Academic literature on the topic 'Pinearq (Firm)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pinearq (Firm)"

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Wei, Shih-Yung, Wei-Chiang Samuelson Hong, and Kai Wang. "Firm Size Transmission Effect and Price-Volume Relationship Analysis During Financial Tsunami Periods." International Journal of Applied Evolutionary Computation 2, no. 3 (July 2011): 59–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jaec.2011070105.

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Investors attend importance to forecast the price of financial assets, thus, the factors affecting the stock price are usually the focus of financial research in the field, in which the most important factors to scholars are firm size transmission effect and price-volume relationship. In this study, the analysis of these two items in the Taiwan stock market is conducted. The results indicate that the firm size transmission effect is almost significant, and the reversal phenomenon also exists. However, before the financial tsunami, the firm size transmission effect does not significantly exist; this result also indirectly proves the directional asymmetry of the market returns, proposed by McQueen, Pinegar, and Thorley (1996). For price and volume relationship, big cap index reveals that volume leads to price before the financial tsunami, and small cap index appears that price leads to volume in 2010.
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Rodríguez y Silva, Francisco, Mercedes Guijarro, Javier Madrigal, Enrique Jiménez, Juan R. Molina, Carmen Hernando, Ricardo Vélez, and Jose A. Vega. "Assessment of crown fire initiation and spread models in Mediterranean conifer forests by using data from field and laboratory experiments." Forest Systems 26, no. 2 (July 24, 2017): e02S. http://dx.doi.org/10.5424/fs/2017262-10652.

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Aims of study: To conduct the first full-scale crown fire experiment carried out in a Mediterranean conifer stand in Spain; to use different data sources to assess crown fire initiation and spread models, and to evaluate the role of convection in crown fire initiation.Area of study: The Sierra Morena mountains (Coordinates ETRS89 30N: X: 284793-285038; Y: 4218650-4218766), southern Spain, and the outdoor facilities of the Lourizán Forest Research Centre, northwestern Spain.Material and methods: The full-scale crown fire experiment was conducted in a young Pinus pinea stand. Field data were compared with data predicted using the most used crown fire spread models. A small-scale experiment was developed with Pinus pinaster trees to evaluate the role of convection in crown fire initiation. Mass loss calorimeter tests were conducted with P. pinea needles to estimate residence time of the flame, which was used to validate the crown fire spread model.Main results: The commonly used crown fire models underestimated the crown fire spread rate observed in the full-scale experiment, but the proposed new integrated approach yielded better fits. Without wind-forced convection, tree crowns did not ignite until flames from an intense surface fire contacted tree foliage. Bench-scale tests based on radiation heat flux therefore offer a limited insight to full-scale phenomena.Research highlights: Existing crown fire behaviour models may underestimate the rate of spread of crown fires in many Mediterranean ecosystems. New bench-scale methods based on flame buoyancy and more crown field experiments allowing detailed measurements of fire behaviour are needed.
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Dubinin, A., and S. V. Zalesov. "FIRE OCCURRENCE IN ILMENSK FOREST RESERVE PINERY AND AFTER-FIRE EFFECTS IN THEM." VESTNIK OF THE BASHKIR STATE AGRARIAN UNIVERSITY 39, no. 3 (September 14, 2016): 101–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.31563/1684-7628-2016-39-3-101-107.

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Madrigal, Javier, Jennifer Souto-García, Rafael Calama, Mercedes Guijarro, Juan Picos, and Carmen Hernando. "Resistance of Pinus pinea L. bark to fire." International Journal of Wildland Fire 28, no. 5 (2019): 342. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wf18118.

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The stone pine (Pinus pinea L.) has thick bark as an adaptation to wildfire. In this study, laboratory tests were carried out to quantify the influence of bark thickness on flammability and fire resistance in this species. Heating rate in the cambium and the time to reach lethal temperatures in living tissues were determined using a mass loss calorimeter. In addition, data from permanent plots were used to generate linear mixed models to predict bark thickness along the trunk in stone pine stands. The combination of laboratory and field data provided information about the critical threshold of bark thickness (2cm) below which the heat transmission rate would increase, decreasing the time to reach lethal temperatures in the cambium and therefore the resistance to fire. A new model was developed to calculate critical thresholds of charring height that guarantee efficient protection from fire along the trunk. Predicting whether the bark is thick enough to help trees survive may have important applications in the field of forest fuel management and in the ecology of these pine forests, as well as in preventive silviculture to assess critical heights of trunks likely to be affected during wildfire and prescribed burning.
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RODRIGO, Anselm, Vanessa QUINTANA, and Javier RETANA. "Fire reduces Pinus pinea distribution in the northeastern Iberian Peninsula." Ecoscience 14, no. 1 (March 2007): 23–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.2980/1195-6860(2007)14[23:frppdi]2.0.co;2.

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Carmichael, Stephen W. "A Microscope as the Smallest Pen." Microscopy Today 7, no. 5 (June 1999): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1551929500064397.

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In a movie I saw recently, a young Will Shakespeare was seen to repeatedly dip the nib of a quill into a reservoir of ink and scrawl on pieces of paper until, finally, what we know as "Romeo and Juliet" was penned. As pointed out by Richard Piner, Jin Zhu, Feng Xu, Seunghun Hong, and Chad Mirkin, this technology is much older than Shakespeare, dating back about 4000 years. But even technology this old can change.As you are well aware, making devices on a smaller and smaller scale (nanofabrication) is certain to change our future way of life, Nanofabrication frequently relies on lithographic methods where a pattern is superimposed on a resistive film and the film is chemically etched to create a structure that conforms to the pattern.
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Molina, Juan Ramon, F. Rodriguez y Silva, and M. A. Herrera. "Potential crown fire behavior in Pinus pinea stands following different fuel treatments." Forest Systems 20, no. 2 (July 10, 2011): 266. http://dx.doi.org/10.5424/fs/2011202-10923.

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St.John, Graham. "DMT Gland." International Journal for the Study of New Religions 7, no. 2 (February 20, 2017): 153–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/ijsnr.v7i2.31949.

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With clinical psychiatrist Rick Strassman's DMT: The Spirit Molecule as a vehicle, the pineal gland has become a popularly enigmatic organ that quite literally excretes mystery. Strassman’s top selling book documented ground-breaking clinical trials with the powerful mind altering compound DMT (N,N-dimethyltryptamine) conducted at the University of New Mexico in the early 1990s. Inflected with Buddhist metaphysics, the book proposed that DMT secreted from the pineal gland enables transit of the life-force into this life, and from this life to the next. Since that study, the hunt has been on to verify the organ’s status as the “lightening rod of the soul” and that DMT is the “brain's own psychedelic.” While the burden of proof hangs over speculations that the humans produce endogenous DMT in psychedelic quantities, knowledge claims have left the clinic to forge a career of their own. Exploring this development, the article addresses how speculation on the DMT-producing “spirit gland”—the “intermediary between the physical and the spiritual”—are animate in film, literature, music and other popular cultural artefacts. Navigating the legacy of the DMT gland (and DMT) in diverse esoteric currents, it illustrates how Strassman’s “spirit molecule” propositions have been adopted by populists of polar positions on the human condition: i.e. the cosmic re-evolutionism consistent with Modern Theosophy and the gothic hopelessness of H. P. Lovecraft. This exploration of the extraordinary career of the “spirit molecule” enhances awareness of the influence of drugs, and specifically “entheogens,” in diverse “popular occultural” narratives, a development that remains under-researched in a field that otherwise recognises that oc/cult fandom—science fiction, fantasy and horror—is a vehicle for religious ideas and mystical practices.
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Giuditta, Elisabetta, Rossana Marzaioli, Assunta Esposito, Davide Ascoli, Adriano Stinca, Stefano Mazzoleni, and Flora A. Rutigliano. "Soil Microbial Diversity, Biomass, and Activity in Two Pine Plantations of Southern Italy Treated with Prescribed Burning." Forests 11, no. 1 (December 21, 2019): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/f11010019.

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Microbial diversity plays a crucial role in ecosystem processes, including organic matter decomposition and nutrient cycling. This research explores the effect of prescribed burning (PB) on soil microbial diversity, as well as biomass and activity in Mediterranean pine plantations. In burned and adjacent unburned plots of Pinus pinea and P. pinaster plantations of Southern Italy protected areas, the fermentation layer and the 5 cm thick layer of mineral soil underneath were sampled at intervals during the first year after PB. The experimental protocol encompassed measurements of total microbial abundance (Cmic and soil DNA), fungal mycelium, fungal fraction of Cmic, microbial activity, bacterial genetic diversity (16S rDNA PCR-DGGE), microbial metabolic quotient (qCO2), and C mineralization rate (CMR), as well as physical and chemical soil properties. PB caused only temporary (up to 3 h–32 d) reductions in Cmic, DNA amount, fungal mycelium, respiration, and CMR in the P. pinaster plantation, and had no appreciable negative effect on the microbial community in P. pinea plantation, where fire intensity was lower because of less abundant litter fuel. In either plantation, PB did not generally reduce bacterial genetic diversity (evaluated as band richness, Shannon index, and evenness), thus, also accounting for the fast recovery in microbial growth and activity after high-intensity PB in P. pinaster plantation. While confirming PB as a sustainable practice to reduce wildfire risk, also supported by data on plant community obtained in the same plantations, the results suggest that an integrated analysis of microbial diversity, growth, and activity is essential for an accurate description of PB effects on soil microbial communities.
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Garcíía, Francisco J. Moral, Louis W. Dekker, Klaas Oostindie, and Coen J. Ritsema. "Water repellency under natural conditions in sandy soils of southern Spain." Soil Research 43, no. 3 (2005): 291. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sr04089.

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The occurrence and consequences of fire-induced water repellency have been studied in several regions of Spain since 1989. The occurrence of water repellency formed under natural conditions, however, has only been described for a few areas in Spain since 1998. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the severity of naturally occurring water repellency in the sandy soils of the Natural Park of Doñana in southern Spain. The persistence and degree of soil water repellency were measured on field-moist and dried sandy soil samples taken beneath Pinus pinea trees. Around 50% of the field-moist soil samples taken at 0–0.10 m depths exhibited (actual) water repellency. Potential water repellency, measured after drying the samples at 60°C, showed for 68% of the samples slight to extreme water repellency. The organic matter content was found to be positively correlated with persistence and with degree of potential water repellency.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pinearq (Firm)"

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Etwell, Tracey. "Determining an appropriate fire frequency for oak savannas in Rondeau and Pinery Provincial Parks /." 2004. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url%5Fver=Z39.88-2004&res%5Fdat=xri:pqdiss&rft%5Fval%5Ffmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft%5Fdat=xri:pqdiss:MQ99304.

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Thesis (M.Sc.)--York University, 2004. Graduate Programme in Biology.
Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 115-122). Also available on the Internet. MODE OF ACCESS via web browser by entering the following URL: http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url%5Fver=Z39.88-2004&res%5Fdat=xri:pqdiss&rft%5Fval%5Ffmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft%5Fdat=xri:pqdiss:MQ99304
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Chen, Yun-Sheng, and 陳韻笙. "Discuss on Memory Pineal, animated symbolic imagery and using of metamorphosis of the film." Thesis, 2016. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/23487588229397292895.

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碩士
國立臺南藝術大學
動畫藝術與影像美學研究所
104
Abustract   This discuss is from my past experience, in my past works the main topics theme peripheral to the “humanity”, and to face self or external effect.   In “Memory Pineal” story combine the man's dream and memory, transform to some strong visual message. This story combine with three visual style to convey the feeling in this story.   In the first chapter, I illustrate how was my visual style become. The second chapter to resolution how “Memory Pineal” engendered .The third chapter analyzes “Memory Pineal” style、symbolic imagery、metamorphosis and behind the scenes. The final two chapter is about in this work what I gained and realize, and my future arranged of being independents animator or illustrator.
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Books on the topic "Pinearq (Firm)"

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Associados, Saraiva +., ed. Hospital Beatriz Ângelo: Pinearq, Saraiva + Associados. Lisboa: Uzina Books, 2012.

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