Reassessing Revitalization Movements: Perspectives from North America and the Pacific Islands

2005 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 136
Author(s):  
John Barker ◽  
Michael E. Harkin
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 631-633
Author(s):  
Linda Spigelblatt ◽  
Robert Rosenfeld ◽  
Yvette Bonny ◽  
Michel Laverdiere

Dengue hemorrhagic fever, a severe, often fatal, illness, occurs mostly in children and is characterized by a hemorrhagic diathesis, fever, vomiting, a maculopapular rash, liver involvement, and occasionally, a protein-losing shock syndrome.1 This disease is to be differentiated from dengue fever, a relatively benign disease occurring primarily in adults and manifested by myalgia, arthralgia, bone pain, and leukopenia. Cases of dengue fever in North America have been described among travellers from the Carribean.2-6 Dengue hemorrhagic fever is an epidemic disease described after World War II and limited to areas of Southeast Asia, India, and the Pacific islands.7-8 We believe this to be the first reported case in North America of dengue hemorrhagic fever with disseminated intravascular coagulation in a child of Southeast Asian origin.


1934 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-302
Author(s):  
Dean S. Carder

summary The favorable location of Berkeley on the eastern margin of the Pacific makes possible a comparative study of surface waves coming directly from the epicenter to that station over paths that are purely Pacific or purely continental. Records of 378 earthquakes dating from November, 1910, to May, 1934, have been used in this study. Speeds and period of the initial impulses of Love waves have been measured and associated with wave-velocity. These waves show normal dispersion, the long waves having the greater speeds. Speeds over oceanic paths are higher than over continental paths, the difference diminishing with an increase in the wave-length. For short or long waves, they are about the same over all Pacific paths, but waves having intermediate periods (30 or 40 seconds) cross under the Aleutian deep faster than under the Polynesian Pacific. The data indicate for the crustal thicknesses under western North America and the Pacific the following approximate values: granite 20 kilometers, gabbro 40 kilometers, under western North America; basalt 25 kilometers, dunite 20 kilometers, under the Aleutian deep; basalt 30 kilometers, dunite 25 kilometers under Polynesia; and intermediate values under the remainder of the Pacific. A third discontinuity under the continent at depths somewhat greater than 60 kilometers is indicated. If the sub-Pacific is assumed to be single-layered, thicknesses of 35 to 45 kilometers form the best fit to the data. The thickness of the crust underlying the Pacific Islands is probably about 10 kilometers greater than that underlying the deeps of the North Pacific. Movements associated with Rayleigh waves apparently have their closest approach to theoretical conditions over central Pacific paths. The dominant periods in the coda are 8 to 9, 10, 13, and 16 seconds. The longer periods are dominant at the greater distances. The increase in period with distance is a discontinuous, step-like function. The structure underlying the Aleutian deep apparently is opaque to 13-second periods in the Rayleigh wave, and the central Pacific and possibly the Atlantic structure seems to be unfavorable in the transmission of waves having this period. Vibrations in the natural period or overtones thereof set up in the focal region being eventually transmitted as sympathetic vibrations to the region of the station seems to be a logical explanation for the dominant groupings in the coda. Should any section of the path be out of sympathy with a given period, this period would probably become subordinate if not lost. The natural period of a portion of the Arctic region, including Alaska, seems to be different from other parts of the world. The natural period of the San Francisco Bay region, or its dominant overtone, is observed to be about eight seconds.


1980 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-136
Author(s):  
Kai Curry-Lindahl

Part 2 of this paper reviews the situation in the Central and Eastern regions of the Pacific Realm as well as in the Pacific mainland coasts of Australia, North America, and South America. Table I lists the ‘Pacific Faunal Balance’ as far as vertebrates are concerned, and gives the number and distribution of existing national parks or nature reserves in each subregion. It shows that the Hawaiian Islands have been subjected to a high number of extinctions. In addition an even larger number of Hawaiian vertebrates are at present on the verge of extinction. Hawaii tops the lists of both extinct (24) and endangered (37) vertebrates. It is also evident from Table I that Pacific islands are much more vulnerable to vertebrate extinctions than are the Pacific coasts of Australia, North America, and South America. Not less than six subregions of Pacific islands show a higher number of extinctions than the east coast of Australia, and 16 subregions are affected by extinctions, while the western coasts of North and South America are not.


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