Academic literature on the topic 'Beans – Arizona'

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Journal articles on the topic "Beans – Arizona"

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Garber, Nicholas P., and Mary W. Olsen. "Leaf Spot of Pinto Bean Caused by a Long-beaked Alternaria in Southeastern Arizona." Plant Health Progress 12, no. 1 (2011): 32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/php-2011-1018-01-br.

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This report identifies an Alternaria disease affecting pinto beans in incidence in Arizona. The similarity of disease symptoms and morphology of the pathogen to a recently characterized Alternaria and its disease of bean in Brazil causes concern about its potentially damaging effects on pinto bean production in Arizona. Accepted for publication 20 September 2011. Published 18 October 2011.
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Heer, Michelle M., and Donna M. Winham. "Bean Preferences Vary by Acculturation Level among Latinas and by Ethnicity with Non-Hispanic White Women." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 6 (2020): 2100. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17062100.

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With high levels of protein, fiber, folate, iron and other micronutrients, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends eating beans for optimal nutrition. Low-income women are at greater risk of nutrition-related health disparities. Use of beans may change among Hispanic women (Latinas) during acculturation, but few studies exist that describe specific preferences of this important traditional food. Preserving or promoting beans in the diets of all low-income women could improve dietary quality. The study objectives were to describe consumption frequency, purchasing patterns, and attitudes
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Preucel, Robert W. "Foraging, farming and village formation in the American Southwest." Antiquity 93, no. 370 (2019): 1092–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2019.100.

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Over 30 years ago, Paul Minnis (1985) proposed the distinction between ‘pristine domestication’ and ‘primary crop acquisition’. The former refers to the initial domestication of wild plant resources and is characterised by only a dozen or so places in the world, most notably China, the Near East and Mesoamerica. The latter refers to the local integration of crops that were domesticated elsewhere and is the more common process. The American Southwest, here defined as the U.S. states of Nevada, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico, and the Mexican states of Sonora and Chihuahua, is a classic case of pri
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Xin, H. L., and H. Zheng. "Vortex Beams Hosted in On-Axis Crystals." Microscopy and Microanalysis 18, S2 (2012): 712–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1431927612005417.

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Kollmer, F., D. Rading, R. Moellers, H. Cramer, W. Paul, and E. Niehuis. "Novel Cluster Ion Beams For Secondary Ion Generation, Sputtering And FIB/SIMS Application." Microscopy and Microanalysis 18, S2 (2012): 904–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s143192761200637x.

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Nelson, Suzanne C., Gary P. Nabhan, and Robert H. Robichaux. "Effects of Water, Nitrogen and Competition on Growth, Yield and Yield Components of Field-grown Tepary Bean." Experimental Agriculture 27, no. 2 (1991): 211–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0014479700018846.

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SummaryThe effects of water and nitrogen on growth, yield and yield components of tepary bean (Phaseolus acutifolius) were evaluated at Tucson, Arizona in 1987 and the effects of water and intercrop competition with Sonoran panicgrass (Panicum sonorum) in 1988. Total shoot biornass and reproductive yield were significantly reduced by lack of water in both seasons. Addition of nitrogen had no significant effect on total shoot biomass or reproductive yield in 1987. Intercrop competition significantly reduced total shoot biomass and reproductive yield of tepary bean in 1988. Yield component respo
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Strohmeier, B. R., R. G. White, T. S. Nunney, P. Mack, and A. E. Wright. "Enhanced Surface and In-Depth Characterization of Organic and Inorganic Materials Using XPS and Soft Depth Profiling with Argon Cluster Ion Beams." Microscopy and Microanalysis 18, S2 (2012): 918–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1431927612006447.

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Tredick, Catherine A., Marcella J. Kelly, and Michael R. Vaughan. "Impacts of large-scale restoration efforts on black bear habitat use in Canyon de Chelly National Monument, Arizona, United States." Journal of Mammalogy 97, no. 4 (2016): 1065–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyw060.

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Abstract Impacts of large-scale changes in habitat due to human development, invasive species, and climate change are important considerations for wildlife management. Likewise, as efforts increase to recover and restore human-altered landscapes, indirect consequences on nontarget components of the restored ecosystem also must be considered. Currently, efforts are underway to eradicate nonnative Russian olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) and tamarisk (Tamarix spp.) in Canyon de Chelly National Monument (CACH), United States, yet impacts to native wildlife, including the American black bear (Ursus
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Winham, Donna, Andrea Hutchins, Sharon Thompson, and Mariah Dougherty. "Arizona Registered Dietitians Show Gaps in Knowledge of Bean Health Benefits." Nutrients 10, no. 1 (2018): 52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu10010052.

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Ahlstrom, Richard V. N., Jeffrey S. Dean, and William J. Robinson. "Evaluating Tree-Ring Interpretations at Walpi Pueblo, Arizona." American Antiquity 56, no. 4 (1991): 628–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/281541.

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The availability both of documentary data on the history of the Hopi pueblo of Walpi and of tree-ring dates from the village provides a rare opportunity to evaluate tree-ring interpretations in the light of independent chronological evidence. Three major events in the history of the community are reflected in the village's overall tree-ring date distribution: the initial settlement around A.D. 1400 of the site of Koechaptevela, located on the flank of First Mesa, the movement of the community around A.D. 1690 to the present location of Walpi on top of First Mesa, and the reconstruction of much
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Beans – Arizona"

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Clark, L. J., E. W. Carpenter, and R. E. Call. "Fungicide Evaluations on Beans in Southeastern Arizona, 1994-1995." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/202442.

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Fungicidal evaluations were performed on pinto beans in two sites in 1994 and one site in 1995 to determine their effect on bean rust, white mold or common bacterial blight The results were mixed between sites and years, but in 1994 the untreated control yielded less than all of the treatments except one and the Fluazinam 500F 1 lb rate was the highest yielding treatment In 1995, no disease symptoms were observed in the field.
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Goertz, S., and J. Kobriger. "Germination of Tepary and Navy Beans with Increasing Salinity." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214131.

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Goertz, S., and J. Kobriger Coons. "Emergence of Tepary and Navy Beans with Increasing Salinity." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/221254.

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Rethwisch, Michael D., Michael Meadows, Larry Hood, Sherwood Winans, Wayne Coates, and Greg Main. "Effect of Oils and an Insecticide Applies to Snap Beans on Leafminer and Associated Parasitoid Numbers." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214517.

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Rethwisch, Michael D., Michael Meadows, and Larry Hood. "Evaluation of Oils and Insecticides for Leafminer Control in La Paz County Snap Beans." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214505.

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Rethwisch, Michael D., Dick Beckstead, and Larry Parker. "Effect of a Plant Growth Regulator on Green Beans Grown for Processing." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214770.

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Three rates of the plant growth regulator Foliar Triggrr were applied to green beans grown for processing at 5% bloom. The 6 oz rate increased yields of size 1 and 2 beans compared to all other treatments and the untreated check and had the fewest size 3 beans (which would be culls). The 11 oz rate was similar to the untreated check while the 16 oz rate decreased yields. Total bean numbers per plant were similar. Although treatment differences in this experiment were not statistically significant, a yield increase of 10.2% for the 6 oz rate compared with the untreated check may well result in
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Podziewski, Judy, Janice Coons, and Kate Lormand. "Tolerance of Terpary and Navy Beans to Different Salt Levels in Irrigation Water." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214256.

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Podziewski, J., J. Coons, S. Goertz, and R. Pratt. "Salt Tolerance of Tepary, Navy and Backcross Beans as Expressed by Yields Over Several Seasons." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214171.

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Alislail, Nabeel Y., and Paul G. Bartels. "Effects of Sodium Chloride on Tepary Bean." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/214497.

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Osmotic adjustment is one of the adaptive responses of plant species to salinity, In tepary bean seedlings, salinity led to osmotic adjustment in different parts of the seedlings. The osmotic potential of the leaves increased to 340rnM(-1MPa)in seedlings treated with - 0.75 MPa NaCl. Water and osmotic potential of leaves and proximal parr of the roots were more negative than the controls whereas the turgor potential remained about the same. The osmotic adjustment of the tepary bean may result from the synthesis and accumulation of free sugars and amino acids or the accumulation of inorganic io
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Clark, Lee J., Keller F. Ellsworth, and Eric R. Norton. "2003 Cooperative dry bean nursery." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/203889.

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This report contains the results of the 2003 National Cooperative Dry Bean Nursery Trials grown at two different sites in southeastern Arizona. These replicated, small plot trials contained twenty-eight varieties from ten different classes of beans. Bill-Z, a pinto variety, was the highest yielding variety in the Terry Brother=s trial with a yield over 3800 pounds per acre. K124467, a Flor de Mayo variety from Archer-Daniels-Midland, was the highest yielding variety in the Haas trial with a yield just under 2900 pounds per acre. Yields, aerial biomass, harvest index, and 100 bean weights are r
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Books on the topic "Beans – Arizona"

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Workshop on Electronuclear Physics with Internal Targets and the BLAST Detector (1992 Arizona State University). Electronuclear physics with internal targets and the BLAST detector: Workshop on Electronuclear Physics with Internal Targets and the BLAST Detector, Arizona, USA, March 19-21, 1992. Edited by Alarcon Ricardo and Butler Malcolm. World Scientific, 1993.

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International, Symposium on Beamed Energy Propulsion (6th 2009 Scottsdale Ariz ). Beamed energy propulsion: Sixth International Symposium on Beamed Energy Propulsion : Scottsdale, Arizona, 1-5 November 2009. American Institute of Physics, 2010.

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Two Six Shooters Beats Four Aces. Globe Pequot Press, The, 2015.

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Whiting, Jim. NFL Today: Arizona Cardinals. Creative Company, The, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Beans – Arizona"

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deBuys, William. "Apache Pass: Crossing the Line." In A Great Aridness. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199778928.003.0013.

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The mochilla lay beside the migrant trail, an abandoned black daypack still heavy with goods. The Border Patrol agent carried it to the shelter of a corner of rocks, where no one could spot him while he searched it. He dug through the contents. There was a package of refried beans in gaudy plastic, a bag of instant oatmeal, fruit punch in a bottle too small to slake a serious thirst, and other convenience food. Also a half-pound or more of white grains in a punctured bag; the agent wet a finger and tasted: only sugar. Then he heard voices approaching and scrambled up the slope to hide in the brush. There were three of them: a rangy young man with a shadowy face in the lead, an older guy in a ball cap, and a pretty young woman with raven hair behind. They were Americans, not migrants or narcos. Their skin, their clothes, even their posture gave them away. They were too relaxed, too careless to be anything else. The agent stepped out from his hiding place. They slowed but did not stop. “You all out hiking?” “Yep,” said the young man with the shadowy face. “Where you from?” “Tucson,” came the clipped reply. Then the hikers, unsmiling and eyes straight ahead, passed him at a fast clip, the chill of the encounter resisting the afternoon heat, the desert absorbing the silence. The hikers had come from the direction of the Rat’s Nest, a maze of drainages half a dozen miles above the Line, and they disappeared toward Apache Pass—not the famous Apache Pass in the Chiricahua Mountains in eastern Arizona, but a lesser pass on the shoulder of Bartolo Mountain, well south of Tucson and only nine or ten miles north of Mexico. The agent knew they weren’t out for a hike. No one comes just to hike in the contorted and contested, bone-dry mountains along this stretch of the border. Everyone has a purpose. They come to smuggle or to be smuggled. They come to scurry in moonlight and to drag themselves under the blaze of the sun across dozens of miles of steep shadeless rock.
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Lane, Belden C. "Holy Folly: Aravaipa Canyon and Thomas Merton." In Backpacking with the Saints. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199927814.003.0026.

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The trip didn’t make sense at the time. Most backpacking trips don’t. There are always more pressing things to do. We didn’t have the time or the money, but we went anyway. Sometimes you just gotta drive to the end of a long dirt road in the middle of the desert and keep walking. When Aravaipa Canyon lies at the end of that road, you know you won’t be disappointed. Mike and I had come to southeastern Arizona to hike the twelve-mile length of the Aravaipa Canyon Wilderness Area. “Laughing Waters” is the name the Apaches gave to the site. The Aravaipa band of the Western Apache lived here in the nineteenth century. They did well at first—hunting deer in the side canyons; gathering saguaro fruit, mesquite beans, and pinyon nuts; catching native fish that thrived in the creek. But by the 1870s, drought drove them out. When they sought relief at Camp Grant a few miles away a Tucson mob organized a massacre that left them decimated. The government relocated the remainder of the tribe in the White Mountain Reservation to the north. These canyon walls, reaching a thousand feet high in places, hold memories of children playing under reddish-brown hoodoos and dark stories etched in the desert varnish of the rock. Today the Bureau of Land Management regulates entry into the canyon, limiting permits to thirty hikers a day at the western entrance. For much of the way you slog through ankle- to knee-deep water, stopping at every bend to marvel at what rises before you. Towering red cliffs, stands of green willows and cottonwoods, jimson weed and desert marigolds, cactuses of every sort. This is a place where humans are outnumbered by bighorn sheep, where poisonous centipedes hide in thick grass, and serpentine side canyons darken ominously in the late afternoon sun. I’ve loved it since I first set eyes on it. At the start of this book I mentioned a night I’d spent alone in the desert near here a few years earlier. What I experienced that night would finally make sense on this subsequent trip into the canyon proper.
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WILKENS, B. J. "LAB REPORT: ION BEAMS FOR ANALYSIS OF MATERIALS (IBEAM) LAB, CENTER FOR SOLID STATE SCIENCE ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY." In Symposium of North Eastern Accelerator Personnel. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812811721_0023.

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deBuys, William. "Introduction: The Tracks at Cedar Springs." In A Great Aridness. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199778928.003.0005.

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March 1919 . Somebody killed the trader at Cedar Springs. The murderer also set fire to the trading post, and soon the dried-out floor planks and the roof beams and split-cedar ceiling erupted in smoke and flame. Except for its sandstone walls, the building would have burned to the ground. The next day a plume of smoke still hung in the Arizona sky, and people from miles around came to see what was the matter. Few automobiles had reached the windy expanses of the Navajo Reservation in those days, and men and women of all ages filed in by foot and horseback and in their buggies and buckboards. The first ones to arrive found the corpse of Charley Hubbell. Cedar Springs was less than a crossroads, not really a hamlet. It stood within a circle of rough-sided buttes a few miles east of the main road between Hopi and Winslow. It consisted of a combined general store, trading post and post office, plus various pens and corrals. Navajos from a considerable distance came to exchange sheep and handcrafts for the things they needed. Charley Hubbell lived at the trading post and presided over what went on. The people who found his body dispatched a messenger on a fast horse toward Ganado, fifty miles northeast, to find Charley’s nephew Lorenzo, who was known throughout Navajo country. A man of giant girth and matching gravitas, Juan Lorenzo Hubbell had bought the Ganado trading post forty years earlier. With acumen and persistence he built a string of almost thirty such establishments from one end of Navajo country to the other. In many cases he appointed members of his large, mixed Anglo and Hispanic family to run them. The post near Ganado, to which the messenger was sent, served as his home and headquarters. Together with its broad sprawl of barns, corrals, and storage sheds, it is preserved today as Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site, a unit of the National Park System.
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Conference papers on the topic "Beans – Arizona"

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C Dean Yonts. "Deficit Irrigation of Dry Edible Beans during Early, Mid and Late Season." In 5th National Decennial Irrigation Conference Proceedings, 5-8 December 2010, Phoenix Convention Center, Phoenix, Arizona USA. American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/2013.35866.

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Vang, Duabchi, Jackelyn R. Anderson, Katherine Langfield, and Phillip D. Ihinger. "GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF FRENCH GLASS TRADE BEADS FROM FORT MACKINAC, MI." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-341238.

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Reagle, C. J., J. M. Delimont, W. F. Ng, S. V. Ekkad, and V. P. Rajendran. "A Novel Optical Technique for Measuring the Coefficient of Restitution of Microparticle Impacts in a Forced Flowfield." In ASME Turbo Expo 2012: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2012-68252.

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Erosion and deposition in gas turbine engines are functions of particle/wall interactions and Coefficient of Restitution (COR) is a fundamental property of these interactions. COR depends on impact velocity, angle of impact, temperature, particle composition, and wall material. The current study attempts to characterize the fundamental behavior of sand at different impact angles. A PIV system is used in the Virginia Tech Aerothermal Rig to measure velocity trajectories of microparticles. A novel method is used that solves for impact velocity in a forced flowfield by numerical methods. Two size
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