708R.1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Joergensenium rotatile n. gen., n. sp. (Entactinaria, Radiolaria); its distribution in west Norwegian fjords
AN - 50620403; 2008-109953
AB - A new radiolarian genus and species, Joergensenium rotatile, is described. This species is restricted to recent sediments and plankton samples from the North Atlantic. Its recent distribution in the Norwegian Sea and West Norwegian fjords shows a strong affinity to the neritic province and reaches almost 2% in Hryangerfjord. This species is only known from late Glacial and Holocene sediments in the Nordic seas. This genus shows, however, a patchy stratigraphic distribution with its first occurrence in the south-west Pacific within Paleocene, in the Middle to Late Miocene from the Norwegian Sea, and in the Labrador Sea at the base of biozone NN 21. Two fjords are compared for the general radiolarian distribution, but with special emphasis on the occurrence of J. rotatile in both sediment and plankton.
JF - Micropaleontology
AU - Bjorklund, Kjell R
AU - Dumitrica, Paulian
AU - Dolven, Jane K
AU - Swanberg, Neil R
Y1 - 2007
PY - 2007
DA - 2007
SP - 457
EP - 468
PB - American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY
VL - 53
IS - 6
SN - 0026-2803, 0026-2803
KW - Entactinaria
KW - Joergensenium rotatile
KW - Hardangerfjord
KW - Europe
KW - Holocene
KW - new taxa
KW - upper Pleistocene
KW - Cenozoic
KW - marine sediments
KW - sediments
KW - Invertebrata
KW - Protista
KW - Western Europe
KW - Quaternary
KW - assemblages
KW - Sognefjord
KW - faunal list
KW - Scandinavia
KW - Radiolaria
KW - paleoenvironment
KW - marine environment
KW - Pleistocene
KW - Norway
KW - North Atlantic
KW - microfossils
KW - Atlantic Ocean
KW - 10:Invertebrate paleontology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50620403?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Micropaleontology&rft.atitle=Joergensenium+rotatile+n.+gen.%2C+n.+sp.+%28Entactinaria%2C+Radiolaria%29%3B+its+distribution+in+west+Norwegian+fjords&rft.au=Bjorklund%2C+Kjell+R%3BDumitrica%2C+Paulian%3BDolven%2C+Jane+K%3BSwanberg%2C+Neil+R&rft.aulast=Bjorklund&rft.aufirst=Kjell&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=53&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=457&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Micropaleontology&rft.issn=00262803&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://micropal.geoscienceworld.org/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 32
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 plates, 3 tables, sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - MCPLAI
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - assemblages; Atlantic Ocean; Cenozoic; Entactinaria; Europe; faunal list; Hardangerfjord; Holocene; Invertebrata; Joergensenium rotatile; marine environment; marine sediments; microfossils; new taxa; North Atlantic; Norway; paleoenvironment; Pleistocene; Protista; Quaternary; Radiolaria; Scandinavia; sediments; Sognefjord; upper Pleistocene; Western Europe
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Deep time; a frontier for paleoclimate research
AN - 50089062; 2010-013493
AB - Earth's climate has changed continually, well beyond limits known from the modern and near-modern world. The stratigraphic record is the only archive of the full magnitude and timescales of these climate events, allowing evaluation of these changes from onset through peak and recovery. Yet, Earth's deep time (pre-Quaternary) climate history is not commonly considered in discussions of modern climate change, nor in predicting the occurrence of petroleum systems. Neither is deep time climate research effectively supported and promoted in government, industry, or the professional societies. The past decade of paleoclimate research has been one of discovery, energized by powerful new computer models and more precise climate proxies, permitting better precision and resolution. However, much of this work has focused on the last 10,000 yrs; a period not representative of Earth's range of climatic possibilities, or perhaps our near-future climate state. The full spectrum of climate possibilities must be considered in evaluating the cause-and-effect relationships between climate and civilization, and predicting future climates. Paleoclimate is also a primary control on the occurrence of petroleum reservoir, seal and source rocks. Paleoclimate research continues to advance understanding and incorporate results in evaluating risk in petroleum exploration, but more can be done. A recent research summit at Statoil recognized inclusion of paleoclimate change as critical for further advances in sequence stratigraphy. Industry, academia and government must work together to promote research in deep time paleoclimates to better define both primary forcing factors and environmental consequences that may be vital to societal and industry concerns.
JF - Abstracts: Annual Meeting - American Association of Petroleum Geologists
AU - Lane, H Richard
AU - Perlmutter, Martin A
AU - Armentrout, John M
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2007
PY - 2007
DA - 2007
SP - 79
PB - American Association of Petroleum Geologists and Society for Sedimentary Geology, Tulsa, OK
VL - 2007
KW - Phanerozoic
KW - petroleum exploration
KW - petroleum
KW - research
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - reservoir rocks
KW - 29A:Economic geology, geology of energy sources
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50089062?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Abstracts%3A+Annual+Meeting+-+American+Association+of+Petroleum+Geologists&rft.atitle=Deep+time%3B+a+frontier+for+paleoclimate+research&rft.au=Lane%2C+H+Richard%3BPerlmutter%2C+Martin+A%3BArmentrout%2C+John+M%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Lane&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=2007&rft.issue=&rft.spage=79&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Abstracts%3A+Annual+Meeting+-+American+Association+of+Petroleum+Geologists&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - AAPG 2007 annual convention & exhibition
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2010-01-01
N1 - PubXState - OK
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - #06983
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - paleoclimatology; petroleum; petroleum exploration; Phanerozoic; research; reservoir rocks
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sophorolipid biosynthesis by Candida bombicola from industrial fatty acid residues
AN - 20841404; 7584104
AB - Yeast Candida bombicola is known to produce sophorolipids from a variety of saccharic and lipidic feed-stocks. In the current study, the influence of fatty acid carbon chain length, unsaturation, source of low-cost industrial lipid feed-stocks, and nickel content in lipid feed-stocks on sophorolipid production by C. bombicola were investigated. Saturated and monounsaturated C18 fatty acid gave the highest levels of sophorolipid production while fatty acids with more than one site of unsaturation gave much lower yields. Sophorolipid production was reduced when shorter (=C20) fatty acids were fed. The possibility of exploiting low-cost industrial wastes or by-products for sophorolipid production by batch or fed-batch processes was investigated. Tallow fatty acid residue was the best lipid feed-stock for sophorolipid production (120g/L, fed-batch cultures), while coconut fatty acid residue resulted in the lowest production (40g/L, fed-batch cultures). Co-feeding coconut fatty acid residue with other feed-stocks improved its substrate value in batch cultures. C. bombicola was tolerant to nickel contamination of up to 112.5mg/L during sophorolipid production. Nickel contaminated stearic fatty acid residue was transformed to value added sophorolipid product while nickel was sequestered primarily in biomass for safe removal and recovery. Sophorolipid product obtained from nickel contaminated lipid wastes had low nickel levels (<5mg/L) that could allow its use in low-end consumer products and household applications.
JF - Enzyme and Microbial Technology
AU - Felse, P Arthur
AU - Shah, Vishal
AU - Chan, Jamie
AU - Rao, Kandula J
AU - Gross, Richard A
AD - NSF I/UCR Center for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Polytechnic University, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, NY 11201, USA, rgross@poly.edu
Y1 - 2007/01//
PY - 2007
DA - Jan 2007
SP - 316
EP - 323
PB - Elsevier Science Ltd., The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 40
IS - 2
SN - 0141-0229, 0141-0229
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Sophorolipids
KW - Candida bombicola
KW - Fatty acid residues
KW - Cosubstrate
KW - Tallow fatty acid residue
KW - Stearic fatty acid residue
KW - Coconut fatty acid residue
KW - Nickel sequestering
KW - Contamination
KW - Lipids
KW - Nickel
KW - Enzymes
KW - Biomass
KW - Batch culture
KW - Carbon
KW - Industrial wastes
KW - Fed-batch culture
KW - Fatty acids
KW - Consumers
KW - A 01310:Products of Microorganisms
KW - W 30945:Fermentation & Cell Culture
KW - K 03420:Plant Diseases
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20841404?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Enzyme+and+Microbial+Technology&rft.atitle=Sophorolipid+biosynthesis+by+Candida+bombicola+from+industrial+fatty+acid+residues&rft.au=Felse%2C+P+Arthur%3BShah%2C+Vishal%3BChan%2C+Jamie%3BRao%2C+Kandula+J%3BGross%2C+Richard+A&rft.aulast=Felse&rft.aufirst=P&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=40&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=316&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Enzyme+and+Microbial+Technology&rft.issn=01410229&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.enzmictec.2006.04.013
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Industrial wastes; Carbon; Contamination; Fed-batch culture; Lipids; Nickel; Fatty acids; Enzymes; Consumers; Biomass; Batch culture; Candida bombicola
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enzmictec.2006.04.013
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Networking Particles over Distance Using Oligonucleotide-Based Devices
AN - 20687451; 8023788
AB - Microparticles covered with DNA-based computing elements that sense inputs and release oligonucleotides as outputs could be used to construct autonomous networks with increasingly complex functions. We demonstrate cascades of particles with up to three layers and a nonlinear network with an AND gate hub. In order to establish functional networks, particles do not have to be in direct physical contact.
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
AU - Yashin, Ruslan
AU - Rudchenko, Sergei
AU - Stojanovic, Milan N
AD - the NSF Center for Molecular Cybernetics, Division of Experimental Therapeutics, Department of Medicine, Columbia University,; mns18@columbia.edu] rudchenkos@hss.edu
Y1 - 2007///0,
PY - 2007
DA - 0, 2007
SP - 15581
EP - 15584
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 USA, [mailto:service@acs.org]
VL - 129
IS - 50
SN - 1272-7863, 1272-7863
KW - Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - microparticles
KW - Oligonucleotides
KW - N 14810:Methods
KW - W 30965:Miscellaneous, Reviews
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20687451?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.atitle=Networking+Particles+over+Distance+Using+Oligonucleotide-Based+Devices&rft.au=Yashin%2C+Ruslan%3BRudchenko%2C+Sergei%3BStojanovic%2C+Milan+N&rft.aulast=Yashin&rft.aufirst=Ruslan&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=129&rft.issue=50&rft.spage=15581&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+the+American+Chemical+Society&rft.issn=12727863&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fja074335tPII%3AS0002-7863%2807%2904335-1
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - microparticles; Oligonucleotides
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja074335tPII:S0002-7863(07)04335-1
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Synthesis of Cetuximab-Immunoliposomes via a Cholesterol-Based Membrane Anchor for Targeting of EGFR
AN - 20526693; 7599370
AB - The objective of the present study was to construct epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) targeting cetuximab-immunoliposomes (ILs) for targeted delivery of boron compounds to EGFR(+) glioma cells for neutron capture therapy. The ILs were synthesized by using a novel cholesterol-based membrane anchor, maleimido-PEG-cholesterol (Mal-PEG-Chol), to incorporate cetuximab into liposomes by either surface conjugation or a post-insertion method. For post-insertion, the transfer efficiency of MAb conjugates from micelles to liposome was examined at varying temperatures, mPEG sub(2000)-DSPE ratios, and micelle-to-liposome lipid ratios. Following this, the cetuximab-ILs were evaluated for targeted delivery of the encapsulated boron anion, dodecahydro-closo-dodecaborate (2-) (B sub(12)H super(2) sub(1) super(-) sub(2)), to human EGFR gene transfected F98 sub(EGFR) glioma cells as potential delivery agents for boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT). In addition, cellular uptake of cetuximab-ILs, encapsulating a fluorescence dye, was analyzed by confocal fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry, and boron content was quantified by ICP-MS. Much greater ( similar to 8-fold) cellular uptake of boron was obtained using cetuximab-ILs in EGFR(+) F98 sub(EGFR) compared with nontargeted human IgG-ILs. On the basis of these observations, we have concluded that cholesterol can serve as an effective anchor for MAb in liposomes, and cetuximab-ILs are potentially useful delivery vehicles for BNCT of gliomas.
JF - Bioconjugate Chemistry
AU - Pan, X
AU - Wu, G
AU - Yang, W
AU - Barth, R F
AU - Tjarks, W
AU - Lee, R J
AD - Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC), Center for Affordable Nanoengineering of Polymeric Biomedical Devices (CANPBD), Department of Pathology, Division of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy, College of Pharmacy, and NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC), The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA
Y1 - 2007/01//
PY - 2007
DA - Jan 2007
SP - 101
EP - 108
VL - 18
IS - 1
SN - 1043-1802, 1043-1802
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Temperature effects
KW - Anions
KW - Monoclonal antibodies
KW - Lipids
KW - Epidermal growth factor receptors
KW - Cholesterol
KW - Liposomes
KW - Boron
KW - Brain tumors
KW - Flow cytometry
KW - Neutrons
KW - Micelles
KW - Glioma cells
KW - Glioma
KW - W 30935:Food Biotechnology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20526693?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bioconjugate+Chemistry&rft.atitle=Synthesis+of+Cetuximab-Immunoliposomes+via+a+Cholesterol-Based+Membrane+Anchor+for+Targeting+of+EGFR&rft.au=Pan%2C+X%3BWu%2C+G%3BYang%2C+W%3BBarth%2C+R+F%3BTjarks%2C+W%3BLee%2C+R+J&rft.aulast=Pan&rft.aufirst=X&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=18&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=101&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bioconjugate+Chemistry&rft.issn=10431802&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbc060174r
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Temperature effects; Anions; Monoclonal antibodies; Lipids; Epidermal growth factor receptors; Cholesterol; Boron; Liposomes; Neutrons; Flow cytometry; Brain tumors; Micelles; Glioma cells; Glioma
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bc060174r
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Synthesis and Characterization of Branched Polymers from Lipase-Catalyzed Trimethylolpropane Copolymerizations
AN - 20032539; 7988834
AB - Lipase-catalyzed terpolymerizations were performed with the monomers trimethylolpropane (B sub(3)), 1,8-octanediol (B sub(2)), and adipic acid (A sub(2)). Polymerizations were performed in bulk, at 70 degree C, for 42 h, using immobilized lipase B from Candida antartica (Novozyme-435) as a catalyst. To determine the substitution pattern of trimethylolpropane (TMP) in copolymers, model compounds with variable degrees of acetylation were synthesized. Inverse-gated super(13)C NMR spectra were recorded to first determine the chemical shift positions for mono-, di-, and trisubstituted TMP units and, subsequently, to determine substitution of TMP units along chains. Variation of TMP in the monomer feed gave copolymers with degrees of branching (DB) from 20% to 67%. In one example, a hyperbranched copolyester with 53 mol % TMP adipate units was formed in 80% yield, with M sub(w) 14 100 (relative to polystyrene standards), M sub(w)/M sub(n) 5.3, and DB 36%. Thermal and crystalline properties of the copolyesters were studied by thermogravimetric analysis and differential scanning calorimetry.
JF - Biomacromolecules
AU - Kulshrestha, Ankur S
AU - Gao, Wei
AU - Fu, Hongyong
AU - Gross, Richard A
AD - National Science Foundation Industry/University Cooperative Research Center for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences, Polytechnic University, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201
Y1 - 2007///0,
PY - 2007
DA - 0, 2007
SP - 1794
EP - 1801
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 USA, [mailto:service@acs.org]
VL - 8
IS - 6
SN - 1525-7797, 1525-7797
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Polymerization
KW - Candida
KW - Models
KW - Monomers
KW - Acetylation
KW - Triacylglycerol lipase
KW - adipic acid
KW - Copolymers
KW - polystyrene
KW - N.M.R.
KW - Catalysts
KW - Manganese
KW - Differential scanning calorimetry
KW - W 30910:Imaging
KW - K 03330:Biochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20032539?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomacromolecules&rft.atitle=Synthesis+and+Characterization+of+Branched+Polymers+from+Lipase-Catalyzed+Trimethylolpropane+Copolymerizations&rft.au=Kulshrestha%2C+Ankur+S%3BGao%2C+Wei%3BFu%2C+Hongyong%3BGross%2C+Richard+A&rft.aulast=Kulshrestha&rft.aufirst=Ankur&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=1794&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomacromolecules&rft.issn=15257797&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbm061096d
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Monomers; Triacylglycerol lipase; Acetylation; Polymerization; adipic acid; polystyrene; Copolymers; N.M.R.; Catalysts; Manganese; Models; Differential scanning calorimetry; Candida
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bm061096d
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Lipase-Catalyzed Copolymerization of omega-Pentadecalactone with p- Dioxanone and Characterization of Copolymer Thermal and Crystalline Properties
AN - 19997928; 7988897
AB - Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB), a metal-free enzyme, was successfully employed as catalyst for ring-opening copolymerization of omega- pentadecalactone (PDL) with p-dioxanone (DO) under mild reaction conditions ( 30 000) and a wide range of comonomer contents was synthesized using various PDL/DO feed ratios. During the copolymerization reaction, large ring PDL was found to be more reactive than its smaller counterpart DO, resulting in higher PDL/DO unit ratios in polymer chains than the corresponding PDL/DO monomer ratios in the feed. The copolymers were typically isolated in 50-90 wt % yields as the monomer conversion was limited by the equilibrium between monomers and copolymer. super(1)H and super(13)C NMR analysis on poly(PDL-co-DO) formed by CALB showed that the copolymers contain nearly random sequences of PDL and DO units with a slight tendency toward alternating arrangements. Copolymerization with PDL was found to remarkably enhance PDO thermal stability. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) results demonstrate high crystallinity in all copolymers over the whole range of compositions. Depending on copolymer composition, the crystal lattice of either PDO or PPDL hosts units of the other comonomer, a behavior typical of an isodimorphic system. In poly(PDL-co-DO), both melting temperature and melting enthalpy display a minimum at 70 mol % DO, that is, at the pseudoeutectic composition. WAXS diffractograms show one crystal phase (that of either PPDL or PDO) on either side of the pseudoeutectic and coexistence of PPDL and PDO crystals at the pseudoeutectic.
JF - Biomacromolecules
AU - Jiang, Zhaozhong
AU - Azim, Himanshu
AU - Gross, Richard A
AU - Focarete, Maria Letizia
AU - Scandola, Mariastella
AD - NSF I/UCRC for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences, Polytechnic University, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201
Y1 - 2007///0,
PY - 2007
DA - 0, 2007
SP - 2262
EP - 2269
PB - American Chemical Society, P.O. Box 182426 Columbus OH 43218-2426 USA, [mailto:service@acs.org]
VL - 8
IS - 7
SN - 1525-7797, 1525-7797
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Temperature effects
KW - Crystallinity
KW - Enthalpy
KW - Candida antarctica
KW - Enzymes
KW - Coexistence
KW - Crystals
KW - Melting
KW - Monomers
KW - Triacylglycerol lipase
KW - X-ray scattering
KW - Crystal structure
KW - Copolymers
KW - Atmospheric pressure
KW - N.M.R.
KW - Catalysts
KW - Thermal stability
KW - Differential scanning calorimetry
KW - W 30910:Imaging
KW - K 03330:Biochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19997928?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Biomacromolecules&rft.atitle=Lipase-Catalyzed+Copolymerization+of+omega-Pentadecalactone+with+p-+Dioxanone+and+Characterization+of+Copolymer+Thermal+and+Crystalline+Properties&rft.au=Jiang%2C+Zhaozhong%3BAzim%2C+Himanshu%3BGross%2C+Richard+A%3BFocarete%2C+Maria+Letizia%3BScandola%2C+Mariastella&rft.aulast=Jiang&rft.aufirst=Zhaozhong&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=2262&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Biomacromolecules&rft.issn=15257797&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbm070138a
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Temperature effects; Enthalpy; Crystallinity; Enzymes; Coexistence; Crystals; Monomers; Melting; Triacylglycerol lipase; Copolymers; Crystal structure; X-ray scattering; N.M.R.; Atmospheric pressure; Thermal stability; Catalysts; Differential scanning calorimetry; Candida antarctica
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bm070138a
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Viable algae released by the seastar Dermasteriasimbricata feeding on the symbiotic sea anemone Anthopleura elegantissima
AN - 19596415; 7320278
AB - Echinoderms are major predators of anemones in temperate ecosystems. The fate of two algae, zooxanthellae and zoochlorellae, after their host anemone (Anthopleura elegantissima Brandt) was consumed by the leather star Dermasterias imbricata Grube was determined in experiments conducted in July and August 2004. Productivity, photosynthetic pigments, and mitotic index (percent of cells dividing) were used as indicators of algal health; algae released after leather stars consumed their host were compared with algae freshly isolated from anemones. Two types of waste products contained algae: pellets resulting from extraoral digestion, and feces. Zooxanthellae and zoochlorellae isolated from these waste products were photosynthetic, although to different extents. For algae from feces and pellets, light-saturated photosynthetic rates (P sub(max)) were 85 and 13%, respectively, of P sub(max )of freshly isolated zooxanthellae; and were 20 and 46%, respectively, for zoochlorellae. The photosynthetic pigments and mitotic index (percent of dividing cells) were not altered by the feeding activities of the leather star. These results show that algae released by seastar predation on their hosts remain viable, and are hence available for establishing symbioses in A. elegantissima and other potential hosts.
JF - Marine Biology
AU - Bachman, Sarah
AU - Muller-Parker, Gisele
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA, gmullerp@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2007/01//
PY - 2007
DA - January 2007
SP - 369
EP - 375
PB - Springer-Verlag (Berlin), Heidelberger Platz 3 Berlin 14197 Germany, [mailto:subscriptions@springer.de]
VL - 150
IS - 3
SN - 0025-3162, 0025-3162
KW - Clonal anemone
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Ecology Abstracts
KW - Marine
KW - Feeding
KW - Leather
KW - Symbionts
KW - Marine invertebrates
KW - Predation
KW - Zooxanthellae
KW - Wastes
KW - Dermasterias imbricata
KW - Predators
KW - Digestion
KW - Predator prey interactions
KW - Photosynthetic pigments
KW - Feces
KW - Anthopleura elegantissima
KW - Algae
KW - O 1070:Ecology/Community Studies
KW - Q1 08483:Species interactions: general
KW - K 03490:Miscellaneous
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19596415?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+Biology&rft.atitle=Viable+algae+released+by+the+seastar+Dermasteriasimbricata+feeding+on+the+symbiotic+sea+anemone+Anthopleura+elegantissima&rft.au=Bachman%2C+Sarah%3BMuller-Parker%2C+Gisele&rft.aulast=Bachman&rft.aufirst=Sarah&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=150&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=369&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+Biology&rft.issn=00253162&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00227-006-0344-y
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Symbionts; Marine invertebrates; Predator prey interactions; Zooxanthellae; Photosynthetic pigments; Algae; Digestion; Feeding; Leather; Predation; Wastes; Predators; Feces; Dermasterias imbricata; Anthopleura elegantissima; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00227-006-0344-y
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Assessment of the risk of infection by Cryptosporidium and Giardia in non-potable reclaimed water
AN - 19587905; 7305402
AB - Quantitative risk assessment for Cryptosporidium oocysts and Giardia cysts was performed to determine the public health significance of non-potable use of tertiary treated reclaimed water. Seven reclaimed water treatment plants in the southwestern United States participated in this study. The average public exposure to oocysts and cysts was estimated, based on concentrations, recovery efficiency, viability and three exposure scenarios. The exponential dose-response model was chosen to determine the probability of infection from ingestion of various numbers of oocysts and cysts. The risks of infection for Giardia were approximately one or two orders of magnitude higher than those for Cryptosporidium. The combined risks of infection from oocysts and cysts at sites using a combination of chlorination and UV disinfection would meet the annual acceptable risk of 1.00E-04, whereas those at the other utilities using only chlorination indicated higher probability of infection than the 1.00E-04 resulting from accidental consumption of a small amount of non-potable reclaimed water.
JF - Water Science & Technology
AU - Ryu, H
AU - Alum, A
AU - Mena, K D
AU - Abbaszadegan, M
A2 - Kim, IS
A2 - Cho, J
A2 - Kim, S (eds)
Y1 - 2007
PY - 2007
DA - 2007
SP - 8
EP - 290
PB - IWA Publishing, Alliance House 12 Caxton Street London SW1H 0QS UK, [URL:http://www.iwaponline.com/wst/toc.htm]
SN - 1843395819
KW - Aqualine Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Sustainability Science Abstracts; Risk Abstracts; Health & Safety Science Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Water Reuse
KW - Disinfection
KW - Reclaimed Water
KW - Infection
KW - Utilities
KW - water reclamation
KW - Public health
KW - Giardia
KW - Assessments
KW - Dose-response effects
KW - Ultraviolet radiation
KW - infection
KW - Oocysts
KW - Wastewater Renovation
KW - Reclaimed water
KW - Ingestion
KW - Cysts
KW - Risk
KW - USA
KW - Cryptosporidium
KW - Chlorination
KW - Waste water
KW - H 3000:Environment and Ecology
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
KW - K 03400:Human Diseases
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - R2 23060:Medical and environmental health
KW - P 6000:TOXICOLOGY AND HEALTH
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Aqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Ryu%2C+H%3BAlum%2C+A%3BMena%2C+K+D%3BAbbaszadegan%2C+M&rft.aulast=Ryu&rft.aufirst=H&rft.date=2007-01-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=283&rft.isbn=1843395819&rft.btitle=Assessment+of+the+risk+of+infection+by+Cryptosporidium+and+Giardia+in+non-potable+reclaimed+water&rft.title=Assessment+of+the+risk+of+infection+by+Cryptosporidium+and+Giardia+in+non-potable+reclaimed+water&rft.issn=02731223&rft_id=info:doi/10.2166%2Fwst.2007.047
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-04-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2007.047
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Progress in governance of converging technologies integrated from the nanoscale.
AN - 68318297; 17312249
AB - It is expected that convergence of nanotechnology, modern biology, the digital revolution, and cognitive sciences will bring about tremendous improvements in transformative tools, generate new products and services, enable human personal abilities and social achievements, and in time reshape societal relationships. This article focuses on the progress made in governance of such converging, emerging technologies that are integrated with more traditional technologies. The proposed framework for governance calls for several key functions: supporting the transformative impact; advancing responsible development that includes health, safety, and ethical concerns; encouraging national and global partnerships; and commitment to long-term planning with effects on human development. Principles of good governance include participation of all those involved or affected by the new technologies, transparency, participant responsibility, and effective strategic planning. Introduction and management of converging technologies must be done with respect for immediate concerns (such as information technology privacy, access to medical advancements, and addressing toxicity of new nanomaterials) and longer-term concerns (such as human development and concern for human integrity, dignity, and welfare). Four levels of governance of converging technologies have been identified: (a) adapting existing regulations and organizations; (b) establishing new programs, regulations, and organizations specifically to handle converging technologies; (c) national policies and institutional capacity building; and (d) international agreements and partnerships.
JF - Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
AU - Roco, Mihail C
AD - The National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Rm. 505 N, Arlington, VA 22230, USA. mroco@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - 1
EP - 23
VL - 1093
SN - 0077-8923, 0077-8923
KW - Index Medicus
KW - Biotechnology -- ethics
KW - Biotechnology -- education
KW - Information Systems -- legislation & jurisprudence
KW - Biotechnology -- legislation & jurisprudence
KW - Information Systems -- ethics
KW - Nanotechnology -- ethics
KW - Nanotechnology -- legislation & jurisprudence
KW - Social Change
KW - Interdisciplinary Communication
KW - Nanotechnology -- education
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/68318297?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+New+York+Academy+of+Sciences&rft.atitle=Progress+in+governance+of+converging+technologies+integrated+from+the+nanoscale.&rft.au=Roco%2C+Mihail+C&rft.aulast=Roco&rft.aufirst=Mihail&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=1093&rft.issue=&rft.spage=1&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+New+York+Academy+of+Sciences&rft.issn=00778923&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2007-03-28
N1 - Date created - 2007-02-21
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - American Geophysical Union 2006 fall meeting
AN - 51439897; 2007-049204
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Illangasekare, T H
AU - Obeysekera, J
AU - Petera, L
AU - Gunatilaka, A
AU - Dharmagunawardane, H A
AU - Liyanage, J
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - Abstract U52A
EP - 04
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 87
IS - Fall Meeting Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - tsunamis
KW - monitoring
KW - salt-water intrusion
KW - Indian Ocean tsunami 2004
KW - pollution
KW - atmospheric precipitation
KW - salinity
KW - Sri Lanka
KW - drinking water
KW - potability
KW - ground water
KW - aquifers
KW - recharge
KW - theoretical models
KW - coastal environment
KW - Asia
KW - water resources
KW - water pollution
KW - coastal aquifers
KW - 22:Environmental geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51439897?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=American+Geophysical+Union+2006+fall+meeting&rft.au=Illangasekare%2C+T+H%3BObeysekera%2C+J%3BPetera%2C+L%3BGunatilaka%2C+A%3BDharmagunawardane%2C+H+A%3BLiyanage%2C+J%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Illangasekare&rft.aufirst=T&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=87&rft.issue=Fall+Meeting+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2006 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - aquifers; Asia; atmospheric precipitation; coastal aquifers; coastal environment; drinking water; ground water; Indian Ocean tsunami 2004; monitoring; pollution; potability; recharge; salinity; salt-water intrusion; Sri Lanka; theoretical models; tsunamis; water pollution; water resources
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessment of mantle thermal structure beneath the Snake River plain-Yellowstone Hotspot
AN - 51403088; 2007-075294
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Schutt, D L
AU - Hughes, S S
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - Abstract V33D
EP - 06
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 87
IS - Fall Meeting Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - silicates
KW - upwelling
KW - geologic thermometry
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - olivine group
KW - thermal regime
KW - melts
KW - continental lithosphere
KW - Western U.S.
KW - olivine
KW - basalts
KW - orthosilicates
KW - rare earths
KW - mantle plumes
KW - P-T conditions
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - lithosphere
KW - cratons
KW - nesosilicates
KW - extension
KW - asthenosphere
KW - metals
KW - magmas
KW - Snake River plain
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51403088?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Assessment+of+mantle+thermal+structure+beneath+the+Snake+River+plain-Yellowstone+Hotspot&rft.au=Leeman%2C+W+P%3BSchutt%2C+D+L%3BHughes%2C+S+S%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Leeman&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=87&rft.issue=Fall+Meeting+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2006 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - asthenosphere; basalts; continental lithosphere; cratons; extension; geologic thermometry; Idaho; igneous rocks; lithosphere; magmas; mantle; mantle plumes; melts; metals; nesosilicates; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; P-T conditions; rare earths; silicates; Snake River plain; thermal regime; United States; upwelling; volcanic rocks; Western U.S.; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Snake River plain silicic volcanism; implications for magmatic fluxes associated with the Yellowstone Hot Spot
AN - 50147337; 2009-091141
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Bonnichsen, B
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - Abstract V44C
EP - 04
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 87
IS - Fall Meeting Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - continental crust
KW - melts
KW - Cenozoic
KW - dates
KW - volcanism
KW - absolute age
KW - thickness
KW - basaltic composition
KW - Ar/Ar
KW - Idaho
KW - rhyolites
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - magmatism
KW - Miocene
KW - Tertiary
KW - Neogene
KW - magmas
KW - heating
KW - Snake River plain
KW - crust
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50147337?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Snake+River+plain+silicic+volcanism%3B+implications+for+magmatic+fluxes+associated+with+the+Yellowstone+Hot+Spot&rft.au=Bonnichsen%2C+B%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Bonnichsen&rft.aufirst=B&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=87&rft.issue=Fall+Meeting+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2006 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - absolute age; Ar/Ar; basaltic composition; Cenozoic; continental crust; crust; dates; heating; Idaho; igneous rocks; magmas; magmatism; mantle; melts; Miocene; Neogene; rhyolites; Snake River plain; Tertiary; thickness; United States; volcanic rocks; volcanism; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A helium isotope perspective on mantle sources for basaltic volcanism in the Northwestern US
AN - 50144070; 2009-091301
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Graham, D W
AU - Reid, M R
AU - Jordan, B T
AU - Grunder, A L
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Lupton, J E
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - Abstract V43D
EP - 02
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 87
IS - Fall Meeting Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - hot spots
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - isotopes
KW - igneous rocks
KW - mantle
KW - continental crust
KW - He-3
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Oregon
KW - Newberry Volcano
KW - volcanism
KW - noble gases
KW - basalts
KW - helium
KW - upper mantle
KW - Idaho
KW - Yellowstone Hot Spot
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Northwestern U.S.
KW - Owyhee Mountains
KW - Cascade Range
KW - plate tectonics
KW - Deschutes County Oregon
KW - mid-ocean ridge basalts
KW - slabs
KW - He-4/He-3
KW - Snake River plain
KW - crust
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2006 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - basalts; Cascade Range; continental crust; crust; Deschutes County Oregon; He-3; He-4/He-3; helium; hot spots; Idaho; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; mantle; mid-ocean ridge basalts; Newberry Volcano; noble gases; Northwestern U.S.; Oregon; Owyhee Mountains; plate tectonics; slabs; Snake River plain; stable isotopes; United States; upper mantle; volcanic rocks; volcanism; Yellowstone Hot Spot
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Transformative Concepts in Scientific Convergence
AN - 20033449; 7910045
AB - AbstractThis article suggests eight high-level concepts that can promote convergence by identifying analogies across fields of science and engineering. Conservation: Many properties are conserved, through symmetries, parity laws, and feedback-regulated stabilities in complex adaptive systems. Indecision: Inconsistency, undecidability, uncertainty, chance, deterministic chaos, and similar concepts are fundamental principles in the dynamics of systems over time. Configuration: Detailed, dynamic structures of objects determine their properties, notably the unity of nature at the nanoscale. Interaction: Elements of a system influence each other, generating higher-level dynamics and other emergent phenomena. Variation: Statistical distributions of properties are caused by the combination of chance and divergent processes of interaction. Evolution: Marked by drift, natural selection, and a trend toward greater complexity, evolution exploits variation to develop new configurations that compete through interactions. Information: Scientific laws can be analyzed in terms of information content, and flow, while the doing of any science today relies heavily upon information technology. Cognition: Mental or computational process is the dynamic aspect of information, fundamental to the human practice of science.
JF - Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
AU - Bainbridge, William Sims
AD - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA, wbainbri@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - Dec 2006
SP - 24
EP - 45
PB - Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 9600 Garsington Road
VL - 1093
IS - 1
SN - 0077-8923, 0077-8923
KW - Sustainability Science Abstracts
KW - conservation
KW - indecision
KW - configuration
KW - interaction
KW - variation
KW - evolution
KW - information
KW - cognition
KW - parity
KW - cognitive ability
KW - Conservation
KW - Technology
KW - M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20033449?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Assamodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+New+York+Academy+of+Sciences&rft.atitle=Transformative+Concepts+in+Scientific+Convergence&rft.au=Bainbridge%2C+William+Sims&rft.aulast=Bainbridge&rft.aufirst=William&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=1093&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=24&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+New+York+Academy+of+Sciences&rft.issn=00778923&rft_id=info:doi/10.1196%2Fannals.1382.003
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - parity; cognitive ability; Conservation; Technology
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1196/annals.1382.003
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Paleoceanographic musings
AN - 1371760448; 2013-048046
JF - Oceanography (Washington D.C.)
AU - Dybas, Cheryl Lyn
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - 178
EP - 181
PB - Oceanography Society, Washington, DC
VL - 19
IS - 4
SN - 1042-8275, 1042-8275
KW - Protista
KW - Jurassic
KW - Eocene
KW - Cretaceous
KW - biostratigraphy
KW - paleo-oceanography
KW - Paleogene
KW - paleogeography
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Mesozoic
KW - climate change
KW - Foraminifera
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Tertiary
KW - Radiolaria
KW - paleoenvironment
KW - paleotemperature
KW - CLIMAP
KW - Invertebrata
KW - Deep Sea Drilling Project
KW - Ocean Drilling Program
KW - world ocean
KW - microfossils
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1371760448?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Oceanography+%28Washington+D.C.%29&rft.atitle=Paleoceanographic+musings&rft.au=Dybas%2C+Cheryl+Lyn&rft.aulast=Dybas&rft.aufirst=Cheryl&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=19&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=178&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Oceanography+%28Washington+D.C.%29&rft.issn=10428275&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.tos.org/oceanography/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2016, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2013-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2016-10-25
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - biostratigraphy; Cenozoic; CLIMAP; climate change; Cretaceous; Deep Sea Drilling Project; Eocene; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; Jurassic; Mesozoic; microfossils; Ocean Drilling Program; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; paleoenvironment; Paleogene; paleogeography; paleotemperature; Protista; Radiolaria; Tertiary; world ocean
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Radiocarbon dating of diatom-bound organic compounds
AN - 1015236952; 2007-080019
JF - Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Hatte, C
AU - Hodgins, G
AU - Jull, T
AU - Cruz, R
AU - Lange, T
AU - Biddulph, D
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/12//
PY - 2006
DA - December 2006
SP - Abstract PP22B
EP - 03
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 87
IS - Fall Meeting Suppl.
SN - 0096-3941, 0096-3941
KW - United States
KW - methods
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - isotopes
KW - algae
KW - paleoclimatology
KW - Holocene
KW - Cenozoic
KW - marine sediments
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - diatoms
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - absolute age
KW - applications
KW - Plantae
KW - Quaternary
KW - frustules
KW - Texas
KW - sample preparation
KW - organic compounds
KW - marine environment
KW - lacustrine environment
KW - C-14
KW - proteins
KW - microfossils
KW - lake sediments
KW - 03:Geochronology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1015236952?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.atitle=Radiocarbon+dating+of+diatom-bound+organic+compounds&rft.au=Hatte%2C+C%3BHodgins%2C+G%3BJull%2C+T%3BCruz%2C+R%3BLange%2C+T%3BBiddulph%2C+D%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Hatte&rft.aufirst=C&rft.date=2006-12-01&rft.volume=87&rft.issue=Fall+Meeting+Suppl.&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Eos%2C+Transactions%2C+American+Geophysical+Union&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - American Geophysical Union 2006 fall meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - EOSTAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - absolute age; algae; applications; C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; diatoms; frustules; Holocene; isotopes; lacustrine environment; lake sediments; marine environment; marine sediments; methods; microfossils; organic compounds; paleoclimatology; Plantae; proteins; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; sample preparation; sediments; Southern Ocean; Texas; United States
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Laboratory Requirements Related to Quality Control and cGMP Compliance
T2 - 7th International Conference and Exhibition on Nutraceuticals and Functional Foods (Worldnutra 2006)
AN - 40425442; 4451586
JF - 7th International Conference and Exhibition on Nutraceuticals and Functional Foods (Worldnutra 2006)
AU - Buening, Delfina
Y1 - 2006/11/05/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Nov 05
KW - Compliance
KW - Quality control
KW - Cyclic GMP
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40425442?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=7th+International+Conference+and+Exhibition+on+Nutraceuticals+and+Functional+Foods+%28Worldnutra+2006%29&rft.atitle=Laboratory+Requirements+Related+to+Quality+Control+and+cGMP+Compliance&rft.au=Buening%2C+Delfina&rft.aulast=Buening&rft.aufirst=Delfina&rft.date=2006-11-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=7th+International+Conference+and+Exhibition+on+Nutraceuticals+and+Functional+Foods+%28Worldnutra+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.worldnutra.com/2006/conference/program/details/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A Century of Continuity and (Little) Change in the Undergraduate Political Science Curriculum
AN - 59735318; 200703790
AB - Although in recent years there has emerged a renewed interest in teaching and learning issues in the APSA, relatively little attention has been paid to the structure of the undergraduate political science curriculum. In this article we conduct a broad survey of articles that appeared in the 'APSR' from 1906 to 1990 and find that (1) in the past the association paid much attention to the undergraduate political science curriculum; (2) over time attention shifted from a conception of the major as promoting substantive knowledge to a conception that emphasized skills; and (3) current concerns regarding skills, sequencing, and capstone experiences were all discussed several decades before the appearance of the 'Wahlke Report' in 1991. We offer an explanation for the ebb and flow of the attention curricular issues received historically in the APSA, and suggest what the future may hold for current efforts to reexamine the structure of the undergraduate political science curriculum. Adapted from the source document.
JF - American Political Science Review
AU - Ishiyama, John
AU - Breuning, Marijke
AU - Lopez, Linda
AD - Truman State University jishiyam@truman.edu mbrunin@truman.edu llopez@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2006/11//
PY - 2006
DA - November 2006
SP - 659
EP - 665
PB - Cambridge University Press, New York NY
VL - 100
IS - 4
SN - 0003-0554, 0003-0554
KW - Political Science
KW - Skills
KW - Learning
KW - Teaching
KW - Curriculum
KW - Associations
KW - article
KW - 9021: academic discipline; professional issues (teaching, academic careers)
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/59735318?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Political+Science+Review&rft.atitle=A+Century+of+Continuity+and+%28Little%29+Change+in+the+Undergraduate+Political+Science+Curriculum&rft.au=Ishiyama%2C+John%3BBreuning%2C+Marijke%3BLopez%2C+Linda&rft.aulast=Ishiyama&rft.aufirst=John&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=100&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=659&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Political+Science+Review&rft.issn=00030554&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017%2FS0003055406062551
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2007-04-01
N1 - Number of references - 36
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Political Science; Curriculum; Skills; Learning; Associations; Teaching
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0003055406062551
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - AE forum: IRBs, bureaucratic regulation, and academic freedom
AN - 36548556; 3355973
JF - American ethnologist
AU - Lederman, Rena
AU - Bradburd, Daniel
AU - Katz, Jack
AU - Shweder, Richard A
AU - Winslow, Deborah
AU - Fassin, Didier
AU - Plattner, Stuart
AU - Ribeiro, Gustavo Lins
AU - Strathern, Marilyn
AU - Sundar, Nandini
AU - Brenneis, Don
AU - Annas, George J
AD - Princeton University ; Clarkson University ; University of California ; University of Chicago ; National Science Foundation ; Université Paris Nord ; University of Cambridge ; Delhi University ; Boston University
Y1 - 2006/11//
PY - 2006
DA - Nov 2006
SP - 475
EP - 548
VL - 33
IS - 4
SN - 0094-0496, 0094-0496
KW - Anthropology
KW - Academic discipline
KW - Social anthropology
KW - Ethnography
KW - Employment
KW - Practice
KW - Ethnology
KW - Biographies
KW - Bureaucracy
KW - Social science research
KW - Human rights
KW - Indigenous populations
KW - Universities
KW - Academic freedom
KW - Quality of life
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/36548556?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+ethnologist&rft.atitle=AE+forum%3A+IRBs%2C+bureaucratic+regulation%2C+and+academic+freedom&rft.au=Lederman%2C+Rena%3BBradburd%2C+Daniel%3BKatz%2C+Jack%3BShweder%2C+Richard+A%3BWinslow%2C+Deborah%3BFassin%2C+Didier%3BPlattner%2C+Stuart%3BRibeiro%2C+Gustavo+Lins%3BStrathern%2C+Marilyn%3BSundar%2C+Nandini%3BBrenneis%2C+Don%3BAnnas%2C+George+J&rft.aulast=Lederman&rft.aufirst=Rena&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=475&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+ethnologist&rft.issn=00940496&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - SuppNotes - Collection of 14 articles
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 4469 1077; 10525 12162 3898; 4214; 9979; 11770 1077; 11919 10902; 4460; 504; 506 5278 9705; 13126 4081 6590; 1604 7464; 1832 567; 6314 9846; 6103 11032 9705
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - NSF supports ethnographic research
AN - 36538950; 3355874
JF - American ethnologist
AU - Winslow, Deborah
AD - National Science Foundation
Y1 - 2006/11//
PY - 2006
DA - Nov 2006
SP - 519
EP - 521
VL - 33
IS - 4
SN - 0094-0496, 0094-0496
KW - Anthropology
KW - Social science research
KW - Scientific research
KW - Ethnography
KW - Ethnology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/36538950?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aibss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+ethnologist&rft.atitle=NSF+supports+ethnographic+research&rft.au=Winslow%2C+Deborah&rft.aulast=Winslow&rft.aufirst=Deborah&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=33&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=519&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+ethnologist&rft.issn=00940496&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 4469 1077; 4460; 11919 10902; 11347 10902
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Amino Acid Conjugated Sophorolipids: A New Family of Biologically Active Functionalized Glycolipids
AN - 19886367; 7598606
AB - Sophorolipids (SLs) are extra cellular glycolipids produced by Candida bombicola ATCC 22214 when grown in the presence of glucose and fatty acids. These compounds have a disaccharide head group connected to a long-chain hydroxyl-fatty acid by a glycosidic bond. To explore structure-activity of modified SLs, a new family of amino acid-SL derivatives was prepared. Synthesized analogs consist of amino acids linked by amide bonds formed between their alpha -amino moiety and the carboxyl group of ring-opened SL fatty acids. Their preparation involved the following: (i) hydrolysis of a natural SL mixture with aqueous alkali to give SL free acids, (ii) coupling of free acids to protected amino acids using dicarbodiimide, and (iii) removing amino acid carboxyl protecting groups. These conjugates were evaluated for their antibacterial, anti-HIV, and spermicidal activity. All tested analogs showed antibacterial activity against both gram +ve and gram -ve organisms. Leucine-conjugated SL was most efficient. For example, the minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) for Moraxella sp. and E. coli were 0.83 and 1.67 mg/mL, respectively. Among the alkyl esters of amino acid conjugated SLs, the ethyl ester of leucine-SLs was most active. Against Moraxella sp., S. sanguinis, and M. imperiale, MIC values are 7.62 x 10 super(-4), 2.28 x 10 super(-3) and 1.67 mg/mL, respectively. All compounds displayed virus-inactivating activity with 50% effective concentrations (EC sub(50)) below 200 mu g/mL. The EC sub(50) of leucine-SL ethyl ester was 24.1 mu g/mL, showing that it is more potent than commercial spermicide nonoxynol-9 (EC sub(50) approximately 65 mu g/mL).
JF - Bioconjugate Chemistry
AU - Azim, A
AU - Shah, V
AU - Doncel, G F
AU - Peterson, N
AU - Gao, W
AU - Gross, R
AD - NSF I/UCR Center for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing of Macromolecules, Polytechnic University, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201, USA
Y1 - 2006/11//
PY - 2006
DA - Nov 2006
SP - 1523
EP - 1529
VL - 17
IS - 6
SN - 1043-1802, 1043-1802
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Virology & AIDS Abstracts; Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Amino acids
KW - Antibacterial activity
KW - New families
KW - Moraxella
KW - Glucose
KW - Esters
KW - Protecting groups
KW - Hydrolysis
KW - Minimum inhibitory concentration
KW - Disaccharides
KW - Candida bombicola
KW - Glycolipids
KW - Human immunodeficiency virus
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - Fatty acids
KW - Alkalis
KW - amides
KW - Phospholipids
KW - V 22360:AIDS and HIV
KW - K 03330:Biochemistry
KW - J 02320:Cell Biology
KW - W 30915:Pharmaceuticals & Vaccines
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19886367?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Bioconjugate+Chemistry&rft.atitle=Amino+Acid+Conjugated+Sophorolipids%3A+A+New+Family+of+Biologically+Active+Functionalized+Glycolipids&rft.au=Azim%2C+A%3BShah%2C+V%3BDoncel%2C+G+F%3BPeterson%2C+N%3BGao%2C+W%3BGross%2C+R&rft.aulast=Azim&rft.aufirst=A&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=17&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=1523&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Bioconjugate+Chemistry&rft.issn=10431802&rft_id=info:doi/10.1021%2Fbc060094n
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-10-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Amino acids; New families; Antibacterial activity; Glucose; Esters; Minimum inhibitory concentration; Hydrolysis; Protecting groups; Disaccharides; Glycolipids; Fatty acids; Alkalis; amides; Phospholipids; Candida bombicola; Human immunodeficiency virus; Moraxella; Escherichia coli
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bc060094n
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic toxicity of sediment-associated linear alkylbenzene sulphonates (LAS) to freshwater benthic organisms
AN - 19327470; 7070080
AB - The toxicity of linear alkylbenzene sulphonates (LAS), to freshwater benthic organisms was assessed during exposure to spiked sediment. Lethal and sub-lethal end-points were monitored for two organisms (oligochaete Lumbriculus variegatus and nematode Caenorhabditis elegans). Results demonstrated relatively low toxicity (LOECs >100 mg/kg dry weight). No observed effect concentrations (NOECs) of 81 mg/kg dw (Lumbriculus) and 100 mg/kg dw (Caenorhabditis) were determined. For the oligochaete, no specific endpoint was particularly sensitive to LAS. For the nematode, egg production was the most sensitive endpoint. Significant degradation was measured over the 28-day duration of the Lumbriculus study, equating to a half-life of 20 days in sediment. This paper provides sediment toxicity data for LAS, essential for a detailed and accurate environment risk assessment.
JF - Environmental Pollution
AU - Comber, SDW
AU - Conrad, A U
AU - Hoess, S
AU - Webb, S
AU - Marshall, S
AD - WRc-NSF, Henley Road, Medmenham, Marlow, Buckinghamshire, SL7 2HD, UK, sean.comber@atkinsglobal.com
Y1 - 2006/11//
PY - 2006
DA - November 2006
SP - 661
EP - 668
PB - Elsevier Science Ltd., The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl]
VL - 144
IS - 2
SN - 0269-7491, 0269-7491
KW - Angleworms
KW - Earthworms
KW - Nematodes
KW - Oligochaetes
KW - Roundworms
KW - Threadworms
KW - ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts
KW - Caenorhabditis
KW - Linear alkylbenzene sulphonates
KW - Lumbriculus
KW - Nematode
KW - Toxicity
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Pollution monitoring
KW - Sulphonates
KW - Radioactive Half-life
KW - Egg production
KW - Toxicity tests
KW - Linear Alkyl Sulfonates
KW - Oligochaeta
KW - Assessments
KW - Weight
KW - Chronic toxicity
KW - Caenorhabditis elegans
KW - Sediment Contamination
KW - Pollution indicators
KW - Nematoda
KW - Pollution
KW - Sediment pollution
KW - Environmental assessment
KW - Inland water environment
KW - Sediments
KW - Lumbriculus variegatus
KW - Bioaccumulation
KW - Alkylbenzenes
KW - Water Pollution Effects
KW - Freshwater organisms
KW - Toxicity testing
KW - Surfactants
KW - Benthos
KW - Q5 08504:Effects on organisms
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - Q2 09261:General
KW - X 24350:Industrial Chemicals
KW - P 6000:TOXICOLOGY AND HEALTH
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19327470?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Pollution&rft.atitle=Chronic+toxicity+of+sediment-associated+linear+alkylbenzene+sulphonates+%28LAS%29+to+freshwater+benthic+organisms&rft.au=Comber%2C+SDW%3BConrad%2C+A+U%3BHoess%2C+S%3BWebb%2C+S%3BMarshall%2C+S&rft.aulast=Comber&rft.aufirst=SDW&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=144&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=661&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Pollution&rft.issn=02697491&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.envpol.2005.12.049
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2006-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Pollution monitoring; Sediment pollution; Bioaccumulation; Environmental assessment; Sulphonates; Toxicity; Inland water environment; Pollution indicators; Toxicity tests; Risk assessment; Alkylbenzenes; Chronic toxicity; Egg production; Pollution; Sediments; Freshwater organisms; Surfactants; Toxicity testing; Benthos; Oligochaetes; Weight; Assessments; Water Pollution Effects; Sediment Contamination; Radioactive Half-life; Nematodes; Linear Alkyl Sulfonates; Lumbriculus variegatus; Caenorhabditis; Lumbriculus; Caenorhabditis elegans; Nematoda; Oligochaeta
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2005.12.049
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Preliminary results of the Lake Peten Itza Scientific Drilling Project
AN - 1033530804; 2012-073334
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Hodell, David
AU - Anselmetti, Flavio
AU - Ariztegui, Daniel
AU - Brenner, Mark
AU - Curtis, Jason
Y1 - 2006/11//
PY - 2006
DA - November 2006
SP - 5
EP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 4
IS - 2
KW - Quaternary
KW - isotopes
KW - Guatemala
KW - Lake Peten Itza
KW - Holocene
KW - cores
KW - Lake Peten Itza Scientific Drilling Project
KW - Cenozoic
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - pollen
KW - carbon
KW - palynomorphs
KW - Pleistocene
KW - miospores
KW - C-14
KW - pollen analysis
KW - Central America
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1033530804?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=DOSECC+News&rft.atitle=Preliminary+results+of+the+Lake+Peten+Itza+Scientific+Drilling+Project&rft.au=Hodell%2C+David%3BAnselmetti%2C+Flavio%3BAriztegui%2C+Daniel%3BBrenner%2C+Mark%3BCurtis%2C+Jason&rft.aulast=Hodell&rft.aufirst=David&rft.date=2006-11-01&rft.volume=4&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=5&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=DOSECC+News&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 3
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Document feature - strat. col.
N1 - Last updated - 2012-10-18
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; Central America; cores; Guatemala; Holocene; isotopes; Lake Peten Itza; Lake Peten Itza Scientific Drilling Project; miospores; palynomorphs; Pleistocene; pollen; pollen analysis; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Communicating the Imperatives of Sustainability with a Sense of Wonder
T2 - 2006 Annual Meeting and Exposition of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2006)
AN - 40326048; 4403426
JF - 2006 Annual Meeting and Exposition of the Geological Society of America (GSA 2006)
AU - Dybas, Cheryl Lyn
Y1 - 2006/10/22/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Oct 22
KW - Resource management
KW - U 5500:Geoscience
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L2 - http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2006AM/finalprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - A US Perspective
T2 - 5th Plant Genomics European Meeting (Plant GEMs 5)
AN - 40324880; 4405428
JF - 5th Plant Genomics European Meeting (Plant GEMs 5)
AU - Silverthorne, Jane
Y1 - 2006/10/11/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Oct 11
KW - Genomics
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
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L2 - http://www.distagenomics.unibo.it/plantgems/PlantG_programme.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-27
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Communicating the imperatives of sustainability with a sense of wonder
AN - 50538872; 2009-009079
AB - "If facts are the seeds that later produce knowledge and wisdom, then the impressions of the senses are the fertile soil in which the seeds must grow." Rachel Carson, author of the best-selling book Silent Spring, wrote those words in a later book, The Sense of Wonder. Her thoughts were echoed in a recent NRC report, Our Common Journey: A Transition Toward Sustainability. How do we communicate this imperative to the public at large? A 2004 NSF survey found that most people get their information about science--including sustainability issues--from the media: print, broadcast, and now, the Internet. The challenge and opportunity for scientists is to make sustainability relevant to the everyday lives of these readers and listeners. Science news "consumers" are hungry for information, and are asking: how does this subject relate to me personally? Knowing the audience is therefore key to communicating the sustainability imperative. Surveys show that people are particularly drawn to science stories that convey a sense of wonder about the complexities, and future of, our planet--in essence, about Earth's sustainability.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Dybas, Cheryl Lyn
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/10//
PY - 2006
DA - October 2006
SP - 241
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 38
IS - 7
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - geology
KW - public awareness
KW - future
KW - sustainable development
KW - 15:Miscellaneous
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, 2006 annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - future; geology; public awareness; sustainable development
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Making Oligo-Peptide Synthesis Look Easy: Papain-Catalyzed Oligo(Gama-Ethyl-L-Glutamate) Synthesis
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39282579; 4363475 DE:
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Li, Geng
AU - Vaidya, Alankar
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Gao, Wei
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/232nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NMR and Molecular Modeling Studies of Geochemical Aqueous Interfaces
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39252637; 4357398
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Kirkpatrick, R James
AU - Kalinichev, Andrey G
AU - Padma, Kumar P
AU - Reinholdt, Marc X
AU - Li, Qiang
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - N.M.R.
KW - Geochemistry
KW - Molecular modelling
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Effects of Modifying Functional Groups on Interfacial Behavior of Hybrid Silicone Polymers
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39252596; 4357387
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Mehta, Somil C
AU - Somasundaran, P
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Polymers
KW - Silicone
KW - Hybrids
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Lipase Catalyzed Route to Hyperbranched Polymers with Dendritic Trimethylolpropane Units
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39251817; 4363522
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Kulshrestha, Ankur
AU - Gao, Wei
AU - Fu, Hongyong
AU - Gross, Richard
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Polymers
KW - Lipase
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Protein Engineering of Lipase B from Candida Antarctica for Polyester Synthesis
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39250207; 4363508
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Mang, Harald
AU - Yang, Jun
AU - Wallner, Sabine R
AU - Gao, Wei
AU - Minshull, Jeremy
AU - Ness, Jon
AU - Govindarajan, Sridhar
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Antarctica
KW - Lipase
KW - Protein engineering
KW - Candida antarctica
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/232nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Metathesis Polymerization of Natural Glycolipids
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39249785; 4363528
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Wallner, Sabine R
AU - Gao, Wei
AU - Hagver, Rena
AU - Shah, Vishal
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Mang, Harald
AU - Ilker, M Firat
AU - Bell, Christen M
AU - Burke, Kelly A
AU - Coughlin, E Bryan
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Glycolipids
KW - Polymerization
KW - Complex lipids
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys.acs.org/acs/232nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Cutinase: A New Biocatalyst for Polyester Synthesis Via Polycondensation Reactions
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39249325; 4363523
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Azim, Abul
AU - Hunsen, Mo
AU - Mang, Harald
AU - Wallner, Sabine R
AU - Ronkvist, Asa
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Biocatalysts
KW - Cutinase
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Immobilization of Candida Antarctica Lipase B on Macroporous Resins: Effects of Resin Chemistry, Reaction Conditions and Resin Hydrophobicity
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39249255; 4363520
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Vaidya, Alankar
AU - Bohling, James C
AU - Miller, M Elizabeth
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Antarctica
KW - Resins
KW - Immobilization
KW - Lipase
KW - Hydrophobicity
KW - Candida antarctica
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Structure and Hydrogen Bonding in Hydrothermal H2O-NaCl Solutions: Are IR and Raman Vibrational Spectra Telling us the Whole Story?
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39234348; 4358842
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Kalinichev, Andrey G
AU - Bondarenko, Galina V
AU - Gorbaty, Yuri E
AU - James, Kirkpatrick R
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Hydrogen bonding
KW - Adhesion
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Molecular Dynamics Simulation of Cationic Complexation with Natural Organic Matter
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39225530; 4357676
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Kalinichev, Andrey G
AU - Kirkpatrick, R James
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Organic matter
KW - Simulation
KW - Molecular dynamics
KW - Cations
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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T1 - Distribution, Formation, and Fragmentation of Neutral Hydrogen Bonded, Van Der Waals, and Metal Oxide Clusters Following 26.5 Ev Soft X-Ray Laser Ionization
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39224869; 4362856
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Dong, Feng
AU - Heinbuch, Scott
AU - Rocca, Jorge J
AU - Bernstein, Elliot R
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Lasers
KW - Hydrogen
KW - Metals
KW - Ionization
KW - Oxides
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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T1 - Reagent Adsorption on Precious Metals and Alloys
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39221644; 4354954
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Mehta, Somil C
AU - Nagaraj, D R
AU - Somasundaran, Ponisseril
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Adsorption
KW - Metals
KW - Alloys
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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T1 - Molecular Dynamics of Mineral-Water Interfaces: Structure, Dynamics, Energetics and Hydrogen Bonding
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39217527; 4357401
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Kalinichev, Andrey G
AU - Wang, Jianwei
AU - Kirkpatrick, R James
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Hydrogen bonding
KW - Adhesion
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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T1 - Dynamic Data Driven Applications Systems
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39213181; 4359403 DE:
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Darema, Frederica
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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TY - CPAPER
T1 - Enzyme Immobilization without a Support: Candida Antartica Lipase B (CALB) Self-Crosslinked Aggregates
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39212166; 4363648
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Vaidya, Alankar
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Gao, Wei
AU - Bohling, James C
AU - Miller, M Elizabeth
AU - Gross, Richard
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Enzymes
KW - Immobilization
KW - Lipase
KW - Candida
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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T1 - Lactone Ring-Opening Polymerization Catalyzed by a Cutinase Biocatalyst
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39212125; 4363647
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Hunsen, Mo
AU - Azim, Abul
AU - Mang, Harald
AU - Wallner, Sabine R
AU - Ronkvist, Asa
AU - Xie, Wenchun
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Biocatalysts
KW - Cutinase
KW - Lactones
KW - Polymerization
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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T1 - CAL-B Catalyzed Synthesis of Poly(Butylene Succinate)
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39211763; 4363519
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Azim, Himanshu
AU - Dekhterman, Alex
AU - Jiang, Zhaozhong
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Polymers
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
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TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF Division of Materials Research PREM Program
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39211706; 4356049
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Rieker, Thomas
AU - Kukla, Maija M
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Education
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
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T1 - Teachable Moments: How Ted Williams Changed the National Science Foundation
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39210546; 4358456
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Blount, Henry N
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Memory
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
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TY - CPAPER
T1 - Overview: Polyester Synthesis Catalyzed by Candida Antarctica Lipase B and the Cutinase from Humicola Insolens
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39209188; 4363494
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Gross, Richard A
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Antarctica
KW - Cutinase
KW - Reviews
KW - Lipase
KW - Humicola insolens
KW - Candida antarctica
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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TY - CPAPER
T1 - Small Business Research Innovation Partnership Opportunities at the National Science Foundation
T2 - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AN - 39195069; 4363125
JF - 2006 Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS 06)
AU - Wesson, Rosemarie D
Y1 - 2006/09/10/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Sep 10
KW - Polymers
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - RPRT
T1 - ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY SOLAR TELESCOPE, HALEAKALA, MAUI, HAWAII.
AN - 36342840; 12238
AB - PURPOSE: The development of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) within the 18.166-acre University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy Haleakala High Altitude Observatories Mees Solar Observatory site at the summit of Haleahala, Maui County, Hawaii is proposed. The site lies within the Conservation District on Pu'u (hill) Kolekole near the summit of Haleakala approximately 0.3 mile from the highest point of the summit, Pu'u Ula'ula (red Hill) Overlook, which is part of the Haleakala National Park. the Kolekole cinder cone lies near the apex of the Southwest rift zone of the maintain. The rift zone forms a spine separating the Kula Forest Reserve from the Kahikinui Forest Reserve. Astronomers have become increasingly aware of the sun's magnetic fields as a complex and subtle system. The familiar 11-year sunspot cycle is just the most obvious of its many manifestations. Recent advances in ground-based instrumentation have shown that sunspots and other large-scale solar phenomenon are intricately related to small-scale magnetic processes whose inner workings occur on scales that are too small to be observed with current ground- and space-based telescopes. The proposed facility would be the world's largest optical solar instrument. AN unobstructed four-meter (13-foot) diameter primary mirror combined with the latest in computer and optical technologies would give the ATST sharper views of solar activities than any telescope on the ground, in space, or in the planning stages. The facility would enable scientists to observe the solar atmosphere at or near the diffraction limit of the telescope, when turbulence in the atmosphere is minimal; to observe the faintest outer layers of the solar atmosphere, the corona, adjacent to the very bright photosphere, and to observe solar atmosphere at wave lengths from visible through mid-infrared wavelengths. After the evaluation f 72 sites around the world with respect to these criteria, six sites were carried forward for further evaluation. Following site testing, additional testing was conducted for another year at the three top-scoring sites, specifically, Haleakala, La Palma on the Canary Islands (Spain), and Big Bear Lake in California. After further testing, La Palma and Big Bear Lake were found to have demonstrable deficiencies in one or more of the primary scientific evaluation criteria, while the Haleakala site met or exceeded all primary scientific evaluation criteria. Hence, the latter site was chosen as the preferred location of the ATST. The facility would include the observatory facility, including the telescope, its pier, and the rotating instrument platform; the telescope enclosure, a support and operations building adjacent to the observatory; a utilities building attached to the support and operations building by a tunnel; facility parking; and modifications to the existing Mees Solar Observatory facility. The entire facility would encompass 40,500 square feet of new building space within a 0.74-acre footprint. In addition to the Mees site, this draft EIS considers construction of the proposed ATST at the Reber Circle site and a No Action Alternative. POSITIVE IMPACTS: The proposed telescope would help scientists understand the solar magnetic activities and variability that drive space weather and the hazards it creates for astronauts and air travelers and the interference it can cause with respect to communications to and from satellites. In addition, the telescope would help resolve fundamental length and time scales of the basic physical processes governing variations in solar activity associated with climate changes on Earth. NEGATIVE IMPACTS: Excavation, construction, and operations at the Mees site would raise the issue of potential desecration of an area considered sacred by Native Hawaiians and historically and archaeologically significant by other interested parties. Construction activities could impact Pu'u borrow habitat during nesting season. The name (Hawaiian goose) and the Hawaiian hoary bat could be affected by human activities through the application of pesticides and other contaminants and collisions with stationary or moving structures of objects as well as by loss of habitat. Once completed, the ATST would be visible from various communities and overlooks on Maui.
JF - EPA number: 060368, Volume I--366 pages, Volume II--675 pages, September 5, 2006
PY - 2006
KW - Research and Development
KW - Archaeological Sites
KW - Archaeological Sites Surveys
KW - Communication Systems
KW - Cultural Resources
KW - Cultural Resources Surveys
KW - Geologic Surveys
KW - Health Hazard Analyses
KW - Historic Sites
KW - Historic Sites Surveys
KW - Impact Monitoring Plans
KW - Islands
KW - Parking
KW - Research
KW - Research Facilities
KW - Site Planning
KW - Soils Surveys
KW - Vegetation Surveys
KW - Wildlife Surveys
KW - Hawaii
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Name - National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia; NSF
N1 - Date revised - 2007-05-08
N1 - SuppNotes - Draft. Preparation date: September 5, 2006
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-16
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Fluid mobile element budget in the in-situ serpentinized harzburgites from the Feather River Ophiolite
AN - 51083381; 2008-084053
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Agranier, Arnaud
AU - Li, Zhengxue
AU - Lee, Cin-Ty
AU - Leeman, William
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/09//
PY - 2006
DA - September 2006
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 70
IS - 18S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - United States
KW - metaigneous rocks
KW - serpentinization
KW - subduction zones
KW - igneous rocks
KW - sinks
KW - mass spectra
KW - mantle
KW - fluid phase
KW - harzburgite
KW - platinum group
KW - metasomatism
KW - California
KW - serpentinite
KW - plutonic rocks
KW - water-rock interaction
KW - metamorphic rocks
KW - spectra
KW - trace elements
KW - heterogeneity
KW - Northern California
KW - mobility
KW - geochemistry
KW - upper mantle
KW - concentration
KW - experimental studies
KW - in situ
KW - lithosphere
KW - ophiolite
KW - migration of elements
KW - ultramafics
KW - ICP mass spectra
KW - Feather River Ophiolite
KW - Feather River
KW - metals
KW - peridotites
KW - osmium
KW - boron
KW - metasomatic rocks
KW - 02C:Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments
KW - 05A:Igneous and metamorphic petrology
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51083381?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 16th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 4
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - boron; California; concentration; experimental studies; Feather River; Feather River Ophiolite; fluid phase; geochemistry; harzburgite; heterogeneity; ICP mass spectra; igneous rocks; in situ; lithosphere; mantle; mass spectra; metaigneous rocks; metals; metamorphic rocks; metasomatic rocks; metasomatism; migration of elements; mobility; Northern California; ophiolite; osmium; peridotites; platinum group; plutonic rocks; serpentinite; serpentinization; sinks; spectra; subduction zones; trace elements; ultramafics; United States; upper mantle; water-rock interaction
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2006.06.023
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Boron and oxygen isotopic evidence for recycling of subducted components through the Earth's mantle since 2.5 Ga
AN - 50539162; 2008-125347
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Turner, S
AU - Tonarini, S
AU - Bindeman, I
AU - Leeman, W P
AU - Schaefer, B F
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/09//
PY - 2006
DA - September 2006
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 70
IS - 18S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - volcanic rocks
KW - Precambrian
KW - oxygen
KW - isotopes
KW - lithosphere
KW - isotope ratios
KW - igneous rocks
KW - oceanic lithosphere
KW - mantle
KW - subduction
KW - O-18/O-16
KW - convection
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Atlantic Ocean Islands
KW - Phanerozoic
KW - plate tectonics
KW - B-11/B-10
KW - basalts
KW - boron
KW - Archean
KW - geochemistry
KW - mantle plumes
KW - Azores
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50539162?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.atitle=Boron+and+oxygen+isotopic+evidence+for+recycling+of+subducted+components+through+the+Earth%27s+mantle+since+2.5+Ga&rft.au=Turner%2C+S%3BTonarini%2C+S%3BBindeman%2C+I%3BLeeman%2C+W+P%3BSchaefer%2C+B+F%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Turner&rft.aufirst=S&rft.date=2006-09-01&rft.volume=70&rft.issue=18S&rft.spage=A661&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geochimica+et+Cosmochimica+Acta&rft.issn=00167037&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.gca.2006.06.1233
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 16th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Archean; Atlantic Ocean Islands; Azores; B-11/B-10; basalts; boron; convection; geochemistry; igneous rocks; isotope ratios; isotopes; lithosphere; mantle; mantle plumes; O-18/O-16; oceanic lithosphere; oxygen; Phanerozoic; plate tectonics; Precambrian; stable isotopes; subduction; volcanic rocks
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2006.06.1233
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-Os geochronology of the Century Pb-Zn-Ag deposit; two stage genesis with mantle input required
AN - 50538713; 2009-009478
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
AU - Keays, R R
AU - Mcinnes, B I A
AU - Lambert, D D
AU - Ihlenfeld, C
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/09//
PY - 2006
DA - September 2006
SP - 1
PB - Elsevier, New York, NY
VL - 70
IS - 18S
SN - 0016-7037, 0016-7037
KW - mineral deposits, genesis
KW - Pb/Pb
KW - lead ores
KW - upper Precambrian
KW - Precambrian
KW - Australasia
KW - zinc ores
KW - Century Deposit
KW - mantle
KW - Proterozoic
KW - Re/Os
KW - silver ores
KW - metallogeny
KW - dates
KW - magmas
KW - Queensland Australia
KW - metal ores
KW - absolute age
KW - polymetallic ores
KW - Australia
KW - lead-zinc deposits
KW - 03:Geochronology
KW - 27A:Economic geology, geology of ore deposits
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50538713?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00167037
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - 16th annual V. M. Goldschmidt conference
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2009-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 2
N1 - PubXState - NY
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GCACAK
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - absolute age; Australasia; Australia; Century Deposit; dates; lead ores; lead-zinc deposits; magmas; mantle; metal ores; metallogeny; mineral deposits, genesis; Pb/Pb; polymetallic ores; Precambrian; Proterozoic; Queensland Australia; Re/Os; silver ores; upper Precambrian; zinc ores
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2006.06.629
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Continental Margin Research in the U. S. Carbon Cycle Science Program: An Interagency Update and Prospectus
AN - 19452598; 7355931
AB - Following the publication of the U. S. Carbon Cycle Science Plan in 1999, leaders in the American carbon cycle research community presented a set of specific research recommendations to the federal agencies that fund carbon cycle research. Representing the oceanographic and terrestrial perspectives respectively, these recommendations were published and widely distributed as the core planning documents for the Ocean Carbon and Climate Change (OCCC) and the North American Carbon (NACP) Programs. While it is clear that ocean margins constitute major transport pathways between ecologically and climatically important carbon reservoirs, it is equally clear that the quantitative impact of margin processes in the global carbon cycle is poorly understood. In this presentation, program officers from the three principal federal agencies that fund ocean carbon cycle research - NASA, NOAA, and NSF -- will summarize the current state of federal programs relevant to the advancement of carbon cycle research on ocean margins. First, the structure, function, and state of development of the interagency Carbon Cycle Science Program will be reviewed, especially with regard to the relationship between projected research trajectories that are primarily terrestrial in scope, those that are primarily open-ocean in scope, and those that must entail a concerted collaborative effort among terrestrial and ocean scientists - i.e., coastal ocean and ocean margin systems. Secondly, we will provide an update on current and prospective carbon cycle research opportunities sponsored primarily as single-agency initiatives. Finally, the session will be concluded with a question-and-answer period to address specific issues raised by members of the audience.
JF - EOS, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
AU - Rice, D L
AU - Bontempi, P S
AU - Tedesco, K
Y1 - 2006/09//
PY - 2006
DA - September 2006
PB - American Geophysical Union, 2000 Florida Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20009 USA
KW - Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; ASFA 2: Ocean Technology Policy & Non-Living Resources
KW - OS33D-06
KW - North America
KW - Climate change
KW - Climatic changes
KW - Carbon cycle
KW - American Geophysical Union
KW - Ecosystem disturbance
KW - Ocean currents
KW - Energy flow
KW - Coastal oceanography
KW - Regional planning
KW - Governments
KW - Reservoirs
KW - Continental margins
KW - National planning
KW - Q2 09185:Organic compounds
KW - M2 551.583:Variations (551.583)
KW - Q5 08521:Mechanical and natural changes
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19452598?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/Aquatic+Science+%26+Fisheries+Abstracts+%28ASFA%29+3%3A+Aquatic+Pollution+%26+Environmental+Quality&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:book&rft.genre=book&rft.jtitle=&rft.atitle=&rft.au=Rice%2C+D+L%3BBontempi%2C+P+S%3BTedesco%2C+K&rft.aulast=Rice&rft.aufirst=D&rft.date=2006-09-01&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=Continental+Margin+Research+in+the+U.+S.+Carbon+Cycle+Science+Program%3A+An+Interagency+Update+and+Prospectus&rft.title=Continental+Margin+Research+in+the+U.+S.+Carbon+Cycle+Science+Program%3A+An+Interagency+Update+and+Prospectus&rft.issn=00963941&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-05-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Probing the structure and function of an archaeal C/D-box methylation guide sRNA
AN - 19316952; 7065268
AB - The genome of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus contains dozens of small C/D-box sRNAs that use a complementary guide sequence to target 2'-O-ribose methylation to specific locations within ribosomal and transfer RNAs. The sRNAs are similar to 50-60 nucleotides in length and contain two RNA structural kink-turn (K-turn) motifs that are required for assembly with ribosomal protein L7Ae, Nop5, and fibrillarin to form an active ribonucleoprotein (RNP) particle. The complex catalyzes guide-directed methylation to target RNAs. Earlier work in our laboratory has characterized the assembly pathway and methylation reaction using the model sR1 sRNA from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. This sRNA contains only one antisense region situated adjacent to the D-box, and methylation is directed to position U52 in 16S rRNA. Here we have investigated through RNA mutagenesis, the relationship between the sR1 structure and methylation-guide function. We show that although full activity of the guide requires intact C/D and C'/D' K-turn motifs, each structure plays a distinct role in the methylation reaction. The C/D motif is directly implicated in the methylation function, whereas the C'/D' element appears to play an indirect structural role by facilitating the correct folding of the RNA. Our results suggest that L7Ae facilitates the folding of the K-turn motifs (chaperone function) and, in addition, is required for methylation activity in the presence of Nop5 and Fib.
JF - RNA
AU - Omer, Arina D
AU - Zago, Maria
AU - Chang, Alex
AU - Dennis, Patrick P
AD - Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada V6T1Z3. Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA
Y1 - 2006/09//
PY - 2006
DA - September 2006
SP - 1708
EP - 1720
PB - Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Fulfillment & Distribution Dept. 500 Sunnyside Boulevard Woodbury NY 11797-2924 USA, [mailto:cshpress@cshl.org]
VL - 12
IS - 9
SN - 1355-8382, 1355-8382
KW - ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources; Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology; Biochemistry Abstracts 2: Nucleic Acids
KW - Genomes
KW - Nucleotide sequence
KW - Sulfolobus acidocaldarius
KW - fibrillarin
KW - Nucleotides
KW - Models
KW - Mutagenesis
KW - Sulfolobus solfataricus
KW - rRNA
KW - Antisense
KW - Ribosomal proteins
KW - Structure-function relationships
KW - Ribonucleoproteins
KW - DNA methylation
KW - DNA
KW - Chaperones
KW - rRNA 16S
KW - Methylation
KW - J 02310:Genetics & Taxonomy
KW - Q1 08185:Genetics and evolution
KW - N 14830:RNA
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19316952?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=RNA&rft.atitle=Probing+the+structure+and+function+of+an+archaeal+C%2FD-box+methylation+guide+sRNA&rft.au=Omer%2C+Arina+D%3BZago%2C+Maria%3BChang%2C+Alex%3BDennis%2C+Patrick+P&rft.aulast=Omer&rft.aufirst=Arina&rft.date=2006-09-01&rft.volume=12&rft.issue=9&rft.spage=1708&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=RNA&rft.issn=13558382&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2006-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-27
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Genomes; DNA; Nucleotides; Mutagenesis; Nucleotide sequence; fibrillarin; Models; rRNA; Antisense; Structure-function relationships; Ribosomal proteins; DNA methylation; Ribonucleoproteins; Chaperones; Methylation; rRNA 16S; Sulfolobus solfataricus; Sulfolobus acidocaldarius
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Climatic Factors in the Widespread Decline of Yellow-Cedar in the Mixed-Conifer Temperate Rainforests of Southeastern Alaska
T2 - 91st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
AN - 40119335; 4297149
JF - 91st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
AU - Beier, Colin
AU - Sink, Scott
AU - Juday, Glenn
AU - Hennon, Paul
AU - D'Amore, David
Y1 - 2006/08/06/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Aug 06
KW - USAlaska
KW - Climate
KW - Rain forests
KW - Environmental effects
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40119335?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=91st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Climatic+Factors+in+the+Widespread+Decline+of+Yellow-Cedar+in+the+Mixed-Conifer+Temperate+Rainforests+of+Southeastern+Alaska&rft.au=Beier%2C+Colin%3BSink%2C+Scott%3BJuday%2C+Glenn%3BHennon%2C+Paul%3BD%27Amore%2C+David&rft.aulast=Beier&rft.aufirst=Colin&rft.date=2006-08-06&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=91st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://abstracts.co.allenpress.com/pweb/esa2006/schedule/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Do Ecologists Have GUTs: A Search for Unified Theories in Community Ecology
T2 - 91st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
AN - 40112867; 4297261
JF - 91st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
AU - Scheiner, Samuel
AU - Willig, Michael
Y1 - 2006/08/06/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Aug 06
KW - Ecology
KW - Digestive tract
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40112867?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=91st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Do+Ecologists+Have+GUTs%3A+A+Search+for+Unified+Theories+in+Community+Ecology&rft.au=Scheiner%2C+Samuel%3BWillig%2C+Michael&rft.aulast=Scheiner&rft.aufirst=Samuel&rft.date=2006-08-06&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=91st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://abstracts.co.allenpress.com/pweb/esa2006/schedule/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Always an Upstart, Never an Icon: Evelyn Hutchinson and Nonequilibrium Theory
T2 - 91st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
AN - 40083057; 4297799 DE:
JF - 91st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
AU - Twombly, Saran
Y1 - 2006/08/06/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Aug 06
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40083057?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=91st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America&rft.atitle=Always+an+Upstart%2C+Never+an+Icon%3A+Evelyn+Hutchinson+and+Nonequilibrium+Theory&rft.au=Twombly%2C+Saran&rft.aulast=Twombly&rft.aufirst=Saran&rft.date=2006-08-06&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=91st+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Ecological+Society+of+America&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://abstracts.co.allenpress.com/pweb/esa2006/schedule/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Weathering of ordinary chondrites in the Sultanate of Oman
AN - 51076179; 2008-086279
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Gnos, E
AU - Al-Kathiri, A
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Hofmann, B A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/08//
PY - 2006
DA - August 2006
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 41, Supplement
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - ordinary chondrites
KW - stony meteorites
KW - cobalt
KW - isotopes
KW - moisture
KW - meteorites
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - barium
KW - carbon
KW - age
KW - chondrites
KW - Asia
KW - mobility
KW - soils
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - sulfates
KW - oxidation
KW - Oman
KW - terrestrial age
KW - weathering
KW - Arabian Peninsula
KW - metals
KW - volume
KW - nickel
KW - C-14
KW - winds
KW - strontium
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/51076179?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Weathering+of+ordinary+chondrites+in+the+Sultanate+of+Oman&rft.au=Gnos%2C+E%3BAl-Kathiri%2C+A%3BJull%2C+A+J+T%3BHofmann%2C+B+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Gnos&rft.aufirst=E&rft.date=2006-08-01&rft.volume=41%2C+Supplement&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A206&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Desert meteorites workshop
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 6
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - age; alkaline earth metals; Arabian Peninsula; Asia; barium; C-14; carbon; chondrites; cobalt; isotopes; metals; meteorites; mobility; moisture; nickel; Oman; ordinary chondrites; oxidation; radioactive isotopes; soils; stony meteorites; strontium; sulfates; terrestrial age; volume; weathering; winds
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Terrestrial ages of meteorites using (super 14) C and (super 14) C/ (super 10) Be from different hot deserts
AN - 50651708; 2008-086284
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - McHargue, L R
AU - Spears, G
AU - Johnson, J A
AU - Kim, K J
AU - Bland, P A
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/08//
PY - 2006
DA - August 2006
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 41, Supplement
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - alkaline earth metals
KW - terrestrial environment
KW - Be-10
KW - isotopes
KW - arid environment
KW - semi-arid environment
KW - terrestrial age
KW - exposure age
KW - weathering
KW - meteorites
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - metals
KW - carbon
KW - residence time
KW - age
KW - C-14
KW - hot deserts
KW - climate
KW - beryllium
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50651708?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=Terrestrial+ages+of+meteorites+using+%28super+14%29+C+and+%28super+14%29+C%2F+%28super+10%29+Be+from+different+hot+deserts&rft.au=Jull%2C+A+J+T%3BMcHargue%2C+L+R%3BSpears%2C+G%3BJohnson%2C+J+A%3BKim%2C+K+J%3BBland%2C+P+A%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Jull&rft.aufirst=A+J&rft.date=2006-08-01&rft.volume=41%2C+Supplement&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A209&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Desert meteorites workshop
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 8
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - age; alkaline earth metals; arid environment; Be-10; beryllium; C-14; carbon; climate; exposure age; hot deserts; isotopes; metals; meteorites; radioactive isotopes; residence time; semi-arid environment; terrestrial age; terrestrial environment; weathering
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Omani-Swiss Meteorite Search Project; a summary of 5 field campaigns, 2001-2006
AN - 50257972; 2008-086282
JF - Meteoritics & Planetary Science
AU - Hofmann, Beda A
AU - Gnos, E
AU - Al-Kathiri, A
AU - Jull, A J T
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/08//
PY - 2006
DA - August 2006
SP - 1
PB - Meteoritical Society, Fayetteville, AR
VL - 41, Supplement
SN - 1086-9379, 1086-9379
KW - ordinary chondrites
KW - stony meteorites
KW - density
KW - isotopes
KW - L chondrites
KW - mass
KW - meteorites
KW - radioactive isotopes
KW - iron meteorites
KW - carbon
KW - chondrites
KW - Asia
KW - stony irons
KW - strewn fields
KW - programs
KW - Oman
KW - statistical analysis
KW - terrestrial age
KW - LL chondrites
KW - H chondrites
KW - weathering
KW - Arabian Peninsula
KW - Omani-Swiss Meteorite Search Project
KW - mesosiderite
KW - C-14
KW - 05B:Petrology of meteorites and tektites
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/50257972?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.atitle=The+Omani-Swiss+Meteorite+Search+Project%3B+a+summary+of+5+field+campaigns%2C+2001-2006&rft.au=Hofmann%2C+Beda+A%3BGnos%2C+E%3BAl-Kathiri%2C+A%3BJull%2C+A+J+T%3BAnonymous&rft.aulast=Hofmann&rft.aufirst=Beda&rft.date=2006-08-01&rft.volume=41%2C+Supplement&rft.issue=&rft.spage=A208&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Meteoritics+%26+Planetary+Science&rft.issn=10869379&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://cavern.uark.edu/~meteor/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Desert meteorites workshop
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - PubXState - AR
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Arabian Peninsula; Asia; C-14; carbon; chondrites; density; H chondrites; iron meteorites; isotopes; L chondrites; LL chondrites; mass; mesosiderite; meteorites; Oman; Omani-Swiss Meteorite Search Project; ordinary chondrites; programs; radioactive isotopes; statistical analysis; stony irons; stony meteorites; strewn fields; terrestrial age; weathering
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards One-Step Estimation of Crop Water Requirements
AN - 19554693; 7263338
AB - This article provides theoretical analyses that facilitate the use of the Penman-Monteith equation to make a one-step estimate of crop water requirements. Reluctance to using a one-step estimate results from two outstanding issues, both of which are addressed. First, no method has been yet defined to handle the problem that meteorological variables are commonly available only at 2 m above the ground while, when using the Penman-Monteith equation, they are required at some level above the crop. To resolve this, a blending height is defined in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) where meteorological conditions are independent of the underlying crop. Expressions are derived to calculate the aerodynamic resistances to, and the vapor pressure deficit at, the blending height from climate variables at 2 m. Consequently, 2 m climate data can be used in the Penman-Monteith equation, either to estimate transpiration from surface resistance or to calculate surface resistance from measured transpiration. Second, no table of effective values currently exists for the surface resistance of different crops equivalent to that for the crop coefficient. This article calls for field studies to address this need. However, recognizing the need for an interim source of crop-specific surface resistances, a methodology is given for translating the crop coefficient into equivalent surface resistance. To make this translation, it is necessary to specify the relationship between the radiative and aerodynamic energy inputs to evapotranspiration when the crop coefficients were calibrated. Finally, a Penman-Monteith-based, one-step estimation equation is derived that makes proper allowance for the different aerodynamic characteristics of crops in all conditions of atmospheric aridity, and that estimates crop evaporation for any crop of specified height from existing crop coefficients using standard 2 m climate data.
JF - Transactions of the ASAE
AU - Shuttleworth, W J
AD - NSF Center for Sustainability of Semi-Arid Hydrology and Riparian Areas (SAHRA), Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA, shuttle@hwr.arizona.edu
Y1 - 2006/08//
PY - 2006
DA - Aug 2006
SP - 925
EP - 935
VL - 49
IS - 4
SN - 0001-2351, 0001-2351
KW - Water Resources Abstracts
KW - Theoretical Analysis
KW - Translations
KW - Resistance
KW - Evaporation
KW - Climates
KW - Water Requirements
KW - Standards
KW - Transpiration
KW - Crops
KW - SW 0830:Evaporation and transpiration
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19554693?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awaterresources&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Transactions+of+the+ASAE&rft.atitle=Towards+One-Step+Estimation+of+Crop+Water+Requirements&rft.au=Shuttleworth%2C+W+J&rft.aulast=Shuttleworth&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2006-08-01&rft.volume=49&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=925&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Transactions+of+the+ASAE&rft.issn=00012351&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-04-01
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Theoretical Analysis; Translations; Resistance; Evaporation; Climates; Standards; Water Requirements; Transpiration; Crops
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A highly conserved Sinorhizobium meliloti operon is induced microaerobically via the FixLJ system and by nitric oxide (NO) via NnrR
AN - 19323859; 6979018
AB - A previously generated collection of 11 Tn5-luxAB insertion mutants of Sinorhizobium meliloti harbouring lux reporter gene fusions induced under microaerobic (1% O sub(2)) conditions was further characterized and mapped on the sequenced S. meliloti genome. One highly induced gene fusion from this collection (loe-7) was found to be located in the intergenic region between sma1292, encoding a putative protease-collagenase, and a gene of unknown function (sma1294). The loe-7 fusion had been shown previously to be partially controlled by the oxygen sensor-regulator FixLJ system, but significant ( similar to 40%) Lux activity remained in a fixLJ mutant background. Therefore, a secondary Tn1721 mutagenesis of the loe-7 strain was carried out. Nine Tn1721 ('dark') insertions completely abolishing the Lux activity of the loe-7 fusion under microaerobic conditions were isolated. Surprisingly, five dark insertions mapped in denitrification genes [napA, napC, nirK- two insertions - and sma1245 encoding a NnrR-like transcriptional regulator controlling denitrification in response to nitric oxide (NO)]; Tn1721 insertions in the respiration genes fixG and fixP resulted in a reduced expression of the loe-7-lux fusion, and insertions in the regulatory genes fixJ and fixK1 resulted in low, but still detectable Lux activity. On the contrary, insertions in the norD or norQ genes resulted in constitutive Lux activity. In these mutant strains, NO would be expected to accumulate under microaerobic conditions. NO was found to be able to strongly induce the loe-7-luxAB fusion under microaerobic and aerobic conditions, but only in the presence of the functional nnrR-like gene (sma1245). These results suggest that NO, via the NnrR regulator, can serve as a signal molecule to induce the loe-7-luxAB fusion in concert with the FixLJ system.
JF - Environmental Microbiology
AU - de Bruijn, Frans J
AU - Rossbach, Silvia
AU - Bruand, Claude
AU - Parrish, Jodi R
AD - Laboratoire des Interactions Plantes Micro-organismes (LIPM), UMR CNRS 2594-INRA 441, BP 52627, 31326 Castanet-Tolosan Cedex, France. MSU-DOE Plant Research Laboratory, Department of Microbiology, NSF Center for Microbial Ecology, and Genetics Program, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA, debruijn@toulouse.inra.fr
Y1 - 2006/08//
PY - 2006
DA - Aug 2006
SP - 1371
EP - 1381
PB - Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 9600 Garsington Road Oxford OX4 2DQ UK, [URL:http://www.blackwellpublishing.com]
VL - 8
IS - 8
SN - 1462-2912, 1462-2912
KW - Microbiology Abstracts B: Bacteriology
KW - Genomes
KW - Aerobic conditions
KW - Respiration
KW - Sinorhizobium meliloti
KW - Transcription
KW - Mutagenesis
KW - Oxygen
KW - Reporter gene
KW - Denitrification
KW - Gene fusion
KW - Nitric oxide
KW - Operons
KW - J 02310:Genetics & Taxonomy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/19323859?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Amicrobiologyb&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Environmental+Microbiology&rft.atitle=A+highly+conserved+Sinorhizobium+meliloti+operon+is+induced+microaerobically+via+the+FixLJ+system+and+by+nitric+oxide+%28NO%29+via+NnrR&rft.au=de+Bruijn%2C+Frans+J%3BRossbach%2C+Silvia%3BBruand%2C+Claude%3BParrish%2C+Jodi+R&rft.aulast=de+Bruijn&rft.aufirst=Frans&rft.date=2006-08-01&rft.volume=8&rft.issue=8&rft.spage=1371&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Environmental+Microbiology&rft.issn=14622912&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fj.1462-2920.2006.01030.x
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2006-10-01
N1 - SuppNotes - Figures, 4; tables, 2; references, 49.
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-25
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Genomes; Oxygen; Aerobic conditions; Reporter gene; Respiration; Gene fusion; Denitrification; Transcription; Nitric oxide; Operons; Mutagenesis; Sinorhizobium meliloti
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1462-2920.2006.01030.x
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Phylogeny and Biogeography of Isoetes (Isoetaceae)
T2 - 2006 Annual Scientific Meeting of the Botanical Society of America (Botany 2006)
AN - 39193185; 4235279
JF - 2006 Annual Scientific Meeting of the Botanical Society of America (Botany 2006)
AU - Taylor, W Carl
AU - Hoot, Sara B
Y1 - 2006/07/23/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jul 23
KW - Biogeography
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Isoetes
KW - Isoetaceae
KW - U 2000:Biological Sciences
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39193185?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Annual+Scientific+Meeting+of+the+Botanical+Society+of+America+%28Botany+2006%29&rft.atitle=Phylogeny+and+Biogeography+of+Isoetes+%28Isoetaceae%29&rft.au=Taylor%2C+W+Carl%3BHoot%2C+Sara+B&rft.aulast=Taylor&rft.aufirst=W&rft.date=2006-07-23&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Annual+Scientific+Meeting+of+the+Botanical+Society+of+America+%28Botany+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.2006.botanyconference.org/engine/search/index.php?func=summ ary
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The DNA Barcode of Life Initiative: What can Fishbol Offer Fish Biologists?
T2 - Seventh International Congress on the Biology of Fish (ICBF 2006)
AN - 39223612; 4390743
JF - Seventh International Congress on the Biology of Fish (ICBF 2006)
AU - von Herbing, I Hunt
AU - Hanner, R
AU - Schindel, D E
Y1 - 2006/07/18/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jul 18
KW - Pisces
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39223612?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=Seventh+International+Congress+on+the+Biology+of+Fish+%28ICBF+2006%29&rft.atitle=The+DNA+Barcode+of+Life+Initiative%3A+What+can+Fishbol+Offer+Fish+Biologists%3F&rft.au=von+Herbing%2C+I+Hunt%3BHanner%2C+R%3BSchindel%2C+D+E&rft.aulast=von+Herbing&rft.aufirst=I&rft.date=2006-07-18&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Seventh+International+Congress+on+the+Biology+of+Fish+%28ICBF+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.mun.ca/biology/icbf7/icbf7.data/Components/forms/Program%20 Guide.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Interactive Cell Modeling Web-Resource, iCell, as a Simulation-Based Teaching and Learning Tool to Supplement Electrophysiology Education
AN - 831174386; 13866764
AB - An interactive cell modeling web site, iCell (http://ssd1.bme.memphis.edu/icell/), that integrates research and education, was developed to present and to disseminate JAVA-coded models of cellular activities, and to supplement physiology education. iCell can be used to supplement the text-book material as a simulation-based teaching and learning tool. Specifically, iCell allows the students to supplement their learning experiences of the text-book cellular physiology material by running simulations in an interactive environment. The site consists of JAVA-coded models of various cardiac cells and neurons, and provides simulation data of their bioelectric transport activities at cellular level. Each JAVA-coded model allows the user to go through menu options to change model parameters, run and view simulation results. The site also has a glossary section for the scientific terms. iCell has been used as a teaching and learning tool for seven graduate courses at the Joint Biomedical Engineering Program of University of Memphis and University of Tennessee. This modeling tool was also used as a collaboration site among our physiology colleagues interested in simulations of cell membrane activities. Scientists from the fields of biosciences, engineering, life sciences and medical sciences in 17 countries have tested and utilized iCell as a simulation-based teaching, learning and collaboration environment. iCell provides us with an interactive, platform-independent, and user-friendly teaching and learning resource, and also a collaboration environment for electrophysiology to be shared over the Internet. The usage of simulations for teaching and learning will continue advancing simulation-based engineering and sciences for research and development.
JF - Annals of Biomedical Engineering
AU - Demir, Semahat S
AD - Biomedical Engineering & Research to Aid Persons with Disabilities Program, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 565, Arlington, VA, 22230, USA, sdemir@memphis.edu
Y1 - 2006/07//
PY - 2006
DA - Jul 2006
SP - 1077
EP - 1087
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany
VL - 34
IS - 7
SN - 0090-6964, 0090-6964
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Heart
KW - Learning
KW - Cell membranes
KW - Data processing
KW - Running
KW - Neurons
KW - Electrophysiology
KW - Internet
KW - W 30965:Miscellaneous, Reviews
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/831174386?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+Biomedical+Engineering&rft.atitle=Interactive+Cell+Modeling+Web-Resource%2C+iCell%2C+as+a+Simulation-Based+Teaching+and+Learning+Tool+to+Supplement+Electrophysiology+Education&rft.au=Demir%2C+Semahat+S&rft.aulast=Demir&rft.aufirst=Semahat&rft.date=2006-07-01&rft.volume=34&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=1077&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+Biomedical+Engineering&rft.issn=00906964&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10439-006-9138-0
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2012-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-19
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Heart; Learning; Data processing; Cell membranes; Neurons; Running; Electrophysiology; Internet
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10439-006-9138-0
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - The Secondary Circuit of Capital Reconsidered: Globalization and the U.S. Real Estate Sector
AN - 59729930; 200621024
AB - The author examines the U.S. real estate sector to show how the state shapes global real estate flows & networks of activity through the creation & control of liquid resources. The analysis focuses on the role of state laws & regulations in the expansion of the mortgage-backed securities markets & the development of real estate investment trusts (REITs). These institutional developments represent a series of ad hoc state efforts to "delocalize" residential & commercial property, & embed real estate financing within global capital markets. Rather than viewing globalization as weakening the state, the author argues that the U.S. state's capacity to influence the degree & development of liquidity is a powerful mechanism of globalization. Tables, Figures, References. Adapted from the source document.
JF - American Journal of Sociology
AU - Gotham, Kevin Fox
AD - Social & Political Sciences Cluster, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA kgotham@nsf.gov
Y1 - 2006/07//
PY - 2006
DA - July 2006
SP - 231
EP - 275
PB - University of Chicago Press, IL
VL - 112
IS - 1
SN - 0002-9602, 0002-9602
KW - Trust
KW - Globalization
KW - Law
KW - State Role
KW - article
KW - 9141: political economy; political economy
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/59729930?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Awpsa&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=American+Journal+of+Sociology&rft.atitle=The+Secondary+Circuit+of+Capital+Reconsidered%3A+Globalization+and+the+U.S.+Real+Estate+Sector&rft.au=Gotham%2C+Kevin+Fox&rft.aulast=Gotham&rft.aufirst=Kevin&rft.date=2006-07-01&rft.volume=112&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=231&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=American+Journal+of+Sociology&rft.issn=00029602&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
N1 - Date revised - 2007-04-01
N1 - Number of references - 118
N1 - Last updated - 2016-09-28
N1 - CODEN - AJSOAR
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Globalization; Law; Trust; State Role
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Liposomal delivery as a mechanism to enhance synergism between anticancer drugs
AN - 21298136; 7132408
JF - Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
AU - Lee, Robert J
AD - Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, National Science Foundation Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, and National Cancer Institute Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
Y1 - 2006/07//
PY - 2006
DA - Jul 2006
SP - 1639
EP - 1640
PB - American Association for Cancer Research, 615 Chestnut St., 17th Floor Philadelphia PA 19106-4404 USA, [URL:http://www.aacr.org/]
VL - 5
IS - 7
SN - 1535-7163, 1535-7163
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
KW - Antitumor agents
KW - W 30965:Miscellaneous, Reviews
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/21298136?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Molecular+Cancer+Therapeutics&rft.atitle=Liposomal+delivery+as+a+mechanism+to+enhance+synergism+between+anticancer+drugs&rft.au=Lee%2C+Robert+J&rft.aulast=Lee&rft.aufirst=Robert&rft.date=2006-07-01&rft.volume=5&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=1639&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Molecular+Cancer+Therapeutics&rft.issn=15357163&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2010-03-01
N1 - Last updated - 2015-03-31
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Antitumor agents
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Removal and Inactivation of Cryptosporidium and Microbial Indicators by a Quaternary Ammonium Chloride (QAC)-Treated Zeolite in Pilot Filters
AN - 1777130998; 13840947
AB - A set of pilot filters packed with Zeolite filter media treated with a quaternary ammonium chloride (QAC) were evaluated to verify the proof of concept of their combined antimicrobial capabilities. Escherichia coli was removed and inactivated the most (2.83 log), followed by MS-2 (2.75 log), Klebsiella terriena (2.21 log), PRD-1 (1.95 log), Chlorella vulgaris (1.92 log), and Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts (1.78 log). Especially, inactivation of C. parvum oocysts (1.19 log) was higher than physical removal (0.54 log). The data suggest that QAC-treated Zeolite in the pilot filters has microbial inactivation capabilities and may have useful applications in other types of filter media.
JF - Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A: Toxic/Hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering
AU - Abbaszadegan, Morteza
AU - Monteiro, Patricia
AU - Ouwens, Rudolf N
AU - Ryu, Hodon
AU - Alum, Absar
AD - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA,National Science Foundation Water Quality Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA
Y1 - 2006/07/01/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jul 01
SP - 1201
EP - 1210
PB - Taylor & Francis Group Ltd., 2 Park Square Oxford OX14 4RN UK
VL - 41
IS - 6
SN - 1093-4529, 1093-4529
KW - Environmental Engineering Abstracts (EN); CSA / ASCE Civil Engineering Abstracts (CE)
KW - QAC-treated Zeolite filter media
KW - Antimicrobial capabilities
KW - Inactivation
KW - Klebsiella
KW - Media
KW - Ammonium chlorides
KW - Pilots
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Indicators
KW - Zeolites
KW - Toxic
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aenvironmentalengabstracts&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.atitle=Removal+and+Inactivation+of+Cryptosporidium+and+Microbial+Indicators+by+a+Quaternary+Ammonium+Chloride+%28QAC%29-Treated+Zeolite+in+Pilot+Filters&rft.au=Abbaszadegan%2C+Morteza%3BMonteiro%2C+Patricia%3BOuwens%2C+Rudolf+N%3BRyu%2C+Hodon%3BAlum%2C+Absar&rft.aulast=Abbaszadegan&rft.aufirst=Morteza&rft.date=2006-07-01&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=1201&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Journal+of+Environmental+Science+and+Health%2C+Part+A%3A+Toxic%2FHazardous+Substances+%26+Environmental+Engineering&rft.issn=10934529&rft_id=info:doi/10.1080%2F10934520600623091
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2011-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 21
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-18
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934520600623091
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Stretching the Health Department BudgetPartnering with a Third Party
T2 - 70th Annual Educational Conference and Exhibition of the National Environmental Health Association (AEC 2006)
AN - 40175726; 4323334
JF - 70th Annual Educational Conference and Exhibition of the National Environmental Health Association (AEC 2006)
AU - Culotta, Nancy J
Y1 - 2006/06/25/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 25
KW - Food
KW - Public health
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40175726?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=70th+Annual+Educational+Conference+and+Exhibition+of+the+National+Environmental+Health+Association+%28AEC+2006%29&rft.atitle=Stretching+the+Health+Department+BudgetPartnering+with+a+Third+Party&rft.au=Culotta%2C+Nancy+J&rft.aulast=Culotta&rft.aufirst=Nancy&rft.date=2006-06-25&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=70th+Annual+Educational+Conference+and+Exhibition+of+the+National+Environmental+Health+Association+%28AEC+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.neha.org/AEC/2006/attendees/index.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Working with the Media to Promote Your Organization
T2 - 70th Annual Educational Conference and Exhibition of the National Environmental Health Association (AEC 2006)
AN - 40167960; 4323341 DE:
JF - 70th Annual Educational Conference and Exhibition of the National Environmental Health Association (AEC 2006)
AU - Bowman, Jerry M
Y1 - 2006/06/25/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 25
KW - U 4300:Environmental Science
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L2 - http://www.neha.org/AEC/2006/attendees/index.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - A folate receptor-targeted liposomal formulation for paclitaxel.
AN - 68014256; 16564654
AB - A novel liposomal formulation of paclitaxel targeting the folate receptor (FR) was synthesized and characterized. This formulation was designed to overcome vehicle toxicity associated with the traditional Cremophor EL-based formulation and to provide the added advantages of prolonged systemic circulation time and selective targeting of the FR, which is frequently overexpressed on epithelial cancer cells. The formulation had the composition of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine/dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol/monomethoxy-polyethylene glycol (PEG)2000-distearoyl phosphatidylethanolamine/folate-PEG3350-distearoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPC/DMPG/mPEG-DSPE/folate-PEG-DSPE) at molar ratios of (85.5:9.5:4.5:0.5) and a drug-to-lipid molar ratio of 1:33. The liposomes were prepared by polycarbonate membrane extrusion. The mean particle size of the liposomes was 97.1 nm and remained stable for at least 72 h at 4 degrees C. FR-targeted liposomes of the same lipid composition entrapping calcein were shown to be efficiently taken up by KB oral carcinoma cells, which are highly FR+. FR-targeted liposomes containing paclitaxel showed 3.8-fold greater cytotoxicity compared to non-targeted control liposomes in KB cells. Plasma clearance profiles of paclitaxel in the liposomal formulations were then compared to paclitaxel in Cremophor EL formulation. The liposomal formulations showed much longer terminal half-lives (12.33 and 14.23 h for FR-targeted and non-targeted liposomes, respectively) than paclitaxel in Cremophor EL (1.78 h). In conclusion, the paclitaxel formulation described in this study has substantial stability and favorable pharmacokinetic properties. The FR-targeted paclitaxel formulation is potentially useful for treatment of FR+ tumors and warrants further investigation.
JF - International journal of pharmaceutics
AU - Wu, Jun
AU - Liu, Qing
AU - Lee, Robert J
AD - Division of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy, NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center, NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, The Ohio State University, 542 LM Parks Hall, 500 W. 12th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210, United States.
Y1 - 2006/06/19/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 19
SP - 148
EP - 153
VL - 316
IS - 1-2
SN - 0378-5173, 0378-5173
KW - Carrier Proteins
KW - 0
KW - Folate Receptors, GPI-Anchored
KW - Liposomes
KW - Receptors, Cell Surface
KW - Paclitaxel
KW - P88XT4IS4D
KW - Index Medicus
KW - KB Cells
KW - Animals
KW - Mice, Inbred ICR
KW - Cell Survival -- drug effects
KW - Humans
KW - Metabolic Clearance Rate
KW - Mice
KW - Receptors, Cell Surface -- metabolism
KW - Paclitaxel -- administration & dosage
KW - Paclitaxel -- blood
KW - Carrier Proteins -- metabolism
KW - Paclitaxel -- pharmacology
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Atoxline&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=International+journal+of+pharmaceutics&rft.atitle=A+folate+receptor-targeted+liposomal+formulation+for+paclitaxel.&rft.au=Wu%2C+Jun%3BLiu%2C+Qing%3BLee%2C+Robert+J&rft.aulast=Wu&rft.aufirst=Jun&rft.date=2006-06-19&rft.volume=316&rft.issue=1-2&rft.spage=148&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=International+journal+of+pharmaceutics&rft.issn=03785173&rft_id=info:doi/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date completed - 2006-11-06
N1 - Date created - 2006-05-29
N1 - Date revised - 2017-01-13
N1 - Last updated - 2017-01-18
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - NSF/ANSI Standard 61: A Review of the Existing Standard
T2 - 2006 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 06)
AN - 39231229; 4264347
JF - 2006 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 06)
AU - Greiner, Peter
Y1 - 2006/06/11/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 11
KW - Reviews
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39231229?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+06%29&rft.atitle=NSF%2FANSI+Standard+61%3A+A+Review+of+the+Existing+Standard&rft.au=Greiner%2C+Peter&rft.aulast=Greiner&rft.aufirst=Peter&rft.date=2006-06-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+06%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.awwa.org/conferences/ace/sessions/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Controlling Contamination in Drinking Water Treatment Chemicals
T2 - 2006 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 06)
AN - 39231189; 4264346
JF - 2006 Annual Conference and Exposition of the American Water Works Association (ACE 06)
AU - Stark, Blake
AU - Franklin, Thomas
Y1 - 2006/06/11/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 11
KW - Drinking water
KW - Contamination
KW - Water treatment
KW - Water pollution
KW - U 1200:Aquatic Science
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39231189?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+06%29&rft.atitle=Controlling+Contamination+in+Drinking+Water+Treatment+Chemicals&rft.au=Stark%2C+Blake%3BFranklin%2C+Thomas&rft.aulast=Stark&rft.aufirst=Blake&rft.date=2006-06-11&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Annual+Conference+and+Exposition+of+the+American+Water+Works+Association+%28ACE+06%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.awwa.org/conferences/ace/sessions/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The Centers for Ocean Sciences Education Excellence: Building a National Network of Support for Ocean Education
T2 - 2006 Summer Meeting of the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO 2006)
AN - 40105006; 4277826
JF - 2006 Summer Meeting of the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO 2006)
AU - Muller-Parker, G T
AU - Cook, S
AU - Ganter, S
Y1 - 2006/06/04/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 04
KW - Education
KW - Oceans
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/40105006?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=2006+Summer+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+of+Limnology+and+Oceanography+%28ASLO+2006%29&rft.atitle=The+Centers+for+Ocean+Sciences+Education+Excellence%3A+Building+a+National+Network+of+Support+for+Ocean+Education&rft.au=Muller-Parker%2C+G+T%3BCook%2C+S%3BGanter%2C+S&rft.aulast=Muller-Parker&rft.aufirst=G&rft.date=2006-06-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=2006+Summer+Meeting+of+the+American+Society+of+Limnology+and+Oceanography+%28ASLO+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://aslo.org/meetings/victoria2006/index.html
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Biomonitoring Anthropogenic Effects in Bull Creek Utilizing Macroinvertebrates
T2 - 54th Annual Meeting of the North American Benthological Society (NABS 2006)
AN - 39983215; 4241186
JF - 54th Annual Meeting of the North American Benthological Society (NABS 2006)
AU - Campbell, E C
AU - Mcmullen, L B
AU - Camann, M A
Y1 - 2006/06/04/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Jun 04
KW - Bioindicators
KW - Biomonitoring
KW - Zoobenthos
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39983215?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=54th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+North+American+Benthological+Society+%28NABS+2006%29&rft.atitle=Biomonitoring+Anthropogenic+Effects+in+Bull+Creek+Utilizing+Macroinvertebrates&rft.au=Campbell%2C+E+C%3BMcmullen%2C+L+B%3BCamann%2C+M+A&rft.aulast=Campbell&rft.aufirst=E&rft.date=2006-06-04&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=54th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+North+American+Benthological+Society+%28NABS+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.benthos.org/Meeting/nabs2006/displayallsessions.cfm
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - HYBRID SPECIATION IN WILD SUNFLOWERS1
AN - 20157617; 8701630
AB - Hybrid speciation refers to the establishment of novel hybrid genotypes that are reproductively isolated from their parental species and genetically stabilized. Most frequently, reproductive isolation is achieved via an increase in ploidy. However, in some instances new hybrid species arise and become reproductively isolated without a change in chromosome number, a process known as diploid or 'homoploid' hybrid speciation. The annual sunflowers of the genus Helianthus provide a well-studied example of this latter mode of speciation. Here, I review this work, placing individual studies in their proper context. These include (1) computer simulations that describe the evolutionary conditions under which hybrid speciation is most likely; (2) molecular phylogenetic studies that document the origins of three hybrid sunflower species; (3) comparative genetic mapping studies that describe the karyotypic changes associated with hybrid speciation; (4) experimental re-creations of homoploid hybrid species that allow genotypic and phenotypic comparisons between synthetic and ancient hybrid lineages; (5) quantitative trait locus (QTL) studies that describe the genetic basis of phenotypic differences between the parental species and the mode of gene action underlying the generation of extreme phenotypes in hybrids; (6) phylogeographic studies that estimate the ages and number of origins of each hybrid species; (7) selection studies that measure the strength of selection on individual traits and QTLs in synthetic hybrids transplanted into hybrid habitats; and (8) candidate gene studies that search for correlations between candidate genes for ecological divergence and traits and QTLs shown to be under selection in the habitats of the hybrid species. Ongoing work includes searches for the molecular signature of selection during hybrid speciation, surveys of gene expression shifts associated with hybrid speciation, and experiments that evaluate the role of new hybrid gene combinations versus reproductive isolation in the ecological divergence of hybrid lineages.
JF - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
AU - Rieseberg, Loren H
AD - 1 The author's research on homoploid hybrid speciation has been supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.
Y1 - 2006/05/31/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 May 31
SP - 34
EP - 48
PB - Missouri Botanical Garden
VL - 93
IS - 1
SN - 0026-6493, 0026-6493
KW - Ecology Abstracts
KW - Quantitative trait loci
KW - Speciation
KW - Reproductive isolation
KW - Reviews
KW - Hybrids
KW - Ploidy
KW - Habitat
KW - Evolution
KW - Helianthus
KW - D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/20157617?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aecology&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.atitle=HYBRID+SPECIATION+IN+WILD+SUNFLOWERS1&rft.au=Rieseberg%2C+Loren+H&rft.aulast=Rieseberg&rft.aufirst=Loren&rft.date=2006-05-31&rft.volume=93&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=34&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+the+Missouri+Botanical+Garden&rft.issn=00266493&rft_id=info:doi/10.3417%2F0026-6493%282006%29932.0.CO%3B2
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2009-08-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-14
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Helianthus; Hybrids; Speciation; Reproductive isolation; Habitat; Quantitative trait loci; Ploidy; Evolution; Reviews
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.3417/0026-6493(2006)93[34:HSIWS]2.0.CO;2
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - GPS constraints on continental deformation in the Africa-Arabia-Eurasia continental collision zone and implications for the dynamics of plate interactions
AN - 51522733; 2006-087979
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
AU - Reilinger, Robert
AU - McClusky, Simon
AU - Vernant, Philippe
AU - Lawrence, Shawn
AU - Ergintav, Semih
AU - Cakmak, Rahsan
AU - Ozener, Haluk
AU - Kadirov, Fakhraddin
AU - Guliev (Guliyev), Ibrahim
AU - Stepanyan, Ruben
AU - Nadariya, Merab
AU - Hahubia, Galaktion
AU - Mahmoud, Salah
AU - Sakr, K
AU - ArRajehi, Abdullah
AU - Paradissis, Demitris
AU - Al-Aydrus, A
AU - Prilepin, Mikhail
AU - Guseva, Tamara
AU - Evren, Emre
AU - Dmitrotsa, Andriy
AU - Filikov, S V
AU - Gomez, Francisco
AU - Al-Ghazzi, Riad
AU - Karam, Gebran
Y1 - 2006/05//
PY - 2006
DA - May 2006
SP - 26
PB - American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC
VL - 111
IS - B5
SN - 0148-0227, 0148-0227
KW - systems
KW - Global Positioning System
KW - Eurasian Plate
KW - plate collision
KW - international cooperation
KW - slip rates
KW - continental crust
KW - block structures
KW - geodesy
KW - deformation
KW - Arabian Plate
KW - topography
KW - plate tectonics
KW - dynamics
KW - rotation
KW - rheology
KW - movement
KW - velocity
KW - bathymetry
KW - faults
KW - crust
KW - African Plate
KW - 18:Solid-earth geophysics
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L2 - http://www.agu.org/journals/jgr/
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2006-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 110
N1 - PubXState - DC
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 2 tables, geol. sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - African Plate; Arabian Plate; bathymetry; block structures; continental crust; crust; deformation; dynamics; Eurasian Plate; faults; geodesy; Global Positioning System; international cooperation; movement; plate collision; plate tectonics; rheology; rotation; slip rates; systems; topography; velocity
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2005JB004051
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Molecular dynamics simulation of water at mineral surfaces: Structure, dynamics, energetics and hydrogen bonding
AN - 20749425; 7426437
AB - Fundamental molecular-level understanding of the properties of aqueous mineral interfaces is of great importance for many geochemical and environmental systems. Interaction between water and mineral surfaces substantially affects the properties of both phases, including the reactivity and functionality of the substrate surface, and the structure, dynamics, and energetics of the near surface aqueous phase. Experimental studies of interfacial water structure and dynamics using surface-sensitive techniques such as sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy or X- ray and neutron reflectivity are not always possible for many practically important substrates, and their results often require interpretation concerning the atomistic mechanisms responsible for the observed behavior. Molecular computer simulations can provide new insight into the underlying molecular- level relationships between the inorganic substrate structure and composition and the structure, ordering, and dynamics of interfacial water. We have performed a series of molecular dynamics (MD) computer simulations of aqueous interfaces with several silicates (quartz, muscovite, and talc) and hydroxides (brucite, portlandite, gibbsite, Ca/Al and Mg/Al double hydroxides) to quantify the effects of the substrate mineral structure and composition on the structural, transport, and thermodynamic properties of water on these mineral surfaces. Due to the prevalent effects of the development of well- interconnected H-bonding networks across the mineral- water interfaces, all the hydroxide surfaces (including a fully hydroxylated quartz surface) show very similar H_2O density profiles perpendicular to the interface. However, the predominant orientations of the interfacial H_2O molecules and their detailed 2-dimensional near-surface structure and dynamics parallel to the interface are quite different reflecting the differences in the substrate structural charge distribution and the density and orientations of the surface OH groups. The H_2O density profiles and other structural and dynamic characteristics of water at the two siloxane surfaces are very different from each other and from the hydroxide surfaces, since the muscovite surface is negatively charged and hydrophilic, while the talc surface is electrostatically neutral and hydrophobic. In general, at hydrophilic neutral surfaces both donating and accepting H-bonds from the H_2O molecules are contributing to the development of the interfacial H-bond network, whereas at hydrophilic but charged surfaces only accepting or donating H-bonds with H_2O molecules are possible. At the hydrophobic talc surface H-bonds among H_2O molecules dominate the interfacial H-bond network and the water-surface interactions are very weak. The first water layer at all substrates is well ordered parallel to the surface, reflecting substrate crystal structures and indicating the reduced translational and orientational mobility of interfacial H_2O molecules. At longer time scale ( similar to 100ps) their dynamics can be decomposed into a slow, virtually frozen, regime due to the substrate- bound H_2O and a faster regime of almost free water reflecting the dynamics far from the surface. At shorter times (>10ps) the two dynamical regimes are superimposed. The much higher ordering of interfacial water (compared to bulk liquid) can not be adequately described as simply "ice-like". To some extent, it rather resembles the behavior of supercooled water.
JF - Proceedings of the 2006 American Geophysical Union Joint Assembly
AU - Kalinichev, A G
AU - Wang, J
AU - Kirkpatrick, R
Y1 - 2006/05//
PY - 2006
DA - May 2006
PB - American Geophysical Union, 2000 Florida Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20009 USA, [URL:http://www.agu.org]
KW - Water Resources Abstracts
KW - V22A-04
KW - Hydrological Regime
KW - Profiles
KW - Structure
KW - Interfaces
KW - Density
KW - Quartz
KW - Substrates
KW - Networks
KW - Minerals
KW - SW 0880:Chemical processes
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-12-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Deep corehole completed in the Chesapeake Bay impact structure
AN - 1033531321; 2012-073333
JF - DOSECC News
AU - Gohn, Gregory S
AU - Koeberl, Christian
AU - Miller, Kenneth G
AU - Reimold, Wolf Uwe
Y1 - 2006/05//
PY - 2006
DA - May 2006
SP - 4
EP - 6
PB - National Science Foundation, DOSECC, Salt Lake, UT
VL - 4
IS - 1
KW - United States
KW - survey organizations
KW - southeastern Virginia
KW - Virginia
KW - impact features
KW - Eocene
KW - U. S. Geological Survey
KW - government agencies
KW - Paleogene
KW - Cenozoic
KW - Tertiary
KW - boreholes
KW - sampling
KW - upper Eocene
KW - International Continental Scientific Drilling Program
KW - geomorphology
KW - drilling
KW - Chesapeake Bay impact structure
KW - Atlantic Coastal Plain
KW - 23:Geomorphology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2012-01-01
N1 - PubXState - UT
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. 3 tables
N1 - Last updated - 2012-08-16
N1 - CODEN - #06828
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Atlantic Coastal Plain; boreholes; Cenozoic; Chesapeake Bay impact structure; drilling; Eocene; geomorphology; government agencies; impact features; International Continental Scientific Drilling Program; Paleogene; sampling; southeastern Virginia; survey organizations; Tertiary; U. S. Geological Survey; United States; upper Eocene; Virginia
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - The George E. Brown, Jr. Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES): Progress to Date and Future Directions
T2 - 100th Anniversary Earthquake Conference
AN - 39954079; 4239833
JF - 100th Anniversary Earthquake Conference
AU - Fragaszy, Richard
AU - Pauschke, Joy
Y1 - 2006/04/18/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Apr 18
KW - Earthquakes
KW - Seismic activity
KW - Simulation
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L2 - http://www.miracd.com/8NCEE/Itinerary/default.asp?Refresh=1&target=Sea rchResults%2Easp%3FsesDay%3D2
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Putting the "Vap" into Evaporation.
T2 - 2006 European Geosciences Union General Assembly (EGU 2006)
AN - 39981024; 4179251
JF - 2006 European Geosciences Union General Assembly (EGU 2006)
AU - Shuttleworth, W J
AU - Gash, J.H.C
Y1 - 2006/04/02/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Apr 02
KW - Evaporation
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39981024?accountid=14244
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L2 - http://www.cosis.net/members/meetings/programme/session_programme.php? m_id=29
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Industrial Funding of Academic R&D Continues to Decline in FY 2004. Info Brief. NSF 06-315
AN - 62090594; ED491635
AB - Industrial funding for research and development in academic science and engineering (S&E) dropped by 2.6 percent in FY 2004, the third consecutive year of declining support from this sector, according to data from the National Science Foundation (NSF) Survey of Research and Development Expenditures at Universities and Colleges (table 1). The industrial sector is the first source of academic R&D funding to show a multiyear decline since the survey began, in FY 1953. Industry's FY 2004 percentage decline was more substantial than its percentage reductions in previous years (1.1 percent in 2003, 1.5 percent in 2002). Industrial support was $2.1 billion in FY 2004, down from a high of $2.2 billion in FY 2001. Industry's share of academic R&D support in FY 2004 equaled its share in FY 1983, at 4.9 percent. Overall, universities and colleges reported R&D expenditures of $42.9 billion in FY 2004, 7.2 percent more than the previous year ($40.1 billion). This increase represents a slowdown in the growth of academic R&D expenditures after 2 years of double-digit growth (10.9 percent in FY 2002, 10.2 percent in FY 2003). When adjusted for inflation, academic R&D rose 4.7 percent in FY 2004. (Contains 4 tables.)
AU - Britt, Ronda
Y1 - 2006/04//
PY - 2006
DA - April 2006
SP - 5
PB - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230. Tel: 703-292-7000; Web site: http://www.nsf.gov/nsb; e-mail: NSBoffice@nsf.gov.
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Higher Education
KW - Expenditures
KW - Financial Support
KW - Public Sector
KW - Colleges
KW - Budgets
KW - Research and Development
KW - Universities
KW - Statistical Surveys
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/62090594?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Mid- to late Holocene environmental changes recorded by sediment from Lake Erie's eastern basin
AN - 51410034; 2007-070141
AB - Understanding how Lake Erie has responded to changes in climate and hydrology in the past will improve our ability to measure current human impacts on the lake, and to predict responses in the future. Lake sediment properties can be used to reconstruct changes in paleoenvironmental conditions such as water temperature, lake level, source water, precipitation, and biologic activity, among others, and to understand the influences of major events like drainage and outlet changes. In this study, we found significant mid- to late Holocene shifts in proxy data, including upward increases in magnetic susceptibility, carbonate content, and delta (super 13) C, and a decrease in grainsize. The data was taken from long sediment cores from Lake Erie's eastern basin, and was then compared with data from several previous studies. These shifts coincide in time with the erosion of the Lyell-Johnson sill, and also align roughly with local and global climate changes, which may have had a similar influence on sediment properties.
JF - Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America
AU - Allen, Katherine A
AU - Saylor, Beverly Z
AU - Barrera, Enriqueta
AU - Clotts, Rebecca
AU - Anonymous
Y1 - 2006/04//
PY - 2006
DA - April 2006
SP - 7
PB - Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
VL - 38
IS - 4
SN - 0016-7592, 0016-7592
KW - lake-level changes
KW - isotopes
KW - erosion
KW - global change
KW - Holocene
KW - stable isotopes
KW - cores
KW - climate change
KW - temperature
KW - magnetic properties
KW - Cenozoic
KW - carbon
KW - sediments
KW - Great Lakes
KW - North America
KW - Quaternary
KW - middle Holocene
KW - Lake Erie
KW - paleohydrology
KW - isotope ratios
KW - human activity
KW - grain size
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - paleomagnetism
KW - properties
KW - measurement
KW - paleoenvironment
KW - magnetic susceptibility
KW - lacustrine environment
KW - reconstruction
KW - upper Holocene
KW - lake sediments
KW - 24:Quaternary geology
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LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Conference title - Geological Society of America, North-Central Section, 40th annual meeting
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
N1 - Date revised - 2007-01-01
N1 - PubXState - CO
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GAAPBC
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - C-13/C-12; carbon; Cenozoic; climate change; cores; erosion; global change; grain size; Great Lakes; Holocene; human activity; isotope ratios; isotopes; lacustrine environment; Lake Erie; lake sediments; lake-level changes; magnetic properties; magnetic susceptibility; measurement; middle Holocene; North America; paleoenvironment; paleohydrology; paleomagnetism; properties; Quaternary; reconstruction; sediments; stable isotopes; temperature; upper Holocene
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - High-resolution stratigraphy of the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary interval at Pueblo (USA) and Wadi Bahloul (Tunisia); stable isotope and bio-events correlation
AN - 50436403; 2006-066291
AB - A high-resolution stratigraphy has been developed for the interval encompassing the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary (CTBI), by means of several lithological, biological and geochemical events. This work entails the study of two sections selected on the base of the completeness of their sedimentary record and their contrasting paleogeographical setting: (1) The Rock Canyon Anticline section west of Pueblo, Colorado, (US Western Interior Basin), which is the Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) candidate for the base of the Turonian stage, as well as the reference section for the ammonite biostratigraphy of the CTBI; and (2) The wadi Bahloul section in Central Tunisia which is the best and complete section spanning this time interval in the southern Tethyan Margin. These sections record similar biogeochemical events that can be correlated over a great distance. Several important biological and geochemical events determined in these sections relative to the ammonite zonation of the CTBI are listed below in chronological order from old to young: 1. FO (first occurrence) of Sciponoceras gracile-Metoicoceras geslinianum ammonite Assemblage-Zone, 2. delta (super 13) C peak I, 3. LO (last occurrence) of Rotalipora cushmani, 4. "Heterohelix shift", 5. FO of the ammonites Pseudaspidoceras pseudonodosoides and Neocardioceras juddii, 6 delta (super 13) C peak II, 7. delta (super 13) C peak III, 8. LO of Cenomanian ammonites (Ps. pseudonodosoides and N. juddii), 9. LO of Anaticinella, 10. FO of Turonian ammonites (Watinoceras devonense, base of the Turonian stage), 11. "filament event", 12. FO of Pseudaspidoceras flexuosum, 13. FO of the Tethyan Helvetoglobotruncana helvetica, 14. FO of Mammites nodosoides, 15. FO of the Western Interior H. helvetica. In the two sections, the Cenomanian-Turonian (C/T) boundary, as defined by the ammonite biostratigraphy, is placed within an interval about 50 cm thick. This interval is termed here as the C/T boundary "precision interval". The delta (super 13) C peak III slightly precedes the precision interval. The genus Anaticinella planktic foraminifer disappears in the middle part of this interval. The "filament event" occurs just above it and is coeval with the first occurrence of Turonian ammonites. These events are useful for placing the C/T boundary precision interval in absence of ammonite markers. Comparing ammonite and planktic foraminiferal biostratigraphy we have dated and correlated changes occurring in planktic foraminiferal assemblages. On this base, as an important result, we have demonstrated the diachroneity of the FO of Helvetoglobotruncana helvetica and the variable duration of the Whiteinella archaeocretacea PRZ.
JF - Geobios
AU - Caron, Michele
AU - Dall'Agnolo, Stephan
AU - Accarie, Hugues
AU - Barrera, Enriqueta
AU - Kauffman, Erle G
AU - Amedro, Francis
AU - Robaszynski, Francis
Y1 - 2006/04//
PY - 2006
DA - April 2006
SP - 171
EP - 200
PB - Elsevier on behalf of Universite Claude Bernard, Departement des Sciences de la Terre, Lyon
VL - 39
IS - 2
SN - 0016-6995, 0016-6995
KW - United States
KW - Rock Canyon Anticline
KW - North Africa
KW - isotopes
KW - Cretaceous
KW - Upper Cretaceous
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Pueblo Colorado
KW - Foraminifera
KW - chronology
KW - total organic carbon
KW - Tetrabranchiata
KW - carbon
KW - chemostratigraphy
KW - Invertebrata
KW - stratotypes
KW - Mollusca
KW - Tunisia
KW - geochemistry
KW - Ammonoidea
KW - high-resolution methods
KW - Protista
KW - biostratigraphy
KW - isotope ratios
KW - Cenomanian
KW - C-13/C-12
KW - Bahloul Formation
KW - Cephalopoda
KW - planktonic taxa
KW - central Tunisia
KW - Wadi Bahloul
KW - Turonian
KW - Maktar Tunisia
KW - paleogeography
KW - Mesozoic
KW - organic compounds
KW - Pueblo County Colorado
KW - biozones
KW - Africa
KW - stratigraphic boundary
KW - Colorado
KW - microfossils
KW - 12:Stratigraphy
KW - 02D:Isotope geochemistry
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Ageorefmodule&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Geobios&rft.atitle=High-resolution+stratigraphy+of+the+Cenomanian-Turonian+boundary+interval+at+Pueblo+%28USA%29+and+Wadi+Bahloul+%28Tunisia%29%3B+stable+isotope+and+bio-events+correlation&rft.au=Caron%2C+Michele%3BDall%27Agnolo%2C+Stephan%3BAccarie%2C+Hugues%3BBarrera%2C+Enriqueta%3BKauffman%2C+Erle+G%3BAmedro%2C+Francis%3BRobaszynski%2C+Francis&rft.aulast=Caron&rft.aufirst=Michele&rft.date=2006-04-01&rft.volume=39&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=171&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Geobios&rft.issn=00166995&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.geobios.2004.11.004
L2 - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00166995
LA - English
DB - GeoRef
N1 - Copyright - GeoRef, Copyright 2012, American Geosciences Institute.
N1 - Date revised - 2006-01-01
N1 - Number of references - 75
N1 - Document feature - illus. incl. sects., strat. cols., sketch map
N1 - Last updated - 2012-06-07
N1 - CODEN - GEBSAJ
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Africa; Ammonoidea; Bahloul Formation; biostratigraphy; biozones; C-13/C-12; carbon; Cenomanian; central Tunisia; Cephalopoda; chemostratigraphy; chronology; Colorado; Cretaceous; Foraminifera; geochemistry; high-resolution methods; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Maktar Tunisia; Mesozoic; microfossils; Mollusca; North Africa; organic compounds; paleogeography; planktonic taxa; Protista; Pueblo Colorado; Pueblo County Colorado; Rock Canyon Anticline; stable isotopes; stratigraphic boundary; stratotypes; Tetrabranchiata; total organic carbon; Tunisia; Turonian; United States; Upper Cretaceous; Wadi Bahloul
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geobios.2004.11.004
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Higher education and economic growth in Africa
AN - 36483127; 3299732
AB - This paper uses panel data over the 1960-2000 period, a modified neoclassical growth equation, and a dynamic panel estimator to investigate the effect of higher education human capital on economic growth in African countries. We find that all levels of education human capital, including higher education human capital, have positive and statistically significant effect on the growth rate of per capita income in African countries. Our result differs from those of earlier research that find no significant relationship between higher education human capital and income growth. We estimate the growth elasticity of higher education human capital to be about 0.09, an estimate that is twice as large as the growth impact of physical capital investment. While this is likely to be an overestimate of the growth impact of higher education, it is robust to different specifications and points to the need for African countries to effectively use higher education human capital in growth policies. Reprinted by permission of Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.
JF - Journal of development studies
AU - Gyimah-Brempong, Kwabena
AU - Paddison, Oliver
AU - Mitiku, Workie
AD - National Science Foundation ; United Nations ECLAC ; UN Economic Commission for Africa
Y1 - 2006/04//
PY - 2006
DA - Apr 2006
SP - 509
EP - 529
VL - 42
IS - 3
SN - 0022-0388, 0022-0388
KW - Economics
KW - Anthropology
KW - National income
KW - Human capital
KW - Development studies
KW - Economic development
KW - Higher education
KW - Africa
KW - Economic growth
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/36483127?accountid=14244
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LA - English
DB - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
N1 - Date revised - 2013-06-12
N1 - Last updated - 2013-09-16
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - 5850 4049; 3907 3483 3921; 3939; 6074 1952; 8509 6271; 3513; 2
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220380600576490
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Degradation of Aroclor 1242 Dechlorination Products in Sediments by Burkholderia xenovorans LB400(ohb) and Rhodococcus sp. Strain RHA1(fcb)
AN - 19979051; 6750720
AB - Burkholderia xenovorans strain LB400, which possesses the biphenyl pathway, was engineered to contain the oxygenolytic ortho dehalogenation (ohb) operon, allowing it to grow on 2-chlorobenzoate and to completely mineralize 2-chlorobiphenyl. A two-stage anaerobic/aerobic biotreatment process for Aroclor 1242-contaminated sediment was simulated, and the degradation activities and genetic stabilities of LB400(ohb) and the previously constructed strain RHA1(fcb), capable of growth on 4-chlorobenzoate, were monitored during the aerobic phase. The population dynamics of both strains were also followed by selective plating and real-time PCR, with comparable results; populations of both recombinants increased in the contaminated sediment. Inoculation at different cell densities (10 super(4) or 10 super(6) cells g super(-1) sediment) did not affect the extent of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) biodegradation. After 30 days, PCB removal rates for high and low inoculation densities were 57% and 54%, respectively, during the aerobic phase.
JF - Applied and Environmental Microbiology
AU - Rodrigues, Jorge LM
AU - Kachel, CAlan
AU - Aiello, Michael R
AU - Quensen, John F
AU - Maltseva, Olga V
AU - Tsoi, Tamara V
AU - Tiedje, James M
AD - NSF Center for Microbial Ecology. Department of Crop and Soil Sciences. Institute for Environmental Toxicology. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA
Y1 - 2006/04//
PY - 2006
DA - Apr 2006
SP - 2476
EP - 2482
PB - American Society for Microbiology, 1752 N Street N.W. Washington, DC 20036 USA, [URL:http://www.asm.org/]
VL - 72
IS - 4
SN - 0099-2240, 0099-2240
KW - Aroclor 1242
KW - Microbiology Abstracts A: Industrial & Applied Microbiology; Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Agricultural and Environmental Biotechnology Abstracts; Bioengineering Abstracts; Aqualine Abstracts
KW - Anaerobic Conditions
KW - Dechlorination
KW - Sediment Contamination
KW - Burkholderia
KW - Sediments
KW - P 2000:FRESHWATER POLLUTION
KW - A 01016:Microbial degradation
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - W2 32510:Waste treatment, environment, pollution
KW - W 30965:Miscellaneous, Reviews
KW - W4 210:Bioremediation, Bioreactors & BioCycling
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LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2006-06-01
N1 - Last updated - 2014-02-21
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Sediments; Dechlorination; Sediment Contamination; Burkholderia
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - First Ten Angstroms at the National Science Foundation
T2 - 231st National Meeting of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40145591; 4116850
JF - 231st National Meeting of the American Chemical Society
AU - Hicks, Janice
Y1 - 2006/03/26/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 26
KW - Imaging techniques
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/231nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Selected Results from NSF Funding of Gender and Equity Issues
T2 - 231st National Meeting of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40131487; 4114726
JF - 231st National Meeting of the American Chemical Society
AU - Hixson, Susan H
Y1 - 2006/03/26/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 26
KW - Sex
KW - Financing
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/231nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Intelligent Design: Bernasek and the Evolution of Analytical and Surface Chemistry
T2 - 231st National Meeting of the American Chemical Society
AN - 40128156; 4116868
JF - 231st National Meeting of the American Chemical Society
AU - Blount, Henry
Y1 - 2006/03/26/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 26
KW - Surface chemistry
KW - Evolution
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://oasys2.confex.com/acs/231nm/techprogram/
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2007-09-05
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Funding Science across the Boundaries: The National Science Foundation Role in the American Competitiveness Initiative
T2 - 48th Annual Meeting and Symposium of the Idaho Academy of Science
AN - 39946538; 4194627
JF - 48th Annual Meeting and Symposium of the Idaho Academy of Science
AU - Gosz, James
Y1 - 2006/03/23/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 23
KW - Competitiveness
KW - Boundaries
KW - Financing
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L2 - http://www.ag.uidaho.edu/ias06/PreProg3_4_06.pdf
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Glaciology, Public Understanding of Science, and the International Geophysical Year
T2 - 2006 Meeting of the Association of American Geographers
AN - 39919676; 4083176
JF - 2006 Meeting of the Association of American Geographers
AU - Korsmo, Fae L
Y1 - 2006/03/07/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 07
KW - Geophysics
KW - U 7000:Multidisciplinary
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L2 - http://communicate.aag.org/eseries/aag_org/program/SessionList.cfm?AlphaCha r=P
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Health Risk Assessment of Chlorobenzenediamine in Drinking Water
T2 - 45th Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2006)
AN - 39912614; 4146275
JF - 45th Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2006)
AU - Bhat, V S
AU - Ball, G L
AU - McLellan, C J
AU - Gillilland, C D
Y1 - 2006/03/05/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 05
KW - Risk assessment
KW - Drinking water
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/39912614?accountid=14244
L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Acpi&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=conference&rft.jtitle=45th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2006%29&rft.atitle=Health+Risk+Assessment+of+Chlorobenzenediamine+in+Drinking+Water&rft.au=Bhat%2C+V+S%3BBall%2C+G+L%3BMcLellan%2C+C+J%3BGillilland%2C+C+D&rft.aulast=Bhat&rft.aufirst=V&rft.date=2006-03-05&rft.volume=&rft.issue=&rft.spage=&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=45th+Annual+Meeting+of+the+Society+of+Toxicology+%28SOT+2006%29&rft.issn=&rft_id=info:doi/
L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/ai/meet/am2006/it_planner.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Developmental Toxicity as an Endpoint for Health Risk Assessment
T2 - 45th Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2006)
AN - 39860597; 4144836
JF - 45th Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology (SOT 2006)
AU - Ball, G L
AU - McLellan, C J
AU - Bhat, V S
Y1 - 2006/03/05/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Mar 05
KW - Toxicity
KW - Risk assessment
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L2 - http://www.toxicology.org/ai/meet/am2006/it_planner.asp
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
ER -
TY - GEN
T1 - Report to the National Science Board on the National Science Foundation's Merit Review Process, Fiscal Year 2005. NSB-06-21
AN - 62016539; ED496333
AB - The National Science Foundation Act of 1950 directs the Foundation "to initiate and support basic scientific research and programs to strengthen scientific research potential and science education programs at all levels." NSF achieves its unique mission by making merit-based awards to researchers, educators, and students at approximately 1,700 U.S. colleges, universities and other institutions. In Fiscal Year (FY) 2005, NSF awards directly involved an estimated 195,000 people, including senior researchers, post-doctoral associates, and teachers, and students from kindergarten through graduate school. This report provides summary information about proposal and award activity and the process by which proposals are reviewed and awarded. (Contains 31 footnotes, 12 figures, 15 appendix tables, and a list of terms and acronyms.)
Y1 - 2006/03//
PY - 2006
DA - March 2006
SP - 60
PB - National Science Foundation. 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22230.
KW - National Science Foundation Act 1950
KW - ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
KW - Elementary Secondary Education
KW - Higher Education
KW - Postsecondary Education
KW - Program Descriptions
KW - Science Education
KW - Federal Aid
KW - Grants
KW - Competitive Selection
KW - Program Proposals
KW - Annual Reports
KW - Public Agencies
KW - Federal Legislation
KW - Scientific Research
UR - http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/62016539?accountid=14244
LA - English
DB - ERIC
N1 - Last updated - 2014-03-21
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Oceans and human health: Emerging public health risks in the marine environment
AN - 20722035; 7159871
AB - There has been an increasing recognition of the inter-relationship between human health and the oceans. Traditionally, the focus of research and concern has been on the impact of human activities on the oceans, particularly through anthropogenic pollution and the exploitation of marine resources. More recently, there has been recognition of the potential direct impact of the oceans on human health, both detrimental and beneficial. Areas identified include: global change, harmful algal blooms (HABs), microbial and chemical contamination of marine waters and seafood, and marine models and natural products from the seas. It is hoped that through the recognition of the inter-dependence of the health of both humans and the oceans, efforts will be made to restore and preserve the oceans.
JF - Marine Pollution Bulletin
AU - Fleming, LE
AU - Broad, K
AU - Clement, A
AU - Dewailly, E
AU - Elmir, S
AU - Knap, A
AU - Pomponi, SA
AU - Smith, S
AU - Gabriele, HSolo
AU - Walsh, P
AD - National Science Foundation (NSF), National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), Oceans and Human Health Center, University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA, lfleming@med.miami.edu
Y1 - 2006/03//
PY - 2006
DA - March 2006
SP - 545
EP - 560
PB - Elsevier Science Ltd., Pergamon, P.O. Box 800 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1DX UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]
VL - 53
IS - 10-12
SN - 0025-326X, 0025-326X
KW - Microbiology Abstracts C: Algology, Mycology & Protozoology; Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts; Oceanic Abstracts; ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality; Aqualine Abstracts; Water Resources Abstracts; Pollution Abstracts
KW - Harmful algal bloom (HAB)
KW - Microbial pollution
KW - Global climate change
KW - Anthropogenic pollution
KW - Natural products
KW - Marine models
KW - Water Pollution
KW - Algal blooms
KW - Marine Environment
KW - Contamination
KW - Eutrophication
KW - Environmental health
KW - Man-induced effects
KW - natural products
KW - Metabolites
KW - Models
KW - Public health
KW - Marine resources
KW - Public Health
KW - Marine environment
KW - Seafood
KW - Chemical pollution
KW - Algae bloom
KW - Marine
KW - Ecosystem disturbance
KW - Model Studies
KW - Marine pollution
KW - Oceans
KW - Microorganisms
KW - Exploitation
KW - M2 551.46:General (551.46)
KW - K 03400:Human Diseases
KW - AQ 00008:Effects of Pollution
KW - SW 3030:Effects of pollution
KW - Q5 08524:Public health, medicines, dangerous organisms
KW - P 6000:TOXICOLOGY AND HEALTH
KW - O 4060:Pollution - Environment
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Aaqualine&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Marine+Pollution+Bulletin&rft.atitle=Oceans+and+human+health%3A+Emerging+public+health+risks+in+the+marine+environment&rft.au=Fleming%2C+LE%3BBroad%2C+K%3BClement%2C+A%3BDewailly%2C+E%3BElmir%2C+S%3BKnap%2C+A%3BPomponi%2C+SA%3BSmith%2C+S%3BGabriele%2C+HSolo%3BWalsh%2C+P&rft.aulast=Fleming&rft.aufirst=LE&rft.date=2006-03-01&rft.volume=53&rft.issue=10-12&rft.spage=545&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Marine+Pollution+Bulletin&rft.issn=0025326X&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.marpolbul.2006.08.012
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2006-12-01
N1 - Last updated - 2016-05-25
N1 - SubjectsTermNotLitGenreText - Algal blooms; Marine pollution; Man-induced effects; Metabolites; Chemical pollution; Seafood; Ecosystem disturbance; Public health; Contamination; Marine environment; Oceans; natural products; Models; Marine resources; Eutrophication; Algae bloom; Environmental health; Water Pollution; Marine Environment; Public Health; Microorganisms; Exploitation; Model Studies; Marine
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2006.08.012
ER -
TY - JOUR
T1 - Introduction to Special Nanobioengineering Issue
AN - 20403434; 7947386
JF - Annals of Biomedical Engineering
AU - Rastegar, Sohi
AU - Bao, Gang
AD - National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA, 22230, USA
Y1 - 2006/03//
PY - 2006
DA - Mar 2006
SP - 545
PB - Springer-Verlag, Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany, [mailto:subscriptions@springer.de], [URL:http://www.springer.de/]
VL - 34
IS - 3
SN - 0090-6964, 0090-6964
KW - Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts
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L2 - http://vb3lk7eb4t.search.serialssolutions.com/?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&rfr_id=info:sid/ProQ%3Abiotechresearch&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.jtitle=Annals+of+Biomedical+Engineering&rft.atitle=Introduction+to+Special+Nanobioengineering+Issue&rft.au=Rastegar%2C+Sohi%3BBao%2C+Gang&rft.aulast=Rastegar&rft.aufirst=Sohi&rft.date=2006-03-01&rft.volume=34&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=545&rft.isbn=&rft.btitle=&rft.title=Annals+of+Biomedical+Engineering&rft.issn=00906964&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10439-006-9116-6
LA - English
DB - ProQuest Environmental Science Collection
N1 - Date revised - 2008-01-01
N1 - Last updated - 2011-12-13
DO - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10439-006-9116-6
ER -
TY - CPAPER
T1 - Support for Instrumentation at the National Science Foundation
T2 - 10th International Meeting of the Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities (ABRF 2006)
AN - 39877269; 4149725
JF - 10th International Meeting of the Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities (ABRF 2006)
AU - Selzer, G B
Y1 - 2006/02/11/
PY - 2006
DA - 2006 Feb 11
KW - Financing
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N1 - Date revised - 2008-05-21
N1 - Last updated - 2010-05-03
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