Academic literature on the topic 'Dundee Courier'

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Dundee Courier"

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Boudreau, Stéphane. "Dépérissement de l'ammophile à ligule courte, Ammophila breviligulata, sur les dunes bordières des Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Québec." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ31689.pdf.

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Books on the topic "Dundee Courier"

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Jenkins, Gordon. The golden anniversary of Bermuda Dunes Country Club 1959-2009. Donning Co., 2008.

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The history of the Dunes Golf and Beach Club. Donning Co., 2005.

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Goodwin, Stephen. Dream golf: The making of Bandon Dunes. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2006.

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Dream golf: The making of Bandon Dunes. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2006.

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Goodwin, Stephen. Dream golf. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2006.

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British artisan expedition to America: Equipped and sent out by and at the expense of the proprietors of the Dundee Courier and Dundee Weekly News newspapers. W. and D.C. Thompson, 1992.

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Anonyma. Artisan Expedition to the World's Fair, Chicago, Organised by the Dundee Courier and the Dundee Weekly News: A Tour of Observation, to Get Information ... How They Live What Kind of Houses They. Franklin Classics Trade Press, 2018.

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Johnson, John R., and Mal Elliott. Perry Maxwell's Prairie Dunes. Wiley, 2002.

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Dolph's Lakeland, Winter Haven, Polk County, Florida: Including Auburndale, Bartow, Davenport, Dundee ... Featuring Golf Courses ... Zip Codes. Not Avail, 2003.

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Dream Golf: The Making of Bandon Dunes. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Dundee Courier"

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Doody, J. Patrick. "Integrated Action – Golf Course Management." In Sand Dune Conservation, Management and Restoration. Springer Netherlands, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4731-9_10.

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Bates, David. "From Childhood into Adolescence." In William the Conqueror. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300118759.003.0003.

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This chapter chronicles the events of the Battle of Val-ès-Dunes in 1047. With significant assistance from the French king, Henry I, this battle put William in a position to rule Normandy much more authoritatively than before. Edward the Confessor's election as king of the English in 1041–2 created circumstances that were in due course to shape the whole of William's life and the histories of peoples and nations. However, rather than take Val-ès-Dunes as a simple end of either a process or of a period in William's life, this chapter goes further, by discussing the profound interpretative problems of assessing the significance of the years between 1035 to 1047, both in terms of the development of William's personality and of the ways in which it can be seen as a preparation for the conquest of England.
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Glazzard, Andrew. "The Rock of Gibraltar." In The Case of Sherlock Holmes. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474431293.003.0009.

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Marital unhappiness is a persistent theme of the Holmes stories, from the first (A Study in Scarlet) to several of the last (‘The Adventure of the Retired Colourman’ and ‘The Adventure of the Veiled Lodger’, both published in 1927). A Study in Scarlet begins as a detective story but its backstory is, as we have seen, a melodrama of forced marriage and domestic tyranny. ‘A Case of Identity’ concerns a courtship that is an elaborate deception, and the story opens with a digression on the ‘Dundas separation case’. This is reported in a newspaper as a ‘husband’s cruelty to his wife’, prompting Watson to claim that he knows the details without even reading the article: ‘There is, of course, the other woman, the drink, the push, the blow, the bruise, the sympathetic sister or landlady. The crudest of writers could invent nothing more crude.’ However, Holmes has investigated the case and reveals that it is actually more unusual: ‘The husband was a teetotaller, there was no other woman, and the conduct complained of was that he had drifted into the habit of winding up every meal by taking out his false teeth and hurling them at his wife’ (Adventures, 31).
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"Anadromous Sturgeons: Habitats, Threats, and Management." In Anadromous Sturgeons: Habitats, Threats, and Management, edited by Pierre Nellis, Simon Senneville, Jean Munro, et al. American Fisheries Society, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781888569919.ch12.

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<em>Abstract.</em>—The short- and long-term impacts of the annual disposal of dredged sediment within Atlantic sturgeon <em>Acipenser oxyrinchus</em> habitat in the St. Lawrence estuary were assessed by simulating sediment transport over 10 years and by sampling sediment and macrobenthos on impacted and control radials. The model applied bed load transport functions embedded in a baroclinic hydrodynamic model. The path predicted by the model was validated at its half-way point (5 years) using multibeam sonar images of the seabed as well as qualitative and quantitative sediment analyses. Sediment took more than 1 year to completely clear the disposal site, indicating continuous sand drift along the predicted path. In the first 2 years, the sediment path increased rapidly in length (10 km), bypassing a field of sand dunes and following the deepest depressions (10 m) in the downstream direction. In the middle of its 10-year course (ca 12 km), the sediment track crossed the most important core area used by early juvenile Atlantic sturgeon. Afterward, sediment progression slowed and accumulated in a 15-mdeep channel between islands in the middle of the estuarine transition zone. The impact stations showed a significant reduction in the average biomass of tubificids, the most important food item of juvenile Atlantic sturgeon in the St. Lawrence. Conversely, the number and abundance of epi- and suprabenthic taxa increased. Model and field results suggest that sand drift generated from disposal operations reduces benthic productivity along the modeled path, including critical habitats of early juvenile Atlantic sturgeon. Sand accumulation from dredged spoil that drift in dead current areas are also likely to reduce juvenile sturgeon habitat quality.
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Raustiala, Kal. "Territoriality’s Evolution." In Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195304596.003.0011.

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At the turn of the last century Americans heatedly debated whether their constitution followed the flag. Did the United States possess a “home-stayin’ constitution,” as the satirist Finley Peter Dunne suggested at the time, or did its foundational rules extend wherever and whenever the federal government governed? Perhaps the newly muscular nature of American power in an overtly imperial age had changed the answer; perhaps the flag was now, in Dunne’s clever words, “so lively that no constitution could follow it and survive.” In the century that followed, of course, the flag became livelier than anyone at the time could have imagined. With the presidential election of 1900 couched as a referendum on the Constitution and the flag, the victory of William McKinley over the anticolonial William Jennings Bryan signaled a new American willingness to embrace empire in places like the Philippines. McKinley’s campaign had declaimed that the flag “has not been planted in foreign soil to acquire more territory, but for humanity’s sake.” McKinley nonetheless did not disappoint the substantial interests that favored more territory. The subsequent ratification by the Supreme Court of a peculiarly American form of imperialism facilitated this expansion. Yet by holding that only some rights applied in the new island possessions, whereas others lost their strength at the water’s edge, the early-twentieth-century Insular Cases cobbled together an odd and unstable marriage of imperialism and constitutionalism. Although it deeply polarized the United States at the time, this debate over the Constitution and the flag is now largely forgotten. Yet as the previous chapter detailed, a very similar debate emerged almost exactly a century later. Whether Guantanamo Bay was a “legal black hole” or a legitimate detention center for dangerous enemy combatants became a topic of often passionate argument the world over. Despite a very different political and legal context, the dispute over Guantanamo focused attention on the geographic reach of American law with an intensity not seen since the early 1900s.
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Woodward, Jamie. "Editorial Introduction." In The Physical Geography of the Mediterranean. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199268030.003.0017.

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The nine chapters in Part II build on the physical, biological, and theoretical frameworks set out in Part I, but with a focus on process regimes and change in specific environments. With its emphasis on much larger spatial scales, Part I showed how the Mediterranean basin is a product of long-term interactions between all components of the Earth system. It showed how these interactions drive landscape and ecosystem processes and environmental change. The chapters in Part II examine Mediterranean-wide patterns too, but explore process interactions in sharper resolution and across scales ranging from individual soil profiles, hillslopes, and habitats to larger landscape elements including lake basins, river valleys, dune systems, and coastal plains. Much of the region is dominated by mountains and many process interactions are especially vivid in the Mediterranean because of the erosive energy available in steep and active tectonic settings, and the presence of soft rocks vulnerable to mass movements and water erosion. Abrupt transitions from uplands to lowlands— and the differential response to tectonic uplift of hard and soft rock terrains—are notable features. The seasonally dry climate can leave bare slopes exposed to high intensity rains, and river sediment yields are typically much higher than in adjacent regions. It can be argued that the Quaternary records of these interactions are more varied and better preserved than in any other part of the world. Recent major advances include the development of high resolution proxy climate data from speleothems and robust dating frameworks for fluvial, glacial, and palaeoecological records. These records have provided important new insights into the tempo of climate, landscape, and ecosystem change in the Mediterranean region and beyond. A variety of sedimentary archives also provide insights into the changing nature and intensity of human action in the Mediterranean landscape during the course of the Pleistocene and Holocene and this is a core theme of Part II. The region is unique because of the very early and widespread impact of humans in landscape and ecosystem change—and the richness of the archaeological and geological archives in which it is chronicled.
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Conference papers on the topic "Dundee Courier"

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Yilmaz, Emin. "Conversion of a Dune Buggy to a Hybrid Vehicle as a Systems Design Course Project." In ASME 2011 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2011-65392.

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Department of Technology has purchased a used Dune Buggy years ago. It had a 6.8 horsepower Honda G65 engine with a centrifugal clutch to move the vehicle. Students in EDTE 341-Transportation Technologies course have tried, twice, to fix the engine, but they were not successful. As a student design project in ETME 475-Mechanical Systems Design course, during spring semester of 2009, three Mechanical Engineering Technology (MET) students, with the help of one Electrical/Electronics Engineering Technology (EET) student, have converted the vehicle to a hybrid vehicle. The purpose of the design project was to convert an internal combustion engine (ICE) driven Dune Buggy to a hybrid vehicle. ICE and Electric motor (EM) sizes were kept at about 6HP and cost was limited to no more than $3000. ETME 475 is a three credit-hour course with two credit hours for lecture and one credit hour (two lab contact hours) for laboratory. Laboratory time is used to discuss the project(s) and cover basic knowledge needed for the specific project(s). Along with regular textbook homework sets, students are assigned to turn in project related assignments. Most weeks, both homework and project assignments were due. First half of the semester was spent on designing the hybrid vehicle. Second half of the semester was spent constructing it. There were three students enrolled in the course. One EET student worked on the project to do electrical/instrumentations systems design and wiring. At the end of the semester, Dune Buggy was able to move with the EM. However ICE stalled as soon as the magnetic clutch was engaged. The following semester, fall semester of 2009, another MET student worked on the project to modify wiring and replace the magnetic clutch with a centrifugal clutch. This work was done under two credit-hour, ETME 499-Independent Research in Mechanical Engineering course. At the end of the semester, the Dune Buggy was fully operational with EM and ICE, one at a time, or both at the same time. Two additional MET students worked on the vehicle during the spring semester of 2011 as one of their low-tech projects to improve safety by covering cover exposed areas of the dune buggy and paint it. This paper discusses the details and coordination of the project as a design project for senior level Mechanical Systems Design course.
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