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1

Steele, Ian K. "Hostage-taking 1754: Virginians vs Canadians1." Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 16, no. 1 (May 7, 2007): 49–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/015727ar.

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Abstract When Virginians, Canadians, and Indians clashed, the Allegheny borderlands were a new ‘muddle ground’ of fateful cultural confusions rather than an established middle ground of recognized compromises. The taking of captives was an early, significant, and portentious part of the contest. Indians who were resettling the region were familiar with traditional panis slavery, with raiding for captives in long-range blood feuds, and with trading Indian captives to Europeans. Their capture of European traders, as diplomatic gifts, was a very recent development. Colonial trade rivalries became military, and the paltry forts became sites of negotiated surrender in 1754. Before European regulars arrived in numbers, or the Anglo-French war was formally declared, colonial intruders surrendered to their Indian and colonial rivals on three occasions. Virginians surrendered their incomplete stockade at the forks of the Ohio in April. In May, Virginians and Indians ambushed a Canadian party under Ensign Jumonville, and survivors of the initial skirmish sought quarter. Within five weeks, avenging Canadians and Indians forced Virginians to surrender their aptly-named Fort Necessity. In taking prisoners and hostages in the Allegheny borderlands, colonial officers adapted and violated both European and Indian conventions, and took different approaches in dealing with the independent actions of their Indian allies. On the eve of a major war, captives and their brethren learned what distinctions had been made, and that they might well be violated.
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2

Stasi, Paul. "Decentering Rushdie: Cosmopolitanism and the Indian Novel in English, Pranav Jani, Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2010." Historical Materialism 20, no. 1 (2012): 232–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156920612x632836.

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Abstract Decentering Rushdie argues that postcolonial studies has consistently underestimated the investment of the English-language Indian novel in the nation by focusing on a handful of texts that conform to Western assumptions about the bankruptcy of the postcolonial nation-state. Taking Salman Rushdie’s work as the sign of a presumed homology between postcolonialism and a postmodern distrust of totality, Jani demonstrates that his novels are hardly representative of the range of Indian writing in English. Instead, in a series of expert readings of less well-known texts, he demonstrates the commitment to the decolonising project that exists even within the inevitably cosmopolitan worldview of Indians writing in a colonial language. Situating his work within foundational debates in postcolonial studies, this review demonstrates the fresh light he sheds on the vexed relations among historical location, political ideology and literary form.
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3

Holton, Woody. "The Ohio Indians and the Coming of the American Revolution in Virginia." Journal of Southern History 60, no. 3 (August 1994): 453. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2210989.

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4

Burk, Robert F. "The Cleveland Indians. By Franklin Lewis. (Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press, 2006. Pp. xviii, 286. $18.00.)." Historian 69, no. 3 (September 1, 2007): 549–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6563.2007.00189_29.x.

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5

Jeffrey Ostler. "“To Extirpate the Indians”: An Indigenous Consciousness of Genocide in the Ohio Valley and Lower Great Lakes, 1750s–1810." William and Mary Quarterly 72, no. 4 (2015): 587. http://dx.doi.org/10.5309/willmaryquar.72.4.0587.

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6

Hunter, Dianne M. "The Spanish Tragedy Redux." Language and Psychoanalysis 7, no. 1 (July 31, 2018): 23–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.7565/landp.v7i1.1581.

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An object-relations concept of transmission of turbulence illuminates the phantom structure of Thomas Kyd’s Elizabethan metatheatrical play The Spanish Tragedy and my response to it. In 1972, interpreting the arbor imagery and the rhetoric of reversal and self-cancellation in the play, I wrote, “Kyd is his father attacking himself in the womb he is in”. After researching my suppressed family history, this peculiar sentence suggested to me unconscious knowledge of a run of murders in my family line, going back to the 1760 Long Cane Massacre of Irish settlers by Cherokee Indians in what is now South Carolina; continuing in the 1799 murder of Major William Love near what is now Harpe’s Head, Kentucky; the suicide of my maternal grandfather in Philadelphia in 1931; and culminating in a Mafia-style execution of my father near Cleveland, Ohio in 1943. Objectification of violence drives Hieronimo and informs this essay.
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7

Johnston, Steven. "Lincoln’s Decisionism and the Politics of Elimination." Political Theory 45, no. 4 (June 13, 2016): 524–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0090591716651110.

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Abraham Lincoln’s hallowed place in American memory is secure: He saved the Union, put an end to slavery, and was assassinated for these very successes. At the same time, Lincoln’s many undeniable achievements came at terrible—and lasting—democratic cost. Informed by the work of Carl Schmitt and Giorgio Agamben, this essay aspires to illuminate that cost by analyzing two cases where Lincoln exercised a sovereign decisionism—one involving the exile of Ohio politician Clement Vallandigham for publicly opposing the Civil War and the draft, a second involving the mass execution of Dakota Sioux Indians for daring to rise up and enact their own sovereign prerogatives during the war. This decisionism reveals Lincoln’s problematic resort to anti-political practices to deal with adversaries. Given the damage Lincoln did to American democracy, the essay also investigates what he might have done to make amends for it. Finally, it explores how Lincoln’s place in American history might be remembered more agonistically, architecturally speaking, on the Mall in Washington, D.C.
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8

Bratsch, Sara A., Samuel Grinstead, Tom C. Creswell, Gail E. Ruhl, and Dimitre Mollov. "Characterization of Tomato Necrotic Spot Virus, a Subgroup 1 Ilarvirus Causing Necrotic Foliar, Stem, and Fruit Symptoms in Tomatoes in the United States." Plant Disease 103, no. 6 (June 2019): 1391–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-11-18-2112-re.

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The genomic, biological, and serological characterization of tomato necrotic spot virus (ToNSV), a virus first described infecting tomato in California, was completed. The complete genomic sequence identified ToNSV as a new subgroup 1 ilarvirus distinct from the previously described tomato-infecting ilarviruses. We identified ToNSV in Indiana in 2017 and 2018 and in Ohio in 2018. The coat protein coding region of the isolates from California, Indiana, and Ohio have 94 to 98% identity, while the same isolates had 99% amino acid identity. ToNSV is serologically related to TSV, a subgroup 1 ilarvirus, and shows no serological relationship to ilarviruses in the other subgroups. In tomato, ToNSV caused symptoms of necrotic spots and flecks on leaves, necrotic streaking on stems, and necrotic spots and circular patterns on fruit resulting in a yield loss of 1 to 13%. These results indicate that ToNSV is a proposed new subgroup 1 ilarvirus causing a necrotic spotting disease of tomato observed in California, Indiana, and Ohio.
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9

Sarver, Matthew A., and Chris O. Yoder. "First Records of Freckled Madtom (Noturus nocturnus) in Ohio, USA." Ohio Journal of Science 121, no. 2 (August 30, 2021): 48–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.18061/ojs.v121i2.8033.

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Two new Ohio localities for the Freckled Madtom (Noturus nocturnus Jordan and Gilbert, 1886) were recently discovered. These are the first, and currently only, Freckled Madtom collected in Ohio waters. A single individual was collected in the Scioto River in Scioto County by the Midwest Biodiversity Institute (MBI) and a previously misidentified specimen was collected in the Ohio River at the Hannibal Locks and Dam by the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission (ORSANCO). The closest historical records are from the Little Sandy River and Big Sandy River drainages in eastern Kentucky. Other Ohio River collections have been made near the border of Kentucky and Indiana. The origins of the recent Ohio specimens are unknown; whether they emanate from other known populations or have been overlooked altogether is unclear.
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10

Babicz, Martin C. "No Money, No Beer, No Pennants: The Cleveland Indians and Baseball in the Great Depression by Scott H. LongertNo Money, No Beer, No Pennants: The Cleveland Indians and Baseball in the Great Depression, by Scott H. Longert. Athens, Ohio University Press, 2016. viii, 285 pp. $55.00 US (cloth), $24.95 US (paper or e-book)." Canadian Journal of History 52, no. 3 (December 2017): 622–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.ach.52.3.rev29.

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11

Byrne, J. M., M. K. Hausbeck, and R. X. Latin. "Efficacy and Economics of Management Strategies to Control Anthracnose Fruit Rot in Processing Tomatoes in the Midwest." Plant Disease 81, no. 10 (October 1997): 1167–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis.1997.81.10.1167.

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Anthracnose (Colletotrichum coccodes) is the major fungal disease affecting processing tomato fruit in the midwestern United States. Currently available disease management strategies evaluated for controlling anthracnose fruit rot (AFR) on processing tomatoes include genetic resistance and the fungicide chlorothalonil applied according to conventional schedules or a disease-forecasting system (Tom-Cast). Experimental field plots were established in West Lafayette, Indiana, and East Lansing, Michigan, in 1993 to 1995. Chlorothalonil was applied every 7, 10, or 14 days or according to Tom-Cast with a threshold of 20 disease severity values, and was not applied to the control. In Michigan, Phytophthora infestans (1993) and C. coccodes (1993 to 1994) caused 91.8% (1993) and 30.7% (1994) fruit rot in the unsprayed plot. In Indiana, C. coccodes caused 69.8% (1993) and 39.0% (1994) AFR in the unsprayed plot. In 1995, Ohio 8245 (Michigan and Indiana), considered to be less prone to anthracnose, and Ohio 7814 were integrated into the conventional and Tom-Cast—prompted spray programs. Cultivar did not affect the incidence of AFR or foliar blight caused by Septoria lycopersici and Alternaria solani in either location. In 1993 and 1994, chlorothalonil applied at 10-day intervals in Indiana resulted in the highest benefit per hectare (BPH) and return per fungicide dollar (RPFD). In 1995, the highest BPH and RPFD resulted from chlorothalonil applied every 14 days to Ohio 8245 (Michigan). Chlorothalonil applied according to the Tom-Cast program resulted in a level of AFR that was generally not statistically different from the 7-day treatment but was high enough to result in crop rejection and high economic loss in 2 of the 3 years the study was conducted. Based on data from this study, it is not commercially feasible to grow processing tomatoes in Michigan and Indiana without chlorothalonil to protect against AFR even when a resistant cultivar is used.
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12

Dorrance, A. E., H. Jia, and T. S. Abney. "Evaluation of Soybean Differentials for Their Interaction with Phytophthora sojae." Plant Health Progress 5, no. 1 (January 2004): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/php-2004-0309-01-rs.

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Soybean lines, each containing a different resistance gene (Rps), are used as differentials to characterize isolates of Phytophthora sojae as physiologic races. Surveys in different soybean production regions have used various sets of soybean differentials thought to carry the same Rps genes. In some instances, isolates of P. sojae have been reported to have different reactions when evaluated in labs using different sets of differentials that were believed to have the same Rps gene. The objective of this study was to compare the consistency of racial classification when three different sets of soybean differentials were challenged with a common set of five races of P. sojae from Ohio and Indiana. Three soybean differential sets (USDA Soybean Germplasm Collection, The Ohio State University, and USDA-ARS Purdue University) were challenged with P. sojae using the hypocotyl inoculation test at OSU and USDA-ARS Purdue. Isolates of races 1, 3, 4, 7, and 25 from Ohio and Indiana had the same reaction on all three sets of soybean differentials for Rps1b, Rps1c, Rps1k, Rps3a, Rps3b, Rps3c, Rps6, Rps7, and on differentials Harlon, Harosoy 12xx, L59-731, and Union for Rps1a. L88-8470 used as a differential for Rps1a and L93-3312 used for Rps1d did not have the expected response. Isolates of races 4 and 25 from Ohio and Indiana responded differently on differentials with the Rps2 gene because this gene was not used previously to characterize races of P. sojae. A similar reaction occurred when differentials with Rps4 and Rps5 were inoculated with isolates of races 1 and 7, respectively. A standardized set of soybean differentials, corresponding to different maturity groups, for thirteen of the fourteen Rps genes is recommended. Accepted for publication 5 February 2004. Published 9 March 2004.
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13

Dean, Donald H., and Brian Flechsig. "A New Record Mayfly Ephemerella subvaria McDunnough (Ephemeroptera, Ephemerellidae) from Ohio, USA." Ohio Journal of Science 119, no. 2 (December 16, 2019): 75. http://dx.doi.org/10.18061/ojs.v119i2.6967.

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In the spring of 2019, a new state record for a mayfly (Ephemeroptera) was collected at Cedar Run and the Mad River in Champaign County, Ohio, United States. Ephemerella subvaria McDunnough, 1931, was collected and identified as nymphs and subsequently reared to adults. This Ohio location is exceptional. The geographic distribution of the species is widespread in the eastern United States; however, its distribution in the upper midwest is limited to northern Michigan and northern Wisconsin, but is absent from the southern counties of those states, and from Illinois. It is rare in Indiana and northern Kentucky. Until this report it was unknown from Ohio. Nymphs were collected on 26 March 2019. Reared in a temperature-controlled aquarium, the subimago emerged on 27 April 2019 and the imago emerged on 30 April 2019. It is hypothesized that Cedar Bog Nature Preserve, Cedar Run, and the Mad River—remnants of streams in a prior swamp in western-central Ohio—provide a refugia for this out-of-place species.
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14

Miller, Keith. "Edward Orton: Pioneer in Petroleum Geology." Earth Sciences History 12, no. 1 (January 1, 1993): 54–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.12.1.4376045247518268.

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Petroleum geology had its beginning in the nineteenth century. One of its leading adherents was Edward Orton of New York and Ohio. He left to that science an important body of writing, especially on the oil fields of the Cincinnati Arch province. His thought included an elaboration of the anticlinal theory. One of his classic works was The Trenton Limestone as a Source of Petoleum and Inflammable Gas in Ohio and Indiana (1889). That treatise and others too placed Orton in the forefront of petroleum geology in its formative period.
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15

House, M. R., Mackenzie Gordon, and W. J. Hlavin. "Late Devonian ammonoids from Ohio and adjacent states." Journal of Paleontology 60, no. 1 (January 1986): 126–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000021582.

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Three late Devonian ammonoid-bearing levels are described from the area of Cleveland, Ohio. These appear to represent the German Platyclymenia, Clymenia and Wocklumeria Stufen, clear evidence for which has been lacking previously in eastern North America. The lowest level, around the base of the Cleveland Shale, yieldsSporadoceras, Cyrtoclymenia, Platyclymeniaand a new species,Pleuroclymenia(?)ohioense. The middle level, near the top of the Cleveland Shale, bearsCymaclymenia, SporadocerasandPrionoceras. The highest level, just above the base of the Bedford Shale, hasPrionoceras quadripartitum. This species, and a fauna of the basal Bedford, have been located also in the area of Columbus, Ohio. AnEpiwocklumeria(?) sp. is recorded from Indiana. Attention is drawn to the international importance of the late Famennian and Lower Carboniferous ammonoid sequence which can now be recognized in Ohio.
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16

Kriss, A. B., P. A. Paul, and L. V. Madden. "Variability in Fusarium Head Blight Epidemics in Relation to Global Climate Fluctuations as Represented by the El Niño-Southern Oscillation and Other Atmospheric Patterns." Phytopathology® 102, no. 1 (January 2012): 55–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/phyto-04-11-0125.

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Cross-spectral analysis was used to characterize the relationship between climate variability, represented by atmospheric patterns, and annual fluctuations of Fusarium head blight (FHB) disease intensity in wheat. Time series investigated were the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI), which is a measure of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the Pacific-North American (PNA) pattern and the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), which are known to have strong influences on the Northern Hemisphere climate, and FHB disease intensity observations in Ohio from 1965 to 2010 and in Indiana from 1973 to 2008. For each climate variable, mean climate index values for the boreal winter (December to February) and spring (March to May) were utilized. The spectral density of each time series and the (squared) coherency of each pair of FHB–climate-index series were estimated. Significance for coherency was determined by a nonparametric permutation procedure. Results showed that winter and spring ONI were significantly coherent with FHB in Ohio, with a period of about 5.1 years (as well as for some adjacent periods). The estimated phase-shift distribution indicated that there was a generally negative relation between the two series, with high values of FHB (an indication of a major epidemic) estimated to occur about 1 year following low values of ONI (indication of a La Niña); equivalently, low values of FHB were estimated to occur about 1 year after high values of ONI (El Niño). There was also limited evidence that winter ONI had significant coherency with FHB in Indiana. At periods between 2 and 7 years, the PNA and NAO indices were coherent with FHB in both Ohio and Indiana, although results for phase shift and period depended on the specific location, climate index, and time span used in calculating the climate index. Differences in results for Ohio and Indiana were expected because the FHB disease series for the two states were not similar. Results suggest that global climate indices and models could be used to identify potential years with high (or low) risk for FHB development, although the most accurate risk predictions will need to be customized for a region and will also require use of local weather data during key time periods for sporulation and infection by the fungal pathogen.
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17

. Dulemba, LaDonna H., Greer Glazer, and Jason Allen Gregg. "Comprehensive needs assessment of COPD patients residing in east-central Indiana and west-central Ohio." Online Journal of Rural Nursing and Health Care 16, no. 2 (December 2016): 112–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.14574/ojrnhc.v16i2.378.

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18

Chacko, Elizabeth, and Paul Varghese. "Identity and Representations of Gated Communities in Bangalore, India." Open House International 34, no. 3 (September 1, 2009): 57–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ohi-03-2009-b0007.

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Gated communities, residential enclaves that offer upscale housing and a variety of recreational and communal facilities within a walled area with controlled entrances, are proliferating in many of India's large metropolitan cities. In this paper, we analyze the images of place and identity that are evoked in online advertisements for gated communities in the city of Bangalore in southern India. Since the 1990s, Bangalore has become known as India's premier information technology (IT) hub and a magnet for multinational corporations and high-skill personnel. The latter include Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) who lived and worked abroad for several years and have returned to partake of new opportunities offered in the country. We explore the intersection of notions of identity, home and community in a globalised world through an examination of the graphic and textual images encoded in the advertisements of thirteen prominent developers in Bangalore whose upscale gated developments cater to NRIs. The advertisements depict high-end gated communities as places of luxury, exclusiveness, high security and convenience which also offer a range of recreational facilities for individuals and families. Additionally, those who live in the gated enclaves are portrayed as persons of distinction and class who are global and cosmopolitan in their outlook and identity.
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19

Saja, David B., and Joseph T. Hannibal. "Quarrying History and Use of the Buena Vista Freestone, South-Central Ohio: Understanding the 19th Century Industrial Development of a Geological Resource." Ohio Journal of Science 117, no. 2 (June 29, 2017): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.18061/ojs.v117i2.5498.

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The Buena Vista Member of the Mississippian Cuyahoga Formation is an economically valuable freestone that is homogeneous with almost no sedimentary structures. The Buena Vista was one of the earliest clastic rocks quarried in Ohio. Early quarries dating at least back to 1814 were located in the hills on the north bank of the Ohio River near the village of Buena Vista, south-central Ohio. By the 1830s, quarries had also opened up along the route of the Ohio & Erie Canal in the Portsmouth area to the east; followed by quarries that opened along a railway line that ran north up the Scioto River valley. Waterways transported the Buena Vista to many cities and towns, including Cincinnati, Ohio, Louisville, Kentucky, and Evansville, Indiana, on the Ohio River, New Orleans on the Mississippi River, and Dayton and Columbus on the Ohio canal system. Later railways transported this stone further afield to Illinois, Wisconsin, and Alberta. Census reports, industry magazines, and other historical accounts document the use of this stone across much of the eastern US and into Canada. Historically, it has been used for a variety of items, including entire buildings, canal structures, fence posts, and laundry tubs. Some 19th-century structures built with this stone remain in cities where it was once commonly used. Literature reviews, field observations, and lab analyses are here compiled as a useful reference to both the urban and field geologist in the identification of the Buena Vista Member, a historically important building stone, in buildings and outcrops, respectively.
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20

Davis, Vince M., Greg R. Kruger, Jeff M. Stachler, Mark M. Loux, and William G. Johnson. "Growth and Seed Production of Horseweed (Conyza canadensis) Populations Resistant to Glyphosate, ALS-Inhibiting, and Multiple (Glyphosate + ALS-Inhibiting) Herbicides." Weed Science 57, no. 5 (October 2009): 494–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.1614/ws-09-024.1.

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Horseweed populations with mixtures of biotypes resistant to glyphosate and acetolactate synthase (ALS)–inhibiting herbicides as well as biotypes with multiple resistance to glyphosate + ALS-inhibiting herbicides have been documented in Indiana and Ohio. These biotypes are particularly problematic because ALS-inhibiting herbicides are commonly tank mixed with glyphosate to improve postemergence horseweed control in soybean. The objective of this research was to characterize the growth and seed production of horseweed populations with resistance to glyphosate or ALS-inhibiting herbicides, and multiple resistance to glyphosate + ALS-inhibiting herbicides. A four-herbicide by four-horseweed population factorial field experiment was conducted in the southeastern region of Indiana in 2007 and repeated in 2008. Four horseweed populations were collected from Indiana or Ohio and confirmed resistant to glyphosate, ALS inhibitors, both, or neither in greenhouse experiments. The four herbicide treatments were untreated, 0.84 kg ae ha−1glyphosate, 35 g ai ha−1cloransulam, and 0.84 kg ae ha−1glyphosate + 35 g ai ha−1cloransulam. Untreated plants from horseweed populations that were resistant to glyphosate, ALS-inhibiting, or multiple glyphosate + ALS-inhibiting herbicides produced similar amounts of biomass and seed compared to populations that were susceptible to those herbicides or combination of herbicides. Furthermore, aboveground shoot mass and seed production did not differ between treated and untreated plants.
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Conroy, Maria Manta, and Al-Azad Iqbal. "Adoption of sustainability initiatives in Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio." Local Environment 14, no. 2 (February 2009): 109–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13549830802521428.

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22

Jacobs, Michelle R. "Urban American Indian Identity: Negotiating Indianness in Northeast Ohio." Qualitative Sociology 38, no. 1 (December 28, 2014): 79–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11133-014-9293-9.

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23

Storandt, Scott T., and Kevin R. Kazacos. "Echinococcus multilocularis Identified in Indiana, Ohio, and East-central Illinois." Journal of Parasitology 79, no. 2 (April 1993): 301. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3283527.

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24

Eschman, Donald Frazier. "Summary of the Quaternary History of Michigan, Ohio and Indiana." Journal of Geological Education 33, no. 3 (May 1985): 161–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.5408/0022-1368-33.3.161.

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25

D Brettel, Peter. "Evolution of the Ohio River Bridges Project in Kentucky/Indiana." IABSE Symposium Report 101, no. 24 (September 1, 2013): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/222137813808626588.

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26

Comstock, Aaron R., and Robert A. Cook. "CLIMATE CHANGE AND MIGRATION ALONG A MISSISSIPPIAN PERIPHERY: A FORT ANCIENT EXAMPLE." American Antiquity 83, no. 1 (September 25, 2017): 91–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2017.50.

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Archaeologists have long recognized an important relationship between climate change and the trajectory of the Mississippian polity at Cahokia, with twelfth- and thirteenth-century droughts playing a key role in transforming social relationships and the pace of monument construction. This environmental transition may have spurred emigration from Cahokia and surrounding farming communities. This raises the questions: What was the nature of environmental change and cultural transformations on the Mississippian peripheries and where did these Mississippian emigrants go? This paper provides a case study from the Middle Ohio Valley that brings together spatiotemporal patterns in moisture availability between AD 1000 and AD 1300 and new archaeological data from Fort Ancient villages located in southeast Indiana and southwest Ohio that were occupied during this same temporal interval. We suggest that droughts in the American Bottom region pushed Mississippians to less drought-stricken areas such as the Middle Ohio Valley, which experienced concurrent periods of wetness. This pattern builds on a growing body of data suggesting that the movement of individuals and communities played a large role in the process of Mississippianization throughout the midcontinental and southeastern United States.
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Gebre, G. Michael, and Michael R. Kuhns. "Seasonal and clonal variations in drought tolerance of Populusdeltoides." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 21, no. 6 (June 1, 1991): 910–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/x91-126.

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Water relations of three field-grown eastern cottonwood (Populusdeltoides Bartr.) clones were compared for the 1989 growing season. Clonal and seasonal variations in leaf water potential, leaf osmotic potential, dry weight fraction, and injury index were measured. The injury index was calculated from conductivity changes due to electrolyte leakage during rehydration of dehydrated and nondehydrated leaves. When samples were measured after dry periods, dry weight fraction increased and injury index and predawn osmotic potential declined. There were significant negative correlations between dry weight fraction and osmotic potential for all clones. There were no significant differences between clones from Nebraska (Platte) and Indiana (Tippecanoe) throughout the season in osmotic potential and injury index. The clones Platte and Tippecanoe had significantly lower osmotic potentials than a clone from Ohio (Ohio Red) on most sample dates. When injury index values increased following favorable weather conditions, Platte and Tippecanoe had a significantly lower injury index than Ohio Red. Since all clones had lower osmotic potential, higher dry weight fraction, and lower injury index during dry periods, it was concluded that all had drought hardened during the period, indicating that all clones have some degree of drought tolerance.
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Quiroz-Barroso, S. A., John Pojeta, Francisco Sour-Tovar, and Salvador Morales-Soto. "Pseudomulceodens: A Mississippian rostroconch from Mexico." Journal of Paleontology 74, no. 6 (November 2000): 1184–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000017716.

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This finding of Pseudomulceodens in Mississippian-age rocks of the Santiago Formation provides the first evidence of the molluscan class Rostroconchia in Mexico. Elsewhere in North American Mississippian rocks the class occurs in Arkansas (Hoare et al., 1982, 1988); Illinois (Weller, 1916); Indiana (Beede, 1906); Iowa (White and Whitfield, 1862); Michigan (Winchell, 1870); Montana and Nevada (Pojeta and Runnegar, 1976); Ohio (Hyde, 1953; Hoare, 1990); and Oklahoma (Branson, 1958).
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Hopkins, Laura C., Christine Penicka, Carly Evich, Blake Jones, and Carolyn Gunther. "Project SWEAT (Summer Weight and Environmental Assessment Trial): study protocol of an observational study using a multistate, prospective design that examines the weight gain trajectory among a racially and ethnically diverse convenience sample of economically disadvantaged school-age children." BMJ Open 8, no. 8 (August 2018): e021168. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2017-021168.

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IntroductionRacial/ethnic minority school-age children are at risk for unhealthy weight gain during the summer, and there is a dearth of information regarding the underlying behavioural and environmental factors. The study objective is to provide an in-depth examination of dietary and physical activity behaviours and food, physical activity, and social environments of African American and Hispanic school-age children during the summer.Methods and analysisAn observational study will be conducted using a multistate (Ohio and Indiana, USA) prospective design examining the weight gain trajectory among a racially/ethnically diverse convenience sample of economically disadvantaged school-age children. In addition, a subset of these children will be evaluated to learn their daily health behaviours and food, physical activity, and social environments during the summer. Comparisons will be made between children who routinely attend programming and those who do not, both in the larger sample and subset. Determinants of programme participation and factors that may enhance the beneficial effects of programme participation will also be identified. Data collection at the Indiana site is planned for summer 2018.Ethics and disseminationThis study is approved by The Ohio State University Behavioral and Social Sciences Institutional Review Board. Results from this study will be disseminated in publications for practitioners, scientists and stakeholders.Trial registration numberNCT03010644; Pre-results.
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30

Workneh, F., G. L. Tylka, X. B. Yang, J. Faghihi, and J. M. Ferris. "Regional Assessment of Soybean Brown Stem Rot, Phytophthora sojae, and Heterodera glycines Using Area-Frame Sampling: Prevalence and Effects of Tillage." Phytopathology® 89, no. 3 (March 1999): 204–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/phyto.1999.89.3.204.

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The prevalence of brown stem rot (caused by Phialophora gregata), Heterodera glycines, and Phytophthora sojae in the north central United States was investigated during the fall of 1995 and 1996. Soybean fields were randomly selected using an area-frame sampling design in collaboration with the National Agricultural Statistics Service. Soil and soybean stem samples, along with tillage information, were collected from 1,462 fields in Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, and Ohio. An additional 275 soil samples collected from Indiana were assessed for H. glycines. For each field, the incidence and prevalence of brown stem rot was assessed in 20 soybean stem pieces. The prevalence and recovery (expressed as the percentage of leaf disks colonized) of P. sojae and the prevalence and population densities of H. glycines were determined from the soil samples. The prevalence of brown stem rot ranged from 28% in Missouri to 73% in Illinois; 68 and 72% of the fields in Minnesota and Iowa, respectively, showed symptomatic samples. The incidence of brown stem rot was greater in conservation-till than in conventional-till fields in all states except Minnesota, which had few no-till fields. P. sojae was detected in two-thirds of the soybean fields in Ohio and Minnesota, whereas 63, 55, and 41% of the fields in Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois, respectively, were infested with the pathogen. The recovery rates of P. sojae were significantly greater (P ≤ 0.05) in conservation-till than in conventional-till fields in all states except Iowa. H. glycines was detected in 83% of the soybean fields in Illinois, 74% in Iowa, 71% in Missouri, 60% in Ohio, 54% in Minnesota, and 47% in Indiana. Both the prevalence and population densities of H. glycines were consistently greater in tilled than in no-till fields in all states for which tillage information was available.
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31

Cosanici, Dragomir. "Bibliometric Study in the Heartland: Comparative and Electronic Citation Practices of the Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio Supreme Courts (1994–2004)." Legal Information Management 7, no. 3 (September 2007): 207–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1472669607001375.

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AbstractThis study by Dragomir Cosanici provides a bibliometric, comparative study of the citation practices of the state supreme courts in the common law jurisdictions of Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio, USA during a recent ten-year span (1994–2004). It focuses on the type of legal materials most frequently cited as authority, examining the importance of both primary and secondary sources. It specifically analyses the growing usage of electronic citations by the four supreme courts.
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32

J Della-Porta, Antony. "Bioterrorism: an historical perspective." Microbiology Australia 24, no. 2 (2003): 6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ma03206.

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During the Middle Ages it was recognised that victims of infections could become weapons themselves. Victims of plague were catapulted into the city of Caffa (Feodosiya, Ukraine) and the epidemic of plague that followed forced the retreat of the Genoese forces from the city. Pizarro is said to have given smallpox-contaminated clothing to South American native people in the 15th century. In 1763 it is reportedthat Captain Ecuyer of the Royal Americans deliberately distributed variola-contaminated blankets and a handkerchief to enemy American Indian tribes. This was followed several months later by a large smallpox outbreak amongst various Indian tribes in the Ohio area.
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33

Neal, Maxwell Lewis, and Joseph T. Hannibal. "Paleoecologic and taxonomic implications of Sphenothallus and Sphenothallus-like specimens from Ohio and areas adjacent to Ohio." Journal of Paleontology 74, no. 3 (May 2000): 369–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000031644.

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Sphenothallus and fossils similar to Sphenothallus are found in Ordovician, Devonian, and Mississippian rock units in Ohio and adjacent states and provinces. Although the Ordovician of Québec, Ontario, and Indiana has yielded parts of tubes, Ordovician specimens from southwest Ohio and nearby areas consist almost entirely of holdfasts on hardgrounds and shelly fossils. Sphenothallus is abundant in the Chagrin Shale (Famennian) of northeast Ohio where it is found in about four percent of concretions that contain identifiable fossils. The Chagrin specimens, usually parts of tubes, are occasionally preserved three-dimensionally. The rate of distal expansion of Chagrin Sphenothallus tubes varies intraspecifically; thus, this rate cannot be used to distinguish species. Some Chagrin specimens are attached to larger, conspecific specimens and to articulate brachiopods. Brachiopods have also been found attached to Chagrin Sphenothallus. Bedford-Berea sequence (Famennian) specimens from northern Kentucky and Meadville Member (Kinderhookian or Osagian) specimens from the Cuyahoga Formation of northeast Ohio are usually preserved as flattened tubes. In both occurrences tubes are similar in width, indicating that individuals in each assemblage are probably the same age. Meadville tubes possess characteristics diagnostic of Sphenothallus, but Bedford-Berea specimens, which lack longitudinal thickenings and exhibit little tube tapering, cannot be assigned to Sphenothallus sensu strictu.Sphenothallus was a gregarious, opportunistic species, tolerant of dysaerobic conditions and able to colonize environments ranging from hardgrounds to soft, muddy sea bottoms. No distinct branching was observed among the Chagrin, Bedford-Berea, or Meadville specimens, suggesting that larval dispersal was the primary mode of reproduction for the genus.
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Frey, Robert C. "The paleoecology of a Late Ordovician shale unit from southwest Ohio and southeastern Indiana." Journal of Paleontology 61, no. 2 (March 1987): 242–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000028444.

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The Treptoceras duseri shale unit within the Waynesville Formation of Late Ordovician (early Richmondian) age in southwest Ohio and the equivalent Trilobite shale unit in the same formation exposed in adjacent portions of Indiana represent an Ordovician shallow marine mud-bottom epeiric sea facies. These fine-grained elastics contain a moderately diverse mollusk-trilobite assemblage dominated by vagrant epifaunal detritus-feeding calymenid and asaphid trilobites, large endobyssate and infaunal filter-feeding pelecypods, and nektonic nautiloids. Articulate brachiopods, ectoprocts, and pelmatozoan echinoderms form only minor elements of this fauna.This mollusk-trilobite assemblage was common in Late Ordovician shallow marine clastic environments where mobility was an asset and there was an abundance of oxygen and food resources. Such assemblages are characteristic of the Lorraine Fauna of Late Ordovician (Edenian to Richmondian) age that occurs from the Ohio Valley north and east into New York, Ontario, Quebec, and Ireland. These early Paleozoic mud-bottom assemblages were considerably modified by the Late Ordovician extinction event and were replaced in the Silurian and Devonian by distinctly different assemblages dominated by large epifaunal strophomenid and spiriferid brachiopods, crinoids, and phacopid trilobites.
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35

Shelley, Fred M., and J. Clark Archer. "Sectionalism and Presidential Politics: Voting Patterns in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 20, no. 2 (1989): 227. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/204833.

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36

Muchmore, William B. "Some Pseudoscorpions (Arachnida: Pseudoscorpionida) from Caves in Ohio and Indiana, U.S.A." Transactions of the American Microscopical Society 113, no. 3 (July 1994): 316. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3226625.

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37

Vasichko, Joseph W. "Fluorite of the Findlay Arch Mineral District, Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana." Rocks & Minerals 93, no. 2 (February 15, 2018): 110–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00357529.2018.1405218.

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38

Trish, Barbara. "Party Integration in Indiana and Ohio: The 1988 and 1992 Presidential Contests." American Review of Politics 15 (July 1, 1994): 235–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-7781.1994.15.0.235-256.

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This article examines the integration between formal party and campaign organizations in Ohio and Indiana during the 1988 and 1992 presidential election seasons. It finds a basic difference in the level of integration across those two states. It also finds variation in the partisan patterns across the two elections. In light of these findings, the article offers an explanation of party integration that considers the structure of the organizations, the nature of the candidacies and campaign personnel, and organizational learning.
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39

Calomiris, Charles W., and Larry Schweikart. "The Panic of 1857: Origins, Transmission, and Containment." Journal of Economic History 51, no. 4 (December 1991): 807–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700040122.

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We explain the origins of the Panic of 1857, examine its spread, and compare state banking systems's responses. We describe the decline in western land and railroad investments and the consequent stress on securities brokers and banks in eastern cities, and trace the transmission of the shock to other regions. Bank performance depended not only on regional conditions and links to eastern banks, but on the ability to coordinate behavior. Southern branch banks and coinsuring banks in Ohio and Indiana were particularly successful.
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40

Hindal, Dale F., James W. Amrine, Robert L. Williams, and Terry A. Stasny. "Rose Rosette Disease on Multiflora Rose (Rosa multiflora) in Indiana and Kentucky." Weed Technology 2, no. 4 (October 1988): 442–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0890037x00032243.

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Multiflora roses showing symptoms of rose rosette were found in nine counties in southern Indiana and two counties in northern Kentucky. The eriophyid mite, Phyllocoptes fructiphilus Kiefer (Acari: Eriophyidae), implicated as the vector of the rose rosette agent, occurred on most symptomatic material. Another eriophyid mite, P. rosarum Liro, was found on symptomatic material collected in Kentucky. Transmission of the causal agent into multiflora rose by shield budding and by P. fructiphilus was successful. The rose rosette agent appears to be spreading east and is established on multiflora rose in the Ohio Valley.
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41

Richardson, Jeffery G., and Loren E. Babcock. "Weird things from the Middle Ordovician of North America interpreted as conulariid fragments." Journal of Paleontology 76, no. 2 (March 2002): 391–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000041779.

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Small phosphatic fossils recovered from acid residues of the Galena Group Middle (Ordovician) of Wisconsin were recently described by Clark et al. (1999) as weird things. Here, we report that specimens identified by those authors as Thing 3 and Thing 6 are fragments of conulariids belonging to two species that occur widely through Middle Ordovician strata of eastern North America. Similarly disintegrated, conspecific specimens from the Trenton Limestone of northwestern Indiana, and articulated, conspecific specimens from Ohio and New York, are introduced for comparison.
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42

Lepper, Bradley T. "Early Paleo-Indian Foragers of Midcontinental North America." North American Archaeologist 9, no. 1 (July 1988): 31–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/uk8e-gyax-fmkm-89cn.

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A survey of private and public collections produced information on 410 fluted point yielding localities within a single county in east central Ohio. Analysis of techno-functional attributes of the fluted points resulted in the definition of four general settlement types including large and small workshop/occupations, chert processing loci, and food procurement/processing loci. The distribution of these loci in relation to various features of the local paleoenvironment suggests that Paleo-Indian bands were seasonally exploiting the diverse environments of the Appalachian Plateau. Subsistence activities appear to have focused primarily on dispersed, non-aggregated game species such as white-tailed deer. The dense concentration of fluted points here may simply reflect the high redundancy in the Paleo-Indian land use system in areas with limited loci of availability for critical chert resources.
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43

Calder, Dale R. "Charles Wesley Hargitt (1852–1927): American educator and cnidarian biologist." Archives of Natural History 36, no. 2 (October 2009): 244–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e0260954109000977.

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Charles Wesley Hargitt was born near Lawrenceburg, Indiana, USA, and died at Syracuse, New York. After a brief career as a Methodist Episcopal minister, he carried out graduate studies in biology at Illinois Wesleyan University and Ohio University. He served briefly on the faculty at Moores Hill College and later at Miami University of Ohio before receiving an appointment at Syracuse University. Hargitt spent 36 years at Syracuse, and for 21 years was a trustee of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts. His research encompassed animal behaviour, cell biology, development, ecology, natural history, and taxonomy, as well as education, eugenics, and theology, and he wrote or contributed to more than 100 publications in science. Approximately half of these were on Cnidaria, with 41 of them on Hydrozoa. His most important works in hydrozoan taxonomy were on species of the Woods Hole region, the Philippines, and south China. Hargitt was author of three genera and 48 species and subspecies ascribed to Hydrozoa, seven species of Anthozoa, and one species of Cubozoa. Four species of hydroids are named in his honour.
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44

Girard, Jeffery S. "Recent Investigations at the Mounds Plantation Site (16CD12), Caddo Parish, Louisiana." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2012.1.12.

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Dr. Montroville Wilson Dickeson, born in Philadelphia in 1810, was a medical doctor, taxidermist and avid collector of fossils. Between 1837 and 1844 he pursued another interest—excavating Indian burial mounds in the Ohio and Mississippi River valleys. He claimed to have “opened up” more than a thousand mounds and collected more than 40,000 objects. He also made drawings of the mounds and later provided these to an artist by the name of John J. Egan, who, about 1850, converted the drawings into a series of large paintings on huge canvases. Dickeson toured the country in 1852 allowing the public to view the canvasses and his artifact collections for a fee of 25 cents. The panorama, titled “Monumental Grandeur of the Mississippi Valley”, was nine feet high, 400 feet long, and consisted of 27 scenes. The canvasses later were curated at the University Museum, University of Pennsylvania until 1953 when purchased by the St. Louis Art Museum where they remain today. Dickeson’s lecture notes refer to Scene 21 as follows: “The following picture shows a group of connected mounds in Caddo Parish, in Northwestern Louisiana, with some of the aboriginal inhabitants of the region . . .” The scene depicts a cluster of nine mounds, some of which are connected by low earthen walls. In the background are mountains, and a group of Indians with elaborate headdresses are shown in front of tents. Similar mountains and the same Indian scene appear in other segments of the Mississippi Panorama and are understandable in light of the Romantic artistic style of the times, as well as the fact that the panorama was part of a show intended to evoke wonder and awe in its audience. Today we know of only one place in Caddo Parish where there is a cluster of at least nine mounds. Located on the western side of the Red River, north of the present city of Shreveport, is the Mounds Plantation Site (16CD12), the single largest Caddo ceremonial center in northwestern Louisiana. It seems fitting that the earliest reference that we have to a prehistoric site in northwest Louisiana likely pertains to Mounds Plantation, a place of primary importance to its ancient Caddo inhabitants, as well as to modern archaeological research.
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45

"Earl P. Olmstead. David Zeisberger: A Life among the Indians. Foreword by George W. Knepper. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. 1997. Pp. xxiv, 441. $39.00." American Historical Review, December 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr/103.5.1690.

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46

Babcock, Michael W., and Stehen Fuller. "A Model of Corn and Soybean Shipments on the Ohio River." Journal of the Transportation Research Forum, October 14, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5399/osu/jtrf.46.2.1016.

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This paper estimates the demand for corn and soybean shipments on the Ohio River during the 1992-2004 period. Using monthly data, OLS (with Newewy-West standard errors) parameters estimates were obtained for the explanatory variables. Results indicate that Ohio River corn and soybean shipments are significantly and positively affected by one month lagged shipments, corn and soybean stocks in the Ohio River production region, and corn and soybean exports from lower Mississippi River Gulf ports. Some empirical support was found for a significant negative relationship between Ohio River corn and soybean shipments and ocean shipping freight rates from lower Mississippi River Gulf ports to Japan. Indiana corn prices did not significantly affect Ohio River corn and soybean shipments.
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47

Xu, Xiaojie. "Linear and Nonlinear Causality between Corn Cash and Futures Prices." Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization 16, no. 2 (August 22, 2018). http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jafio-2016-0006.

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Abstract This study investigates linear and nonlinear causality between the daily Chicago Board of Trade corn futures price series and each of seven regional cash series from Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Kansas for January 2006–March 2011. Empirical results suggest bidirectional linear causality between cash and futures prices under a bivariate vector autoregressive model in differences (Bi-VAR-Diff) which consists of the futures and one of the seven cash series that are not cointegrated, and unidirectional linear causality from futures to cash prices under an octavariate vector error correction model (Octa-VECM) which consists of the futures and all of the seven cash series that are cointegrated. With linear relationships among prices removed using the Bi-VAR-Diff or Octa-VECM filtering, nonlinear causality is tested through a bivariate vector autoregressive model in levels (Bi-VAR-Lev) on residuals associated with the futures and a cash series from the linear models, and is found to be unidirectional from the futures market to Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio in general. Finally, a GARCH-BEKK specification is added to a Bi-VAR-Diff or the Octa-VECM to obtain residuals for the nonlinear causality test using a Bi-VAR-Lev, and the futures market leadership against Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio is still identified.
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48

"Ostrinia nubilalis. [Distribution map]." Distribution Maps of Plant Pests, no. 2nd Revision) (August 1, 1991). http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/dmpp/20046600011.

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Abstract A new distribution map is provided for Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner). Lepidoptera: Pyralidae. Attacks maize, millet, sorghum, Indian hemp, hops, Artemisia. Information is given on the geographical distribution in Europe, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Irish Republic, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Sardinia, Sicily, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom, Yugoslavia, USSR, Georgian SSR, Moldavian SSR, Russian SFSR, Kabardino-Balkaria, Kirov, Krasnodar, Stavropol, Ukrainian SSR, Africa, Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia, Asia, Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, North America, Canada, Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Saskatchewan, USA, Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachussetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin.
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49

"Peach yellows phytoplasma. [Distribution map]." Distribution Maps of Plant Diseases, no. 4) (August 1, 1998). http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/dmpd/20066500060.

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Abstract A new distribution map is provided for Peach yellows phytoplasma Bacteria: Phytoplasmas Hosts: Peach (Prunus persica), also other Prunus spp. Information is given on the geographical distribution in NORTH AMERICA, Canada, Ontario, USA, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia.
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50

"Soybean vein necrosis virus. [Distribution map]." Distribution Maps of Plant Diseases, No.April (August 1, 2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/dmpd/20173134800.

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Abstract A new distribution map is provided for Soybean vein necrosis virus. Tymovirales: Bunyaviridae: Tospovirus. Hosts: soyabean (Glycine max). Information is given on the geographical distribution in North America (Canada, Ontario, USA, Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and Wisconsin).
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