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1

Kleppel, G. S., M. Richard DeVoe, and Mac V. Rawson, eds. Changing Land Use Patterns in the Coastal Zone. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-387-29023-0.

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2

The Soviet war in Afghanistan: Patterns of Russian imperialism. Lanham, Md: University Press of America, 1991.

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3

Prøsch-Danielsen, Lisbeth. The deforestation patterns and the establishment of the coastal heathland of southwestern Norway. Stavanger: Museum of Archaeology, Stavanger, National Research Centre for Paleostudies and Conservation, 2000.

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4

Coastal hinterlands: Site patterns, microregions and coast-inland interconnections by the Corinthian Gulf, c.600-300 BC. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2014.

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5

The archaeology of the coastal desert of Namaqualand, South Africa: A regional synthesis. Oxford: John and Erica Hedges Ltd., 2008.

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6

editor, Maquiling Joel T., ed. Patterns of vulnerability in the forestry, agriculture, water, and coastal sectors of Silago, Southern Leyte, Philippines. Quezon City]: Manila Observatory, 2011.

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7

The archaeology of complex societies in southeastern Pacific coastal Guatemala: A regional GIS approach. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, 1999.

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8

Geological Survey (U.S.), ed. Coastal habitats of the Elwha River, Washington: Biological and physical patterns and processes prior to dam removal. Reston, Va: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 2011.

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9

The neolithic settlement of Knossos in Crete: New evidence for the early occupation of Crete and the Aegean islands. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: INSTAP Academic Press, 2013.

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10

Formative settlement patterns on the Pacific Coast of Guatemala: A spatial analysis of complex societal evolution. Oxford: B. A. R., 1989.

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11

Bicho, Nuno Ferreira, Jonathan A. Haws, and Loren G. Davis. Trekking the shore: Changing coastlines and the antiquity of coastal settlement. Edited by Society for American Archaeology. Meeting and International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences (15th : 2006 : Lisbon, Portugal). New York: Springer, 2011.

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12

Love, Michael. Early complex society in Pacific Guatemala: Settlements and chronology of the Río Naranjo, Guatemala. Provo, Utah: New World Archaeological Foundation, Brigham Young University, 2002.

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13

Love, Michael. Early complex society in Pacific Guatemala: Settlements and chronology of the Río Naranjo, Guatemala. Provo, Utah: New World Archaeological Foundation, Brigham Young University, 2002.

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14

Occupation de l'espace et gestion des ressources à l'interface entre massifs primaires et bassins secondaires et tertiaires au Néolithique: L'exemple du Massif armoricain et de ses marges. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2012.

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15

Ceci, Lynn. The effect of European contact and trade on the settlement pattern of Indians in coastal New York, 1524-1665. New York: Garland Pub., 1990.

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16

National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS). Fish assemblages and benthic habitats of Buck Island Reef National Monument (St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands) and the surrounding seascape: A characterization of spatial and temporal patterns. Silver Spring, MD, USA: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 2008.

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17

Mackie, Quentin. Settlement archaeology in a Fjordland archipelago: Network analysis, social practice and the built environment of Western Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada since 2,000 BP. Oxford: J. and E. Hedges, 2001.

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18

Dickinson, William R. Coastal Landforms on Islands of Pacific Oceania. Edited by Ethan E. Cochrane and Terry L. Hunt. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199925070.013.023.

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The evolution of coastal landforms on tropical Pacific islands has been influenced jointly by changes in relative sea level and by shoreline sediment dynamics. During human occupation of Pacific Oceania, changes in sea level have reflected a monotonic hydro-isostatic drawdown in regional sea level following a mid-Holocene highstand in eustatic sea level, and varied patterns of tectonic uplift or subsidence affecting individual islands or island groups. Wave erosion has altered some bold coastlines, but the dominant trend of paleoshoreline evolution along lowland coasts has been the expansion of coastal plains by the accretion of successive beach ridges to island cores as regional sea level gradually fell. Anthropogenic impacts on island landscapes have influenced strandline sedimentation by enhancing sediment delivery to island coasts in response to inland deforestation.
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19

Winbeckler, Roland A. More Occupation & Hobby Patterns. Winbeckler Enterprises, 1986.

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20

Cosgrove, Richard, and Jillian Garvey. Behavioural inferences from Late Pleistocene Aboriginal Australia. Edited by Umberto Albarella, Mauro Rizzetto, Hannah Russ, Kim Vickers, and Sarah Viner-Daniels. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199686476.013.49.

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Detailed research into marsupial behavioural ecology and modelling of past Aboriginal exploitation of terrestrial fauna has been scarce. Poor bone preservation is one limiting factor in Australian archaeological sites, but so has been the lack of research concerning the ecology and physiology of Australia’s endemic fauna. Much research has focused on marine and fresh-water shell-fish found in coastal and inland midden sites. Detailed studies into areas such as seasonality of past human occupation and nutritional returns from terrestrial prey species have not had the same attention. This chapter reviews the current level of published Australian research into two aspects of faunal studies, seasonality and nutrition. It describes the patterns from well-researched faunal data excavated from the Ice Age sites in southwest Tasmania. Concentration is on the vertebrate fauna found in seven limestone cave sites to examine any temporal changes to seasonal butchery and identify any differences between seasonally occupied sites.
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21

Winbeckler, Roland A. Occupation & Hobby Patterns For Cake Decorating. Winbeckler Enterprises, 1985.

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22

Coastal Knits A Collaboration Between Friends On Opposite Shores. NNK Press (Never Not Knitting), 2011.

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23

Antony, Long, Eddison Jill, Gardiner Mark, and University of Oxford. Committee for Archaeology., eds. Romney Marsh: Environmental change and human occupation in a coastal lowland. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 1998.

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24

Coastal Oregon Productivity Enhancement (Organization), ed. Wildlife diversity and landscape patterns in Northwest coastal forests. [Newport, Ore.?: Coastal Oregon Productivity Enhancement, 1989.

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25

author, Ledesma-Vázquez Jorge, ed. Gulf of California coastal ecology: Insights from the present and patterns from the past. Sunbelt Publications, Inc., 2016.

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26

The Shobhan Paul Site (CA-LAN-958): Archaeological investigations of a Coastal Millingstone horizon occupation. Salinas, CA: Coyote Press, 1995.

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27

Justic, Dubravko, Kenneth A. Rose, Robert D. Hetland, and Katja Fennel. Modeling Coastal Hypoxia: Numerical Simulations of Patterns, Controls and Effects of Dissolved Oxygen Dynamics. Springer, 2017.

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28

Kleppel, G. S., M. Richard DeVoe, and Mac V. Rawson. Changing Land Use Patterns in the Coastal Zone: Managing Environmental Quality in Rapidly Developing Regions. Springer, 2010.

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29

Sica, Emanuele. Drawing the Curtain on the Occupation. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039850.003.0012.

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This chapter describes the period that unceremoniously ended the Italian military occupation in France during World War II. Starting in late July 1943, the Italians set in motion their gradual disengagement from southeastern France. In theory all units, with the exception of a few coastal divisions, were supposed to return to Italy by midnight on September 9. Officially the Italians were moving their troops from France in order to shore up Italy’s defenses. The end of the occupation matched its beginnings in June 1940 and September 1942, both in its strategic improvisation and utter disorganization. This chapter explains how the disorganization of the Italian Army, combined with the sudden announcement of the Franco-Italian armistice, changed what should have been a gradual disengagement from southeastern France to a complete rout back into Italy. It shows that the Italian Army commanders in the French Riviera, caught completely unaware by the declaration of the armistice, had to make a hasty and disorganized retreat, with entire units ending up captured by the Germans.
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30

United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee, ed. The Bi-coastal economy: Regional patterns of economic growth during the Reagan administration : a staff study. [Washington, D.C.?: The Committee], 1986.

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31

United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee., ed. The Bi-coastal economy: Regional patterns of economic growth during the Reagan administration : a staff study. [Washington, D.C.?: The Committee], 1986.

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32

United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee, ed. The Bi-coastal economy: Regional patterns of economic growth during the Reagan administration : a staff study. [Washington, D.C.?: The Committee], 1986.

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33

The Bi-coastal economy: Regional patterns of economic growth during the Reagan administration : a staff study. [Washington, D.C.?: The Committee], 1986.

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34

United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee, ed. The Bi-coastal economy: Regional patterns of economic growth during the Reagan administration : a staff study. [Washington, D.C.?: The Committee], 1986.

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35

United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee., ed. The Bi-coastal economy: Regional patterns of economic growth during the Reagan administration : a staff study. [Washington, D.C.?: The Committee], 1986.

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36

(Editor), G. S. Kleppel, M. Richard DeVoe (Editor), and Mac V. Rawson (Editor), eds. Changing Land Use Patterns in the Coastal Zone: Managing Environmental Quality in Rapidly Developing Regions (Springer Series on Environmental Management). Springer, 2006.

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37

Late Paleoindian Occupation of the Southern Rocky Mountains: Early Holocene Projectile Points and Land Use in the High Country. University Press of Colorado, 2003.

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38

Sharrock, Floyd W. Prehistoric Occupation Patterns in Southwest Wyoming and Cultural Relationships With the Great Basin and Plains Culture Areas (Utah Anthrop No 77). Ams Pr Inc, 2003.

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39

Changing Land Use Patterns in the Coastal Zone: Managing Environmental Quality in Rapidly Developing Regions (Springer Series on Environmental Management). Springer, 2007.

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40

Aaron J., Ph.d. Adams. Fly Fisherman's Guide to Saltwater Prey: How to Match Coastal Prey Fish and Invertebrates With the Fly Patterns That Imitate Them. Stackpole Books, 2008.

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41

Erickson, Vicky J. The influence of distance and floral phenology on pollen gene flow and mating system patterns in a coastal Douglas-fir seed orchard. 1987.

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42

Ryan, Eileen. Italian Imperialism and Sanusi Authority at the Turn of the Century. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673796.003.0002.

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Italian unification preceded a new era of European imperial expansion. Italian nationalists were eager to ensure Italy’s position as a European great power by claiming overseas territories. For many Italians, adventures in East Africa served only as a distraction from the goal of securing the Mediterranean. After the French occupation of Tunisia in 1881 and the Italian military disaster at Adwa in 1896, Italian imperialists turned their focus to the Ottoman districts of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica in modern-day Libya. It was during these last decades of the nineteenth century that the Sanusiyya emerged as an undeniable political, social, and religious force in North Africa. Any central state authorities with an interest in securing the eastern Libyan district of Cyrenaica had to engage with the Sanusiyya. Sanusi elites developed patterns of engaging with centralized state authorities that would inform their reactions to the Italian occupation after 1911.
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43

Jensen, Anne M. Archaeology of the Late Western Thule/Iñupiat in North Alaska (. 1300–1750). Edited by Max Friesen and Owen Mason. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199766956.013.27.

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This chapter covers the Late Western Thule (LWT) and precontact Iñupiat of Northern Alaska, the most recent archaeological manifestation of the Northern Maritime tradition. From a maritime-adapted, whale-hunting culture living in semisubterranean sod-covered houses, this culture expanded to include inland settlements along rivers and in caribou hunting regions. The chronology of the LWT period is refined, based on recent advances in dating and many new dates. Other topics covered include settlement patterns and demography, technology, trade, architecture, social relations, mortuary practices, and the history and effects of contact with Euro-Americans. Several unresolved questions, including climate-change effects, the existence and nature of resource stress, and factors governing interior occupation are highlighted.
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44

Cristini, Annalisa, Andrea Geraci, and John Muellbauer. Sifting through the ASHE. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807056.003.0008.

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This chapter presents an analysis of changing job and pay structures in the UK, constructing for this purpose a novel dataset covering each year from 1975 to 2015 linking different datasets and ensuring that key variables such as occupation are captured on as consistent a basis as possible. This provides the information base required to investigate job polarization in a much more disaggregated fashion than previously possible, allowing important distinctions to be made by gender, sector, and region, between full- versus part-time workers, and across birth-cohorts. The analyses are thus able to reveal the differing implications of long-term trends in job structures and pay for these different groups, and bring out what the varying patterns reveal about the underlying processes at work in the labour market.
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45

Milkman, Ruth. Two Worlds of Unionism. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040320.003.0008.

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This chapter examines the ways in which job segregation by gender is mirrored in the structure of organized labor, by analyzing patterns of union membership by gender, occupation, and industry in the early twenty-first century. It first looks at data on workforce feminization and segregation as well as evidence of women's view of organized labor and receptivity to unionism before comparing the composition of union membership to that of the U.S. labor force as a whole. It shows that there are two separate worlds of unionism, one male and one female, each with a distinctive culture and political orientation. Finally, it considers the fact that the labor movement is highly segmented along gender lines, along with its implications for understanding the dynamics of the relationship of women workers to unions in an era of labor movement decline.
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46

Johnson, Elizabeth Lominska, and Graham E. Johnson. A Chinese Melting Pot. Hong Kong University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888455898.001.0001.

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A Chinese Melting Pot: Original People and Immigrants in Hong Kong’s First ‘New Town’ traces the transformation of Tsuen Wan from a poor and marginal district of agricultural villages, culturally distinctive in that all were Hakka. Like others present in the New Territories in 1898, they enjoyed special privileges under British colonialism as ‘original inhabitants’. This study is focused, in part, on one of their villages: its history, lineages, relationships among and through women, and their songs and laments. In the aftermath of the Japanese occupation and revolution in China, the town, with its daily coastal market, rapidly grew into a major industrial area and assumed an intense, if chaotic, urban form. Its industries attracted enormous numbers of immigrants from China, who created a large variety of voluntary associations to ease their adaptation to the new environment, while the original inhabitants, as property owners, benefited financially from the immigrants’ need for housing, and politically from continuing government support. In the 1980s, changes in economic policies in China led to Tsuen Wan’s present post-industrial form. The original inhabitants remain as a small fragment of the population, their villages intact, although re-sited away from the town centre as part of greatly increased government intervention in creating a planned ‘new town’. Their language and traditions are disappearing as they, like the immigrants, are absorbed into the wider Hong Kong lifestyle.
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47

Badenhorst, Shaw. The zooarchaeology of Iron Age farmers from southern Africa. Edited by Umberto Albarella, Mauro Rizzetto, Hannah Russ, Kim Vickers, and Sarah Viner-Daniels. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199686476.013.29.

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The Iron Age of southern Africa covers the spread and occupation of Bantu-speaking farmers during the last 1,500 years. Archaeological research of these farmers was heavily influenced by the Central Cattle Pattern, a settlement model which, as one of its main concepts, argued that cattle were the most important domestic animal since the first farmers settled in southern Africa during the first millennium ad. Various arguments have been presented to support this view, including the presence of cattle dung, cattle herd sizes, informants and ethnography, and weights of livestock, as well as ageing and skeletal part data. These arguments have been challenged recently, and new interpretations offered. New interpretations unrestricted by the Central Cattle Pattern have focused on descent patterns of farmers. Changes in identification methodology and measures of changes of livestock over time have played a major role in these new interpretations.
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48

Dalton, Russell J. Democracy in Unequal Terms. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198733607.003.0011.

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This chapter summarizes the results of this study: changes in social structure and participation patterns are increasing social-status-based inequality in political participation. Those with higher educational levels, incomes, or occupation have greater political voice, while lower-status individuals are less politically involved. Moreover, the politically rich are getting richer, and the politically poor are getting poorer. The chapter then discusses the implications of these results. The chapter considers claims that participation erodes governance and some form of epistocracy (rule by the knowledgeable) is preferable. Cross-national analysis shows that well-governed democracies have high levels of citizen participation, including both conventional and contentious forms of action. In addition, the size of the SES participation gap is negatively related to good governance. The conclusion discusses ways that democracies might narrow the participation gap and give voice to those citizens who need government support.
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49

Bidisha, Sayema Haque, Tanveer Mahmood, and Mahir A. Rahman. Earnings inequality and the changing nature of work: Evidence from Labour Force Survey data of Bangladesh. 7th ed. UNU-WIDER, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2021/941-9.

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With structural changes in production coupled with technological progress, there have been shifts in modes of production and patterns of employment, with important consequences on task composition of occupations. This paper has utilized different rounds of Labour Force Survey data of Bangladesh and combined it with occupation network data of the United States along with its country-specific database and analysed the role of such factors on labour market outcomes. Our analysis shows a fall in the average routine intensity of tasks with no evidence of job polarization. We find a decline in earnings inequality where the decomposition analysis shows that earnings structure effect rather than characteristics effect plays a key role, with routine-task intensity of jobs and education explaining the majority of differences in earnings. Our analysis suggests that investing in education should be the highest priority, with greater emphasis on skill-biased training programmes, particularly those involving cognitive skill.
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50

Rippon, Stephen, Piers Dixon, and Bob Silvester. Overview. Edited by Christopher Gerrard and Alejandra Gutiérrez. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198744719.013.8.

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During the later medieval period, the vast majority of the British population lived in rural settlements whose primary means of subsistence was agriculture. This overview summarizes the evidence for the villages, hamlets, and farmsteads of medieval England, Scotland, and Wales. Regional differences in the intensity of fieldwork are explored, followed by discussions of nucleated and dispersed settlement patterns, planned villages, and specialist grazing (including seasonal), coastal, industrial, and high-status settlements associated with different forms of landscape exploitation. This exposes some of the commonalities between settlement patterns in the different regions of medieval Britain, although it is also apparent that there have been separate research traditions in England, Scotland, and Wales.
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