Note on the Occurrence of Thrust-Faulting in Western Newfoundland

1926 ◽  
Vol 63 (8) ◽  
pp. 348-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles C. Mook

During the summer of 1918 a party under the direction of Mr. Hamlin Brooks Hatch carried on field studies in a section of the property of the Reid-Newfoundland Company in Western Newfoundland. A number of features of general scientific interest were noted, among which was faulting of the Appalachian type. The writer is indebted to Mr. Hatch for permission to publish this phase of the results of the latter's investigations.

1868 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  

Dr. Benjamin Guy Babington was born in 1794. He was the son of Dr. William Babington, who, in his time, held a foremost place as a popular and successful London physician. Educated at the Charter House, he subsequently went through the usual course of study at Haileybury College then required of young men destined for the Indian Civil Service; he went out to the Madras Presidency as a member of that service in 1812. After remaining seven years in India, he was compelled by ill health to return home, and then determined to leave the Indian Service and adopt his father’s profession. With this view he entered at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and took the degree of M. B. in 1825, and that of M. D. in 1830, In the meantime he commenced practice in London, and in 1831 was elected a Fellow of the College of Physicians. For the prosecution of his medical studies in London he had chosen Guy’s Hospital, where Ins father was physician, and he was himself appointed assistant physician to that Institution in 1837, and promoted to be one of the physicians in 1840. Dr. Babington was much esteemed as a clinical teacher, and was the author of papers on different professional subjects, published in the Guy’s Hospital Reports, and elsewhere; but he also engaged in researches of more general scientific interest, and among them his observations on the blood, published in the ‘Medico-Chirurgical Transactions' of 1830, deserve especial mention, inasmuch as he there showed that the liquid part of the circulating blood, or “liquor sanguinis” (a name proposed by him to distinguish it from the serum, and very generally adopted since) really contains or yields the coagulable matter, or fibrin, which solidifies in the process of coagulation. This, no doubt, was merely a confirmation by simple but well-devised experiments of the doctrine held by Hewson and his contemporaries, and accepted by most British physiologists; but the confirmation was needful and well timed on account of the erroneous views then prevailing on the continent on the authority of Prevost and Dumas. At a later time, namely in 1859, Dr. Babington communicated to the Royal Society a series of observations on the effect of various salts dissolved m water in retarding or otherwise altering the rate of spontaneous evaporation, and an abstract stating the nature and results of the experiments was published in the ‘Proceedings’ for 1859.


The problem of gel structure is one of general scientific interest and importance, but it is in regard more particularly to its significance in ultra-filtration that the present work has to deal. The observations concern collodion gel films, and have been made during an investigation into the problem of filtration and filterable viruses, which has involved a close study of the behaviour of various types of gel membranes employed for ultra-filtration purposes. The most widely used membranes are made from collodion, a solution of nitro-cellulose in some suitable solvent, like acetic acid or ether/alcohol mixture. Two methods are available for preparing such membranes, according as to whether the solvent is volatile, like ether/alcohol, or non-volatile like acetic acid. In the former case the collodion is spread in a uniform layer over a glass or mercury surface and the solvents allowed to evaporate under standard conditions until the film just “sets,” i. e. , incipient gelation occurs. The remaining solvent is then washed out by immersing the film in water, which completes the gelling process. The alternative method, used when employing acetic acid collodion, consists in impregnating filter-paper (which serves to support the delicate film) with the collodion and then washing in water to replace the solvent acetic acid, and so gel the collodion.


Legal Concept ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 43-47
Author(s):  
Mohammed Alhamdawi ◽  
Maxim Nenashev

Introduction: the scientific interest in the study of peculiarities of regulating the termination of a civil contract due to a significant change in circumstances in the foreign practice is predetermined by both the discussion and lack of scientific coverage of the relevant issues, and the difficulties in interpreting and applying the relevant norms of the law of obligations in Russia. Methods: the methodological framework for the research is a set of methods of scientific cognition, among which the main ones are the general scientific dialectical, comparative legal, logical-syntactic, semantic methods of cognition, as well as the methods of cause-and-effect analysis, forecasting, synthesis and analysis. Results: the study reveals the features and main problematic aspects of the application of the rules on the termination of a civil contract due to a significant change in circumstances in a number of post-Soviet states. The paper presents the insights on the need to improve the statutory regulation of the considered grounds for the termination of a civil contract in Russia, including specifying the provisions of Article 451 of the Civil Code.


1874 ◽  
Vol 22 (148-155) ◽  
pp. 308-310

The importance, as an instrument of research, which the spectroscope has reached within a few years, renders any improvement therein a matter of general scientific interest. Hitherto it has been under a disadvantage, which, though slight in amount in those cases in which the dispersive power of the instrument is moderate, becomes a rather serious annoyance to the observer when a number of prisms are used in serial combination, and the curvature of the spectral lines is proportionally increased, and only to be restrained appearance by using a narrow breadth of the spectrum. I have lately thought of a very simple and practical remedy (which may indeed have occurred to others, but which I have not seen men­tioned), whereby those lines are rendered palpably straight in a very large field; but previous to describing it, it is desirable to refer to a state­ment appearing in the ‘ Astronomical Notices ’ for last month (March), viz. that the spectral lines can be rendered perfectly straight simply by returning them (after their first passage through a series of prisms arranged for minimum deviation) by a direct reflection from a plane mirror ; and, further, that this has been accomplished in a spectroscope in construction for the Royal Observatory.


1872 ◽  
Vol 9 (95) ◽  
pp. 203-209
Author(s):  
J. W. Dawson

The writer had the opportunity last summer, with Dr. B. J. Harrington as assistant, to re-examine the rock formations of Prince Edward Island, of which a notice was given in the second edition of his “Acadian Geology.” The report of our reconnaissance, which has been published by the local government, with a map, sections, and figures of fossils, may be referred to for details; but I propose in this paper to notice a few points of general scientific interest not dwelt on in the report.


2020 ◽  
pp. 45-49
Author(s):  
Yu. Tkalich ◽  
S. Shevchenko

Goal. The of the research was to conduct field studies of new formulations of herbicides in winter wheat crops and to optimize the phytotoxic composition of tank mixtures consisting of different-spectrum active substances. Methods. In carrying out the work, general scientific and special research methods were used. Results. Species diagnostics of weed phytocenoses in winter wheat crops showed that high potential weed caused dominance in the agrophytocenoses of ragweed wormwood and sunflower scavenger. The deformation of the classic wintering type of weed was observed in the direction of the annual seed species composition. The phytotoxic properties of tank mixtures of Granstar Gold and Hammer herbicides and combined preparations were studied, their technical efficiency, the dynamics of depression and the death of weeds during the growing season were established, the individual resistance of certain types of weeds was revealed. A biometric analysis (crop density, linear growth, grain yield from an ear) of winter wheat was carried out depending on the toxicity of the herbicides. The scientific conclusion was made that the most effective mixture of herbicides was Granstar Gold 30 g/ha + Hammer 20 g/ha. Conclusions. As a result of the studies, it was found that winter wheat responded positively to reducing the degree of clogging by improving biometric and productive indicators. The yield of winter wheat grain is in a natural dependence on the degree of weediness of crops and phytotoxic effectiveness against weeds. The maximum increase in grain yield of 0.34 t/ha was achieved in comparison with the control when processing wheat crops of the winter mixture of herbicides Granstar Gold 30 g/ha + Hammer 20 g/ha.


This paper contains the results, theoretical and experimental, of work undertaken, at the request of the Ordnance Committee, by the authors as Technical Officers of the Munitions Inventions Department. Permission to publish such parts as appear to be of general scientific interest has now been granted by the Ordnance Committee and the Director of Artillery. The publication of this paper has received their sanction. The experiments in question were carried out at the firing ground of H. M. S. “Excellent,” Portsmouth; the Experimental Department, H. M. S. “Excellent,” also provided the 3-inch guns used and the material for the construction of the range. The authors’ best thanks are due to the officers of this department, especially Lieut.-Commander R. F. P. Maton, O. B. E., R. N., without whose cordial co-operation these experiments could never have been carried out; also to the other officers of the Munitions Inventions Department who assisted in the heavy work of making and analysing the observations. The aeronautical measurements at low velocities, required for comparison, were made in the wind channels of the National Physical Laboratory, by arrangement with the Director and the Superintendent of the Aero­nautical Department, to whom also we wish to express our thanks.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arie Verhagen

Generally, construction based approaches to grammar consider constructions to be pairings of form and meaning and thus as a kind of signs, not essentially distinct from words and other lexical items. Granting this commonality, Langacker (2005) criticizes other varieties of constructional approaches for using the notion ‘grammatical form’, and for not reducing the properties of grammar to the more fundamental and minimal notions of sound, meaning, and symbolic links between these two. While such a reduction is definitely worth pursuing, if only for reasons of general scientific interest, the abstract forms postulated in Cognitive Grammar (schematic sound patterns) are so general that they represent ‘any sound’, which threatens the very basis for the assumption that constructions are a kind of signs. I will argue that a usage-based view of sign-formation (Keller 1998), allows us to understand how the recognition of an element as belonging to a particular class of elementary signs can come to function as a signal for a specific linguistic environment (a construction), and produce a level of structure (categories of more elementary signs and relations between them) intermediate between sound and meaning that has its own (emergent) properties, which can still be reduced to more basic phenomena of processing and language use.


1964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milton S. Katz ◽  
Paul A. Cirincione ◽  
William Metlay
Keyword(s):  

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