Academic literature on the topic 'East Hampton (N.Y. : Town)'

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Journal articles on the topic "East Hampton (N.Y. : Town)"

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Stevenson, Jill. "Penny Granger, The N-Town Play: Drama and Liturgy in Medieval East Anglia." European Medieval Drama 14 (January 2010): 157–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.emd.1.102132.

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Douglas Sugano. "The N-Town Play: Drama and Liturgy in Medieval East Anglia (review)." Comparative Drama 44, no. 1 (2010): 92–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cdr.0.0094.

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Sugano, Douglas. ""This game wel pleyd in good a-ray": The N-Town Playbooks and East Anglian Games." Comparative Drama 28, no. 2 (1994): 221–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cdr.1994.0024.

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Perissinotto, Renzo. "Description of Callophylla macrocephala sp. n. from southern Tanzania." ZooKeys 818 (January 23, 2019): 129–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.818.32269.

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A male cetoniine specimen from the old Schürhoff collection currently deposited in the Ditsong National Museum of Natural History (Pretoria, South Africa), was recently submitted for identification and has been found to represent a yet undescribed species of the poorly-known genus Callophylla Moser, 1916. The species is named C.macrocephalasp. n., in recognition of its wider than average head, particularly at the level of the clypeus, and originates from the southern Tanzanian highlands, near the Tanzania-Zambia border town of Nakonde. This brings the total number of species now known for this genus to four, two from West Africa and two from East-Central Africa. All species were described on the basis of a male only, or this and a few extra specimens. The female is only known for the two West African species, C.costata Moser, 1916 and C.lamottei Antoine, 2007. A dichotomous key for the identification of the species of this genus is presented for the first time. It is suggested that the genus may be constituted of high altitude specialists, with a short period of activity and no ability to feed at the adult stage.
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Nur-Anwari, Rizki Amalia, Pawito Pawito, and Andrik Purwasito. "Etnografi Dakwah Ulama Rantau pada Etnis Dayak Ngaju di Kalimantan Tengah." Jurnal Komunikasi Islam 8, no. 2 (December 2, 2018): 295–320. http://dx.doi.org/10.15642/jki.2018.8.2.295-320.

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This study aims to look at the role of ulama rantau in the process of proselytising (da'wah) in the Ngaju Dayak community, East Kotawaringin town, Central Kalimantan Province, particularly regarding the way ulama deal with a Dayak local culture which deeply remains lived within this community. Using a qualitative research method and the ethnographic approach, the findings revealed that the way ulama rantau conveyed the da'wah messages in a polite manner implicated to Ngaju Dayak ethnic society's acceptance towards Islam. Further, because ulama rantau respected the local cultural wisdom when conveying da’wah, people appreciated Islam brought by ulama (da’i) n the midst of a society which has different beliefs and cultural backgrounds.
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Katkova, Irina R. "Letters from the Malay Sultanates of the 17th and 18th Centuries: An Unknown Collection in St. Petersburg." Itinerario 43, no. 01 (April 2019): 32–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115319000044.

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AbstractThis article deals with Malay letters and documents from the archives of the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie—VOC), dating to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The collection of “golden” Malay letters, which belonged to the governor- general of the VOC in Java (1704–1709) Joan van Hoorn, made a long voyage on the ship Sandenburg from Batavia to Cape Town and Amsterdam in 1710. Its cultural and historical value was firstly estimated by the outstanding Russian scholar and antiquarian N. P. Likhachev, who purchased it for the Paleographical Museum in Petrograd (St. Petersburg) in 1910. The pages of the fifty-seven diplomatic letters cover one of the most controversial periods of VOC history on the Archipelago, 1683 to 1710, the establishment of its relationships with local nobility and states. The collection represents the original letters of the sultans of Palembang, Gowa, Buton, Bone, Tallo, Banten, and Cirebon, and of prominent historical figures of Malay states as well as the famous Indian merchant from Surat, Abdul Ghafur. They are written in Malay (in Arabic graphic: Jawi and Pegon), Arabic, Javanese (in two scripts: Pegon and Carakan), Dutch, Spanish, Persian, and Chinese. Their investigation will contribute to the academic scholarship on the famous records, reconstructing the history of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) on the Malay Archipelago, and on the peculiarities of Malay letter writing in different languages, scripts, and regions.
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Luminosu, Iona. "Experimental studies and economic considerations on a living space heated through passive solar gain and through electric power." Thermal Science 7, no. 2 (2003): 89–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/tsci0302089l.

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The Trombe wall, of an area AT = 8.8 m, built on the southern facade of a room, heats the accommodation during the transition months, complementary to electric power. The statistical processing of the experimental data led to a global quantitative image of the wall?s behavior during the average day of the months March, April, September, and October 1999. The inner climate parameters are: tint = = 21 ?C, trad = 17.9 ?C, troom= 19.5 ?C, j= 35-70%, E ?80 + 120 lx. The thermal comfort factor is B = -0.325. These values insure a room?s comfort close to the optimal one prescribed by the hygienists. The heliothermal conversion?s efficiency is hT = 10.4%. The proportion of heat supplied by the wall in the entire energy required by the room is hheat = 45.8%. The wall?s specific cost is Pu = 24.9 ? /m. The write-off period of the initial investment is n = 53 years. The development of passive solar architecture in the Euro-region Danube-Cris-Mures-Tisa which includes the town of Timisoara (45? north, 22? east), was proven feasible by the experiments from both the energy and the economical point of view.
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Limoncu, M. Emin, İ. Cüneyt Balcıoğlu, Seray Töz, Samiye Demir, Hakan Kavur, Mehmet Karakuş, Aslı Tetik Vardarlı, and Yusuf Özbel. "Entomological Survey for the Detection of Sand Fly Fauna and Vector Species in the Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Endemic Area in East Mediterranean Region of Turkey, Mersin Province." Journal of Medical Entomology 57, no. 5 (May 29, 2020): 1510–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jme/tjaa089.

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Abstract Cutaneous (CL) and visceral (VL) forms of leishmaniasis, transmitted by sand flies, are seen in all countries located in Mediterranean Basin including Turkey. In this study, we aimed to conduct an entomological survey for the detection of sand fly fauna and vector species in Mersin province, one of the important endemic areas for CL in Turkey. In total, 912 sand fly specimens were collected in 2010 and 2011 using CDC light traps. Nine Phlebotomus (Diptera: Psychodidae) and three Sergentomyia (Diptera: Psychodidae) species were detected. Of the collected Phlebotomus sand flies, P. sergenti Parrot, 1917 (30.1%) was the most dominant followed by P. alexandri Sinton, 1928 (18.2%), P. neglectus/syriacus Tonnoir Adler (12.0%), P. tobbi Adler & Theodor, 1930 (11.7%), and P. papatasi Scopoli, 1786 (10.2%), while S. minuta Rondani, 1843 (11.3%) was the dominant species among Sergentomyia. During the field work in 2011, female specimens (n = 81) were screened for the presence of Leishmania promastigotes by midgut dissection, and all were found negative. The rest of the collected female specimens (n = 334) were pooled according to species (P. alexandri, P. neglectus/syriacus, P. papatasi, P. sergenti, P. simici, and P. tobbi) and location (Mut, Silifke, and Anamur). In total, 29 pools were generated and real-time ITS1 PCR assay was performed to detect and identify natural Leishmania Ross, 1903 (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatida) infection. Two pools, both from Mut town, containing P. sergenti specimens were found positive and Leishmania tropica Ross, 1903 was identified as an infectious agent for both pools. In conclusion, the sand fly fauna was determined in an endemic area for CL. The detection of L. tropica DNA in P. sergenti specimens showed the possible vectorial role of this species in Mersin province.
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Andersen, Stig, Kent Kleinschmidt, Bodil Hvingel, and Peter Laurberg. "Thyroid hyperactivity with high thyroglobulin in serum despite sufficient iodine intake in chronic cold adaptation in an Arctic Inuit hunter population." European Journal of Endocrinology 166, no. 3 (March 2012): 433–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/eje-11-0888.

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ObjectiveAdult man hosts brown adipose tissue with the capacity to consume energy and dissipate heat. This is essential for non-shivering thermogenesis and its activation depends on sympathetic activity and thyroid hormones. This led us to evaluate the impact of chronic cold exposure on thyroid activity and thyroid hormones in serum in Arctic residents.DesignComparative, population-based study (n=535) performed in Greenland.MethodsHunters were compared with other men, and Inuit in remote settlements in East Greenland with no modern housing facilities were compared with the residents of the capital city in West Greenland and residents of a major town in East Greenland in a cross-sectional study. We used interview-based questionnaires, measured TSH, free thyroxine, free triiodothyronine (fT3), thyroglobulin (TG) antibody and TG (a measure of thyroid activity) in serum, and iodine and creatinine in spot urine samples.ResultsSerum TG was the highest among hunters (P=0.009) and settlement dwellers (P=0.001), who were most markedly exposed to cold, even though they had the highest urinary iodine excretion (hunters,P<0.001; settlement dwellers,P<0.001). Hunters and settlement dwellers also had the lowest fT3(hunters,P<0.001; settlement dwellers,P<0.001) after adjusting for gender, age, smoking habits, alcohol intake and iodine excretion in multivariate linear regression models. TSH was not influenced by measures of cold exposure (hunter,P=0.36; residence,P=0.91).ConclusionsCold exposure influenced thyroid hormones and TG in serum in Arctic populations consistent with consumption of thyroid hormone and higher thyroid hormone turnover. Findings emphasise that changes in thyroid activity are essential in cold adaptation in Arctic residents.
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Nawrocka, Danuta Michalska, Danuta Joanna Michczyńska, Anna Pazdur, and Justyna Czernik. "Radiocarbon Chronology of the Ancient Settlement in the Golan Heights Area, Israel." Radiocarbon 49, no. 2 (2007): 625–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200042521.

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Carbonate binders from mortars and plasters as well as charcoal fragments sampled at the ancient settlement of Hippos (Sussita) have been subjected to radiocarbon dating by gas proportional counting (GPC) and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). Hippos is situated on the east coast of the Sea of Galilee (32°46′N, 35°39′E) at the top of a hill in the Golan Heights area, Israel. According to historical-archaeological data, the town had functioned since the 3rd century BC until AD 749, when it eventually crumbled into ruins after an earthquake. The appropriate sample selection and preparation based on the results of petrographic observations permitted us to distinguish different phases involved in the expansion of the settlement. More than 200 samples were taken from the settlement and subjected to petrographic and chemical analyses. Of the 200 total samples, about 20 were selected for dating. Here, we present the first 10 results of 14C dating carried out for Hippos. The oldest sample dated thus far gave an age corresponding with the 2nd century BC to 1st century AD—probably indicating an old Roman temple, on the base of which the North-West church (NWC) was later erected. The next dates extend up to the 8th century AD, the age related to the last phase of settlement inhabitation. Research is continuing as new excavations take place.
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Books on the topic "East Hampton (N.Y. : Town)"

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Geus, Averill Dayton. The second fifty years, 1941-1991. West Kennebunk, Me: Published for the Centennial Committee of the Maidstone Club, East Hampton, Long Island, New York, by Phoenix Pub., 1991.

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2

Granger, Penny. The N-Town play: Drama and liturgy in medieval East Anglia. Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 2009.

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The N-Town play: Drama and liturgy in medieval East Anglia. Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 2009.

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4

Tom, Twomey, ed. Discovering the past: Writings of Jeannette Edwards Rattray, 1893-1974, relating to the history of the Town of East Hampton, Suffolk County, New York. New York: Newmarket Press, 2001.

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GOVERNMENT, US. An Act to Authorize the Secretary of the Interior to Acquire Property in the Town of East Hampton, Suffolk County, New York, for Inclusion in the Amagansett National Wildlife Refuge. [Washington, D.C.?: U.S. G.P.O., 1996.

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East Hampton A Town and Its People. 2nd ed. Fireplace Press, 1994.

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7

United States. Federal Emergency Management Agency., ed. Flood insurance study: Town of East Hampton, New York, Suffolk County. [Washington, D.C.?]: Federal Emergency Management Agency, 1986.

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Exploring the Past: All the Writings from 1798 to 1896 Relating to the History of the Town of East Hampton (East Hampton Historical Collection). Newmarket Press, 2001.

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Rattray, Jeannette Edwards, and Tom Twomey. Discovering the Past: Writings of Jeannette Edwards Rattray 1893-1974 Relating to the History of the Town of East Hampton (The East Hampton Historical Collection). Newmarket Press, 2002.

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Molnar, Fanning Phillips and, Grimes Contracting Co, New York State Energy Research and Development Authority., and East Hampton (N.Y. : Town), eds. Landfill reclamation feasibility study for the Springs-Fireplace Road Landfill, Town of East Hampton, New York: Final report. Albany, N.Y: The Authority, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "East Hampton (N.Y. : Town)"

1

James, Simon. "The Plateau Zone East of G St." In The Roman Military Base at Dura-Europos, Syria. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743569.003.0020.

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The N end of the city’s plateau zone E of G St, bounded by the N wadi, the river cliff, and the head of the inner wadi, comprising the remotest corner within the walls, also became part of the Roman military quarter. Here, as across the whole N part of the city, the stratigraphy is shallow, rarely deeper than a metre, with bedrock showing in places. Surface indications and magnetometry suggest that much of the region had been built up in pre-Roman times, although there may have been areas of open ground. The street grid had been substantially laid out here, especially H St which ran to the N city wall, but E of this line it seems partly to break down. In particular, in the nominal areas of projected block positions X1–X8, 10th St actually curved off-grid to the S, probably preserving the line of an early approach road to the N end of the Citadel before the stronghold was separated from the plateau by a great quarry and rebuilt. This far N region was presumably mostly residential before AD 165, except for two known sanctuaries beside H St: the so-called Dolicheneum in X7, and a temple of unknown dedication in X9. Under Roman rule it became dominated by insertion of the massive residence known as the ‘Palace of the dux ripae’, here referred to as the Roman Palace. Closures of both G and I Sts on the N side of 10th St, by the building of Roman structures across them, indicates that the zone N of this line became a military enclosure. This was accessible from the civil town only via an entrance on H St, and from the W part of the base area on the plateau, already enclosed by a boundary along the W side of G St, via a smaller entrance on the diverted line of ‘12th St’ at the N-most point of block E3. Within the re-entrant to the continuous base perimeter created by the G St and 10th St lines, more blocks appear to have been taken over by the military.
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Brown, Jeannette E. "Chemists Who Work for the National Labs or Other Federal Agencies." In African American Women Chemists in the Modern Era. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190615178.003.0009.

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Dr. Patricia Carter Sluby (Fig. 5.1) is a primary patent examiner retired from the US Patent and Trademark Office and formerly a registered patent agent. She is also the author of three books about African American inventors and their patented inventions. Patricia’s father is William A. Carter Jr., and her mother is Thelma LaRoche Carter. Her father was the first black licensed master plumber in Richmond, VA, and his father also had the same distinction in Columbus, OH, years earlier. Her father was born in Philadelphia, PA, and attended college. Her grandfather went from Virginia to look for work in Canada and became a stonemason. Later he relocated back to the United States, where he soon married in Boston, MA, and several of his children were born there. Later, the family moved to Philadelphia where Patricia’s father was born. Her mother, who attended Hampton Institute, taught school and later managed the office for Patricia’s father’s business. Patricia’s mother was born and raised in Richmond, as were most of her maternal relatives. Patricia had three brothers. They were all born during segregation in Richmond, the former capital of the Confederacy. Patricia was born on February 15, in Richmond. She attended kindergarten through eighth grade in segregated schools that were within walking distance of home. In school, they studied from hand-me-down books, but her black teachers were well trained and well informed. They had bachelor’s degrees; some had master’s or even PhD degrees. To go to high school, Patricia took a city bus across to the east side of town, to the newly built school for black students, which incorporated eighth grade through twelfth grade. Her teachers were excellent instructors who lived in her neighborhood and knew her parents quite well. The teachers looked out for the neighborhood kids and acted as surrogate parents out­side the confines of the home. Teachers and principals were also great mentors, dedicated to their craft; they encouraged students to understand the world and function as responsible adults. Patricia excelled in science and math.
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EVANS, CHRISTOPHER, MARIE-LOUISE STIG SØRENSEN, and KONSTANTIN RICHTER. "An Early Christian Church in the Tropics: Excavation of the N.ª S.ª da Conceição, Cidade Velha, Cape Verde." In Brokers of Change. British Academy, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265208.003.0008.

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This chapter concerns what is arguably one of the first European-built Christian churches in the Tropics, the N.a S.a da Conceição, in Ribeira Grande (now known as Cidade Velha), the former capital of the Cape Verde Islands. It briefly covers the early history of the town and then proceeds to consider its earliest church. The evidence of historical documents is first outlined, and thereafter the results from the first explorative archaeological investigations focussed on the physical remains of the building are summarised. The excavations were successful in locating the early church, which can now be reconstructed as a large, one-and-a-half or two storey high, east‐west oriented building with a vaulted side-chapel on its northern side and buttressed corners on its western façade. Two tombstones found in situ within the floor confirm that the building dates to, at least, the early 16th century.
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