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Results: 1782
Interview with Brenda Stone
Brenda Stone
Jan 01, 0001
In her June 1984 interview with Michael Cooke, Brenda Stone discussed her work with DHEC and her relationship with the community organizations that dealt with sickle cell. Stone discussed topics of DHEC's role in handling sickle...
Published by: Winthrop University
The comparative in situ hygrothermal performance of Hemp and Stone Wool insulations in vapour open timber frame wall panels
An in situ experiment in a full scale timber frame test building was carried out to compare the hygrothermal performance of Hemp and Stone Wool insulations of identical thermal conductivity. Hemp and Stone Wool insulations were...
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Geochemical fingerprinting of Pleistocene stone tools from the Tràng An Landscape Complex, Ninh Bình Province, Vietnam.
Benjamin Utting
Jul 22, 2022
Raw material analyses of prehistoric stone tool assemblages can reveal insight into mobility and exchange patterns in hunter-gatherer populations by reconstructing the circulation of stone throughout ancient landscapes. In...
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Lithic landscapes
Humans have had a major impact on the environment. This has been particularly intense in the last millennium but has been noticeable since the development of food production and the associated higher population densities in the...
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Helen DeKroyft: A Case Study on the Importance of Intersectionality in Disability Studies and History
Lizzie Elliott
Jan 01, 0001
Living in the 19th century, Helen DeKroyft was an incredibly popular and highly praised blind orator and author. Her ability to gain such success was not only due to her intelligence, but also due to the ability for audiences to...
Published by: Ursinus College
Identifying anthropogenic features at Seoke (Botswana) using pXRF
Numerous and extensive 'Stone Walled Sites' have been identified in southern African Iron Age landscapes. Appearing from around 1200 CE, and showing considerable variability in size and form, these settlements are named after...
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Economics Professor Gary Stone Chosen as William H. Grier Professor
Winthrop University
Jan 01, 0001
The Grier Professorship is awarded every four years to an excellent classroom teacher who is highly imaginative, dependable and in command of his or her discipline. Stone, who previously held the title from 2002-05, follows...
Published by: Winthrop University
Influence of Stone Columns on Seismic Response of Buildings Considering the Effects of Liquefaction
In this paper, the behaviour of a soil-foundation system supported on a stone column-reinforced liquefiable soil strata is investigated through finite element analysis. The numerical analyses are performed on a five story...
A spatiotemporally explicit paleoenvironmental framework for the Middle Stone Age of eastern Africa.
Eastern Africa has played a prominent role in debates about human evolution and dispersal due to the presence of rich archaeological, palaeoanthropological and palaeoenvironmental records. However, substantial disconnects occur...
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Helen McRae Hicklin of Richburg Jan. 8, 1947
Winthrop News Service
Jan 01, 0001
A senior at Winthrop College, Helen McRae (Pat) Hicklin of Richburg, SC has been selected for Who's Who among students in American colleges and universities for 1946-1947. Others named for Who's Who at Winthrop include: Marian...
Published by: Winthrop University
The comparative in situ hygrothermal performance of Hemp and Stone Wool insulations in vapour open timber frame wall panels
An in situ experiment in a full scale timber frame test building was carried out to compare the hygrothermal performance of Hemp and Stone Wool insulations of identical thermal conductivity. Hemp and Stone Wool insulations were...
Published by:
Why invent the handle? Electromyography (EMG) and efficiency of use data investigating the prehistoric origin and selection of hafted stone knives
Abstract: For over 3 million years hominins held stone-cutting tools in the hand, gripping the portion of tool displaying a sharp cutting edge directly. During the late Middle Pleistocene human populations started to produce...
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How to kill two birds with one stone

Since their implementation in China's tertiary education system two decades ago, EMI programmes have been reported largely less successful and more problematic than envisioned. Although portrayed as killing two birds with one...

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Why invent the handle? Electromyography (EMG) and efficiency of use data investigating the prehistoric origin and selection of hafted stone knives
Abstract: For over 3 million years hominins held stone-cutting tools in the hand, gripping the portion of tool displaying a sharp cutting edge directly. During the late Middle Pleistocene human populations started to produce...
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Communication media and the dead
Tony Walter
Jan 01, 0001
This article argues that i) the presence of the dead within a society depends in part on available communication technologies, specifically speech, stone, sculpture, writing, printing, photography and phonography (including the...
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How to kill two birds with one stone

Since their implementation in China's tertiary education system two decades ago, EMI programmes have been reported largely less successful and more problematic than envisioned. Although portrayed as killing two birds with one...

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Kidney stone/Renal calculus – A case study
Shagufta Parveen
Jan 05, 2018
The prevalence of stones has been a matter of concern and has been rising over the past 30 years in an aging population. Many factors may contribute to this rise including life style changes, improved diagnostic abilities...
Published by: IJHS Medical Association
Statistical inference of earlier origins for the first flaked stone technologies.
Identifying when hominins first produced Lomekwian, Oldowan, and Acheulean technologies is vital to multiple avenues of human origins research. Yet, like most archaeological endeavors, our understanding is currently only as...
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Communication media and the dead
Tony Walter
Jan 01, 0001
This article argues that i) the presence of the dead within a society depends in part on available communication technologies, specifically speech, stone, sculpture, writing, printing, photography and phonography (including the...
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Declaration as Disavowal
Emma Stone Mackinnon
Nov 01, 2018
This article argues that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), by claiming certain inheritances from eighteenth-century American and French rights declarations, simultaneously disavowed others, reshaping the...
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Father David Valtierra Scholarship Awarded for First Time
Winthrop University
Jan 01, 0001
During a memorial concert earlier this month, Helen Layton became the first recipient of the scholarship, which provides financial support for scholarships, faculty support and programming needs of the Peace, Justice, and...
Published by: Winthrop University
Kidney stone/Renal calculus – A case study
Shagufta Parveen
Jan 05, 2018
The prevalence of stones has been a matter of concern and has been rising over the past 30 years in an aging population. Many factors may contribute to this rise including life style changes, improved diagnostic abilities...
Published by: IJHS Medical Association

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