3,574 research outputs found
Workshop on oiled seabird cleaning and rehabilitation : proceedings of a workshop held in Townsville, Australia, 26 February 1991
This report is a summary of the proceedings from the Oiled Seabird Cleaning and
Rehabilitation Workshop, the first in Queensland to address this issue. It is hoped that more
workshops will be held in the future.Table of Contents: Dr Wendy Craik, Seabird Cleaning and Rehabilitation in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park 17; Mr Terry Walker, Seabird Distribution on the Great Barrier Reef 24; Dr Peter Dann and
Dr Ros Jessop, The Effect of Oil on Birds 37; Ms Erna Walraven and Mr Larry Vogelnest, Emergency Care for Birds at Lake Liddell Oil Spill 44; Mr Peter Brookhouse, Management of Wildlife Operations 49; and Material Submitted: Dr Geoffrey Smith, Rescuing Oiled Seabirds 61
Workshop on the use of bioremediation for oil spill response in the Great Barrier Reef Region : proceedings of a workshop held in Townsville, Australia, 25 February 1991
The intensity of shipping within the Great Barrier Reef presents a very real threat to the’
Reef from oil spills. In response to this threat, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Authority and the Commonwealth Department of Transport and Communications have
developed REEFPLAN, the marine pollution contingency plan for the Great Barrier
Reef Region. As of 1 January 1991, the role of the Department of Transport and
Communications under REEFPLAN has been taken over by the Australian Maritime
Safety Authority.Table of Contents: Papers Presented: Dr Wendy Craik, Bioremediation in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park 15; Dr Riehard Edgehill,
Bioremediation - The Biological, Physical, and Chemical Bases 20; Dr Bruce Kelley and Mr Stuart Rhodes, Bioremediation of Industrial Wastes 26; Ms Randi Larson, Research into Bioremediation of Oil and Related Compounds in Australia 32; Prof. Paul Greenfield, Bioremediation Applications in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park 41; Dr Alan Sheehy, Bioremediation of Oil Spills 45; Mr Locon Wall, The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill - Woodward-Clyde Consultants' Contributions to Bioremediation 48; Papers Submitted: American Society for Microbiology, Biodegradation of Oil in the Open Ocean 53; and Ms Rebecca Hoff Bioremediation for Oil Spills - Update 55
Hot dense capsule implosion cores produced by z-pinch dynamic hohlraum radiation
Hot dense capsule implosions driven by z-pinch x-rays have been measured for
the first time. A ~220 eV dynamic hohlraum imploded 1.7-2.1 mm diameter
gas-filled CH capsules which absorbed up to ~20 kJ of x-rays. Argon tracer atom
spectra were used to measure the Te~ 1keV electron temperature and the ne ~ 1-4
x10^23 cm-3 electron density. Spectra from multiple directions provide core
symmetry estimates. Computer simulations agree well with the peak compression
values of Te, ne, and symmetry, indicating reasonable understanding of the
hohlraum and implosion physics.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Place attachment in deprived neighbourhoods: The impacts of population turnover and social mix
This paper examines the determinants of individual place attachment, focussing in particular on differences between deprived and others neighbourhoods, and on the impacts of population turnover and social mix. It uses a multi-level modelling approach to take account of both individual- and neighbourhood-level determinants. Data are drawn from a large sample government survey, the Citizenship Survey 2005, to which a variety of neighbourhood-level data have been attached. The paper argues that attachment is significantly lower in more deprived neighbourhoods primarily because these areas have weaker social cohesion but that, in other respects, the drivers of attachment are the same. Turnover has modest direct impacts on attachment through its effect on social cohesion. Social mix has very limited impacts on attachment and the effects vary between social groups. In general, higher status or more dominant groups appear less tolerant of social mix
Shifting new media: from content to consultancy, from heterarchy to hierarchy
This is a detailed case history of one of London’s iconic new media companies, AMX Studios. Some of the changes in this firm, we assume, are not untypical for other firms in this sector. Particularly we want to draw attention to two transformations. The first change in AMX and in London’s new media industry more generally refers to the field of industrial relations. What can be observed is a shift from a rather heterarchical towards a more hierarchical organized new media industry, a shift from short-term project networks to long-term client dependency. The second change refers to new media products and services. We want to argue for a shift from cool content production towards consultancy and interactive communications solutions
Investigation of the catalytic and structural roles of conserved histidines of human coproporphyrinogen oxidase using site-directed mutagenesis
Background: The catalytic contribution of four conserved histidines of human coproporphyrinogen oxidase (CPO) has been investigated using site-directed mutagenesis to change histidine (H) into alanine (A). Material/Methods: The wild-type and mutant enzyme forms were analyzed for their ability to utilize coproporphyrinogen-III, mesoporphvrinogen-VI, and harderoporphyrinogen as substrates. Results: Wild-type CPO had specific activities of 4.9 +/- 0.9 nmole product/min/mg for coproporphyrinogen-III, 1.7 +/- 0.7 nmole ptoduct/min/mg for mesoporphyrinogen-VI, and 5.1 +/- 1.8 nmole product/min/mg for harderoporphyrinogen. The four mutant enzymes were catalytically competent With all three substrates, but to varying degrees. The most affected Mutant was the H158A enzyme which exhibited approximately 50-fold lower activity than wild-type recombinant CPO. Conclusions: Thus, His 158 of human CPO may have a role ill the active site, but none of the conserved histidine residues of human coproporphyrinogen oxidase is essential for catalytic activity although changes in histidines have been implicated in the disease state hereditary coproporphyria
Histological insights into the pathogenesis of post‐Roux‐en‐Y hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia
Background β‐cell hyperplasia has been implicated in the aetiology of post Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia, but the pathogenesis of this condition is still unclear. Case report We report a case of a 52‐year‐old man with post‐Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia who underwent distal pancreatectomy to alleviate his symptoms. Pancreatic histopathology showed chronic pancreatitis with a corresponding loss of exocrine tissue and islet retention. Amyloid deposition was found in pancreatic islets. These features are more typically associated with Type 2 diabetes. Discussion This case highlights the potential multifactorial pathogenesis of symptomatic hypoglycaemia after Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass. What's new? We present a case of a patient with post Roux‐en‐Y hypoglycaemia and pancreatic histology typically associated with diabetes. We show that hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia has a multifactorial aetiology.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109602/1/dme12571.pd
Exploring the role of professional associations in collective learning in London and New York's advertising and law professional service firm clusters.
The value of regional economies for collective learning has been reported by numerous scholars. However often work has been criticised for lacking analytical clarity and failing to explore the architectures of collective learning and the role of the knowledge produced in making firms in a cluster economy successful. This paper engages with these problematics and investigates how collective learning is facilitated in the advertising and law professional service firm clusters in London and New York. It explores the role of professional associations and investigates how they mediate a collective learning process in each city. It argues that professional associations seed urban communities of practice that emerge outside of the formal activities of professional associations. In these communities individual with shared interests in advertising and law learn from one-another and are therefore able to adapt and evolve one-another approaches to common industry challenges. The paper suggests this is another form of the variation Marshall highlighted in relation to cluster-based collective learning. The paper also shows how the collective learning process is affected by the presence, absence and strength of an institutional thickness. It is therefore argued that a richer understanding of institutional affects is needed in relation to CL
Foundation and empire : a critique of Hardt and Negri
In this article, Thompson complements recent critiques of Hardt and Negri's Empire (see Finn Bowring in Capital and Class, no. 83) using the tools of labour process theory to critique the political economy of Empire, and to note its unfortunate similarities to conventional theories of the knowledge economy
Eigenvector localization as a tool to study small communities in online social networks
We present and discuss a mathematical procedure for identification of small
"communities" or segments within large bipartite networks. The procedure is
based on spectral analysis of the matrix encoding network structure. The
principal tool here is localization of eigenvectors of the matrix, by means of
which the relevant network segments become visible. We exemplified our approach
by analyzing the data related to product reviewing on Amazon.com. We found
several segments, a kind of hybrid communities of densely interlinked reviewers
and products, which we were able to meaningfully interpret in terms of the type
and thematic categorization of reviewed items. The method provides a
complementary approach to other ways of community detection, typically aiming
at identification of large network modules
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