Academic literature on the topic 'Castlecoole (Fermanagh, Northern Ireland)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Castlecoole (Fermanagh, Northern Ireland)"

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Gibson, P. J., P. Lyle, and N. Thomas. "MAGNETIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CUILCAGH DYKE, CO. FERMANAGH, NORTHERN IRELAND." Irish Journal of Earth Sciences 27, no. -1 (January 1, 2009): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.3318/ijes.2009.27.1.

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NELSON, E. CHARLES, and JÜRGEN HAFFER. "The ornithological observations of James Parsons Burkitt in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland." Archives of Natural History 36, no. 1 (April 2009): 107–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e0260954108000673.

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James Parsons Burkitt (1870–1959), a civil engineer and County Surveyor of Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, was one of the pioneers of modern ornithology. He was an experienced field ornithologist when, during the early 1920s, he designed and conducted the first population study of a bird, the robin (Erithacus rubecula), based on marked (ringed) individuals. He discovered details of territorial behaviour, song, and threat display, and estimated the average life-span of this bird. After the completion of his robin study he continued to observe and to publish on the birds around his home. In this biographical paper, hitherto unreported details of his ornithological work, including a series of maps showing the robins’ territories at Lawnakilla (1922–1926), are provided, and the places near Enniskillen where Burkitt lived and studied birds are located.
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Craig, Kerrie, Darrick Evensen, and Dan Van Der Horst. "How distance influences dislike: Responses to proposed fracking in Fermanagh, Northern Ireland." Moravian Geographical Reports 27, no. 2 (June 1, 2019): 92–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/mgr-2019-0008.

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Abstract Despite extensive social science research into public perceptions and social responses to fracking, scholars have only begun to examine the relationship between distance to development and support or opposition for it. Importantly, the emerging studies are exclusively from the United States, and focus on communities and regions in which fracking already exists – in contrast to areas where it is proposed and still going through planning approvals. This paper reports public responses to proposed fracking in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom. A total of 120 people participated in an in-person survey with a qualitative follow-up in four locations: the village right next to the development site, two other villages just inside and just outside the wider fracking concession area, and in the capital city of Belfast, 150 km away. A clear spatial pattern of opinion was found, from almost universal opposition to fracking next to the site, to an even three-way split between proponents, opponents and ‘neutrals’ to fracking in general, in Belfast. Results show that some risks are perceived to be more local than others, whilst perceived (economic) benefits are recognised mainly at the national level. Content analysis of local and national newspapers revealed a very clear and similar pattern. Connections to Fermanagh, through visits or long-term residence, were also clear predictors of opposition to fracking. The spatial pattern of support for fracking in Northern Ireland differs substantially from each of the contrasting patterns observed in the United States. We discuss likely reasons for this and implications for both research and policy.
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Egan, Sean. "James Bernard Walsh: Formerly Consultant Psychiatrist, Craigavon Area Hospital & St Lukes Hospital, Armagh, Northern Ireland." Psychiatric Bulletin 32, no. 7 (July 2008): 277. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.bp.108.021097.

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James (Jim) Walsh was born on 25 August 1932 at Belleek on the Fermanagh–Donegal border. He showed early academic promise by winning a scholarship at St Columb's College, Derry, where he had commenced studies in 1945. By 1950 he had begun to study medicine at the Queen's University of Belfast, graduating in 1956, and completing his intern year at the Mater Infirmorum Hospital in Belfast.
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Kelly and Jones. "A revised Mississippian (Courceyan – Chadian) geology of the Clogher Valley, counties Fermanagh and Tyrone (Northern Ireland)." Irish Journal of Earth Sciences 38 (2020): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3318/ijes.2019.38.6.

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Dooley, Terence A. M. "Protestant Migration from the Free State to Northern Ireland, 1920-25: A Private Census for Co. Fermanagh." Clogher Record 15, no. 3 (1996): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27699401.

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GIBSON, P. J., and P. LYLE. "Evidence for a major Tertiary dyke swarm in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, on digitally processed aeromagnetic imagery." Journal of the Geological Society 150, no. 1 (January 1993): 37–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/gsjgs.150.1.0037.

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Burke, Philip G., and Ian C. Percival. "John Stewart Bell. 28 July 1928 – 1 October 1990." Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 45 (January 1999): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.1999.0001.

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John Stewart Bell, the second of four children of John and Annie Bell (née Brownlee), was born in Belfast on 28 July 1928. The families of both his parents were Protestant, his father's family coming from Fermanagh and his mother's from Tyrone. Originally, Annie Bell's family had come from Scotland and John Bell's second Christian name was that of her family. At home, John Bell was always known as Stewart, only becoming John when he went to university. John Bell's family were not well off, his father being sent out to work before he was twelve years old to help the family finances. However, John Bell's father and mother always impressed on John, his elder sister Ruby and his two younger brothers David and Robert the importance of education. Later, David, through evening study, became a qualified electrical engineer and a professor at Lambton College in Canada, writing several very successful textbooks; Robert is now a successful Northern Ireland businessman.
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Lister, Adrian M., and Rainer Grün. "Mammoth and musk ox ESR-dated to the Early Midlandian at Aghnadarragh, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, and the age of the Fermanagh Stadial." Geological Journal 50, no. 3 (March 12, 2015): 306–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gj.2668.

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Swindles, Graeme T., Gill Plunkett, and Helen M. Roe. "A multiproxy climate record from a raised bog in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland: a critical examination of the link between bog surface wetness and solar variability." Journal of Quaternary Science 22, no. 7 (2007): 667–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jqs.1093.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Castlecoole (Fermanagh, Northern Ireland)"

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Fonville, Thierry Remi. "Paleoenvironmental investigations of Crannogs in south west Scotland and Co. Fermanagh, Northern Ireland." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2015. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/395475/.

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Crannogs are widely distributed archaeological sites in Scotland and Ireland and can be described as artificially constructed islands, dated mainly to the Iron Age and Medieval periods. However, little is known about the function and chronology of these sites. This study aims to show how palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental analyses can support the interpretation of these sites. Two regions were chosen, as national archaeological databases indicated that they had a high concentration of dated crannogs: south west Scotland and Co. Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. Five lakes in total were selected: Cults Loch, Barhapple Loch and Black Loch of Myrton from south west Scotland, and Derryhowlaght Lough and Ross Lough in Co. Fermanagh. By analysing the lake sediments near the crannogs using palaeoecological/environmental techniques, a more detailed concept of the timing and use of these sites can be formalized. The approach employed in this study explores multiple lines of evidence, where the lake cores were analysed for their geochemical proxies (loss-on-ignition, magnetic susceptibility and X-ray fluorescence) as well as their fossil diatom and pollen assemblages. By examining those sediments dating from around the time of the crannog, disturbances in the lake ecology as a result of the crannog can be identified and explored. The geochemical and diatom records show varying responses, indicating that crannogs had a wide range of impact upon the lake ecology. Some sites indicate eutrophication and acidification, while other sites indicate increased erosion rates. The most common crannog related disturbance is a minor deforestation event around the time of the crannog construction, indicating that the large wooden component of the crannog would have impacted nearby woodlands. In some sites a secondary occupation period showed a stronger palaeoecological response than the estimated depth of the crannog construction. By comparing the long term lake records within these regions, it was also possible to identify large scale regional disturbances. The Scottish crannogs appear to have been built between major deforestation phases in the catchment, while the sites in Co. Fermanagh indicate a major deforestation phase taking place after the main construction phase of the crannogs. In Co. Fermanagh this deforestation phase was synchronous with catchment erosion and increases in planktonic and periphytic diatoms. These disturbances all took place around the end of the Early Medieval Period. There are some limitations to the study, as all of the palaeoecological sequences would benefit from an improved age-depth model and an improved understanding of the interactions between diatom taxa in shallow lakes. Overall this thesis identified the potential of applying palaeoecological analyses to lake cores in these highly disturbed sediments and contributed to an understanding of this common occupation type and place in the landscapes of the North-West of the British Isles.
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Swindles, Graeme T., G. Plunkett, and H. M. Roe. "A multi-proxy climate record from a raised bog in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland: a critical examination of the link between bog surface wetness and solar variability." 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4157.

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No
A proxy climate record from a raised bog in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, is presented. The record spans the interval between 2850 cal. yr BC and cal. yr AD 1000 and chronological control is achieved through the use of tephrochronology and 14C dating, including a wiggle-match on one section of the record. Palaeoclimatic inferences are based on a combination of a testate amoebae-derived water table reconstruction, peat humification and plant macrofossil analyses. This multiproxy approach enables proxy-specific effects to be identified. Major wet shifts are registered in the proxies at ca. 1510 cal. yr BC, 750 cal. yr BC and cal. yr AD 470. Smaller magnitude shifts to wetter conditions are also recorded at ca. 380 cal. yr BC, 150 cal. yr BC, cal. yr AD 180, and cal. yr AD 690. It is hypothesised that the wet shifts are not merely local events as they appear to be linked to wider climate deteriorations in northwest Europe. Harmonic analysis of the proxies illustrates statistically significant periodicities of 580, 423-373, 307 and 265 years that may be related to wider Holocene climate cycles. This paper illustrates how the timing of climate changes registered in peat profiles records can be precisely constrained using tephrochronology to examine possible climatic responses to solar forcing. Relying on interpolated chronologies with considerable dating uncertainty must be avoided if the climatic responses to forcing mechanisms are to be fully understood.
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Books on the topic "Castlecoole (Fermanagh, Northern Ireland)"

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Great Britain. Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland. Environment Service. Fermanagh & west Tyrone nature reserves. Belfast: H.M.S.O., 1994.

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Gilmour, Helen. Dementia in Fermanagh Northern Ireland: Services, prevalence, living circumstances. [Stirling: Dementia Services Development Centre, University of Stirling, 2002.

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Cunningham, John B. A history of Castle Caldwell and its families. Enniskillen: Watergate Press, 1989.

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4

'Forgotten schooldays': Oscar Wilde at Portora Royal School, Iniskillen, County Fermanagh, Ireland, 1864 to 1871. Gortnaree (Co. Fermanagh): Principia Press, 2002.

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Marson, Peter. Belmore: The Lowry Corrys of Castle Coole, 1646-1913. Belfast: Ulster Historical Found, 2007.

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Marson, Peter. Belmore: The Lowry Corrys of Castle Coole, 1646-1913. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation, 2007.

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Marson, Peter. Belmore: The Lowry Corrys of Castle Coole, 1646-1913. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation, 2007.

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McCusker, Breege. Castle Archdale and Fermanagh in World War II. Irvinestown, Co. Fermanagh: Necarne Press, 2000.

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McCusker, Breege. Castle Archdale and Fermanagh in World War II. Irvinestown: Necarne Press, 1993.

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10

Mayhew, Patrick. Speech by Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Sir Patrick Mayhew MP: To Fermanagh Unionist Association, Enniskillen, 18 April 1995. Belfast: Northern Ireland Information Service, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Castlecoole (Fermanagh, Northern Ireland)"

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Hennessey, Thomas, Máire Braniff, James W. McAuley, Jonathan Tonge, and Sophie A. Whiting. "Who are the UUP Members—and What do they Believe?" In The Ulster Unionist Party, 91–109. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198794387.003.0005.

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The fourth chapter provides the first detailed data on the demography, geography, and viewpoints of the UUP membership. The chapter examines if the UUP is still in any way the party of ‘Big House’ unionism, one with a more middle-class membership, or with members enjoying higher incomes, than those belonging to the DUP. The chapter profiles the party base in terms of when members joined—and why. This section assesses where the UUP, traditionally strong in middle-class areas and in rural parts of Northern Ireland, such as Fermanagh, continues to attract members. It then considers members’ views of their own political positions and those of their party in terms of left–right distinctions, support for political institutions, and policy preferences.
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