Academic literature on the topic 'North Dakota Heritage Center'

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Journal articles on the topic "North Dakota Heritage Center"

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Benedict, James B. "The Knife River Flint Quarries: Excavations at Site 32DU508, Stanley A. Ahler, 1986, State Historical Society of North Dakota, North Dakota Heritage Center, Bismarck, 117 pp. (paper), $20.00." Geoarchaeology 2, no. 4 (October 1987): 334–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gea.3340020407.

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Galloway, Ann-Christe. "People in the News." College & Research Libraries News 78, no. 11 (December 4, 2017): 667. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crln.78.11.667.

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Bridget Burke has been appointed associate dean for special collections at the University of Oklahoma (OU) Libraries starting next month. Burke will be responsible for the leadership and strategic vision for OU Libraries’ seven distinct special collections. Burke recently visited OU Libraries’ Western History Collections as a member of a team of western American history materials experts to assess and recommend best practices for preservation, acquisition of new materials and enhancement of both the collections’ web presence and its centrality to the scholarly fields of western and Native American history and culture. Currently, Burke is the director of the American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming. She formerly served as the dean of libraries at North Dakota State University, as well as having held positions at the Boston College University Libraries, the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.
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Rees, Amanda. "Identifying Twentieth Century Dude Ranches in the Teton Valley Region." UW National Parks Service Research Station Annual Reports 31 (January 1, 2008): 133–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/uwnpsrc.2008.3725.

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The states of Wyoming, Montana, and to a lesser extent Colorado are commonly understood as the industrial heartland of U.S. dude ranching in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries (Borne 1983). Though there were earlier small scale efforts to host easterners on ranches in the West from the 1850s onwards, dude ranching is commonly understood to have begun in 1879 in Medora, North Dakota by the Eaton Brothers (Borne 1983, Rothman 1998). Dude ranching--when outsiders pay to stay on a ranch ­ usually demonstrates most/if not all of the following six characteristics: 1). it embraces of the West's nineteenth century agricultural heritage; 2). it celebrates wild, preserved landscapes; 3). it provides an economic vehicle for ranchers to maintain their cultural heritage, and/or investors and managers to have a piece of the American West; 4). it demonstrates a distinct dude ranch aesthetic (architecture, clothing, food, music, stories, education and landscape); 5). it includes horse­related activities; and 6). it provides a safe and contained regional experience transforming the traveler from "mere' tourist status to that of a liminal space in­between outsider and insider. Since the late nineteenth century Wyoming has developed five centers of dude ranch activity located primarily near mountain ranges, within or close to public lands (National Park Service (NPS) or Forest Service (FS)): 1) Medicine Bow Mountain Range in southeastern Wyoming; 2) Big Horn Mountain Range (eastern and western slopes) in north-central Wyoming; 3) eastern gate region of Yellowstone National Park, northwest Wyoming; 4) Wind River Mountain Range (eastern and western slopes), northwestern Wyoming; and 5) Teton Mountain Range in northwestern Wyoming. My work seeks to establish the extent of dude ranching in Teton Valley.
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Choy, Patrick C. "The making of a lipid biochemist." Clinical and Investigative Medicine 41 (November 3, 2018): 26–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.25011/cim.v41i2.31431.

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Patrick obtained his undergraduate degree at McGill University, and received his graduate training in Medicine and Biochemistry at the University of North Dakota. His postdoctoral work was conducted at the University of British Columbia. He joined the Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba as an Assistant Professor of Biochemistry in 1979. He was the recipient of a New Investigator Award (1979–85) from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, followed by a Scientist Award (1985–90) from the MRC/CIHR. These career awards allowed him to devote the majority of his time to research. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1983 and Full Professor in 1986. He was cross-appointed as Professor of Pathology and participated in the teaching of General Pathology to residents. He was the founding Director of the Centre for Re-search and Treatment of Atherosclerosis at the University of Manitoba and the Winni-peg Health Sciences Centre. Administratively, he was appointed as the Professor and Head of Biochemistry and Medical Genetics (1992–1999), and an Associate Dean in the Faculty of Medicine in 1999 until his retirement in 2010.Professionally, Patrick served as President of the Canadian Biochemical Society, Chair of the Medical Research Council/Canadian Institute of Health Research New Investigator Awards Committee, Chair of the Alberta Heritage Foundation Senior Investigator Awards Committee, Vice-President of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Manitoba, and Secretary/Treasurer of the Canadian Society for Clinical Investigation. He continues to serve on Editorial Boards of scientific journals, including the Journal of Clinical and Investigative Medicine. He was invested into the Order of Manitoba in 2011.
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National Park Service Research Center, University of Wyoming. "National Park Service Areas Cooperating with U.S.-N.P.S. Research Center." UW National Parks Service Research Station Annual Reports 11 (January 1, 1987): 280–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/uwnpsrc.1987.2681.

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National Park Service Research Center, University of Wyoming. "NATIONAL PARK SERVICE AREAS COOPERATING WITH U.W.-N.P.S. RESEARCH CENTER." UW National Parks Service Research Station Annual Reports 10 (January 1, 1986): 278–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/uwnpsrc.1986.2605.

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National Park Service Research Center, University of Wyoming. "National Park Service Areas Cooperating with U.S.-N.P.S. Research Center Montana and Wyoming." UW National Parks Service Research Station Annual Reports 12 (January 1, 1988): 314–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/uwnpsrc.1988.2759.

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National Park Service Research Center, University of Wyoming. "National Park Service Areas Cooperating with U.W.-N.P.S." UW National Parks Service Research Station Annual Reports 9 (January 1, 1985): 234–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/uwnpsrc.1985.2531.

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Shinstine, Debbie S., and Khaled Ksaibati. "Road Safety Improvement Program on Indian Reservations in North Dakota and South Dakota." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 2531, no. 1 (January 2015): 146–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3141/2531-17.

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Tribal communities recognize the need to improve roadway safety. A five-step methodology was developed by the Wyoming Technology Transfer Center, Local Technical Assistance Program (WYT2/LTAP), to improve roadway safety on Indian reservations. This methodology was implemented initially on the Wind River Indian Reservation (WRIR); the success of this implementation was the impetus for the Wyoming Department of Transportation, Cheyenne, to fund three systemwide, low-cost safety improvement projects. Given the success of the program on the WRIR, tribes across the country became interested in the program. WYT2/LTAP and the Northern Plains Tribal Technical Assistance Program (NPTTAP) assist tribes to implement this program on their reservations in the Great Plains region and developed criteria to identify tribes to participate. Reservations in North Dakota and South Dakota applied to NPTTAP, and three tribes were accepted to participate: the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (SRST), the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate Tribe, and the Yankton Sioux Tribe. Although work had begun on all three reservations, this study focused on the implementation on the roadway safety program by the SRST. Members of the SRST were located in North Dakota and South Dakota, and crash data were collected from each state separately. Because the reporting and years of data differed, several analyses were performed to identify trends in crashes on the SRST. The South Dakota portion of the reservation was compared with statewide rural roads and with the WRIR because the two reservations were of similar size and character. Many challenges and differences were identified through the analysis, which demonstrated that a single procedure would not work for all reservations. Through extensive coordination and collaboration with the tribes and government agencies, WYT2/LTAP and the technical assistance program centers could provide the technical assistance that the tribes would need to develop their own road safety improvement programs.
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Gilblom, Elizabeth A., Sarah L. Crary, and Hilla I. Sang. "Demographic Shifts and Segregation in Fargo and West Fargo, North Dakota Schools." Journal of Education and Learning 9, no. 2 (February 5, 2020): 11. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jel.v9n2p11.

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In this article, we examine how demographic changes in Fargo and West Fargo, North Dakota between 2000 and 2017, including the resettlement of refugees, have impacted equitable educational arrangements in Fargo Public Schools (FPS) and West Fargo Public Schools (WFPS). Drawing on multiple data sources, including North Dakota’s Department of Public Instruction (DPI), Common Core of Data (CCD) available from the National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES) and block group data from the U.S. Census Bureau, we use Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to examine city and district level changes in the years 2000 and 2017. We also conduct descriptive statistics and a multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) to assess the relationships among Black student enrollment, performance on state tests and enrollment characteristics that include race and free and reduced lunch. Findings underscore the increasing isolation of students over time by race, socioeconomic background and language.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "North Dakota Heritage Center"

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O'Brien, Peter. "Plant Community Composition of Camp Grafton Training Center (South Unit) from 1998-2013." Master's thesis, North Dakota State University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10365/24003.

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A vegetation monitoring study was conducted from 1998 to 2013 at Camp Grafton South (CGS) in Eddy County, North Dakota to assess how climatic, grazing, and military training disturbance affects plant community composition. The objectives of this study were to 1) describe the prairie vegetation at CGS across three topographic positions and 2) explore any shifts in plant community composition in correlation with time. Frequency data was collected at 45 randomly selected transects on lowland, midland, and upland grassland plant communities on native prairie. Plant communities were compared using non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMS) ordination. NMS ordination showed that the three plant communities were distinct from one another, and that the frequency of the invasive graminoids Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L.) and smooth brome (Bromus inermis Leyss.) increased. Increases in precipitation, temperature, and growing season days appear to be the primary influence on the changes in plant communities from 1998-2013.
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Andrews, Erin L. "Old stories, new narratives public archaeology and the politics of display at Georgia's official Southeastern Indian interpretive center /." Atlanta, Ga. : Georgia State University, 2009. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/anthro_theses/30/.

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Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2009.
Title from title page (Digital Archive@GSU, viewed June 22, 2010) Despina Margomenou, committee chair; Jeffrey Glover, Emanuela Guano, committee members. Includes bibliographical references (p. 94-100).
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Hieb, Sara. "Rural Datascapes: A Data Farm Network for Rural North Dakota." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1911/64605.

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This thesis attempts to render architectural agency and aesthetics within the typological discussion of the data center in the rural American landscape. The disciplinary question of the role of architecture and aesthetics in data center design is related to earlier examples of factories and warehouses during modernity. The data center alters the traditional representative role of architecture; they are massive, horizontal buildings that are only conceivable from an aerial perspective, driven by logistics and efficiency. This thesis engages these issues by focusing on the point at which the architectural and programmatic problems of the data center converge, the building form and envelope. This thesis engages the building envelope as an expanded surface that considers not only logistical and environmental issues, but also engages the social and political architectural questions related to the identity of the data center in the rural landscape.
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Books on the topic "North Dakota Heritage Center"

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Lenton, Evelyn. Eastside echoes: A North Dakota heritage story. Norwich, N.D. (Rt. 1, Box 36, Norwich 58768): E. Lenton, 1988.

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Jasinski, Andrew. The centennial of St. Andrew's Catholic Church, Zeeland, North Dakota and the spiritual heritage of St. John's Catholic Church, rural McIntosh County, North Dakota. Fargo, N.D: Germans from Russia Heritage Collection, North Dakota State University Libraries, 2005.

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Jasinski, Andrew. The centennial of St. Andrew's Catholic Church, Zeeland, North Dakota and the spiritual heritage of St. John's Catholic Church, rural McIntosh County, North Dakota. Fargo, N.D: Germans from Russia Heritage Collection, North Dakota State University Libraries, 2005.

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North Dakota State University. Land Reclamation Research Center. Report to North Dakota Legislative Council from Land Reclamation Research Center Agricultural Experiment Station, North Dakota State University: Pursuant to Section 5, House bill no. 1005 of the Fiftieth Legislative Assembly, State of North Dakota. Mandan, N.D. (Box 459, Mandan 58554): The Center, 1988.

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Olson, Lori. Norsk Høstfest: Heritage comes alive. Helena, MT: American & World Geographic Pub., 1995.

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1943-, Miller Michael M., and Germans from Russia Heritage Society., eds. Researching the Germans from Russia: Annotated bibliography of the Germans from Russia Heritage Collection at the North Dakota Institute for Regional Studies, North Dakota State University Library, with a listing of the library materials at the Germans from Russia Heritage Society. Fargo, N.D., USA: The Institute, 1987.

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Halvorson, Mark J. Sacred Beauty: Quillwork of Plains Women. Bismarck, N.D: State Historical Society of North Dakota, North Dakota Heritage Center, 1998.

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North Dakota. Legislative Assembly. Legislative Council. Addressing immediate and future needs of the North Dakota State Penitentiary and the Missouri River Correctional Center: Reusing the existing penitentiary. Bismarck, N.D: North Dakota Legislative Council, 2008.

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Halvorson, Mark J., and Leslie W. Peltier. A'nicina'be Manido' minesikan: Chippewa Beadwork. Bismarck, N.D: State Historical Society of North Dakota, 1996.

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International Conference on Hypersonic Flight in the 21st Century (1st 1988 University of North Dakota). Proceedings of the First International Conference on Hypersonic Flight in the 21st Century, September 20-23, 1988, University of North Dakota, Center for Aerospace Sciences, Grand Forks, ND, U.S.A. Edited by Higbea Mary E and Vedda James A. Grand Forks, ND: Dept. of Space Studies, University of North Dakota, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "North Dakota Heritage Center"

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Inserra, Incoronata. "Exporting Southern Italian Festivals from South to North." In Global Tarantella. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041297.003.0003.

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This chapter presents a fieldwork-based analysis of the tammurriata festivals in the Campania region and in the northern Italian city of Milan. The chapter examines how notions of place and land—main elements in the tammurriata tradition—are being transformed within the current revival to respond to the needs of new festival participants, often urbanites with little knowledge of the tammurriata’s peasant culture. These changes are evident in the introduction of new dance styles and, at least in the core years of the revival in the 1990s, in the combination of traditional elements with urban youth culture. At the same time, the revival has contributed to the emergence of (southern) Italian women performers at center stage. These changes are even more evident when tammurriata moves from the south to the north of Italy, mainly in the large metropolitan center of Milan, where tammurriata is performed together with other tarantella forms and is usually marketed as “ethnic” music. Since southern immigrants make up a large component of Milan’s population, performing or simply participating in a tarantella event in Milan often becomes a way for Campania practitioners to reconnect with their own tammurriata heritage away from home.
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Taber, Douglass. "Enantioselective Assembly of Oxygenated Stereogenic Centers." In Organic Synthesis. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199764549.003.0032.

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Reaction with an enantiomerically-pure epoxide is an efficient way to construct a molecule incorporating an enantiomerically-pure oxygenated stereogenic center. The Jacobsen hydrolytic resolution has made such enantiomerically-pure epoxides readily available from the corresponding racemates. Christopher Jones and Marcus Weck of the Georgia Institute of Technology have now (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 1105) developed an oligomeric salen complex that effects the enantioselective hydrolysis at remarkably low catalyst loading. Any such approach depends on monitoring the progress of the hydrolysis, usually by chiral GC or HPLC. In a complementary approach, we (J. Org. Chem. 2007, 72, 431) have found that on exposure to NBS and the inexpensive mandelic acid 2, a terminal alkene such as 1 was converted into the two bromomandelates 3 and 4. These were readily separated by column chromatography. Individually, 3 and 4 can each be carried on the same enantiomer of the epoxide 5. As 3 and 4 are directly enantiomerically pure, epoxide 5 of high ee can be prepared reliably without intermediate monitoring by chiral GC or HPLC. Another way to incorporate an enantiomerically-pure oxygenated stereogenic center into a molecule is the enantioface-selective addition of hydride to a ketone such as 6. Alain Burgos and his team at PPG-SIPSY in France have described (Tetrahedron Lett. 2007, 48, 2123) a NaBH4 -based protocol for taking the Itsuno-Corey reduction to industrial scale. In the past, aldehydes have been efficiently α-oxygenated using two-electron chemistry. Mukund P. Sibi of North Dakota State University has recently (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 4124) described a novel one-electron alternative. The organocatalyst 10 formed an imine with the aldehyde. One-electron oxidation led to an α-radical, which was trapped by the stable free radical TEMPO to give, after hydrolysis, the α-oxygenated aldehyde 11. High ee oxygenated secondary centers can also be prepared by homologation of aldehydes. Optimization of the enantioselective addition of the inexpensive acetylene surrogate 13 was recently reported (Chem. Commun. 2007, 948) by Masakatsu Shibasaki of the University of Tokyo. Note that the free alcohol of 13 does not need to be protected.
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Conference papers on the topic "North Dakota Heritage Center"

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Aoki, Nobuo, and Subin Xu. "Notice of Retraction: A study on the culture heritage conservation of Tianjin, economic center of North China." In 2011 International Conference on Electric Technology and Civil Engineering (ICETCE). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icetce.2011.5775989.

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Lu, Xijia, Scott Martin, Mike McGroddy, Mike Swanson, Josh Stanislowski, and Jason D. Laumb. "Testing of a Novel Post Combustion Acid Removal Process for the Direct-Fired, Oxy-Combustion Allam Cycle Power Generation System." In ASME Turbo Expo 2017: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2017-65217.

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The Allam Cycle is a high performance oxy-fuel, supercritical CO2 power cycle that offers significant benefits over traditional fossil and hydrocarbon fuel-based power generation systems. A major benefit arises in the elimination of costly pre-combustion acid gas removal (AGR) for sulfur-(SOx) and nitrogen-based (NOx) impurities by utilizing a novel downstream cleanup process that utilizes NOx first as a gas phase catalyst to effect SOx oxidation, followed by NOx removal. The basic reactions required for this process, which have been well-demonstrated in several facilities for the cleanup of exhaust gasses, ultimately convert SOx and NOx species to sulfuric, nitric and nitrous acids for removal from the supercritical CO2 stream. The process results in simplified and significantly lower cost removal of these species and utilizes conditions inherent to the Allam Cycle that are ideally suited to facilitate this process. 8 Rivers Capital and the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC), supported by the state of North Dakota, the US Department of Energy (DOE) and an Industrial consortium from the State of North Dakota, are currently working together to test and optimize this novel impurity removal process for pressurized, semi-closed supercritical CO2 cycles, such as the Allam Cycle. Both reaction kinetic modeling and on-site testing have been completed. Initial results show that both SOx and NOx can be substantially removed from CO2-rich exhaust gas containing excess oxygen under 20 bar operating pressure utilizing a simple packed spray column. Sensitivity of the removal rate to the concentration of oxygen and NOx was investigated. Follow-on work will focus on system optimization to improve removal efficiency and removal control, to minimize metallurgy and corrosion risks from handling concentrated acids, and to reduce overall CAPX/OPEX of the system.
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Petrucci, Enrica, Diana Lapucci, and Noemi Lapucci. "La Rocca di Arquata del Tronto: simbolo di rinascita per il territorio marchigiano colpito dal sisma." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Valencia: Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11371.

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The fortress of Arquata del Tronto: symbol of rebirth for the Marche Region affected by the earthquakeThe Fortress of Arquata del Tronto in the Marche region is an imposing structure that rises on the crag to the north of the historic center. It represents a typical example of military architecture in the Apennines Area. Its foundation is between the eleventh and the twelfth century, an initial phase of embankment which undergoes a gradual and progressive increase in structures to enhance the functionality of the fortress. The city of Ascoli Piceno, worried about consolidating the defense outposts located at its borders, soon took possession of it. From the thirteenth to the sixteenth century, the Rocca lived alternate events, clashing with nearby castles, especially with Norcia. At the end of the eighteenth century, Arquata will be absorbed in the territory of the Clitunno Department, in the ancient Duchy of Spoleto. During this period, it was partially restored, to house a stable military garrison, becoming the third fortress of the Trasimeno Department, until it returned under the Papal States. Continuous interventions make the structure suitable for military uses. At the end of the nineteenth century, Giuseppe Sacconi, as director of the Conservation Office in the Marche and Umbria Region, undertook an important restoration. The ruins of the fortress were reconfigured according to medieval forms, taken by analogy from the repertoire of fortifications in the Apennine area. A further conservative intervention was carried out in 1990 to allow a new use. Unfortunately, the seismic events in 2016-2017 have compromised the Rocca, with large collapses that currently make the complex unusable. The intention is to undertake new restoration work, setting up a school construction site; this could represent a virtuous example to favor the rebirth of Arquata del Tronto, so strongly hit by the earthquake, through a project for the enhancement of its architectural heritage.
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Reports on the topic "North Dakota Heritage Center"

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N. Environmental Assessment and Finding of No Significant Impact: Wind Energy Center Edgeley/Kulm Project, North Dakota. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/823431.

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