Ocular Lesions in the Earth Day, 1970, Histoplasmosis Epidemic

1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 51-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
FREDERICK H. DAVIDORF ◽  
JOHN D. ANDERSON
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (I) ◽  
pp. 168
Author(s):  
D. Alok Sharma ◽  
Sunil Kumar Garg ◽  
Omprakash Swami
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 527-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Abdeen Hamed ◽  
Alexa A. Ayer ◽  
Eric M. Clark ◽  
Erin A. Irons ◽  
Grant T. Taylor ◽  
...  

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to test the hypothesis of whether more complex and emergent hashtags can be sufficient pointers to climate change events. Human-induced climate change is one of this century’s greatest unbalancing forces to have affected our planet. Capturing the public awareness of climate change on Twitter has proven to be significant. In a previous research, it was demonstrated by the authors that public awareness is prominently expressed in the form of hashtags that uses more than one bigram (i.e. a climate change term). The research finding showed that this awareness is expressed by more complex terms (e.g. “climate change”). It was learned that the awareness was dominantly expressed using the hashtag: #ClimateChange. Design/methodology/approach – The methods demonstrated here use objective computational approaches [i.e. Google’s ranking algorithm and Information Retrieval measures (e.g. TFIDF)] to detect and rank the emerging events. Findings – The results shows a clear significant evidence for the events signaled using emergent hashtags and how globally influential they are. The research detected the Earth Day, 2015, which was signaled using the hashtag #EarthDay. Clearly, this is a day that is globally observed by the worldwide population. Originality/value – It was proven that these computational methods eliminate the subjectivity errors associated with humans and provide inexpensive solution for event detection on Twitter. Indeed, the approach used here can also be applicable to other types of event detections, beyond climate change, and surely applicable to other social media platforms that support the use of hashtags (e.g. Facebook). The paper explains, in great detail, the methods and all the numerous events detected.


Author(s):  
Timothy O'Riordan ◽  
William C. Clark ◽  
Robert W. Kates ◽  
Alan McGowan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Marvin T. Brown

AbstractThe Earth is both our home and our provider. It’s meaning for us depends on how we interpret our human, social, and civic relationships with it. All humans exist as participants in the earth’s dynamics, from breathing its air to consuming its provisions. Our social relations with the Earth span the range from indigenous groups who see the Earth as sacred to some modern groups who see it as a commodity. We are dwellers on the Earth and our dwellings exist as homes in a natural and urban environment and yet they can be treated as nothing but real estate. Still, since Earth Day in 1972, there have been “environmental victories” in preserving the Earth’s vitality, and yet today as citizens we face a stark alternative between a stable or “hot house” Earth. Making the right choice depends on breaking through the climate of injustice that now prevents us from both repairing our relationships with each other and from restoring the Earth as a habitat for all living things.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gede H Cahyana
Keyword(s):  

Tema peringatan Hari Bumi (Earth Day) tahun 2021 ini adalah Restore the Earth. Pulihkan Bumi. Satu-satunya planet di tatasurya yang bisa didiami oleh manusia ini sedang sakit. Satu di antara beberapa cara untuk memulihkannya adalah puasa. Puasa dari aktivitas yang mencemari Bumi. Siapa yang harus puasa? Setiap orang sebagai individu dan orang sebagai pengelola masyarakat, yaitu pemerintah (pusat dan daerah). Ada tiga matra yang harus direstorasi dengan cara puasa, yaitu tanah, air dan udara.


Author(s):  
Richard Revesz ◽  
Jack Lienke

In the preceding chapters, we’ve focused largely on what is often called “traditional pollution”: soot and smog and their precursors, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides. But power plants are also the nation’s largest source of a very different sort of pollutant: carbon dioxide. Unlike traditional pollution, atmospheric CO2 does not pose a threat to public health through inhalation. As every schoolchild learns, humans exhale CO2 during normal respiration, and plants absorb it as part of the photosynthesis that fuels their growth. Carbon dioxide does, however, act as a “greenhouse gas.” Like the glass of a greenhouse, molecules of CO2 let sunlight pass through to warm the earth but then trap some of the heat that radiates back from the planet’s surface. Up to a point, this heat-trapping effect is beneficial; without it, the earth would be too cold to support life. But when humans burn fossil fuels, carbon that has been sequestered underground for millions of years is rapidly released in the form of CO2, and the natural carbon cycle is altered. As the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere increases, the greenhouse effect becomes stronger, and the earth’s surface temperature rises. Over time, warming driven by ever-increasing industrial emissions of CO2 is expected to have serious, possibly devastating consequences for all corners of human society. (There are other greenhouse gases, like methane, but CO2 is by far the most common, accounting for more than 75 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions and almost 85 percent of U.S. emissions.) And yet, when President Obama took office in 2009, almost forty years after the U.S. Congress passed a piece of legislation designed to eliminate all air pollution that posed a threat to public health and welfare, emissions of carbon dioxide were still entirely unregulated at the federal level. As the President observed in his first Earth Day address on April 22, 2009: “[W] e place limits on pollutants like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide and other harmful emissions. But we haven’t placed any limits on carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. It’s what’s called the carbon loophole.”


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-37
Author(s):  
Violeta Lukočienė

While analysing theoretical presumptions of educational methods, it has been noticed that personality’s development is validated by the conference as a method. This method stimulates support of active relationships among the participants of education process involving personal experiences. Conference as an education method involves learning process of multidimensional environment that includes various types of digital media such as text, image, sound, video that are integrated into one presentation. Conference as education method highlights the division between pupil-centred vs. teacher-centred conceptions. A pupil as a central figure creates conditions for pupils to communicate with each other without teacher’s positioning in the education process. Pupils and teachers of Šilutė Martynas Jankus primary school organise events dedicated to the Earth Day. One of the events is conference. Conference activities, presentations, community’s involvement into the educational process stimulate social communication; the education process becomes important not only to its participants, but also to the whole community increasing the engagement to solve nature problems. Keywords: conference as education method, primary school pupils, Earth Day, nature lessons.


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