Academic literature on the topic 'Pueblo of Laguna'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pueblo of Laguna"

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Rosen, Deborah A. "Acoma v. Laguna and the Transition from Spanish Colonial Law to American Civil Procedure in New Mexico." Law and History Review 19, no. 3 (2001): 513–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/744272.

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Less than two years after the United States occupied New Mexico, Acoma Pueblo accused its neighbors in Laguna Pueblo of misappropriating a painting of Saint Joseph. The Indians of Acoma claimed that they had loaned the picture to the pueblo of Laguna for the purpose of celebrating Holy Week, but Laguna had subsequently refused to return it. The large oil painting on canvas, which portrayed the standing figure of Joseph holding the baby Jesus, was said to have been sent to New Mexico by Carlos II, king of Spain from 1665 to 1700. Both pueblos claimed rightful ownership of the picture, both said that missionaries with the early Spanish conquerors had brought them the oil painting from Spain, and both asserted that the painting was necessary for their religious worship. It was believed that the painting of Saint Joseph, or San José, as he was referred to throughout the legal documents, worked miracles for its possessor. Most important to the pueblos was the belief that the painting brought life-sustaining rain to the parched agricultural lands that provided their main source of food.
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San Martín-del Ángel, Pablo, Rodrigo Cuervo-González, Vicencio De la Cruz-Francisco, and Rosa Idalia Hernández-Herrera. "Macrofauna bentónica asociada a bancos ostrícolas (Crassostrea virginica) en las lagunas de Pueblo Viejo, Tamiahua y Tampamachoco, Veracruz, México." Novitates Caribaea, no. 18 (July 15, 2021): 78–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.33800/nc.vi18.267.

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Los bancos ostrícolas de Crassostrea virginica constituyen hábitats importantes ya que proveen refugio, alimento y áreas de crianza para diversos organismos acuáticos. El objetivo de este trabajo fue estudiar la composición y abundancia de la macrofauna bentónica en los bancos ostrícolas (C. virginica) de las lagunas Pueblo Viejo, Tamiahua y Tampamachoco, Veracruz, México. Se realizaron muestreos mensuales en tres bancos ostrícolas por laguna costera. Los organismos fueron extraídos con el arte de pesca “gafas”. La información obtenida se utilizó para estimar la riqueza de especies, abundancia, equitatividad y diversidad verdadera a nivel mensual por laguna costera. Además, se determinaron diferencias significativas mediante análisis de similitud y ordenación. Se recolectó un total de 1 606 ejemplares del macrobentos en las tres lagunas, identificando 28 especies, 24 familias, 18 órdenes distribuidos en seis grupos zoológicos: Porifera, Platyhelminthes, Annelida, Mollusca, Arthropoda y Bryozoa. Mollusca y Annelida fueron los de mayor riqueza y abundancia de especies. Los bancos ostrícolas de la laguna Tampamachoco fueron más diversos en especies (27 taxa) y abundantes (857 individuos) en comparación a Pueblo Viejo y Tamiahua. Epibiontes filtradores caracterizaron los bancos ostrícolas representados por Brachidontes exustus (en Pueblo Viejo), Amphibalanus eburneus e Hydroides dianthus (ambas en Tampamachoco). Mientras en Tamiahua, las más representativas fueron carnívoros: Nereis oligohalina y Stylochus ellipticus. Para las tres lagunas estudiadas, los valores de la riqueza, abundancia y equitatividad fueron homogéneos en los meses estudiados. Los bancos ostrícolas de cada laguna costera presentan un ensamblaje macrofaunístico propio, dado que se determinaron diferencias significativas con base en la riqueza y abundancia.
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Swan, Edith. "Feminine Perspectives at Laguna Pueblo: Silko's Ceremony." Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 11, no. 2 (1992): 309. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/464303.

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Peters, Kurt M. "Continuing Identity: Laguna Pueblo Railroaders in Richmond, California." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 22, no. 4 (January 1, 1998): 187–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicr.22.4.b82163468j162654.

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Grugel, Andrea. "Culture, religion and economy in the American southwest: Zuni Pueblo and Laguna Pueblo." GeoJournal 77, no. 6 (August 27, 2010): 791–803. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-010-9376-4.

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Armitage, Shelley. "Laguna Pueblo: A Photographic History by Lee Marmon and Tom Corbett." Great Plains Quarterly 36, no. 3 (2016): 244–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/gpq.2016.0046.

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Shafiq, Qasim, Shaheena Ayub Bhatti, and Ghulam Murtaza. "Re-reading Silko’s Ceremonies and American History." Global Regional Review IV, no. I (March 31, 2019): 104–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/grr.2019(iv-i).12.

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This article retrieves the history of Native American ceremonies to highlight the aboriginal ways of being. Using Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony to retrieve the reality of the ceremonies, I argue how the myths inscribed in Native American contemporary writings are the social and cultural embedment of the ceremonies in which they were written and thus the knowledge of prehistoric times. I focus on Silko’s modern techniques to revive the myths of oral tradition to understand and publicize the truths of Native American ceremonial world. She explains the ceremony of 1955 with reference to the ceremonies incorporated in Laguna myths, thereby juxtaposing two different time periods: the pre-Columbian timelessness and the post-second World War fragmented tribal community in Laguna in 1955. To understand the overlapping of poetic-prose stories I explain the function of ceremony in the prosperity of the Pueblo and assimilate the present in the past and the future.
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Blake, Johanna M., Cherie L. De Vore, Sumant Avasarala, Abdul-Mehdi Ali, Claudia Roldan, Fenton Bowers, Michael N. Spilde, et al. "Uranium mobility and accumulation along the Rio Paguate, Jackpile Mine in Laguna Pueblo, NM." Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts 19, no. 4 (2017): 605–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c6em00612d.

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The dissolution of U-bearing minerals such as coffinite (USiO4) detected in mine wastes (300 to 9000 mg kg−1U) exposed to surface oxidizing conditions can cause the release of U to the Rio Paguate, NM during hydrologic events.
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John, Robert. "Use of Cluster Analysis in Social Service Planning: A Case Study of Laguna Pueblo Elders." Journal of Applied Gerontology 7, no. 1 (March 1988): 21–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073346488800700103.

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Grádiz, Lina Carlos, Sonia Garth, and Paula Ingram. "CREENCIAS Y COSTUMBRES TRADICIONALES DEL PUEBLO INDÍGENA MÍSKITU DE KAHKABILA." Ciencia e Interculturalidad 5, no. 2 (February 14, 2011): 105–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.5377/rci.v5i2.275.

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El abordaje se hizo a partir de la investigación: "Creencias y costumbres tradicionales del pueblo indígena miskitu de la comunidad de Kahkabila" de Laguna de Perlas, Región Autónoma del Atlántico Sur de Nicaragua (RAAS). Se considera la revitalización un factor importante para el fortalecimiento de la identidad y autoestima del pueblo y por ende del desarrollo de la comunidad y la Educación Intercultural Bilingüe (EIB). Para el análisis de la pérdida paulatina de las creencias y tradiciones ancestrales de esta comunidad miskitu, se identifican las causas y se proponen alternativas de solución que contribuyan a la sensibilización de la juventud. Se aplicaron entrevistas en la lengua miskitu a los adultos y ancianos; en kriol a los jóvenes, mujeres y varones. Se utilizó la observación, para así valorar la forma y estilo de vida de los comunitarios. Se puede mencionar que los resultados de las principales causas de la pérdida de las creencias y costumbres tradicionales, es la emigración masiva de los miskitu de la comunidad de Kahkabila. La situación económica y la imitación del estilo de vida en otras etnias. Las recomendaciones se basan en la revitalización cultural, Educación Intercultural Bilingüe, actitudes y prácticas tradicionales. CIENCIA E INTERCULTURALIDAD, Volumen 5, Año 2, No. 2, Diciembre 2009, 105-115
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pueblo of Laguna"

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Grugel, Andrea. "Zuni Pueblo und Laguna Pueblo : ökonomische Entwicklung und kulturelle Perspektiven; mit ... 3 Tab. /." Sankt Augustin : Asgard-Verl, 2005. http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz25029981xinh.htm.

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Stewart, Sherrie Lynn. "Collage of Color in Silko's "Storyteller"." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/193400.

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As an American Indian writer, Leslie Marmon Silko stretches the imaginations and perceptions of her readers. This Master's thesis investigates one of the motifs she employs to induce these results, the use of color symbolism. Color and color symbolism are utilized in every culture, but Silko's writings provide a quandary which begs investigation - how does this Laguna Pueblo writer integrate the color symbols of her culture and landscape into her stories and poetry? This question is addressed by researching the significance of specific colors within the Pueblo and related communities, exposing through close reading the use of these specific colors within the texts, and finally, through literary analysis, unraveling the language to glean new perspectives on the discourse. A primary work to be analyzed is her collection of poems and stories, Storyteller, and specifically one fictional piece from that collection also entitled "Storyteller," which incorporates layering of Pueblo culture and color symbolism over a distinctly different community and landscape, the Inuit of Alaska. Using this particular story as a basis for looking at other pieces within Storyteller, the integrated system of colors emerges through a close reading of the text. Although color representation is considered universal or innate, this research addresses culture specific color systems and how that association enriches Native literature as well as the scholarship and theoretical basis of American Indian Studies programs.
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Graham, Joe L. "A Bountiful Harvest: Pueblo of Laguna College Graduates Assessment of Tribal Utilization of Subsidized Academic Capital." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/222832.

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The Pueblo of Laguna in New Mexico maintains a tribal scholarship program to assist students in their pursuit of higher education. This research was initiated to assess from the graduates' perspective how effectively the tribe utilized its subsidized academic capital. The purpose of the study was to identify obstacles, incentives, distractions, or alternative opportunities that Laguna college graduates encountered on their academic paths that influenced their perceptions about working for the tribe. Several challenges were identified that if addressed could profoundly benefit the tribe by increasing the retention of tribal graduates for the professional roles for which they were academically trained. A mixed methods research design was employed to examine why graduates educated with considerable assistance from their tribe were not working for their tribe in the capacity for which they earned degrees. Within this study, both quantitative and qualitative approaches were used to gather, report, and interpret the data. The combined use of a survey as the quantitative method and interviews as the qualitative method provided a balanced view of the perceptions of the Laguna graduates. An analysis of both sets of data indicated that several significant rifts existed between the arenas of tribal professional employment opportunities, college level academic attainment, and the existing secondary school system. Conversely, notions of tribal student loyalty and an intense desire to contribute to community were confirmed. Based on the findings, it was recommended that several critical decisions regarding the future of the Pueblo's higher education priorities be made. Further, it was recommended that the tribe increase their efforts to capitalize on the intrinsic community connectedness demonstrated by the Laguna graduates.
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Torres, Terrones Jorman Martin. "Elaboración del expediente técnico de la carretera departamental Puerto Eten – C.P Lagunas, provincia de Chiclayo, departamento de Lambayeque." Bachelor's thesis, Universidad Católica Santo Toribio de Mogrovejo, 2019. http://tesis.usat.edu.pe/handle/usat/1801.

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El presente proyecto tiene como finalidad elaborar el expediente técnico de la carretera departamental Puerto Eten – C.P Lagunas, Provincia de Chiclayo, Departamento de Lambayeque; pues la zona que se ha evaluado solo tiene un camino completamente desértico, que impide el tránsito de vehículos y de manera directa hace que los pobladores tengan que caminar o cruzar la zona en acémilas, de esta manera los temas importantes como el desarrollo económico y social decrece por el poco interés de personas por conocer los grandes lugares turísticos de la zona debido al difícil acceso. La realización de la carretera en mención permite la comunicación y acceso directo para los distritos más cercanos y de manera directa genera el desarrollo económico y comercial, ayudando a generar trabajo en su etapa de ejecución, dándoles una calidad de vida a los pueblos involucrados en el proyecto. La tesis en mención será realizada en tres fases programadas: FASE I: Visita a la zona de proyecto y recolección de información. FASE II: Estudios Básicos. FASE III: Diseño de la carretera y cada componente del proyecto.
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Pillado, Albarrán Karla Violeta, and González Felipe Carlos Viesca. "Efectos en las actividades económicas en los pueblos Riberenos del curso alto del Río Lerma por la extracción del Agua de las Lagunas (1942-2011)." Tesis de Licenciatura, Medicina-Quimica, 2013. http://ri.uaemex.mx/handle/20.500.11799/13923.

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Schoen, Alice Renee. "A 7600-year Record of Environmental History from the Sediments of Laguna Tortuguero, Puerto Rico." 2011. http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/1020.

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In 1987, Burney and collaborators (Journal of Archaeological Science (1994) 21, 273–281) recovered a ca. 8 m sediment core from the western basin of Laguna Tortuguero, Puerto Rico that spanned the last ca. 7000 calibrated years. They produced a detailed microscopic charcoal record, and from an initial peak in charcoal at ca. 5300 cal yr B.P. suggested that humans had colonized the island some 2000 years earlier than documented by the archaeological evidence then available. In 2008, two sediment cores were recovered from the eastern basin of Laguna Tortuguero. AMS dates on macrofossils indicate the profile extends to 7600 calibrated years, but it includes an interval with missing sediment marked by a layer of shell hash and bracketed by radiocarbon dates of 5144 and 1648 cal yr B.P. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic analyses show evidence for a drastic change in depositional environment following this event. Microscopic charcoal concentrations peak just below and at the contact of the shell hash, with the first of three high-charcoal levels positioned immediately above the date of 5144 cal yr B.P. The microscopic charcoal record appears to support the interpretations of Burney et al. (1994) of human colonization around 5300 cal yr B.P., although the fires recorded in the Laguna Tortuguero sediments may also be driven by regional climate shifts. Desiccation of Laguna Tortuguero, a hurricane or multiple hurricanes, or a tsunami could explain the missing sediments and the large change in depositional environment that occurs above the shell hash. AMS dating of sediment from the mud-water interface at the 2008 core site suggests a possible hard-water effect of ca. 1200 cal yr for dates on the algal gyttja above the shell hash, which if true would mean that the event that deposited the shell hash may have occurred as late as ca. 448 cal yr B.P. (A.D. 1502).
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Books on the topic "Pueblo of Laguna"

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Grugel, Andrea. Zuni Pueblo und Laguna Pueblo: Ökonomische Entwicklung und kulturelle Perspektiven. Sankt Augustin: In Kommission bei Asgard-Verlag, 2005.

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Lanmon, Dwight P. Josephine Foard and the glazed pottery of Laguna Pueblo. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2007.

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Hannaford, Charles A. Archaeological investigations at four sites near Laguna Pueblo, Cibola County, New Mexico. Santa Fe, N.M: Museum of New Mexico, Office of Archaeological Studies, 1998.

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Peaster, Lillian. Pueblo pottery families: Acoma, Cochiti, Hopi, Isleta, Jemez, Laguna, Nambe, Picuris, Pojoaque, San Ildefonso, San Juan, Santa Clara, Santo Domingo, Taos, Tesuque, Zia, Zuni. Atglen, PA: Schiffer publishing, 1997.

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Peaster, Lillian. Pueblo pottery families: Acoma, Cochiti, Hopi, Isleta, Jemez, Laguna, Nambe, Picuris, Pojoaque, San Ildefonso, San Juan, Santa Clara, Santo Domingo, Taos, Tesuque, Zia, Zuni. 3rd ed. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub. Ltd., 2008.

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Ferré, Rosario. La casa de la laguna. Barcelona: Emecé Editores, 1997.

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Santiago, Luís. Hydrology of Laguna Joyuda, Puerto Rico. San Juan, P.R: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1995.

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Santiago-Rivera, Luis. Hydrology of Laguna Joyuda, Puerto Rico. San Juan, P.R: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1995.

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Santiago-Rivera, Luis. Hydrology of Laguna Joyuda, Puerto Rico. San Juan, P.R: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1995.

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Ramírez, Salvador Jiménez. Lagunas de Ruidera: El Río que pasa por mi pueblo. [Pedro Muñoz]: Perea Ediciones, 1994.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pueblo of Laguna"

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"LAGUNA PUEBLO." In Sanctuaries of Spanish New Mexico, 296–303. University of California Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520339316-036.

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Graziano, Frank. "St. Joseph Mission Church, Laguna Pueblo." In Historic Churches of New Mexico Today, 72–99. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190663476.003.0003.

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The chapter opens with a detailed presentation of the church and altar, as described by Laguna informants. Also discussed in this context are the dipping of St. Joseph images in the San José River to bring rain, and Laguna’s request for a Franciscan mission around 1700. The experience of visiting the midnight mass and native dances on Christmas Eve is then described, with supporting observations from historical sources, and is followed by similar, detailed exposition of the annual September 19 feast-day events. Canes of power and the loss of one of these at Laguna are also discussed. The bulk of the chapter treats parallel religions—the simultaneity but (usually) separateness of native religion and Catholicism at Laguna. The chapter concludes with presentation of the factionalism and emigration that resulted when Laguna was divided by competition between Catholics and Presbyterians. A visiting guide is included.
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Wong, Hertha D. Sweet. "Leslie Marmon Silko’s Photo-Narratives." In Picturing Identity, 59–82. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469640709.003.0003.

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This chapter explores Laguna Pueblo writer Leslie Marmon Silko’s less discussed works: the photo-texts Storyteller and Sacred Water. The chapter shows how rather than using images to illustrate or explain the text, Silko uses uncaptioned, floating images to create a “field of vision for the reading of the text,” thus emphasizing structurally a Pueblo sense of cyclical time. Pueblo identity, Silko insists, is defined by a long historical connection to place. She reveals how human relationships with land, plants, and animals link past, present, and future into a web of interdependence, highlighting her notion of an ecocentric, rather than homocentric, subjectivity.
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Graziano, Frank. "San Esteban del Rey, Acoma Pueblo." In Historic Churches of New Mexico Today, 100–122. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190663476.003.0004.

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The punitive expedition ordered by Juan de Oñate and commanded by Vicente de Zaldívar is summarized, following documents from the subsequent trials. The construction and current situation of San Esteban del Rey, including the convento and courtyard complex, is then detailed, following historical sources and interviews with gaugashti (church caretakers) and others. Of particular interest is the decline of tradition and the lack of volunteer labor for traditional church workdays. The chapter then analyzes how Catholic churches at the pueblos are often dissociated from Catholicism and reinterpreted in Indian terms. The experience of visiting the church on Christmas Eve is then discussed, including votive offerings made by Acomas to the Christ child. The chapter’s last section explores Acoma v. Laguna, a lawsuit regarding the disputed ownership of a miraculous painting of St. Joseph. The chapter concludes with a visiting guide.
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Conference papers on the topic "Pueblo of Laguna"

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E. Hunter, Lewis, and David W. Henry. "Evaluation of Airborne and Ground Geophysical Data Collected at Target N-10, Pueblo of Laguna, New Mexico." In 19th EEGS Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609-pdb.181.169.

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Hunter, Lewis E., and David W. Henry. "Evaluation of Airborne and Ground Geophysical Data Collected at Target N‐10, Pueblo of Laguna, New Mexico." In Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2006. Environment and Engineering Geophysical Society, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4133/1.2923629.

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Temes Córdovez, Rafael R., Moisés Simancas Cruz, Alicia García Amaya, and María Pilar Peñarrubia Zaragoza. "Urban form in the tourist cities of the coast of the Canary Islands. The morphologies of leisure." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.5964.

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The tourist city has been a space with few and weak reflections from the urban discipline. The developed planning, at best, has been uncritically exported from the residential city. However, in these cities, almost 12% of Spanish GDP is generated. The vast majority of Spanish coasts, especially on the Mediterranean coast and in the archipelagos, are occupied by large areas of holiday cities. Many of them were born in the first boom of Spanish tourism in the 60's. The mass tourism model, predominant in our coast, also generates a mass city. The morphology of this city does not follow the common and more consolidated patterns of the residential city. Today many of these tourist destinations begin to show of obsolescence. For this reason, the analysis of its urban form is a valuable tool in the face of its renovation project. In this work, we propose the analysis of the tourist micro-destinations of the Canarian archipelago. In order to this we will identify the main morphological patterns and characterize them from the analysis of a set of descriptive indicators related to public and private space. References Gaja, F. (ed.) (2012) DeCoastruction (Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Valencia). Pié, R. and Rosa, C. (eds.) (2013) Turismo líquido (Instituto Hábitat Turismo Territorio, UPC and UM, Barcelona). Simancas Cruz, M. R. and Hernández Martín R. (Eds.) (2015) Reinventando alojamientos turísticos. Casos de éxito y soluciones innovadoras (Cátedra de Turismo de Cajacanarias - ASAHOTEL - Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife Simancas Cruz, M. R. and García Cruz, J. I. (2015): ‘La modelización territorial de un espacio urbano-turístico de litoral: una propuesta para el plan de rehabilitación de las infraestructuras turísticas de Puerto de la Cruz (España)’, in GeoFocus, nº 15, p 105-132. Temes R. and Tuset, J., R. (eds.) (2015) Orilla marítima. Territorio litoral (General de ediciones de Arquitectura, Valencia).
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Cruz Vega, Eduardo Josue. "PALEOBIOGEOGRAPHY OF PELOMEDUSOID TURTLES AND NEW DATA FROM THE OLIGOCENE-MIOCENE SAN SEBASTIAN FORMATION IN PUERTO RICO, LAGUNITA FORMATION IN CUBA AND YANIGUA-LOS HAITISES FORMATION IN DOMINICAN REPUBLIC." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-336909.

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Reports on the topic "Pueblo of Laguna"

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McDonald, J. R., H. H. Nelson, Richard Robertson, and Russell A. Jeffries. MTADS Live Site Demonstration, Pueblo of Laguna, NM. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, August 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada637475.

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Beard, Les P., William E. Doll, and T. J. Gamey. 2002 Airborne Geophysical Survey at Pueblo of Laguna Bombing Targets, New Mexico. Revision 3. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada637445.

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Pueblo of Laguna Utility Authority Renewable Energy Feasibility Study. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/927846.

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Attachments to Pueblo of Laguna Utility Authority Renewable Energy Feasibility Study Report. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/927847.

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Hydrology of Laguna Joyuda, Puerto Rico. US Geological Survey, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/wri934135.

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