Academic literature on the topic 'NGER Act'

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Journal articles on the topic "NGER Act"

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Mia, Parvez, Tarek Rana, and Lutfa Tilat Ferdous. "Government Reform, Regulatory Change and Carbon Disclosure: Evidence from Australia." Sustainability 13, no. 23 (November 30, 2021): 13282. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su132313282.

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This paper examines the effect of two Australian environmental regulatory changes, specifically the Clean Energy Act (CEA) 2011 and the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) Act 2007 with reference to voluntary corporate carbon disclosure practices. In doing so, it describes the brief history of this carbon-related regulatory change, its scope, enforcement criteria and corporations’ disclosures. This is a longitudinal analysis of 219 annual reports of 73 listed corporations in Australia which were subjected to carbon tax and report carbon emissions as per the CEA 2011 and NGER Act 2007 accordingly. Any corporation or facility that emitted scope 1 emissions of 25,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-e) or more were liable for a carbon tax in accordance with CEA 2011. Drawing on stakeholder theory and legitimacy theory, this study uses content analysis to examine corporate carbon disclosure. The findings suggest there is a considerable increase in the number of carbon-related disclosures following these regulations being enacted as law. In addition, carbon-specific communication has become much more prevalent and accounts for a larger proportion of the sampled organisations’ reported environmental information. The results of this study enrich the validity of the hypothesis that organisations would seek to legitimise their operations to stakeholders by increasing their environment-related declarations. The evidence presented in the analysis confirms the assertion that government environmental legislation/regulation has a positive impact on corporate behaviour and accountability. These findings have significant consequences for the government, decision-makers and the accounting profession, indicating that regulatory guidance enhances both mandatory and voluntary disclosure. It also offers key insights into the possible impacts of the carbon regulatory change for future research to consider.
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Borghei, Zahra, Philomena Leung, and James Guthrie. "The nature of voluntary greenhouse gas disclosure – an explanation of the changing rationale." Meditari Accountancy Research 24, no. 1 (April 11, 2016): 111–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/medar-02-2015-0008.

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Purpose This paper aims to explore the nature of voluntary greenhouse gas (GHG) disclosure by non-GHG-registered companies among industry sectors over a period after the introduction of the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) Act 2007 and before the introduction of the Australian ETS. Design/methodology/approach A GHG disclosure index is used to evaluate the levels of GHG disclosure in 2009 and 2011 annual reports. Findings This paper highlights that non-GHG-registered companies seem to improve their disclosure by incorporating more “behavioural management” actions rather than “symbolic” actions. The changing rationale of GHG disclosure is towards more serious GHG reduction strategies. Consistent with voluntary disclosure and signalling theories, companies having good news to tell disclose their superior GHG information to promote their superior environmental performance. Research limitations/implications The findings should be useful for stakeholders who are interested in GHG disclosure strategies. Also, the content analysis of the annual reports provides some clarity in respect of the most common aspects of GHG disclosure by non-GHG-registered companies which is helpful in the evaluation of correspondence between carbon disclosure strategies and the objectives of carbon abatement. Originality/value Previous studies mostly investigate the differences in the type of GHG disclosure among companies subject to mandatory GHG regulations. However, this paper is the first study to examine the changing rationale in the nature of GHG disclosure of non-GHG-registered companies. While much of the prior research uses GHG-registered companies as the sample, no empirical study to date has considered non-GHG-registered companies that encompass 96 per cent of ASX listed companies.
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Yunus, Somaiya, Evangeline O. Elijido-Ten, and Subhash Abhayawansa. "Impact of stakeholder pressure on the adoption of carbon management strategies." Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal 11, no. 7 (February 10, 2020): 1189–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/sampj-04-2019-0135.

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Purpose This paper aims to examine whether the perceived pressures from stakeholders with high potential to cooperate and/or threaten the firm’s survival affect the decision to adopt carbon management strategies (CMSs). Design/methodology/approach A logistic panel regression model is estimated using longitudinal data from Australia’s Top-200 listed firms over seven years from 2009 to 2015. The authors test the firm’s propensity to adopt CMSs conditioned on the influence of four groups of stakeholders: the regulators, institutional investors, media and creditors. Data on CMSs adopted by firms are sourced from Thomson Reuters ASSET4 database, the Carbon Disclosure Project survey, annual reports, company websites and sustainability reports. Findings The authors show that stakeholder pressures are associated not only with the adoption or non-adoption of CMSs but also with the type of CMSs adopted. Three types of CMSs are identified, namely, compensation, reduction and innovation strategies. The findings reveal that CMS adoption and the firms’ propensity to adopt compensation and reduction strategies are significantly related to perceived pressures from the regulators, media and creditors. While pressure from the regulators is also associated with the firms’ propensity to adopt innovation strategies, a more advanced type of CMSs, the potential pressure from the media and creditors are not significantly related. Practical implications The findings imply that a firm’s adoption of CMSs is not merely about managing stakeholders in the regulatory sphere but also about taking into account the perceived pressures from non-regulatory stakeholders and the context-dependent nature of their influences. The authors show that by influencing the voluntary disclosure of carbon emissions, the government continues to be effective in encouraging firms to take action on climate change despite the abolition of the carbon tax in Australia. Social implications This study highlights that, apart from a heavy-handed approach, regulators can adopt softer forms of regulation such as the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) Act and a less invasive, stakeholder-driven approach to encourage firms to adopt CMSs and thereby work towards climate change mitigation. Originality/value This study extends the literature by showing that perceived pressure from some stakeholders found to be influential in relation to some corporate decisions (such as environmental strategy adoption and climate-change-related disclosure) may not necessarily be influential in relation to CMS adoption.
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Goodyer, Cynthia G., Sorana Marcovitz, Jules Hardy, Yves Lefebvre, Harvey J. Guyda, and Barry I. Posner. "Effect of insulin-like growth factors on human foetal, adult normal and tumour pituitary function in tissue culture." Acta Endocrinologica 112, no. 1 (May 1986): 49–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/acta.0.1120049.

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Abstract. To determine the direct effects of insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) on hormone release by the human pituitary gland, human foetal, adult normal and tumour pituitary tissues were maintained in culture for 2 to 4 weeks and tested with acute (3 h) exposures to different preparations of IGF peptides. Adult normal pituitaries and adenomas were tested with a semipurified preparation of IGFs, free of immunoreactive insulin, containing IGF-I and IGF-II in a ratio of approximately 1:4. Human foetal pituitaries were tested with the semipurified IGFs as well as more purified preparations of IGF-I and IGF-II. Culture media were assayed for hGH, hPrl, hACTH and hLH using specific radioimmunoassays. Both foetal (n = 16 (No. of pituitaries), 33 (No. of observations)) and normal adult (n = 3, 16) human pituitaries cultures responded to the semipurified IGFs (2–25 ngEq/ml for foetal and 2–4 ngEq/ml for adult pituitaries) with a significant decrease in hGH release compared to basal (P < 0.01) whereas the GH-secreting pituitary tumours showed no effect when tested with from 2 to 25 ngEq/ml (n = 8, 129, ns). The effect of IGFs on human foetal somatotrope activity was dose-related for both the semipurified IGFs (2–25 ngEq/ml, n = 16, 33) and IGF-I or IGF-II (10–100 ng/ml; n = 3, 18). hPrl release was inhibited in the normal adult (n = 2, 12; P < 0.01) but not in the foetal (n = 2, 9; ns) pituitary cultures by 2–4 ngEq/ml of the semipurified IGFs, while the Prl-secreting pituitary tumour cultures showed variable responses to 3–4 ngEq/ml of the same IGFs preparation (a) suppression: n = 1, 14, P < 0.001; b) no effect: n = 3, 28, ns). hGH release was inhibited in one of the two mixed (GH- and Prl-secreting) tumours examined (n = 1, 10, P < 0.02) and unaffected in the other (n = 1, 14, ns), while hPrl release remained unchanged in both. The IGFs did not alter release of hLH or hACTH by either foetal or normal adult pituitaries. Conclusions: A semipurified preparation of IGFs directly inhibited hGH release by human foetal pituitaries and hGH and hPrl release by normal adult pituitaries but had no effect on hLH or hACTH secretion. Human foetal somatotropes responded to IGF-I and IGF-II in a similar dose-dependent manner suggesting that, like in the rat, both IGF peptides can have an inhibitory influence on GH secretion. GH- and/or Prl-secreting pituitary adenomas showed a predominant lack of responsiveness to the semipurified IGFs, suggesting that the sensitivity of somatotropes and lactotropes to an IGF inhibitory influence is often abnormal in the tumour state.
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morano, nicholas, Sarah Garret, and Steven Almo. "Structural and Functional Investigations Into B7-1:NGFR." Journal of Immunology 202, no. 1_Supplement (May 1, 2019): 229.7. http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.202.supp.229.7.

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Abstract Although Nerve Growth Factor Receptor (NGFR, TNFSFR16) is traditionally thought of as a receptor that regulates the growth of neurons, it is also widely expressed throughout the immune system in response to inflammation where its function is poorly characterized. In addition to binding the four neurotrophins (NGF, BDNF, NT3, NT4), the Almo lab and others have recently discovered that NGFR can also act as a receptor for B7-1 (CD80). B7-1 is a major costimulatory molecule expressed on antigen presenting cells (APCs) such as dendritic cells, macrophages, and microglia in response to inflammation. B7-1 can bind to CD28 on naïve T-cells, which induces T-cell activation. It can then bind CTLA4 (upregulated on T cells after CD28 activation), which reduces activation. B7-1 also interacts with PD-L1. The structure and function of the B7-1-NGFR interaction is currently unknown. We have recently conducted epitope mapping experiments that suggest the NGFR binds to B7-1 on the same interface that CD28 and CTLA4 bind to B7-1. This interface appears to be independent of the PD-L1-B7-1 binding interface. NGFR epitope mapping data suggests that B7-1 binds to NGFR near the binding site for NGF, and similarly to other TNFRSF receptor-ligand interactions. Furthermore, our data shows that NGFR and CTLA4 can compete for binding to B7-1. In addition, we are investigating the role the B7-1:NGFR binding plays in neurons.
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Quirici, Nadia, Davide Soligo, Chiara Borsotti, Cinzia Scavullo, Stefano Zangrossi, and Giorgio Lambertenghi-Deliliers. "Phenotypic and Molecular Characterization of Bone Marrow L-NGFR + Mesenchymal Stem Cells." Blood 104, no. 11 (November 16, 2004): 2333. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v104.11.2333.2333.

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Abstract In a previous report we demonstrated that the immunomagnetic sorting of bone marrow (BM) cells labeled with low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor (L-NGFR) antibodies allows the selection of phenotypically and functionally homogeneous cells that are capable of expansion, self-renewal and differentiation into multiple mesenchymal cells lineages. Furthermore, we reported the presence of a subpopulation of L-NGFR+ cells coexpressing CD133 and CD34, markers associated with a primitive hematopoietic stem cell phenotype. In the present study we expanded on the phenotypic characterization of these cells and investigated their potential for multilineage differentiation. BM L-NGFR+ cells were analyzed by flow cytometry immediately after immunoseparation and the expression of a variety of stem cell markers was studied. In 12 subsequent experiments L-NGFR+ cells expressed CD45low (97.5% ±3), CD34 (19.9%±13), CD133 (10.4%±6), CD105 (46.8%±36%), P1H12 (50.5%±18), KDR (34%±18) and SSEA-3 (0.47%±0.41). In addition L-NGFR+ expressed high levels of the SCF ligand CD117 (40%±16%). As we previously demonstrated, L-NGFR antibodies identify a subpopulation of cells with a high proliferative capacity and potential for multilineage differentiation along the mesenchymal lineage. We now show, in accordance to these phenotypic data, that the L-NGFR+ cells in the presence of SCF (100 ng/ml) doubled the number of CFU-F and expanded both adipocytic and osteoblastic differentiation in comparison to mesenchymal cultures without growth factors or supplemented with Flt-3L+IL-6 (both 100 ng/ml). SCF seems therefore to act at least as a survival/proliferation factor for mesenchymal stem cells. Transdifferentiation potentialities towards endothelium were determined incubating L-NGFR+ cells in M199 supplemented with 10% FBS, 50 ng/ml VEGF, 1 ng/ml bFGF and 2 ng/ml IGF-1. At confluence, the cells were further purified using Ulex europaeus agglutinin-1 (UEA-1)-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) and anti-FITC microbeads and expanded with VEGF. Immunophenotypic analysis of 8 samples showed a variable expression of endothelial markers: P1H12 ranging from 17 to 58%, CD105 from 98–100% and CD202b from 18 to 100%. L-NGFR+ cells, immediately after immunoseparation, were expressing Desmin but not MyoD, Miogenin, Mrf4, Myf5 by means of RT-PCR, while these cells were expressing NSE, TRKA and GalC, but not Nestin and GFAP. Experiments are ongoing to demonstrate muscle and neuron-glial differentiation in vitro using specific media (DMEM 10% FBS + 3 mM %-azacytidine, astrocyte conditioned media, neural stem cell conditioned media), In conclusion, the expression on NGFR+ cells of a variety of markers, not exclusively related to the mesenchymal lineage, and the reproducible ability to differentiate endothelial cells suggest that these cells may represent a subset of adult MSC with some multipotentiality.
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Creasy, Caitlin A., Yuzhong Jeff Meng, Marie-Andrée Forget, Tatiana Karpinets, Katarzyna Tomczak, Chip Stewart, Carlos A. Torres-Cabala, et al. "Genomic Correlates of Outcome in Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocyte Therapy for Metastatic Melanoma." Clinical Cancer Research 28, no. 9 (February 18, 2022): 1911–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-21-1060.

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Abstract Purpose: Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) historically yields a 40%–50% response rate in metastatic melanoma. However, the determinants of outcome are largely unknown. Experimental Design: We investigated tumor-based genomic correlates of overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), and response to therapy by interrogating tumor samples initially collected to generate TIL infusion products. Results: Whole-exome sequencing (WES) data from 64 samples indicated a positive correlation between neoantigen load and OS, but not PFS or response to therapy. RNA sequencing analysis of 34 samples showed that expression of PDE1C, RTKN2, and NGFR was enriched in responders who had improved PFS and OS. In contrast, the expression of ELFN1 was enriched in patients with unfavorable response, poor PFS and OS, whereas enhanced methylation of ELFN1 was observed in patients with favorable outcomes. Expression of ELFN1, NGFR, and PDE1C was mainly found in cancer-associated fibroblasts and endothelial cells in tumor tissues across different cancer types in publicly available single-cell RNA sequencing datasets, suggesting a role for elements of the tumor microenvironment in defining the outcome of TIL therapy. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that transcriptional features of melanomas correlate with outcomes after TIL therapy and may provide candidates to guide patient selection.
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Takahashi, Mizuho, Akiharu Yoshino, Ayako Yamanaka, Chihiro Asanuma, Tadaaki Satou, Shinichiro Hayashi, Yoshinori Masuo, Kiyomi Sadamoto, and Kazuo Koike. "Effects of Inhaled Lavender Essential Oil on Stress-Loaded Animals: Changes in Anxiety-Related Behavior and Expression Levels of Selected mRNAs and Proteins." Natural Product Communications 7, no. 11 (November 2012): 1934578X1200701. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1934578x1200701132.

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Inhalation of various essential oils elicits behavioral changes as a consequence of a complex centrally coordinated response. To understand the molecular mechanisms of action of aromatic compounds on emotional responses, we evaluated the stress-induced changes in mouse brain and the efficacy of inhaled essential oil from Lavandula officinalis (LvEO) using two approaches: a behavioral test, and examining the expression levels of selected genes {fast nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR) mRNA, activity regulated cytoskeletal-associated protein (Arc) mRNA} and proteins {galactokinase 1 (GLK1) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)}. Animals were randomly divided into 4 groups depending on the treatment given: stress (-)/H2O, stress (-)/LvEO, stress (+)/H2O, and stress (+)/LvEO group. For behavioral testing, using an elevated plus-maze test, significant anxiolytic-like effects were seen in both the stress (-)/LvEO and stress (+)/LvEO groups, indicating that LvEO exerts anxiolytic-like effects regardless of the administration of water immersion stress. On expression analysis, the levels of NGFR and Arc mRNA were significantly lower in animals subjected to stress. Inhalation of LvEO, however, reversed this change, thus suggesting that LvEO negates the impact of stress on gene expression levels. Meanwhile, significant decreases in expression levels were also observed in the stress (-)/LvEO group, which implies that LvEO, when given in a stress-free situation, may act as a stress stimulus. Taken together, our data suggest that inhalation of LvEO exerts bidirectional influences in the central nervous system (CNS) of animals, either attenuating the effects of stress or acting as a stressor, depending on the subject state.
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Nwozor, Agaptus, and Blessing Okhillu. "Child's Rights and the Challenges of Educating the Girl-Child: Assessing the Contributions of UNICEF in Nigeria." Age of Human Rights Journal, no. 18 (June 23, 2022): 285–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.17561/tahrj.v18.6520.

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In 2003, Nigeria domesticated the twin international instruments on child rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. The resultant legislation from Nigeria’s domestication efforts is the Child’s Rights Act (CRA) of 2003. Despite the provisions of this legislation detailing the elaborate atlas of rights to be enjoyed by the Nigerian child, their fortune especially that of the girl-child, has not got better. At the base of the contentious forces militating against the rights of the girl-child are the cultural and religious norms that are intrinsically embedded in the dominant patriarchal system prevalent in Nigeria, especially in northern Nigeria. These forces are intricately united in marginalizing and precluding the girl-child from accessing education. Using the lens of radical feminism in combination with human-rights based approach, this paper interrogates the challenges faced by the girl-child in accessing education and the interventionist role played by UNICEF to salvage the situation. The paper finds that although the interventionist program of UNICEF, that is, the Nigeria girls’ education project (NGEP), contributed in re-enrolling over one million out-of-school girls back to school, a lot needs to be done to salvage the girl-child from the doldrums of structural alienation that deprives her of access to education.
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Failasufah, Failasufah, Farida Hanum, and Mohamad Hilmi Bin Mat Said. "Islamic Counseling Guidance As A Teenage Social Conflict Resolution In Madrasah." Edukasia Islamika 7, no. 2 (December 27, 2022): 232–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.28918/jei.v7i2.6277.

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This study aims to describe Islamic counseling guidance as conflict resolution carried out to help alleviate conflict problems and packaged as a psychological therapy procedure, becoming a strategic way that can be applied to resolve conflicts among adolescents, increase anti-violent and hostile behavior, and increase the use of resolution strategies. peaceful conflict. Conflict is a form of interaction between humans who have interests between the two, can be in the form of conflict, bickering, threats, or others with the aim of destroying the opponent. The method used in this study is qualitative. The results showed that, the occurrence of social conflicts among adolescent students in madrasas, conflicts experienced by adolescent students in madrasas began with the emergence of several students whose numbers were less than one percent of the number of students in madrasas involved in social groups or gangs. who act in the name of the “school gang” with all their activities, such as ngre-se or klitih, hanging out, fights, convoys, which occur because of the interests of social groups of adolescent students to show their existence. As a preventive and problem solving step, Islamic counseling guidance services as a conflict resolution aim to assist adolescent students in resolving conflict problems in peaceful ways. Keywords: Islamic counseling guidance, conflict resolution, and conflict
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "NGER Act"

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(9841514), Maria Tyler. "Corporate voluntary emissions disclosure in Australia: A multi-theoretical accounting perspective." Thesis, 2013. https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Corporate_voluntary_emissions_disclosure_in_Australia_A_multi-theoretical_accounting_perspective/13436210.

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"This study explores the issue of corporate (voluntary) emissions disclosures in Australia during the period 2003/04 through 2009/10. This seven year period covered significant changes in the emissions-related social and political environment, including a change in Australian government, ratification of the Kyoto Protocol by Australia, the introduction of the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting Act 2007, and a proposed Australian Emissions Trading Scheme (including carbon pricing). A multi-theoretical accounting model is used to explain the disclosures as a transitioning of two political economy theories: Legitimacy and Stakeholder theories. Both theories have been widely used in accounting research for examining the communication between an entity and society in general (Legitimacy Theory) or with certain stakeholders (Managerial Stakeholder Theory)."
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Macdonald, Fraser. "Parks, people, and power : the social effects of protecting the Ngel Nyaki Forest Reserve in eastern Nigeria : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Anthropology in the University of Canterbury /." 2007. http://library.canterbury.ac.nz/etd/adt-NZCU20071106.114121.

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Books on the topic "NGER Act"

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Rubin Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), ed. The Nepalese stylistic legacy in Tibetan painting: From early Beri to Ngor. New York: Rubin Museum of Art, 2010.

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Jackson, David Paul. The Nepalese legacy in Tibetan painting: From early Beri to Ngor. New York: Rubin Museum of Art, 2010.

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Munsterberg, Hugo. Symbolism in ancient Chinese art. New York: Hacker Art Books, 1986.

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Looking at the land of promise: Pioneer images of the Pacific Northwest. Pullman, Wash: Washington State University Press, 1988.

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Bueno, Alicia Albornoz. La memoria del olvido: El lenguaje del Tlacuilo : glifos y murales de la iglesia de San Miguel Arcángel, Ixmiquilpan, Hidalgo, teopan dedicado a Tezcatlipoca. México: Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, 1994.

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Jackson, Land Betty Lou, ed. Literacy strategies: Resources for beginning teachers, 1-6. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Pearson/Merrill/Prentice Hall, 2004.

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It's Your First Year Teaching... But You Don't Have to Act Like It. ScarecrowEducation, 2003.

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Chandra, Lokesh, Tachikawa Musashi, Watanabe Sumie, and Mandala Institute (Nagoya-shi Japan), eds. A Ngor maṇḍala collection. Nagoya: Mandala Institute, 2006.

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The Ngor Mandalas of Tibet: Listings of the Mandala deities. sqkyo, Japan: Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies, 1991.

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Hatherley, Candy, and Ross Murray. Culduthel. Society if Antiquaries of Scotland, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/9781908332202.

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The Iron Age settlement at Culduthel (NGR: NH 664 414) is one of the most significant later prehistoric sites identified in mainland Scotland. Archaeological excavation in 2005 revealed a craftworking centre which had specialised in the production of iron, bronze and glass objects between the late 1st Millennium BC and early 1st Millennium AD. This volume combines illustrated catalogues of finds with expert analyses to offer a unique insight into manufacture, trade and exchange of an Iron Age community in north-east Scotland.
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Book chapters on the topic "NGER Act"

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Fenton, Gordon A., and Erik H. Vanmarcke. "Random Field Characterization of NGES Data." In Probabilistic Site Characterization at the National Geotechnical Experimentation Sites, 61–78. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784406694.ch05.

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O'Neill, Michael W., and Gil Lim Yoon. "Spatial Variability of CPT Parameters at University of Houston NGES." In Probabilistic Site Characterization at the National Geotechnical Experimentation Sites, 1–12. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784406694.ch01.

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Akkaya, Aysen (Dener), and Erik H. Vanmarcke. "Estimation of Spatial Correlation of Soil Parameters Based on Data from the Texas A&M University NGES." In Probabilistic Site Characterization at the National Geotechnical Experimentation Sites, 29–40. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784406694.ch03.

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"T cu im rre e n tl Sycahleeasd ) qu aas rte wreeldlaatst he thLeammounltt -i D na oth io e n rt aylEIaR rt I h , odtrhoeurgm ht ajporrem di ocd ti eolnprw ob il llem re s q . u T ir hee the resolution of hOabvseearnva im to p ry o rt oafntCcooluupm le bdiamoUdneilvecrosm ity p . onTehnet, sea lt ehfo fo urgthsp ex hteernes , io onntaogfloorbeaclasdto in mga , in boatnhdth th eseeaorcee dva saonlnacn es diantcm lu odse ­ m in acn lu ydeodf ( t C he a rs toyn pe 1s9o 98 f ) m . ethods discussed above are uomciesamnatacnhdbaettmwoesepnhtehree . fl Fuo xe rsmaatntyhearbeoaus, n d th atr io ie nsoofftthhee rep F li o ca rtE in NgSaOn , d c , ur in re nstom co eupclaesdesm , oidmep ls roav re in cgapoanb le thoefo of frtehaelsie st iwcillalnrde -q suuirrfeacse ig coupling may be ess eenatd ia dli . tiA on ll tshue cc ecsusrroefnetmgpein ri ecraalt / isotn at i o st ficcaolumpe le th dom ds o . dFeo ls rirnesptlain ca ctee , a model parameterisatio nificant improvements in the SST anomaly patterns in the equatorial Pacific that th ry elraeyqeu rs ir , ecd lo m ud osd , erlad im inasp ti oonf , saun rf dacceonpv ro ecce ti sosn es, bound­ have many characteristics in common with observed to a quick solution, but, ro g v iv eemnetnhtesiam re p o li rktealny . N to onye ie o ld flEeN ss SsO uc cceosm sf puolsiin te tsh . eCm ur orreentdim ffi ocduelltspa ro re blceomnso id ferreapblliy ­ imp Iatcsthoofud ld ronuogthbte , they are worth pursuing. ce of the p ca hteirnigcc th ir ecuslpae ti c o if n ic peav tt oelruntsioinnoafgtihve en SESNTSaOndepaitsm od oes . ­ tehxe prospects for im forgotten, however, that not all of However, it is precisely this problem that must be no ctlufsuilv ly eluynodnersse ta a n so pnraolvteidmde ro sc uag le hst . p A re l dictions reside solved. Just as the ‘average’ daily weather is rarely of climate variabilit d y , th th eem re u l is ti aanmnpulaelteo th doeucgahdawles ca dloeo ce bpsteuravleda , idthteo ‘ ucnadneornsitcaanl’ diEnNgS th Oan id aeauissefm ul orceonastcroun ct ­ e2x .1 is c t ) e nc aend -e th .g e . , sien the time series o vidence for its for prediction. To reach their full potential, coupled distributions of rai cnuflaalrl ( cFhiagnugrees2i . n2ftrhae in f p al rlob (F ab ig il uir ty eim nd oidveildsun al eepdas to t E be N S ab O le etpoisroedpe li scaa te ndt he th eeivroleuv ti ooln vi nogfnoefw co duep velopments in data an ). Very recently, extratropical atmospheric and ocean interactions. There is lesdommeoedveildsehnacveeosftd ar etaeld ys t is oaonpdeinn the accuracy The most optimistic expectation is that once that may have a somewhat c ad d a if lfv er aern ia t t io unpstihnisEN fie S ld O . cEoNuSpO le , d th m ey odw el i s ll bheavaeb le cotnoqhueelrped id etnhtei fy chaanld le npg re edio ct ftmheeasiun red by the ocean s character, as other modes of climate variability. This may include Zhang te ertananl. ua1l99 ti 7 m , eFoslc la al neusr fa ( cKeleteemmapne ra et tures, from links between ENSO and the climate system not yet are now beginning to fin ddeatanlu . m1b9e9r8 ) o . M al. od1e9 ll 9e6 rs , m dis ocdoevlesremdaiyntahiediimnpienrv fe ecsttiogbaste io rv nast io onfaplodsastiab . lIemcplriomvaetdem ab e il cih ty anoin sm th seinde th ca edN al otrothmaun lt d i tropic f potential modes that link ocean basins, such as ENSO-and Barnett 1996). There is adlescoad ev aalltiPm ac eifsiccaf le o r ( vari­ related variations of SST in the tropical North Atlantic, ENSO links to rainfall may come an id dengcoed th ep aetnsLoam ti e f rece In n tl aydddiistc io u n ss etdoboycE ea n n fi -e altdmaonsdphMea re y er c o ( u1p9l9 in 7 g ). , new nointutdheeo se fcE ul N ar S O va riitas bility in the str ding generations of models need to include realistic land-southern Europe (R eolpfe -le wes .g k . i , a in ndneonrg Ha th th lp e e rn an dAfm ri acga/ ­ rae tm ali oss ti pchm er oedeclosuopflitnhge . la Snudch su rifm ac peroavnedmie ts ntvsegientvao ti lovneaThheeadp , r m ed aiyctaalbsio lity of ENS rt 1987). and adequate descriptions based on observed data of in Northern Hevm ar iyspohnerdeecOa sp d , rail on ntgiem ( e to s Ba c a ls a a le fse , w e sp se eacs ia oln ly strheep re isne it nitaal tio ve nge in ta t m io ondesltsa te is . c W ur orrekn tl oynbleainndg -s m ur afiancleym 19 e9a5n ) s . (i I . n e ., additio meda et al. driven by the development of coupled models for over several cdheacnagdenes , sis ) n ec a th u lso e la r ‘ itvnyfpairciaalbio li rty in the climate climate change projection over the next century conditional ENSO probability l u fo ernecceassetsxsi . m pe Fpcolteeds ’ e values (Dickinson et al. 1996). the Gulf Coast of the United States shows reaxaam sonal Significant advances in coupled model-based ENSO signal for both the first and second half s o tro p n le, f th g e." In Droughts, 65. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315830896-45.

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