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Journal articles on the topic 'Ramsgate'

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1

Stamp, Gavin. "Ramsgate Cemetery Chapel." Architectural History 41 (1998): 273. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1568660.

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2

Appleby, John H. "Joshua Reynolds's Portrait of John Barker, Chairman of Ramsgate Harbour." Metropolitan Museum Journal 41 (January 2006): 133–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/met.41.20320665.

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3

Woolman, Anna. "Reaching non-specialist audiences and engaging them with science at an affordable seaside campsite." Research for All 4, no. 1 (February 1, 2020): 6–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.18546/rfa.04.1.02.

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In 2018, the British Science Association piloted a project that involved partnering with an activity provider and campsite in Ramsgate to determine whether affordable, accessible campsites near the seaside would be an effective location to reach audiences unengaged with science and engage them with food sustainability and eating insects. Results suggested that mostly unengaged audiences were present and that their attitude towards science improved after taking part. Future work should trial different activities and campsite partnerships across the UK, on a larger scale and at busier times of year.
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4

Doran, Mark. "Deal Summer Music Festival: David Matthews UK and World Premières." Tempo 57, no. 223 (January 2003): 83–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298203240080.

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Nestling on the Kent coast between Ramsgate and Dover, the historic town of Deal is the distinctly pleasant home of a Summer Music Festival which in its 21 seasons has come to incorporate a fair amount of important contemporary music alongside more traditional offerings. This year's programme featured a welcome performance of the Seventh Piano Sonata (1956) by Harold Truscott (1914–92), marking the tenth anniversary of the death of this composer (resident in Deal from 1954); the world première of the choral work Town and Country (2002) by the Festival's new President, Kent-born Sir Richard Rodney Bennett (b.1936); and two compositions (and one arrangement) by David Matthews (b.1943), part-time Deal resident and the Festival's Artistic Director since 1989.
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5

Joseph, C., G. Hamilton, M. O'Connors, S. Nicholas, R. Marshall, R. Stanwell-Smith, R. Sims, et al. "Cryptosporidiosis in the Isle of Thanet; an outbreak associated with local drinking water." Epidemiology and Infection 107, no. 3 (December 1991): 509–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0950268800049207.

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SUMMARYAn outbreak of cryptosporidiosis occurred in the Isle of Thanet during December 1990 and January 1991. A total of 47 cases ranging in age from 2 months to 85 years were identified in residents from the Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate areas, with dates of onset of illness from 3 December to 14 January. A case-control study demonstrated a strong statistical association between illness and the consumption of unboiled tap water from a particular source, with evidence of a dose–response relationship. Although no cryptosporidial oocysts were identified in samples of untreated or treated water taken during the investigation, the results were consistent with the view that the source of infection was treated river water which was used to supplement borehole water.
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6

Midmer, F. N., and M. J. Brown. "The Approach to Sewage Treatment for the Coastal Towns of the Isle of Thanet, England." Water Science and Technology 21, no. 1 (January 1, 1989): 19–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.1989.0003.

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The Isle of Thanet in South East England is an important holiday area with a total summer population of 180,000 in the four seaside towns of Birchington, Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate. Sewage is discharged to sea through short sea outfalls causing pollution of local beaches. The feasibility study into possible solutions showed that marine treatment is generally the most cost effective solution for coastal towns and that local solutions were cheaper than area solutions due to the significant impact of transfer costs. The marine treatment schemes now being built provide preliminary treatment of fine screening and grit removal in enclosed headworks with high velocity, plug flow, operation of the outfalls. Special structures have been provided to protect the tapering manifold multi-port diffusers and to provide access to the outfalls. Installation of the outfalls was successfully achieved from difficult clifftop sites.
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7

Newman, T. G., R. G. Allen, and R. N. Mortimore. "Geological modelling, the observational method and management of ground hazards: Ramsgate Harbour Approach Road Tunnel." Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology 36, no. 1 (February 2003): 35–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/1470-9236/01041.

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8

Jackson, Neil. "Clarity or Camouflage? The Development of Constructional Polychromy in the 1850s and Early 1860s." Architectural History 47 (2004): 201–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00001751.

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My earlier article inArchitectural History43, ‘Christ Church, Streatham, and the Rise of Constructional Polychromy’, showed that James Wild’s church of 1840–42 was, in its use of coloured masonry, far ahead of its time (Fig. 1). It preceded, by about a decade, the High Victorian fashion for constructional polychromy usually associated with John Ruskin’s pronouncements on colour, contained inThe Stones of Venice(1851 and 1853) and William Butterfield’s contemporaneous church of All Saints, Margaret Street (1849–59). The article argued that the interest in polychromy had, in fact, started much earlier in the century. The use of colour in ancient Greek architecture had been investigated and debated by the Institute of British Architects, under the guidance of Thomas Leverton Donaldson, in the 1830s while, in the 1840s, Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin gave constructional polychromy a moral quality — an expression of honesty in construction — at the Grange and St Augustine’s Church, at Ramsgate (1845–50).
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9

Burdekin, Michael. "Sir Bernard Crossland CBE. 20 October 1923—17 January 2011." Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 66 (November 28, 2018): 123–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2018.0032.

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Bernard Crossland was one of the UK's most eminent engineers and an inspirational figure in his profession. He was a leading expert in materials and structural integrity, applied particularly to thick-walled pressure vessels and explosive welding. After an initial period with Rolls-Royce, his early academic career was at the University of Bristol where he developed his research into strength of thick cylinders under high pressure. He was appointed Professor of Mechanical Engineering and head of that department at Queen's University Belfast in 1959 at the age of 35, and he proceeded to transform both teaching and research in that department over the next 23 years. He continued his research into behaviour of thick-walled pressure vessels and also started research into explosive welding and forming in Belfast. After his retirement from QUB he was appointed as an expert adviser or expert witness in a number of high-profile disaster inquiries, including the King's Cross Underground fire in 1987, the Bilsthorpe Colliery roof collapse in 1993 and the Ramsgate Ferry walkway collapse in 1994. He took a major part in professional affairs in engineering and was president of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1986/87. He was knighted in 1990 for Services to Education and Industry in Northern Ireland and was presented with the Sustained Achievement Award of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 2010.
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10

Webber, J. Beau W. "Some Applications of a Field Programmable Gate Array Based Time-Domain Spectrometer for NMR Relaxation and NMR Cryoporometry." Applied Sciences 10, no. 8 (April 15, 2020): 2714. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app10082714.

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NMR Relaxation (NMRR) is an extremely useful quantitative technique for material science, particularly for studying polymers and porous materials. NMR Cryoporometry (NMRC) is a powerful technique for the measurement of pore-size distributions and total porosities. This paper discusses the use, capabilities and application of a newly available compact NMR time-domain relaxation spectrometer, the Lab-Tools Mk3 NMR Relaxometer & Cryoporometer [Lab-Tools (nano-science), Ramsgate, Kent, UK (2019)]. Being Field Programmable Gate Array based means that it is unusually compact, which makes it particularly suitable for the lab bench-top, in the field and also mobile use. Its use with a variable-temperature NMR probe such as the Lab-Tools Peltier thermo-electrically cooled variable-temperature (V-T) probe is also discussed. This enables the NMRC measurement of pore-size distributions in porous materials, from sub-nano- to over 1 micron sized pores. These techniques are suitable for a wide range of porous materials and also polymers. This instrument comes with a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for control, which also enables both online and offline analysis of the measured data. This makes it is easy to use for material science studies both in the field and in university, research institute, company and even school laboratories. The Peltier cooling gives the precision temperature control and smoothness needed by NMR Cryoporometry, particularly near the probe liquid bulk melting point. Results from example NMR Relaxation and NMR Cryoporometric measurements are given.
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11

Van Noten, Koen, Thomas Lecocq, Christophe Sira, Klaus-G. Hinzen, and Thierry Camelbeeck. "Path and site effects deduced from merged transfrontier internet macroseismic data of two recent <i>M</i>4 earthquakes in northwest Europe using a grid cell approach." Solid Earth 8, no. 2 (April 7, 2017): 453–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/se-8-453-2017.

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Abstract. The online collection of earthquake reports in Europe is strongly fragmented across numerous seismological agencies. This paper demonstrates how collecting and merging online institutional macroseismic data strongly improves the density of observations and the quality of intensity shaking maps. Instead of using ZIP code Community Internet Intensity Maps, we geocode individual response addresses for location improvement, assign intensities to grouped answers within 100 km2 grid cells, and generate intensity attenuation relations from the grid cell intensities. Grid cell intensity maps are less subjective and illustrate a more homogeneous intensity distribution than communal ZIP code intensity maps. Using grid cells for ground motion analysis offers an advanced method for exchanging transfrontier equal-area intensity data without sharing any personal information. The applicability of the method is demonstrated on the felt responses of two clearly felt earthquakes: the 8 September 2011 ML 4.3 (Mw 3.7) Goch (Germany) and the 22 May 2015 ML 4.2 (Mw 3.7) Ramsgate (UK) earthquakes. Both events resulted in a non-circular distribution of intensities which is not explained by geometrical amplitude attenuation alone but illustrates an important low-pass filtering due to the sedimentary cover above the Anglo-Brabant Massif and in the Lower Rhine Graben. Our study illustrates the effect of increasing bedrock depth on intensity attenuation and the importance of the WNW–ESE Caledonian structural axis of the Anglo-Brabant Massif for seismic wave propagation. Seismic waves are less attenuated – high Q – along the strike of a tectonic structure but are more strongly attenuated – low Q – perpendicular to this structure, particularly when they cross rheologically different seismotectonic units separated by crustal-rooted faults.
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12

Webber, John Beausire Wyatt, and Pavel Demin. "Digitally Based Precision Time-Domain Spectrometer for NMR Relaxation and NMR Cryoporometry." Micro 3, no. 2 (April 3, 2023): 404–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/micro3020028.

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NMR Relaxation (NMRR) is an extremely useful quantitative technique for material science, particularly for studying polymers and porous materials. NMR Cryoporometry (NMRC) is a powerful technique for the measurement of pore-size distributions and total porosities. This paper discusses the use, capabilities and application of a newly developed compact NMR time-domain relaxation spectrometer suitable for studying both solid and liquid samples (Mk3 NMR Relaxation spectrometer & Cryoporometer, Lab-Tools (nano-science), Ramsgate, Kent, UK. (2019)). This highly compact precision NMR Spectrometer is based on a Field Programmable Gate array (FPGA) module and custom surface mount low-noise NMR receiver and NMR linear transmitter. A high proportion of the RF circuitry is in a digital form, implemented as firmware in the FPGA, which gives the instrument an excellent long-term stability. It also includes an on-chip Linux computer. The FPGA module is credit-card sized, and both the NMR receiver and NMR transmitter are even smaller. The software, including the top-level NMR pulse sequence definitions, are written in an array processing language, Apl. The spectrometer comes complete with a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for control and on- and offline curve fitting and data analysis. The recent development of the Lab-Tools Peltier thermo-electrically cooled NMR variable-temperature (V-T) probe that cools the sample below −60 °C is also discussed. This Peltier cooling gives the precision temperature control and smoothness needed by NMR Cryoporometry (10 mK near the probe liquid bulk melting point). This enables the NMRC measurement of pore-size distributions in porous materials, for the unusually wide pore-size range of sub-nano to over 1 micron-sized pores. The NMR Spectrometer’s unusually small size, ability to measure solids, low noise and high performance make it particularly suitable for material science studies both in the field and in university, research institute, company and even school laboratories. A human portable version now exists. Use of the controlling GUI is described, and results from example NMR Relaxation and NMR Cryoporometric measurements are given.
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13

"RAMSGATE: Sandstone hallucinations." Geology Today 13, no. 5 (September 1997): 173–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2451.1997.d01-570.x.

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14

"Live export inspections tightened at Ramsgate." Veterinary Record 171, no. 25 (December 21, 2012): 635.2–635. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/vr.e8570.

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15

"Tight sites to clean seaside at Ramsgate." International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences & Geomechanics Abstracts 32, no. 5 (July 1995): A242. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0148-9062(95)93452-u.

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16

"Denso coverwrap protection system for Port Ramsgate terminal." Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials 37, no. 5 (May 1990): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb060863.

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17

Fletcher, Pamela. "‘Unmistakeably visible’: Queen Victoria in Frith‘s <i>The Marriage of the Prince of Wales</i>." Victoria’s Self-Fashioning: Curating the Royal Image for Dynasty, Nation, and Empire 2022, no. 33 (February 9, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.16995/ntn.4729.

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When William Powell Frith was asked to paint the marriage of Prince Albert and Princess Alexandra in 1863, it was impressed upon him that the ‘great object with the Queen herself’ was that she be ‘unmistakeably visible’ in the composition. In this article, I offer a close reading of the resulting painting and its reception, arguing that Victoria’s decision to commission the picture from Frith lent a very particular set of contexts to the form and content of her visibility. In 1863 Frith was at the height of his fame for his modern-life subjects, Ramsgate Sands, Derby Day, and The Railway Station. By commissioning the ‘successor’ to this series, Queen Victoria placed herself quite deliberately into the very visible context of ‘modern life’, both in the painting and at the Academy. In Frith’s ingenious composition, Victoria sits high above the crowd, clearly visible to the viewers of the picture, presiding over her citizenry and the continuation of her dynasty, even if within the space of the picture itself only the loving few can see her. Represented as both aloof from and fully present within the contemporary moment, Queen Victoria is unmistakeably visible both as the vigilant monarch and the secluded widow.
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