scholarly journals The Duane, Key Largo, Florida, USA.

2022 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
Keyword(s):  
Geology ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. 360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Don C. Steinker ◽  
Jack C. Floyd
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
pp. 365-386
Author(s):  
Ate van Delden
Keyword(s):  
New York ◽  

After the Trio and the Shop, Rollini starts a third venture, the Driftwood, a fishing lodge on Key Largo, Florida. He has a relaxed life, spending his time on all three ventures as well as on his hobby, fishing. Al Perlis joins the Trio on guitar and records are made for another small label, Bullet, andissued on the new Mercury label. Rollini develops another serious disease, tuberculosis and recovers. He stays in a hospital in New York, but two years later he has a mysterious accident near his lodge and he dies from complications in a hospital in Homestead, Florida. He was survived by Dixie.


Author(s):  
Ryan Neighbors

John Huston was an American actor, director, and screenwriter, who became one of the world’s most influential filmmakers. Born in Missouri to Rhea Huston, a sports editor, and Walter Huston, a vaudeville actor and eventual film star, Huston spent his early years as an artist, author, reporter, soldier, and amateur boxer. He started out in Hollywood as a screenwriter for Samuel Goldwyn at Universal Studios, and later for Warner Bros. At Warner Bros., he helped to launch Humphrey Bogart’s career with High Sierra (1941). A string of successful scripts gained him his first directing job with Maltese Falcon (1941), a film that would thrust Huston into the limelight. In total, his career spanned over five decades, earned him fifteen Oscar nominations and two Academy awards, a Golden Globe, and several lifetime achievement awards. Huston worked in multiple genres, including comedies, war films, musicals, Westerns, adventures, and literary adaptations. His most pronounced role, however, likely involved his development of the modernist film noir, writing and directing several classics of the genre, including Key Largo (1948) and The Asphalt Jungle (1950). Many of these films call into question traditional forms of authority, religious faith, and epistemology, and focus on protagonists who wander the world on a journey to define their own values.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 177-177
Author(s):  
Peter B. Lask

Cyclocrinitids are considered to be calcareous green algae closely related to, or members of, the dasycladacean algae. Cyclocrinitids are characterized by a globular thallus 1-5 cm in diameter consisting of whorls of calcified meromes borne from a tubular or spherical central axis. The species Cyclocrinites darwini is distinguished from other cyclocrinitids by the presence of lateral branches arranged in a stellate pattern at the distal end of each merome.C. darwini is restricted to strata of the Cincinnatian Series. Specimens are commonly found in shale-filled channels cutting through nodular, irregularly-bedded limestones within the Mt. Auburn Formation and the lower Sunset Member of the Arnheim Formation. Numerous specimens are also known from the Bellevue Member of the Grant Lake Formation at Maysville, Kentucky. Each of these units has been interpreted to be the top of separate shoaling-upward, third-order cycles. These facies are abundantly fossiliferous, often consisting of broken, abraded, and reworked material.The modern dasyclad Neomeris is cited for its structural similarity to the cyclocrinitids and ecological parallels have been postulated as well. Neomeris and a similar dasyclad Batophora, thrive while attached to pieces of coral rubble at depths of less than 3 m in the high-energy conditions associated with a reef crest environment at Key Largo, Florida.It is likely that C. darwini lived under similar conditions, attached to rubble in shoaling areas. Preservation only occurred in instances when thalli were broken off from their holdfasts and swept into ripple troughs or downslope channels cutting across the shoals. It has been suggested that the presence of cyclocrinitids is indicative of relatively quiet environments below wave base. For Cyclocrinites darwini, the opposite would appear to be the case.


2008 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 471-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. DeMay ◽  
Lawrence J. Hribar
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 986-996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa W. Southwell ◽  
Jeremy B. Weisz ◽  
Christopher S. Martens ◽  
Niels Lindquist

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