Academic literature on the topic 'House of St'

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Journal articles on the topic "House of St"

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Чарыкова, Карина. "Топография Симонаса Даукантаса в Санкт-Петербурге." Archivum Lithuanicum, no. 23 (December 31, 2021): 299–348. http://dx.doi.org/10.33918/26692449-23009.

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Simonas Daukantas’s Topography of St Petersburg S u m m a r y Simonas Daukantas spent 15 years (between 1834 and 1850) living in St Petersburg, where he worked as an assistant registrar at the Senate. This article highlights the exact addresses of where Daukantas lived and published books in St Petersburg. The address of the place where Daukantas lived in 1837 is published for the first time; the drawing of the building has been obtained, the landlord identified. Apparently, in 1837 Daukantas lived in the building owned by Marya Nelsen, the wife of chief (regiment) doctor Gavrila Nelsen, at the intersection of Kazanskaya street and Voznesensky prospect (or Voznesensky avenue; the exact address: Voznesensky Ave 15–17/Kazanskaya St 45). The article features the drawing of this building and contains information about its condition, which shows that in late 1830s and in 1840s the building was in an appalling state of repair. Marya Nelsen died in 1840, and the building was assigned to a care agency. Some of the tenants continued to live at the building for some time, only to move out later; apparently, Daukantas was among those who vacated this residence. More details are provided about Daukantas’s place of residence in 1842 (address: Malaya Masterskaya 9, the building near the Church of St Stanislaus), providing the drawing of the building and publishing pictures of how it looks today, revealing the characteristics of the building’s architecture, including those from the time when Daukantas lived there. The building next to St Stanislaus Church at Malaya Masterskaya 9 was built in 1841–1842. In one letter of 1842 Daukantas claimed his residency at this address, so we suggest that he might have moved in right after the completion of construction. The addresses of three printing houses where Daukantas published his books have been identified. On top of that, details of what the buildings looked like during Daukantas’s time there have been obtained. Christian Hintze’s printing house was located at Durygina’s house at Nevsky prospect 8. The building has survived to this date virtually intact. Ivanov’s lithograph based on Sadovnikov’s picture represents the view of the building in 1830s, the approximate time of Daukantas’s book publications at Hintze’s printing house. Later, the enterprise was acquired by Merkushev. The printing house of Karl Kray was located in the corner of Frost’s building at Malaya Morskaya 12/Gorokhovaya 9. Analysis of the archive drawings of the buildings has provided some insights into what the building’s appearance was during Daukantas’s time in St Petersburg. Before 1850, Gretsch’s house (current address: Moika 92; the building was demolished in early 1960s) was home to Eduard Pratz’s printing house. The blueprints of the building that were found in the archives shed a light on what the building looked like in 1840s and 1850s, when Daukantas would publish his books there. Gretsch’s own publishing house was in the same building. The archives contain blueprints of Gretsch’s house on Moika riverfront, showing the appearance of the building at the time of Daukantas’s printing his books there: the façade off Moika, the courtyard, and the plan of the building. Giedrius Subačius has noted that 1841–1845 were the years when Daukantas was the most consistent in his orthography. Βetter living conditions in the new building constructed in 1842 most probably had allowed Daukantas to improve the quality and efficiency of his work. It is also worth noting that the publishing houses were close to the places where Daukantas lived and worked. All these buildings are located in the Admiralteisky district of St Petersburg.
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Baranova, Irina V. "German Charity in St. Petersburg: The Contribution of the Pastor A. Mazing to the Establishment and Organization of “The Evangelical House of Diligenceˮ." IZVESTIYA VUZOV SEVERO-KAVKAZSKII REGION SOCIAL SCIENCE, no. 1 (209) (March 30, 2021): 48–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.18522/2687-0770-2021-1-48-53.

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The role of the “Evangelical house of diligenceˮ in the religious space of St. Petersburg is considered. The tradition of creating “Houses of diligenceˮ originated in St. Petersburg in the 19th century and began to revive again in the city on the Neva River at the beginning of the 21st century. At present time a few “Houses of diligenceˮ operate as rehabilitation centers for children and adults with disabilities engaging them in various workshops and other labour activities. It is obvious that the possibility of providing unemployed citizens with social assistance through the provision of temporary work, as well as assistance in their further employment, does not lose its relevance. The goal of this paper is to assess the role of “The Evangelical house of diligenceˮ in the religious space of Saint Petersburg. During the writing of this paper we used materials from the Russian Central State Historical Archive of St. Petersburg. For the main research we used chronological and comparative historical methods of analysis. Using the chronological analysis, we explored the sequence of formation and development of “The Evangelical house of diligenceˮ. Using comparative historical analysis, we determined the structure of that institutions, sources of his financing and the underlying mechanism of his operation. The article makes an effort to evaluate the role of pastor A. Mazing in organisation of “The Evangelical house of diligenceˮ. Management of “The Evangelical house of diligenceˮ and in addition to organising of the temporary employment to those in need of the Evangelical Lutheran faith, was providing charitable assistance to the disabled individuals. It was also involved in creations of a hospice and a shelter for alcoholics. In that “institution of labour assistance” they paid a special attention to the concerns for morality of the wards in accordance with the canons of the Evangelical-Lutheran Church, therefore they prioritised the faithful of this Church dur-ing the admission. “The Evangelical house of diligenceˮ was offering its workers in need an option to live on the premises, which was a welcome offer especially during wintertime.
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Fortowsky, Alyson. "St. Patrick’s Day." After Dinner Conversation 3, no. 4 (2022): 23–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/adc20223433.

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Would you kill your best friend if you found out he raped someone? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, the narrator is a sophomore in college who spends time with her friend, a drug dealing college student named Nate, and his law school friend Jack. They all get together to drink, smoke pot, and have long philosophical debates. One night at a party the narrator wakes up to find Jack having sex with her. She waits until the party is over and tells Nate that Jack raped her. Nate comforts her, and supporters her, although she opts not to press charges, she tells Nate she wants Jack dead When Jack calls her to say he had a good time, and ask her out on a date, she refuses. The group grows apart until a year later, word gets back that Jack was at a party at Nate’s house when he drank to much and died of alcohol poisoning. Oddly, the police find nothing when questioning Nate because this is the one party where Nate, a drug dealer, doesn’t have drugs in the house. They never talk again, but the narrator wonders if Nate followed through and killed Jack. She hopes he did.
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Shaw, D. W. D. "Theology in the University — A Contemporary Scottish Perspective." Scottish Journal of Theology 41, no. 2 (May 1988): 217–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0036930600040795.

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There is a tale which Douglas Young tells of a St Andrews University divine and which may well be regarded as cautionary. Thomas Jackson was born in St Andrews in 1797, and held the Chair of Divinity, first in St Andrews and then in Glasgow. When he retired in 1874, he returned to St Andrews to write his great work, designed to settle all the controversies of the centuries and bring discordant Scots into unanimity. He had one of the big houses on the south side of South Street, with its ‘lang rigg’, at the foot of which was an elegant garden room, with table and chair. Thither, daily, the septuagenarian repaired, garbed in his ecclesiastical frock coat, took off his shiny top-hat, and grasped a quill pen to set down his great thoughts on the virgin white folio quire, daily laid on the table. white folio quire, daily laid on the table. After several hours, he would tear it all up and go back to the house. After four years, they found him dead, aged eighty-one, and the garden house yielded a single written sheet with the sum of his wisdom: ‘Theology is everything, and everything is theology’.
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Michel, Aurélie. "L’architecture organique de la Gue(ho)st House." Marges, no. 18 (May 1, 2014): 80–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/marges.882.

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Notley, R. Steven. "Byzantine Bethsaida and the House of St. Peter." Novum Testamentum 64, no. 4 (September 9, 2022): 532–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685365-bja10031.

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Abstract The recent discovery of a 6th century basilica at el-A‘raj (Bethsaida) on the northern shore of the Sea of Galilee has challenged our understanding of Byzantine traditions about Simon Peter. This study examines the corre-spondence between the archaeological finds and the description of Byzan-tine Bethsaida in the historical sources. Christian tradition consistently voiced that Peter’s home was in Bethsaida and was memorialized with a basilica. The archaeological finds at el-A‘raj accord with this tradition, but they also present a challenge to the innovation of Orfali in 1921 that the octagonal church in Capernaum was built over Peter’s house.
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Katharine. "York House St. James's Palace London S.W.1." Progress in Palliative Care 1, no. 1 (October 1993): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09699260.1993.11746652.

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Miller, Malcolm, and Martin Anderson. "FIVE LONDON REPORTS." Tempo 59, no. 233 (June 21, 2005): 57–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298205280233.

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Purcell Room: Charles HartManoukian Cultural Centre, St Yegiche's Armenian Church, Cranley Gardens: Mikhail PletnevPurcell Room: Roxanna PanufnikLeighton House and The Warehouse: Jonathan Powell, ‘Finland Piano Suomi’Leighton House: Richard Dubugnon's ‘Mikroncerto III’
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Guerci, Manolo. "Salisbury House in London, 1599-1694.: The Strand Palace of Sir Robert Cecil." Architectural History 52 (2009): 31–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00004147.

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Salisbury House is but one example from a significant corpus of architectural patronage carried out by a single family. In two generations, the Cecils created three great ‘prodigy houses’ among a range of notable country houses including Cranborne Manor in Dorset, Pymmes in Hertfordshire, Wothorpe Lodge near Burghley House in Northamptonshire, and Snape Castle in Yorkshire. It was William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley (1520/21-98), who from the early 1560s initiated this prolific campaign of building with Burghley House in Northamptonshire, Theobalds in Hertfordshire, and Burghley House in London. Both Thomas Cecil (1542-1623) and Robert Cecil (1563-1612) inherited their father’s passion for architecture. Even when Burghley House in the Strand was nearing completion, Thomas continued work on his remarkable Italianate villa in Wimbledon (begun 1588, demolished c. 1720), one of the most innovative houses of the period, with a three-sided plan, built on a steeply sloping hillside that prompted the composition of elaborate terraces. Like the family’s other properties, Wimbledon House was able to offer hospitality to Elizabeth I, while Hatfield House, built by Robert Cecil between 1607 and 1612, was specifically designed to entertain James I and his Queen, Anne of Denmark. In London, Robert Cecil’s architectural patronage started in about 1596 with the improvement and remodelling of Beaufort House in Chelsea, apparently in order to extend his influence into that area, although the scheme was quickly abandoned. Three years later, Robert began Salisbury House in the Strand, while in 1609 he built the first commercial centre in the West End, known as the ‘New Exchange’. From 1612, he also developed a strip of land along the west side of St Martin’s Lane as a new residential area, but did not live to see it completed.
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Zhuykov, S. "EXERGETIC ANALYSIS OF A BUILDING AS A KEY ELEMENT OF A HEAT SUPPLY SYSTEM." Construction Materials and Products 4, no. 3 (August 12, 2021): 23–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.34031/2618-7183-2021-4-3-23-40.

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the study of the complex influence of weather and climatic factors and their variability on the needs of en-ergy and exergy when creating thermal comfort in a house with various engineering and architectural charac-teristics is carried out. It is confirmed that even for houses with relatively low thermal characteristics built in accordance with regulatory documents, the role of solar radiation in the formation of the heat balance, espe-cially at the beginning and end of the heating season, is important. Studies showed that due to the combined influence of external meteorological factors, with the improvement of the thermal characteristics of houses, the correlation between the energy demand for creating a favorable microclimate and the outdoor air tem-perature significantly worsens. It is determined that in this case, the value of the approximation reliability decreases from 1 (with a linear dependence) to 0.55 and lower (with the maximum possible improved ther-mal characteristics of the house today). This position significantly corrects the operating modes and charac-teristics of the ST. In particular, this makes it necessary to improve the automatic control system of ST. And this, in turn, increases the investment component of the system. A method was developed for calculating exergy needs to create thermal comfort inside the house by taking into account, using the probability theory, the influence of the random nature of meteorological factors within the heating period, on the basis of which, in the conditions of the region, it is shown and calculated that when determining the seasonal exergy needs for the heat supply of the house, the use of a stationary approach leads to an underestimation of the results by 12...28% compared to the dynamic approach
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "House of St"

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Grissino-Mayer, Henri D., Leda N. Kobziar, Grant L. Harley, Kevin P. Russell, Liza B. LaForest, and Joseph K. Oppermann. "The Historical Dendroarchaeology Of The Ximénez-Fatio House, St. Augustine, Florida, U.S.A." Tree-Ring Society, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/622617.

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In recent decades, agencies charged with managing historic structures and sites have found dendroarchaeological studies increasingly valuable, given the ability of such studies to verify (or refute) accepted dates of construction. The Ximénez-Fatio House has well-documented historical and cultural significance for the state of Florida, as it is one of St. Augustine’s oldest, best-preserved, and most studied historic properties. According to documentary sources, the two-story coquina-stone main house was reportedly built around 1797–1798, and included a one-story wing of warehouses, giving the house a distinctive ‘‘L’’ shape. Documentary evidence also suggests that a second story was added above the wing sometime between 1830 and 1842. However, after studying the building fabric itself, historical architects now believe the entire wing of the house was remodeled two decades later in the 1850s. Our goals were to: (1) determine the probable construction years for the original house and wing using tree-ring dating techniques, and (2) verify the probable construction year for the remodeling that occurred in the wing section of the house. A total of 74 core samples were extracted from longleaf pine (Pinus palustris P. Miller) timbers used to construct the house. Twenty-six were confidently crossdated both visually and statistically against each other to produce a 185-year floating tree-ring chronology. A statistically significant (p < 0.0001) correlation between our chronology and a longleaf pine chronology from Lake Louise, Georgia, anchors our chronology between 1673 and 1857. No cutting dates were obtained from the main house, but the lack of any tree rings that post-date 1798 supports the 1797 construction date. Furthermore, cutting dates obtained from beams in the first-floor wing revealed that the extensive remodeling of the wing likely occurred in the period 1856 to 1858 soon after the house had been purchased by Louisa Fatio in 1855.
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Oliphant, Mary V. "The house of the Church the living worship space of St. Clement's parish /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1999. http://www.tren.com.

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McNeely, Andrew J. "A House Divided: St. Augustine's Dualistic Ecclesiology Revisited in Light of the Doctrine of the totus Christus." University of Dayton / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1596276140358224.

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Do, Khoa Tat. "Universal Engineering Programmer - An In-house Development Tool For Developing and Testing Implantable Medical Devices In St. Jude Medical." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2011. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/488.

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During development and testing of the functionality of the pacemaker and defibrillator device, engineers in the St. Jude Medical Cardiac Rhythm Management Division use an in-house development tool called Universal Engineering Programmer (UEP) to ensure the device functions as expected, before it can be used to test on an animal or a human during the implantation process. In addition, some applications of UEP are incorporated into the official releases of the device product. UEP has been developed and used by engineers across departments in the St. Jude Medical Cardiac Rhythm Management Division (CRMD). This thesis covers the flexible and reusable design and implementation of UEP features, to allow engineers to easily and effectively develop and test the devices.
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Woldemichael, Michael Haile. "The Mineralogical Composition of House Dust in Ontario, Canada." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20664.

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Despite increasing concern about the presence of heavy metals, pesticides and other toxins in indoor environments, very little is known about the physical and chemical composition of ordinary household dust. This study represents the first systematic investigation of the mineralogical composition of indoor dust in residential housing in Canada. Specimens of dust were obtained from homes in six geographically separate cities in the Province of Ontario: two located on the metamorphic and igneous rocks of the Precambrian Canadian Shield (Thunder Bay and Sudbury), the other four located on Palaeozoic limestone and shale dominated bedrock (Barrie, Burlington, Cambridge, and Hamilton). Forty samples of household vacuum dust were obtained. The coarse fraction (80 – 300 µm) of this dust was subjected to flotation (using water) to separate the organic components (e.g. insect fragments, dander), natural and synthetic materials (e.g. fibres, plastics) from the mineral residue. The mineral fraction was then analyzed using quantitative point counting, polarizing light microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy methods. Despite the great distances between the sampling localities and the distinct differences in bedrock geology, the mineral fraction of dust from all six cities is remarkably similar and dominated by quartz and feldspar, followed by lithic fragments, calcite, and amphibole. Some evidence of the influence of local geology can nevertheless be found. For example, a relatively higher proportion of sulphide minerals is observed in the two cities on the Canadian Shield where these minerals are clearly more abundant in the bedrock. Specimens from Sudbury, Canada’s largest mining centre located atop a nickel-sulphide mineral deposit, showed the highest sulphide contents. Quartz is the dominant mineral in all cities. All quartz grains have internal strain features and fluid inclusions that are indicative of a metamorphic-igneous provenance. In all cities, sand is used on the streets as an abrasive for traction during the icy winter season. This sand is obtained in all cases from local glaciofluvial deposits that were ultimately derived principally from the rocks of the Canadian Shield in the last Pleistocene glaciations that affected all of Ontario. Thus, tracking in sand is the most plausible mechanism by which quartz was introduced into these homes since sampling was done, in all cases, in the winter season. The results indicate that glacial deposits dominate the mineral composition of indoor dust in Ontario cities and that nature of the bedrock immediately underlying the sampling sites is relatively of minor importance.
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Roe, Jerry Allen. "A biblical development of modern home fellowship leaders with special emphasis on Acts 2:42-47." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2005. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p064-0117.

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Leitch, Fran. "10 Bowen St." Click here to access this resource online, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10292/475.

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This project is a site specific based exploration into the boundaries between the domestic home and the navigation of the anxious corporeal body which dwells in the space. These connections open up ways of mapping anxiety brought on through intrusive thoughts surrounding contamination (in relation to Obsessive Compulsive Disorder). The corporal navigation of the domestic is fuelled by the thoughts and their control over the notions of fear and anxiety surrounding the transferring of contaminated material from the external temporal world (dust and organic matter) into the internal sterile environment through movement or fissures in the fabric of the dwelling. The project explores the notions of the domestic space being formed into a container for the intrusive thoughts through physical acts of decontaminating, containment, sealing and expelling the elements of dirt; the body and the home become a hybrid entity alluding to the extreme control which forms and takes over the domestic space.
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Straw, Elizabeth A. "The history of Sears, Roebuck and Company's pre-cut houses in St. Joseph County, Indiana : a study in the preservation of early twentieth century houses." Virtual Press, 1988. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/539624.

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In the early twentieth century Sears, Roebuck and Company entered into the pre-cut housing market and offered complete houses to the public through their catalogues. This thesis discusses the history of Sears, Roebuck and Company's Modern Homes Division and preservation problems of this form of early twentieth century housing.Methedology included identification of Sears, Roebuck and Company's Modern Homes in St. Joseph County, Indiana through public response to a newspaper article and through the study of St. Joseph County mortgage records. Identified houses were matched to available catalogue illustrations from the Sears, Roebuck and Company Archives. The location and age of Sears houses in St. Joseph County is discussed.Using Sears houses in St. Joseph County as models, a study of the common preservation problems and solutions for early twentieth century houses has been made. The results of the preservation study and history of Sears houses in St. Joseph County will be available for use by the St. Joseph County Historic Preservation Commission to help homeowners understand the history of their Sears houses and how to preserve them.
Department of Architecture
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Torrance, David Alan. "Christian kinship : relatedness in Christian practice and moral thought." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2017. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/269744.

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Ideas of kinship play a significant role in structuring everyday life, and yet kinship has been neglected in Christian ethics, as well as moral philosophy and bioethics. Attention has been paid in these disciplines to the ethics of ‘family,’ but little regard has been paid to the fact that kinship is not a given, but is culturally contingent. The thesis seeks to remedy the neglect in recent Christian theological ethics by drawing on resources from the history of Christian thought and practice. It uses social anthropology both to unsettle the accounts of kinship used in Christian ethics, and to expose elements in Christian traditions of thought and practice relating to kinship. Notions of shared bodily substance, the house, gender and personhood recur cross-culturally in giving shape to kinship. By examining these four notions as they inform Christian thought and practice, a theological account is developed. Chapters dedicated to each of these four attempt to provide, in the first instance, a descriptive account of how the notion has structured Christian thought and practice in relation to kinship. Each chapter then turns, in the second instance, to a critical mode, offering a theological treatment of the chapter topic as it bears on kinship. The thesis concludes that kinship in Christ should be considered normatively primary for the Christian, but also that there are ways in which Christians have honoured this kinship in Christ by organising and playing out kinship on a smaller scale. In detailing the distinctively Christian organising principles that structure some practices of kinship ‘in miniature,’ another common practice – the special privileging of the blood tie in structuring kinship – is singled out for critique.
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Werner, David. "Bytový dům Panoráma Boskovice - dopravní řešení." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta stavební, 2019. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-392185.

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The diploma thesis deals with the project of transport solution for new buildings of BD Panorama Boskovice. The project documentation elaborates the design of the road, sidewalks and parking spaces to the proposed 4 apartment buildings in Boskovice The work corresponds to the extent of the design documentation for construction (PDPS).
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Books on the topic "House of St"

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McLaughlin, Eve. St. Catherine's House. 8th ed. Birmingham: Federation of Family History Societies, 1991.

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McLaughlin, Eve. St. Catherine's House. 6th ed. Solihull, West Midlands, England: Federation of Family History Societies, 1985.

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Synan, Edward A. A house nearby, a divine dwelling, a house named for Augustine. Scarborough, Ont: St. Augustine's Seminary, 1988.

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Park, Keith. St Catherines House and civil registration. Aberdare: Family History Club, 1994.

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Weismann, John J. The house that Jack built. Sandia Park, N.M: Grand Lake Press, 1990.

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Field, Margaret. The history of Plantation House, St. Helena. Newmill, UK: Patten Press, 1998.

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S, Brantley Robert, and Brantley Jan White, eds. The Pitot House on Bayou St. John. New Orleans, La: Louisiana Landmarks Society, 1992.

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Beauman, Katharine Bentley. St Margaret's House: A brief history, 1889-1989. London: St Margaret's House, 1989.

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City of Hereford Archaeology Unit. Collingwood House, 9, St. Ethelbert St., Hereford: Report on a watching brief. Hereford: City of Hereford Archaeology Unit, 1995.

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Watkins, Priscilla G. Government House, St. Croix: Its history and special furnishings. St. Croix, V.I: Published in cooperation with the St. Croix Landmarks Society, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "House of St"

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Muller, Hendrik. "Casthouse Upgrade at Bayside Aluminium: From the Manual 1970's into the 21'st Century." In Aluminium Cast House Technology, 35–45. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118787304.ch4.

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Power, P. Edm. "St. Peter In Gallicantu And The House Of Caiphas." In Oriens Christianus (1901-1941), edited by Anton Baumstark, 182–208. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463217570-011.

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"St. Benedict’s Ghost:." In Magdalene House, 95–113. Vanderbilt University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv16754p8.9.

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"St. Columb’s Park House." In Work with Youth in Divided and Contested Societies, 241. Brill | Sense, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789087903695_023.

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"Weekend House at St Andrews Beach." In Cost-Effective Building, 54–57. Birkhäuser, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.11129/detail.9783034615105.54.

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"ST. PETER IN GALLICANTU AND THE HOUSE OF CAIPHAS." In St. Peter in Gallicantu, 191–217. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463224301-002.

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Parno, Travis G., and Timothy B. Riordan. "“The most bewitching Game”." In Unearthing St. Mary's City, 165–82. University Press of Florida, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813066837.003.0010.

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For colonists living on the seventeenth-century frontier, drinking, gaming, and other forms of entertainment often went hand-in-hand. Games involving dice, cards, tables, and gaming pieces could be found at most ordinaries. Outdoor entertainment, such as horse racing, bowling, and animal blood sport, were also popular attractions. This chapter surveys the documentary and archaeological evidence for seventeenth-century gaming in St. Mary’s City with a focus on the site’s proliferation of ordinaries. Of particularly emphasis is an oval-shaped animal baiting ring discovered at the Leonard Calvert House site, a property that was home to Maryland’s first governor and later served as the colony’s first statehouse and largest ordinary.
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"Five. House of St rangers/Diminished Lives." In The Unspoken as Heritage, 114–48. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781478007029-006.

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Gitlin, Jay. "Constructing the House of Chouteau: St. Louis." In The Bourgeois Frontier, 13–25. Yale University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300101188.003.0002.

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Stone, Garry Wheeler, and Stephen S. Israel. "The Captain John Hicks House Site and the Eighteenth-Century Townlands Community." In Unearthing St. Mary's City, 203–23. University Press of Florida, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813066837.003.0012.

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In 1969–1971, archaeologists and a historian collaborated to interpret the ca.1720–1745 dwelling site of a prominent St. Mary’s County tobacco planter, Captain John Hicks. Hicks was a ship captain from Whitehaven, England, who married a local woman and settled on the St. Mary’s Townlands. Shortly before 1749, Hicks constructed a new dwelling and his old dwelling was moved to become an outbuilding. In the process of clearing the old site for agriculture, Hicks’s slaves buried thousands of artifacts in the old cellar and in pits. Archaeologists Glenn Little and Stephen Israel sorted the artifacts by function. Minimal vessel estimates were made for ceramics and glass. Historian Lois Carr used land records and probate inventories to model the social structure of the St. Mary’s City Townlands and St. Mary’s County. While Captain Hicks ranked among the top ten-percent of the County’s tobacco producers and lived quite comfortably, his standard of living was modest compared to William Deacon, Esquire, Customs Collector for the North Potomac, the Townlands’ grandee. While Dr. Carr was able to reconstruct much of Captain Hicks’s career, she could learn little about his 19 slaves other than their names and ages.
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Conference papers on the topic "House of St"

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Solonenko, V. K. "St. Petersburg publishing house «Red Sailor». To the 25th anniversary of the foundation." In Современные проблемы книжной культуры: основные тенденции и перспективы развития: памяти члена-корреспондента РАН В.И. Васильева. Москва: Федеральное государственное бюджетное учреждение науки Научный и издательский центр "Наука" Российской академии наук, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52929/978-5-6046447-2-0_425.

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Liu, Geng, and Haibo Dong. "Effects of Tail Geometries on the Performance and Wake Pattern in Flapping Propulsion." In ASME 2016 Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting collocated with the ASME 2016 Heat Transfer Summer Conference and the ASME 2016 14th International Conference on Nanochannels, Microchannels, and Minichannels. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fedsm2016-7691.

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Swimming fishes exhibit remarkable diversities of the caudal fin geometries. In this work, a computational study is conducted to investigate the effects of the caudal fin shape on the hydrodynamic performance and wake patterns in flapping propulsion. We construct the propulsor models in different shapes by digitizing the real caudal fins of fish across a wide range of species spanning homocercal tails with low aspect ratio (square shape used by bluegill sunfish, rainbow trout, etc.) or high aspect ratio (lunate shape adopted by tuna, swordfish, etc.), and even heterocercal caudal fin adopted by sharks. Those fin models perform the same flapping motion in a uniform flow to mimic fish’s forward swimming. We then simulate the flow around the flapping fins by an in-house immersed-boundary-method based flow solver. According to the analysis of the hydrodynamic performance, we have found that the lunate shape model (high aspect-ratio) always generates a larger thrust compared to other models. The comparison of the propulsive efficiency shows that the large aspect ratio fins (tuna and shark) have a higher efficiency when the Strouhal number (St) is in the range of steady swimming (0.2<St<0.4), while the lower aspect ratio caudal fins (catfish, trout, etc.) are more efficient when St>0.4, in which the fish is accelerating or maneuvering. Finally, the 3D wake patterns of those propulsors are analyzed in detail.
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Cueva, Marcos, Vinicius L. F. Matos, Sylvio H. Correa, Eduardo A. Tannuri, and Carlos Mastraˆngelo. "Downtime Analysis for Offloading Operation: DP X Non-DP Shuttle Tanker." In ASME 2009 28th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2009-79637.

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The Brazilian oil company PETROBRAS will install the first FPSO ever in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM). This unit will be installed in a water depth of 2.500m, and in addition to several challenges to develop such a project, one has received special attention: the offloading to be performed by a shuttle tanker in tandem with the FPSO. In a general offloading analysis, the motions of the shuttle tanker and the hawser tension are evaluated only in the maximum operational environmental conditions. This approach has limitations, the most important being the fact that the worst results do not always happen with the most severe environmental conditions and that it does not provide an indication of the operational downtime. In this work, an analysis is performed to evaluate the downtime of a shuttle tanker, with and without dynamic positioning (DP) assistance, under the scatter environmental data taken from the GoM METOCEAN technical specification. Due to the large amount of possible environmental combinations of wave, wind and current, a reduced selection of 60 conditions has been chosen based on statistical procedures. The offloading analysis is performed for a turret moored FPSO, connected with two types of shuttle tankers: a non-DP shuttle tanker (ST) or a DP shuttle tanker (DPST). The DPST uses 2 tunnel thrusters in the bow, 1 in the aft and the main propeller, with a total power of 12,500kW. The ST is assisted by one tug in tandem, which applies at least 10t of force at the ST stern. The calculations are performed with the in-house PETROBRAS software DYNASIM, a fully coupled time domain simulator. In the analysis the position of the moving shuttle tanker is monitored within the green zone, defined as ±45° from the FPSO bow-stern axis, and the mean and maximum hawser tensions, for all defined environmental conditions. The downtime for each loading condition is obtained by the summation of the occurrence probabilities of the environmental conditions under which the ST or DPST results did not stay inside the defined limits of position in the green zone and by the hawser tensions, i.e. the offloading cannot be performed. Machinery failure probability is not considered for the evaluation. As a result a downtime smaller than 3%, or 11 days per year, was obtained for the ST and smaller than 2.4%, or 9 days per year, for the DPST, with the hawser tension limit exceedence being the main cause.
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Donțu, Tatiana. "Tezaurul religios în colecțiile Bibliotecii „Transilvania”." In Simpozionul Național de Studii Culturale, Ediția a 2-a. Institute of Cultural Heritage, Republic of Moldova, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52603/9789975352147.04.

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Library „Transilvania” owns a large estimate of religious books, presence of which in this amazing book temple is a furthermore testimony that God is everywhere or how St. Ioan Gură de Aur stated: „who has a bible in their house, also has God”. Books value that creates this fund which consists not only in action it was edited in Bucureşti, Blaj, Alba Iulia and Roma, ongoing XVII, XX centuries, but in the sacred learning composed in it. The collections importance grows and through the fact that authors were saint people, who had a communion relationship with God and being enlightened by the divine grace spreading towards sharing continuously from the giving knowledge of life. And we, at our time, to become worthy of sending generations that come the necessity to know our creator.
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Levchenya, A. M., and E. M. Smirnov. "Numerical Analysis of the Multiple-Horseshoe-Vortex Effects on the Endwall Heat Transfer in the Leading-Edge Region of a Symmetric Bluff Body." In 2010 14th International Heat Transfer Conference. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ihtc14-22655.

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The present contribution covers results of a CFD analysis of the 3D flow and endwall heat transfer for a generic junction configuration with a wall-mounted symmetric bluff body experimentally investigated by Praisner and Smith [1, 2]. The computations based on the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations (RANS) were performed using two codes of second order accuracy: the in-house code SINF and the commercial package ANSYS-CFX 12.0. For the turbulence closure problem, the Menter SST turbulence model with and without the streamline-curvature correction term was used. The grid sensitivity of solution was studied using a set of grids, the finest of which was of about five million cells. In accordance with the experiments, the computations with both the codes predict development of multiple horseshoe vortices and several bands of high values of the Stanton (St) number upstream of the body leading edge. The spatial relationships between the vorticity in individual planes and the associated endwall Stanton number are generally same in the measurements and in the computations. Some quantitative distinctions between the predictions and experimental data are attributed to the smoothing effect of the low-frequency unsteadiness of the horseshoe vortex system developing in the real flow. Simulation of this effect is outside of RANS-based formulations.
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Habchi, Charbel, Serge Russeil, Daniel Bougeard, Jean-Luc Harion, Sebastien Menanteau, Hisham El Hage, Ahmed El Marakbi, and Hassan Peerhossaini. "Numerical Simulation of the Interaction Between Fluid Flow and Elastic Flaps Oscillations." In ASME 2013 Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fedsm2013-16352.

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Several numerical methods have been developed recently to solve problems including the interaction between viscous fluid flow and elastic solid structures. In this work, an in-house partitioned numerical solver is developed by using the open source C++ library OpenFOAM. Finite volume method is used to discretize the fluid flow problem on a moving mesh in an Arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian formulation and by using an adaptive time step. The structural elastic deformation is analyzed in a Lagrangian formulation using the St. Venant-Kirchhoff constitutive law. The solid structure is discretized by the finite volume method in an iterative segregated approach. The automatic mesh motion solver is based on Laplace smoothing equation with variable mesh diffusion. The strong coupling between the segregated solvers and the equilibrium on the fluid-structure interface are achieved by using an iterative implicit fixed-point algorithm with dynamic Aitken’s relaxation method. The solver is first validated on a benchmark largely used in the open literature. Then, a more complex case is studied including two elastic flaps immersed in a pulsatile fluid flow. The present solver predicts accurately the interaction between the complex flow structures generated by the flaps and the effect of the flaps oscillations on each other.
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Zheng, Huabin, Jinqiang Chen, Peixiang Yu, and Hua Ouyang. "High Accuracy Numerical Investigation of Trailing Edge Noise at Vortex Shedding Critical Angle of Attack." In ASME Turbo Expo 2022: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2022-83143.

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Abstract In this paper, the trailing edge noise generated by a 2D airfoil around the critical angle of attack for vortex shedding is numerically investigated using an in-house code with high accuracy and efficiency. In the present method, a fourth-order upwind compact finite-difference scheme with dispersion relation preserving (DRP) property is applied for the convection terms, and a fourth-order Runge-Kutta scheme is used for temporal discretization. The reflection of sound on the boundary is suppressed with Navier-Stokes characteristics boundary condition (NSCBC). To improve computational efficiency, a novel parallel computing strategy for the high-order compact schemes is employed. Thus, direct numerical simulation (DNS) can be realized for the flows of low Reynolds number (Re), while implicit large eddy simulation (ILES) would be carried for the flows of high Reynolds number. The present numerical method is validated by comparing the lift coefficient, drag coefficient and Strouhal number (St) to the previous publications. Based on the high accuracy and high-fidelity method, the flow field and sound field of a two-dimensional NACA0012 airfoil around critical angle of attack (AoA) at Re = 1000 are simultaneously solved. The results indicate that sound source is dipole centered at the surface of the airfoil at vortex shedding frequency, and is dipole, quadrupole or more complex sources located at the wake close to the trailing edge at higher order frequencies. These findings will help to improve understanding about the generation and propagation mechanisms of trailing edge noises at low Reynolds number.
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Jesha, Tasnova Alam, and M. Tariq Iqbal. "Data logging and energy consumption analysis of two houses in St. John's, Newfoundland." In 2014 8th International Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering (ICECE). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icece.2014.7026882.

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Gironi, Roberta. "The Diagonal City: crossing the social divisions." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.6266.

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Roberta Gironi Departamento de Proyectos Arquitectónicos, UPV. Camino de Vera, s/n. 46022 Valencia Joint Doctorate Dipartimento di Architettura – Teorie e Progetto. “Sapienza” Università degli Studi di Roma. Via Gramsci, 53. 00100 Roma E-mail: roberta.gironi@gmail.com Keywords (3-5): Informal processes, dynamic transformation, new planning approach, flexible space, self-organization Conference topics and scale: Reading and regenerating the informal city Contemporary cities are affected by transformations that put in discussion the claim of control and stability to which the urban project aspires. All those gradual adjustments are manifested according to the demand, bring toward a less formal and more flexible spatial order, for which the traditional forms of the "static" city become the background of the "kinetic" landscape of informal cities. On the contrary of the formal processes of urban planning, informality process is configured as an organic development model and a flexible dynamic system opened to changes. The informal space is produced according to principles of spontaneity and self-organization. A consideration on the possibility to assume different approaches can be proposed. Those approaches should integrate in the design reasoning all the dynamics usually excluded by the discourse on the urban project, which processes can become catalysts to enrich the methods of planning and design of the urban space. Through the analysis of the case-study Previ Lima and the Living Room at the Border of St. Ysidro, the aim is to delineate in which way the contemporary architecture can absorb and metabolize these processes, triggering a different approach to a different method to intervene in the spaces of relationship among formal and informal. It is believed that the informal urban qualities cannot be eliminated and is impossible to ignore the inhabitants' practices, but rather to work on the intersection between collective and individual actions. References Brillembourg A., Feireiss K., Klumpner H. (2005), Informal City (Prestel Publishing, Munich) Cruz T. (2008), "De la frontière globale au quartier de frontière: pratiques d'empiètement", Multitudes, 31(1). Davis M. (2006), Planet of Slums (Verso, London). Hernandez F., Kellett P., Allen L.K. (2010), Rethinking the informal city: critical perspectives from Latin America (Berghahn books, New York, Oxford). McFarlane C., Waibel M., (2012), Urban Informalities: Reflections on the Formal and Informal (Ashgate, Farnham). Jacobs J. (1961), The death and life of great American cities(Random House, New York- Toronto). Roy A., Alsayyad N., (2004) Urban Informality: Transnational Perspectives from the Middle East, Latin America, and South Asia (Lexington Books, Lanham)
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Souza, Eliza Aparecida de, and Ana Eliza Garcia Ralise. "CARACTERÍSTICAS DOS ACIDENTES DE TRABALHO, REGISTRADOS NO SINAN, NO CEREST REGIONAL DE AMPARO – SP, DE 2008 A 2018." In I Congresso Brasileiro de Saúde Pública On-line: Uma abordagem Multiprofissional. Revista Multidisciplinar em Saúde, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51161/rems/3082.

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Introdução: O trabalho é parte importante da vida do indivíduo e a Saúde do Trabalhador (ST) é uma política pública no Brasil, desde a criação do Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS). Objetivo: conhecer os acidentes relacionados ao processo de trabalho (ART) e identificar o perfil dos trabalhadores acidentados nos municípios de abrangência do CEREST Regional de Amparo. Material e métodos: Dados coletados pelos casos notificados no Sistema de Informação de Agravos de Notificação (SINAN), no período de 2008 a 2018. Resultados: no período analisado, foram notificados 703 Acidentes de Trabalho Grave (ATG) e 1675 Acidentes de Trabalho com Exposição a Material Biológico (AT-Bio). Os trabalhadores mais acometidos foram do sexo masculino nos ATG (82,1%) e do sexo feminino entre os AT-Bio (79,2%). Houve predomínio na faixa etária entre 20 a 39 anos (ATG: 54,6% e AT-Bio: 71,3%), da raça/cor branca (ATG: 78,3% e AT-Bio: 87,5%) e da escolaridade ensino médio (ATG: 48,8% e AT-Bio 55,8%) em ambos os agravos, assim como de trabalhadores registrados (ATG: 73,9% e AT-Bio: 76,3%). A ocupação predominante entre os ATG foi de trabalhadores da produção de bens e serviços industriais (61,7%) e de técnicos de nível médio entre os AT-Bio (58,6%). Os AT típicos representaram 80,5% das notificações de ATG e os AT-Bio ocorreram mais durante a realização de procedimentos (21%) e de administração de medicação (20,9%). A maioria dos casos evoluiu com incapacidade temporária entre os ATG (29,3%) e para alta entre os AT-Bio (48,6%), embora os dados identificados como “ignorado / vazio” tenha representado um número expressivo nesse campo (43,5% e 49,7% respectivamente). O município que registrou mais notificações de ATG no período foi Amparo (56,8%) e de AT-Bio (51%), Bragança Paulista. Os municípios Pedra Bela e Vargem não realizaram nenhuma notificação de ART no período avaliado. Conclusão: Concluiu-se que é importante conhecer o perfil do trabalhador acidentado para subsidiar ações de prevenção de novos acidentes entre a população que permanece exposta aos riscos, principalmente entre os trabalhadores com as características sociodemográficas mais acometidas no território.
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Reports on the topic "House of St"

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Atkinson, E. A. Regional mapping and qualitative petroleum resource assessment of the Magdalen Basin, Gulf of St. Lawrence, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland and Labrador. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/331452.

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The Geological Survey of Canada conducted a broad regional study of the Magdalen Basin in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, as part of the Marine Conservation Targets initiative. MCT is a national initiative to protect more of Canada's offshore areas, and resource assessment and related regional mapping are part of the review process. This study assembled a large seismic and geologic database that allowed new regional mapping of several key horizons in this basin. Digital seismic data was donated by industry, and reprocessing undertaken both in-house and with contractors. Wells were correlated and tops from literature were used to indentify regional reflection packages. Regionally consistent two-way time interpretations add to confidence. Depth conversion used regional time-depth functions from literature, which were developed from refraction data, with a residual correction for the water column. Nine regional depth maps and eight isopach maps were produced, including Pre-Horton Basement, Horton Group Isopach, Base Windsor Group, Top Salt, Top Bradelle Formation, Bradelle / Cumberland Isopach, and Top Cable Head Formation. These maps illustrate that the Pre-Horton basement is about 15 km deep in the centre of the basin. Two main trends are visible in the Horton Grabens, which may relate to basin formation, and no significant reactivation of deeper Appalachian structure is observed. In the basin centre, the more robust Base Windsor Unconformity horizon reaches about 12 km deep, and a key reservoir and source sequence in the Bradelle Formation reaches 7 km. These maps are useful for considering regional stratigraphy. The new mapping also constrained basin models and became the input for our Qualitative Petroleum Potential map. Basin modelling reveals scenarios where oil may be preserved. The petroleum potential of the region is highest north of Îles de la Madeleine and southeast of Îles de la Madeleine and northwest of Cape Breton.
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Skulski, T., S. Castonguay, Y. Moussallam, V. J. McNicoll, C. R. van Staal, and J. H. Bédard. Geology, Nippers Harbour and parts of Horse Islands, Cape St. John, and Little Bay Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, NTS 2-E/13 and parts of NTS 2-E/12, NTS 2-E/14, and NTS 2-L/4. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/295866.

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MacFarlane, Andrew. 2021 medical student essay prize winner - A case of grief. Society for Academic Primary Care, July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37361/medstudessay.2021.1.1.

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As a student undertaking a Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship (LIC)1 based in a GP practice in a rural community in the North of Scotland, I have been lucky to be given responsibility and my own clinic lists. Every day I conduct consultations that change my practice: the challenge of clinically applying the theory I have studied, controlling a consultation and efficiently exploring a patient's problems, empathising with and empowering them to play a part in their own care2 – and most difficult I feel – dealing with the vast amount of uncertainty that medicine, and particularly primary care, presents to both clinician and patient. I initially consulted with a lady in her 60s who attended with her husband, complaining of severe lower back pain who was very difficult to assess due to her pain level. Her husband was understandably concerned about the degree of pain she was in. After assessment and discussion with one of the GPs, we agreed some pain relief and a physio assessment in the next few days would be a practical plan. The patient had one red flag, some leg weakness and numbness, which was her ‘normal’ on account of her multiple sclerosis. At the physio assessment a few days later, the physio felt things were worse and some urgent bloods were ordered, unfortunately finding raised cancer and inflammatory markers. A CT scan of the lung found widespread cancer, a later CT of the head after some developing some acute confusion found brain metastases, and a week and a half after presenting to me, the patient sadly died in hospital. While that was all impactful enough on me, it was the follow-up appointment with the husband who attended on the last triage slot of the evening two weeks later that I found completely altered my understanding of grief and the mourning of a loved one. The husband had asked to speak to a Andrew MacFarlane Year 3 ScotGEM Medical Student 2 doctor just to talk about what had happened to his wife. The GP decided that it would be better if he came into the practice - strictly he probably should have been consulted with over the phone due to coronavirus restrictions - but he was asked what he would prefer and he opted to come in. I sat in on the consultation, I had been helping with any examinations the triage doctor needed and I recognised that this was the husband of the lady I had seen a few weeks earlier. He came in and sat down, head lowered, hands fiddling with the zip on his jacket, trying to find what to say. The GP sat, turned so that they were opposite each other with no desk between them - I was seated off to the side, an onlooker, but acknowledged by the patient with a kind nod when he entered the room. The GP asked gently, “How are you doing?” and roughly 30 seconds passed (a long time in a conversation) before the patient spoke. “I just really miss her…” he whispered with great effort, “I don’t understand how this all happened.” Over the next 45 minutes, he spoke about his wife, how much pain she had been in, the rapid deterioration he witnessed, the cancer being found, and cruelly how she had passed away after he had gone home to get some rest after being by her bedside all day in the hospital. He talked about how they had met, how much he missed her, how empty the house felt without her, and asking himself and us how he was meant to move forward with his life. He had a lot of questions for us, and for himself. Had we missed anything – had he missed anything? The GP really just listened for almost the whole consultation, speaking to him gently, reassuring him that this wasn’t his or anyone’s fault. She stated that this was an awful time for him and that what he was feeling was entirely normal and something we will all universally go through. She emphasised that while it wasn’t helpful at the moment, that things would get better over time.3 He was really glad I was there – having shared a consultation with his wife and I – he thanked me emphatically even though I felt like I hadn’t really helped at all. After some tears, frequent moments of silence and a lot of questions, he left having gotten a lot off his chest. “You just have to listen to people, be there for them as they go through things, and answer their questions as best you can” urged my GP as we discussed the case when the patient left. Almost all family caregivers contact their GP with regards to grief and this consultation really made me realise how important an aspect of my practice it will be in the future.4 It has also made me reflect on the emphasis on undergraduate teaching around ‘breaking bad news’ to patients, but nothing taught about when patients are in the process of grieving further down the line.5 The skill Andrew MacFarlane Year 3 ScotGEM Medical Student 3 required to manage a grieving patient is not one limited to general practice. Patients may grieve the loss of function from acute trauma through to chronic illness in all specialties of medicine - in addition to ‘traditional’ grief from loss of family or friends.6 There wasn’t anything ‘medical’ in the consultation, but I came away from it with a real sense of purpose as to why this career is such a privilege. We look after patients so they can spend as much quality time as they are given with their loved ones, and their loved ones are the ones we care for after they are gone. We as doctors are the constant, and we have to meet patients with compassion at their most difficult times – because it is as much a part of the job as the knowledge and the science – and it is the part of us that patients will remember long after they leave our clinic room. Word Count: 993 words References 1. ScotGEM MBChB - Subjects - University of St Andrews [Internet]. [cited 2021 Mar 27]. Available from: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/subjects/medicine/scotgem-mbchb/ 2. Shared decision making in realistic medicine: what works - gov.scot [Internet]. [cited 2021 Mar 27]. Available from: https://www.gov.scot/publications/works-support-promote-shared-decisionmaking-synthesis-recent-evidence/pages/1/ 3. Ghesquiere AR, Patel SR, Kaplan DB, Bruce ML. Primary care providers’ bereavement care practices: Recommendations for research directions. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2014 Dec;29(12):1221–9. 4. Nielsen MK, Christensen K, Neergaard MA, Bidstrup PE, Guldin M-B. Grief symptoms and primary care use: a prospective study of family caregivers. BJGP Open [Internet]. 2020 Aug 1 [cited 2021 Mar 27];4(3). Available from: https://bjgpopen.org/content/4/3/bjgpopen20X101063 5. O’Connor M, Breen LJ. General Practitioners’ experiences of bereavement care and their educational support needs: a qualitative study. BMC Medical Education. 2014 Mar 27;14(1):59. 6. Sikstrom L, Saikaly R, Ferguson G, Mosher PJ, Bonato S, Soklaridis S. Being there: A scoping review of grief support training in medical education. PLOS ONE. 2019 Nov 27;14(11):e0224325.
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Melbourne - Premises, 367 Collins St. - Construction - View from Findon House , 2nd floor slab reinforcement in position - 6 September 1922. Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-000328.

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