Academic literature on the topic 'San Andres'

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Journal articles on the topic "San Andres"

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Anderson, Mary S. "Reactivity of San Andres Dolomite." SPE Production Engineering 6, no. 02 (1991): 227–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/20115-pa.

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Kondo, Takumasa, Penny Gullan, and Andrea Amalia Ramos Portilla. "Report of new invasive scale insects (Hemiptera: Coccoidea), Crypticerya multicicatrices Kondo and Unruh (Monophlebidae) and Maconellicoccus hirsutus (Green) (Pseudococcidae), on the islands of San Andres and Providencia, Colombia, with an updated taxonomic key to iceryine scale insects of South America." Insecta Mundi 2012, no. 265 (2012): 1–17. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5175631.

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Kondo, Takumasa, Gullan, Penny, Portilla, Andrea Amalia Ramos (2012): Report of new invasive scale insects (Hemiptera: Coccoidea), Crypticerya multicicatrices Kondo and Unruh (Monophlebidae) and Maconellicoccus hirsutus (Green) (Pseudococcidae), on the islands of San Andres and Providencia, Colombia, with an updated taxonomic key to iceryine scale insects of South America. Insecta Mundi 2012 (265): 1-17, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5175631
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Fracasso, Michael A., and Susan D. Hovorka. "First occurrence of a phyllodont tooth plate (Osteichthyes, Platysomidae) from the Permian San Andres Formation, subsurface, Texas Panhandle." Journal of Paleontology 61, no. 2 (1987): 375–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000028535.

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A single phyllodont tooth plate was identified in core from the Permian San Andres Formation of the Palo Duro Basin, Texas Panhandle. This is the first vertebrate fossil recorded from the San Andres Formation, and extends the Permian range of phyllodont dentitions into the lower Guadalupian Stage. The life environment is inferred to have been normal marine to marginally hypersaline, based on the occurrence of the specimen near the top of a carbonate unit in a carbonate-evaporite cycle.
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Wang, F. P., F. Jerry Lucia, and Charles Kerans. "Integrated Reservoir Characterization Study of a Carbonate Ramp Reservoir: Seminole San Andres Unit, Gaines County, Texas." SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering 1, no. 02 (1998): 105–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/36515-pa.

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Abstract An integrated reservoir characterization of Seminole San Andres Unit was conducted using outcrop and subsurface data. The high-frequency cycles and rock-fabric facies identified on outcrop and cores were used to correlate wireline logs. Reservoir and simulation models of the outcrop and a two-section area of the Seminole San Andres field were constructed using rock-fabric units within high-frequency cycles (HFC's) as a geologic framework. Simulations were performed using these models to investigate critical factors affecting recovery. High-frequency cycles and rock-fabric units are the two critical scales for modeling shallow-water carbonate ramp reservoirs. Descriptions of rock-fabric facies stacked within high-frequency cycles provide the most accurate framework for constructing geologic and reservoir models because discrete petrophysical functions can be fit to rock fabrics and fluid flow can be approximated by the kh ratios among rock-fabric flow units. Permeability is calculated using rock-fabric-specific transforms between interparticle porosity and permeability. Core analysis data showed that separate-vug porosity has a very strong effect on relative permeability and capillary pressure measurements. The stratigraphic features of carbonates can be observed in stochastic realizations only when they are constrained by rock-fabric flow units. Simulation results from these realizations are similar in recovery but different in production and injection rates. Scale-up of permeability in the vertical direction was investigated in terms of the ratio of vertical permeability to horizontal permeability (kvh). This ratio decreases exponentially with the vertical grid-block size up to the average cycle size of 20 ft (6.1 m) and remains at a value of 0.06 for a grid-block size of more than 20 ft >6.1 m), which is the average thickness of high- frequency cycles. Simulation results showed that critical factors affecting recovery efficiency are stacking patterns of rock-fabric flow units, kvh ratio, and dense mudstone distribution. Introduction More than 9 billion stock-tank barrels of oil has been produced from shallow-water ramp carbonates of the San Andres Formation, West Texas and New Mexico. Because reservoirs in this play are highly heterogeneous and stratified, waterflood recovery averages only 30 percent, and more oil can be recovered if reservoir characterization is done along with infill drilling and CO2 flooding programs. Major issues in characterizing carbonate reservoirs are geologic framework, interwell heterogeneity including rock-fabric facies and permeability structure, scale-up of petrophysical properties, and factors affecting recovery efficiency. Because well spacings in most San Andres fields in West Texas and New Mexico are greater than 600 ft >200 m), outcrops on the Algerita Escarpment in the Guadalupe Mountains, Texas and New Mexico, provide an opportunity to define geologic framework, to quantify interwell heterogeneity, and to develop methods for scale-up of petrophysical properties. Applying the results of outcrop investigations to subsurface reservoirs leads to the development of new methods and techniques for constructing 3-D reservoir and flow models for simulating fluid flow and forecasting performance. The Seminole San Andres Unit (SSAU) lies on the northeastern margin of Central Basin Platform (Fig. 1) immediately south of the San Simon Channel. It covers approximately 23 mi2 and contains more than 600 wells. The field, discovered in 1936, is a solution-gas-drive reservoir with a small initial gas cap and has an estimated original oil in place of 1,100 MMSTB. Production comes from the Upper San Andres Formation and the upper part of the Lower San Andres Formation. The crude is 35 API and has an initial formation volume factor (FVF) of 1.39 and a solution-gas ratio of 684 SCF/STB.
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Flórez, Silvia. "A Study of Language Attitudes in Two Creole-Speaking Islands: San Andres and Providence (Colombia)." Íkala, Revista de Lenguaje y Cultura 11, no. 1 (2006): 119–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.17533/udea.ikala.2783.

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The aim of this study was to assess the language attitudes on the islands of San Andres and Providence (Colombia) from a comparative perspective. The sociolinguistic variables studied included age, gender, ethnicity, occupation, place of residence and language knowledge. Respondents on both islands expressed similar attitudes, with a general tendency favorable to the three languages (Standard Caribbean English, Islander Creole and Colombian Spanish) and to multilingualism.
 Received: 01-03-06 / Accepté: 17-08-06
 How to reference this article:
 Flórez, S. (2006). A Study of Language Attitudes in Two Creole-Speaking Islands: San Andres and Providence (Colombia). Íkala. 11(1), pp. 119 – 147
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Stiles, L. H., and J. B. Magruder. "Reservoir Management in the Means San Andres Unit." Journal of Petroleum Technology 44, no. 04 (1992): 469–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/20751-pa.

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Lentz, Mark W. "Black Belizeans and Fugitive Mayas: Interracial Encounters on the Edge of Empire, 1750–1803." Americas 70, no. 04 (2014): 645–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000316150000359x.

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In 1796, the commander of die Guatemalan presidio of Peten, Jose de Galvez, together with its leading prelate and the caciques of the nearby pueblos of San Andres and San Jose, registered a formal complaint: an increasing number of runaway black slaves from Belize taking refuge there had been marrying Maya women in their villages. The officials objected to these unions, stating that they did not want “their blood mixed with these newly Christian blacks” and alleged that the asylum seekers took Maya brides in thinly disguised attempts to exploit native female labor. The cacique of San Andres, don Raimundo Chata, backed by the leading civil and ecclesiastical authorities in a rare moment of unity, advocated the removal of the escaped slaves to a site set aside for blacks on the other side of Lake Peten (see map in Figure 1). The result of this proposed policy of segregation was the creation of a “new pueblo for blacks converted to the faith.”
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Lentz, Mark W. "Black Belizeans and Fugitive Mayas: Interracial Encounters on the Edge of Empire, 1750–1803." Americas 70, no. 4 (2014): 645–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tam.2014.0047.

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In 1796, the commander of die Guatemalan presidio of Peten, Jose de Galvez, together with its leading prelate and the caciques of the nearby pueblos of San Andres and San Jose, registered a formal complaint: an increasing number of runaway black slaves from Belize taking refuge there had been marrying Maya women in their villages. The officials objected to these unions, stating that they did not want “their blood mixed with these newly Christian blacks” and alleged that the asylum seekers took Maya brides in thinly disguised attempts to exploit native female labor. The cacique of San Andres, don Raimundo Chata, backed by the leading civil and ecclesiastical authorities in a rare moment of unity, advocated the removal of the escaped slaves to a site set aside for blacks on the other side of Lake Peten (see map in Figure 1). The result of this proposed policy of segregation was the creation of a “new pueblo for blacks converted to the faith.”
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Castellón-Mena, Naida Del Carmen, Ricardo Sarmiento-Devia, and Patricia Romero-Murillo. "Temporal variability of plastic litter in two sand beaches of San Andres Island, Colombian Caribbean." Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research 52, no. 5 (2024): 793–804. http://dx.doi.org/10.3856/vol52-issue5-fulltext-3212.

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The majority of marine plastic waste is anthropogenic. Recently, several reports have documented negative impacts on tourist beaches in the Caribbean, especially on the fauna associated with marine coastal ecosystems. This study analyzes the characteristics and seasonal variation of plastic waste considering the most common sizes on two beaches (Spratt Bight and Los Charquitos) of San Andres Island in 2021. Nine hundred twenty-six plastic items were collected from three perpendicular transects established in three beach strips. The largest number of plastic debris (416 items) was found in the dry season (March), followed by the transition (August, 280 items) and rainy season (November, 230 items). Regarding relative abundance, microplastics are the most predominant size class, while fragments are the most common form of plastic debris on San Andres Island beaches.
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Valencia, Inge Helena. "Conflictos interétnicos en el Caribe Insular Colombiano." REVISTA CONTROVERSIA, no. 205 (October 23, 2015): 173–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.54118/controver.vi205.395.

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En el archipiélago de San Andrés, Providencia y Santa Catalina, ubicado en el corazón del Caribe occidental, se encuentran, en un pequeño territorio insular de cincuenta kilómetros cuadrados, el mundo anglófono con el hispanófono, y el católico con el protestante. El multiculturalismo etnizado propuesto por la Constitución Política de 1991 en Colombia permitió que la población nativa del archipiélago de San Andrés, Providencia y Santa Catalina, la isleña-raizal, recibiera el reconocimiento jurídico como grupo étnico. Esto generó que dicho lugar se rigiera por normas especiales respecto al control de la migración y la economía, además de significar un avance alrededor del otorgamiento de derechos para esta población, hecho que profundizó el conflicto existente entre los pobladores raizales nativos y aquellos emigrados provenientes del Caribe continental colombiano. El presente artículo pretende dar a conocer cómo la implementación de políticas multiculturalistas ha fracturado el proceso de convivencia histórico entre ambas poblaciones.Palabras Clave: Multiculturalismo, Etnicidad, Conflicto social, Relaciones interétnicas, Caribe insular colombiano, Isleños-raizales, Pañas-continentales, Archipiélago de San Andrés, Providencia y Santa Catalina. ABSTRACTINTER-ETHNIC CONFLICTS IN THE COLOMBIAN INSULAR CARIBBEAN In the San Andres, Providencia and Santa Catalina Archipelago, located at the heart of the western Caribbean, in a small, 50 square kilometer insular territory, the Anglophone world meets the Spanish speaking, and the Catholic world meets the Protestant. The ethnicized multiculturalism proposed by the Political Constitution of 1991in Colombia allowed the native population of San Andres, Providencia and Santa Catalina, the Raizal-islander, to be legally recognized as an ethnic group. As a result, this place started to be governed by special norms regarding the migration and economy control, something which deepened the existing conflict between local Raizals and those from the Colombian Continental Caribbean. This article sets out to disclose how implementing multiculturalist polices have disrupted the historical process of coexistence between both communities.Key Words: Multiculturalism, Ethnicity, Social conflict, Interethnic relations, Colombian insular Caribbean, Raizal-islanders, Continental settlers (pañas), San Andres, Providencia and Santa Catalina Archipelago.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "San Andres"

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Campero, Chloée. "De San Andrés Larrainzar à San Andres Sakamch'en de los Pobres : la transformation du discours politique Mexicain." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0021/MQ54982.pdf.

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Le, Guyader Morgane. "« God Bless San Andres » : Esclavage, double colonisation et ethnicité post-émancipation dans la Caraïbe « colombienne »." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Antilles, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022ANTI0767.

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À partir de la fin du 18ème siècle, une petite société plantationnaire de coton est établie sur l’archipel de San Andres et Old Providence, situé à l’intersection des côtes nicaraguayennes, du Sud de la Jamaïque et du Nord de la Colombie. Entre 1834 et 1851, celle-ci se démantèle au cours du processus d’émancipation sous l’autorité du pasteur baptiste Philippe Beekman Livingston, descendant du principal négrier écossais de ces îles et issu d’une famille d’esclavagistes installée sur l’île d’Old Providence et à la Jamaïque. De son projet missionnaire s’apparentant au concept baptiste jamaïcain de Free Village, naît une société insulaire afro-anglo-créole « post-émancipation » fondée sur une idéologie égalitariste et dont le déploiement s’accélère à la fin du 19ème siècle. Si l’impitoyable rivalité entre les empires coloniaux a conduit la majorité des territoires caribéens à être successivement et/ou simultanément colonisés par les Britanniques et les Espagnols (entre autres), cet archipel se confronte, à partir du début du 20ème siècle, au prolongement du paradigme colonial cette fois incarné par la Colombie. Le gouvernement central colombien initie alors une politique d’acculturation par assimilation auprès de cette communauté insulaire jugée trop « afro », trop « antillaise » et trop « protestante » pour l’identité nationale que les élites politiques cherchent à affirmer. Localement connue comme la « colombianisation », cette politique assimilationniste reste aujourd’hui synonyme du traumatisme communautaire le plus explicite. Sur l’île de San Andres, à partir des années 1950, de profonds bouleversements démographiques, économiques, territoriaux, et socio-culturels sont annonciateurs d’un point de non-retour. Ne représentant plus que 30% de la population insulaire de l’île de San Andres, la minorisation de la communauté afro-anglo-créole, devient ainsi, à partir de la seconde moitié du 20ème siècle, l’expression la plus contemporaine du phénomène de double colonisation inhérent à la condition historique et politique de l’archipel.Ce phénomène de « dépossession » représente l’un des facteurs majeurs du processus identitaire contemporain des héritiers de la société livingstonienne, institutionnellement inauguré dans les années 1990 par la revendication communautaire d’une catégorie ethnique et autochtone : la catégorie raizal. Au-delà des approches inter-ethniques et généalogiques de l’émergence de la catégorie raizal, la thèse vise à comprendre les enjeux ontologiques de ce processus identitaire post-esclavagiste et postcolonial. Elle interroge son caractère « racinaire », bâti sur la mémoire du processus d’émancipation intrinsèquement reliée à la mémoire communautaire des terres, et dont le récit de la genèse puise dans la figure profondément paradoxale du pasteur Beekman Livingston, érigé en mythe fondateur de la communauté.En dépit de l’apparente insignifiance qui lui est souvent attribuée, en quoi la raïzalité est-elle l’éminente manifestation du récit moderne d’une inquiétude résistante d’exister ? Dans quelle mesure la raïzalité constitue-t-elle une réponse singulière à l’expérience violente de la dépossession ? Pourquoi dépasse-t-elle amplement les frontières de cet archipel injustement effacé de la carte régionale et mondiale des luttes d’existence contre-hégémoniques ?<br>From the end of the 18th century, a small cotton plantation society was established on the archipelago of San Andres and Old Providence, located at the intersection of the Nicaraguan Coast, southern Jamaica and northern Colombia. Between 1834 and 1851, this settlement was dismantled during the process of emancipation under the authority of the Baptist minister Philip Beekman Livingston, descendant of the main Scottish slave trader of both islands and from a family of slavers settled on Old Providence Island and Jamaica. From his missionary project, similar to the Jamaican Baptist concept of Free Village, was born a « post-emancipation » Afro-Anglo-Creole society based on an egalitarian ideology, whose deployment accelerated at the end of the 19th century. If the ruthless rivalry between colonial empires led the majority of Caribbean territories to be successively and/or simultaneously colonized by the British and the Spanish (among others), this archipelago was confronted, from the beginning of the 20th century, with the extension of the colonial paradigm, this time incarnated by Colombia. The Colombian central government then initiated a policy of acculturation by assimilation with this island community considered too « Afro », too « West Indian » and too « Protestant » for the national identity that the political elites were then trying to assert. Locally known as « Colombianization », this assimilationist policy remains today synonymous with the most explicit community trauma. On the island of San Andres, starting in the 1950s, profound demographic, economic, territorial, and socio-cultural upheavals were the harbingers of a point of no return. Representing only 30% of the island population of San Andres, the minorization of the Afro-Anglo-Creole community became, from the second half of the 20th century, the most contemporary expression of the phenomenon of double colonization inherent to the historical and political condition of the archipelago. This phenomenon of « dispossession » represents one of the major factors of the contemporary identity process of the heirs of the Livingstonian society, institutionnaly inaugurated in the 1990s by the community claim of an ethnic and indigenous category : the Raizal category. Beyond the inter-ethnic and genealogical approaches to the emergence of the Raizal category, the thesis aims to understand the ontological stakes of this post-slavery and postcolonial identity process. It questions its « root » character, built on the memory of the emancipation process intrinsically linked to the community memory of the land, and whose genesis is narrated by the paradoxical figure of Pastor Beekman Livingston, erected as the founding myth of the community. Despite the apparent insignificance often attributed to it, in what ways is Raizality a prominent manifestation of the modern narrative of a resistance to exist ? To what extent does Raizality constitute a singular response to the violent experience of dispossession ? Why does it go far beyond the borders of this unjustly erased archipelago on the regional and global map of counter-hegemonic struggles for existence ?<br>Desde finales del siglo XVIII, se estableció una pequeña sociedad de plantación de algodón en el archipiélago de San Andrés y Old Providence, situado en la intersección de la costa nicaragüense, el sur de Jamaica y el norte de Colombia. Entre 1834 y 1851, esta última fue desmantelada durante el proceso de emancipación bajo la autoridad del pastor bautista Philip Beekman Livingston, descendiente del principal comerciante de esclavos escocés de estas islas y de una familia de esclavistas asentada en la isla de Old Providence y en Jamaica. Su proyecto misionero, similar al concepto bautista jamaicano del Free Village, dio lugar a una sociedad insular afro-inglesa-kriol "post-emancipación" basada en una ideología igualitaria, que se aceleró a finales del siglo XIX. Mientras que la despiadada rivalidad entre los imperios coloniales hizo que la mayoría de los territorios del Caribe fueran colonizados sucesiva y/o simultáneamente por británicos y españoles (entre otros), este archipiélago se enfrentó, desde principios del siglo XX, a la extensión del paradigma colonial, esta vez encarnado por Colombia. El gobierno central colombiano inició entonces una política de aculturación a través de la asimilación de esta comunidad insular, considerada demasiado "afro", demasiado "antillana" y demasiado "protestante" para la identidad nacional que las élites políticas pretendían afirmar. Conocida localmente como "colombianización", esta política de asimilación sigue siendo hoy en día sinónimo del trauma comunitario más explícito. En la isla de San Andrés, a partir de los años 50, los profundos cambios demográficos, económicos, territoriales y socioculturales anunciaron un punto de no retorno. Con sólo el 30% de la población de la isla, la minorización de la comunidad afro-anglo-kriol se convirtió, a partir de la segunda mitad del siglo XX, en la expresión más contemporánea del fenómeno de la doble colonización inherente a la condición histórica y política del archipiélago. Este fenómeno de "desposesión" representa uno de los principales factores del proceso identitario contemporáneo de los herederos de la sociedad livingstoniana, inaugurado institucionalmente en los años 90 por la reivindicación comunitaria de una categoría étnica e indígena: la categoría raizal. Más allá de las aproximaciones interétnicas y genealógicas a la emergencia de la categoría raizal, la tesis pretende comprender las apuestas ontológicas de este proceso identitario post-esclavista y post-colonial. Cuestiona su carácter de "raíz", construido sobre la memoria del proceso de emancipación intrínsecamente ligado a la memoria comunitaria de la tierra, y cuya génesis es narrada por la figura profundamente paradójica del pastor Beekman Livingston, erigido en mito fundacional de la comunidad.A pesar de la aparente insignificancia que a menudo se le atribuye, ¿de qué manera la raizalidad es la manifestación prominente de la narrativa moderna de una necesidad vital y resistente de existir ? ¿En qué medida la raizalidad constituye una respuesta singular a la experiencia violenta del despojo? ¿Por qué va más allá de las fronteras de este archipiélago injustamente borrado en el mapa regional y mundial de las luchas contrahegemónicas por la existencia?
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Hall, Anne Marie. "The clay mineralogy of the lower San Andres formation, Palo Duro Basin, Texas." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/25880.

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Montoya-Lerma, James. "Biology of visceral leishmaniasis vectors in San Andres de Sotavento focus (Cordoba, Colombia)." Thesis, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (University of London), 1996. http://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/682292/.

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Throughout its range of South and Central America, visceral leishmaniasis due to Leishmania chagasi is transmitted by Lutzomyia longipalpis. Recently, a new vector, Lutzomyia evansi, has been discovered transmitting the parasite in the Caribbean Coast of Colombia. Field studies, using both experimental and observational methodologies were employed to elucidate the main ecological and behavioural factors affecting disease transmission in the focus of San Andres de Sotavento, northern Colombia. Nine species of Lutzomyia were present and Lu. evansi constituted 90% of all sandflies caught. Flies were most abundant in April, May June and September. Trapping in and around houses showed Lu. evansi to be endophilic but with exophagic behaviour, preferring houses near to forest edge as resting places. Host preference, measured using a newly designed trap in a rotational experimental design, showed that humans were preferred over dogs or opossums (reservoirs) during the peak abundance of Lu. evansi. This was supported by catches on tethered hosts and bloodmeal analysis although location of capture of resting flies was also a significant factor. Mark-release-recapture studies showed that Lu. evansi can move up to 800m after 5 days and that freshly fed flies move a few hundred metres to resting sites. Basic life history data on Lu. evansi was obtained from laboratory rearing. This species was bred under laboratory conditions though high mortalities were seen in first instars. In adults survival was associated with different types of sugar. Flagellate parasites resembling L. chagasi were found in 3 of 5326 wild caught Lu. evansi (0.05%) however, culturing and subsequent characterization of these isolates failed. Experimental infections with L. chagasi showed that at least one strain of the parasite grew more prolifically in Lu. longipalpis than in Lu. evansi. This, together with a limited vector range compared to the Old World L. infantum is suggested to be the result of a recent parasite-vector association. Morphologically no differences were seen between Colombian, Venezuelan and Costa Rican Lu. evansi populations. Some variation was seen however in one enzyme (6GPDH) of 18 isozymes tested. Mitochondrial DNA variation was seen between Central and South American populations.
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Lepage, Andrea. "Arts of the Franciscan Colegio De San Andres in Quito : a process of cultural reformation." View abstract/electronic edition; access limited to Brown University users, 2008. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3319103.

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Schwittay, Anke Fleur. "Between San Andres and Buenos Aires, memory, practice and articulation of an indigenous land struggle in Northwestern Argentina." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/mq43402.pdf.

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Diaz, Garcia Gabriela. "Determinación de los daños económicos por inundación en zonas urbanas y agricolas, en la localidad de San Andres Cuexcontitlan, municipio de Toluca, Estado de México." Tesis de Licenciatura, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México, 2015. http://148.215.1.179/handle/20.500.11799/24427.

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Contiene mapas, tablas, esquemas y fotografías del lugar.<br>El presente trabajo pretende brindar una solución a la problemática mediante la cuantificación de daños que se presenta en la localidad de San Andrés Cuexcontitlán referente al fenómeno de inundación analizando los diferentes factores que influyen en la crecida de la inundación basándose en la aplicación de la metodología del Dr. Baro et al. 2012 para cuantificar los daños económicos tangibles directos e indirectos provocados por inundaciones en zonas habitacionales y agrícolas. Como primera fase se hizo la recopilación de información bibliográfica del marco conceptual, como segunda fase con el objeto de lograr recomendaciones que permitan valorar la problemática de inundación en la localidad se realizó la recopilación del marco legal a nivel federal, estatal y municipal que se aplica a la zona de estudio. En la tercera fase se realizó la caracterización físico-natural y socioeconómica de la Localidad de San Andrés Cuexcontitlán. La cuarta fase detalla en cada área inundable cual sea el caso se aplicó una ecuación de la familia de curvas de daños para cada Ageb´s y según su tipo de marginación. Finalmente, se formularon las conclusiones y recomendaciones con atención al objetivo principal mencionado.
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Ticona, Quispe Miguel. "La conservacion preventiva y curativa de los documentos publicos oficiales en la Biblioteca Central de la Universidad Mayor de San Andres." Universidad Mayor de San Andrés. Programa Cybertesis BOLIVIA, 2003. http://www.cybertesis.umsa.bo:8080/umsa/2007/ticona_qm/html/index-frames.html.

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El presente trabajo de investigación titulado “CONSERVACIÓN PREVENTIVA Y CURATIVA DE LOS DOCUMENTOS PÚBLICOS OFICIALES EN LA BIBLIOTECA CENTRAL DE LA UNIVERSIDAD MAYOR DE SAN ANDRES”, es el resultado del interés de conocer las estrategias de conservación que se aplican en la Biblioteca el cual incluye el ordenamiento y el estado de las colecciones, el control del medio ambiente, la higiene y el manejo y uso de los documentos por los usuarios universitarios, teniendo en cuenta su conservación, su facilidad de acceso, los sistemas de seguridad, el edificio, el trabajo de reparación y restauración empírica que se realiza; todo ello, permite la obtención de nuevos conocimientos sistematizados derivados de la metodología y las técnicas propuestas en el presente estudio y determinar el grado de eficiencia en el servicio de Circulación y Préstamo de libros y documentos en la Biblioteca Central. La conservación que debe recibir este tipo de colección y las demás colecciones del fondo bibliográfico general, no solamente es tarea de los bibliotecarios que trabajan en esta unidad de información, sino también de las autoridades superiores de la UMSA y del Estado Boliviano por que constituyen patrimonio bibliográfico y documental de la nación; por lo tanto, recursos informativos de gran valor potencial para la investigación científica, técnica y cultural. La existencia de leyes y normas jurídicas como medidas de seguridad, preservación y el buen orden de las documentaciones públicas oficiales a lo largo de la historia de la República, tanto activas con pasivas, han proporcionado resultados limitados; originando la destrucción paulatina de acervos documentales.
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Ayet, San Andres Samuel [Verfasser]. "Developments for multiple-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometers and their application to high-resolution accurate mass measurements of short-lived exotic nuclei / Samuel Ayet San Andres." Gießen : Universitätsbibliothek, 2018. http://d-nb.info/1171704631/34.

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Núñez, Riaño Miguel Ángel. "Political and judicial strategies for the care of marine and coastal ecosystems. The case of Creole People in San Andrés Island, Colombia." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Antikens kultur och samhällsliv, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-317791.

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This thesis illustrates how native populations exert a crucial ecological role through deliberate strategies in order to conserve and preserve marine and coastal ecosystems. The investigation identifies political and judicial practices of the Creole people that have contributed to care of ecosystems placed in the Caribbean Archipelago of San Andrés. To this regard, this study considers how the agency of Creole people has influenced the environmental structuring of islands and seas during 20th and 21st centuries. The result is an improved comprehension, through critical analysis of cultural and judicial discourses, of the current ecological state of the Archipelago.
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Books on the topic "San Andres"

1

Urkullu Pollo, Ma. Teresa de., ed. Biañezko San Andres. Diputación Foral de Vizcaya, Departamento de Cultura, 1997.

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Guinea, Miguel Angel García. Monasterio de San Andres de Arroyo. Excma. Diputación Provincial de Palencia, 1991.

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Asbun, Eliana. Teses de Grado: Produccion Intelectual en la Universidad Mayor de San Andres. Rectorado Universidad, 1990.

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Fracasso, Michael A. Cyclicity in the Middle Permian San Andres Formation, Palo Duro Basin, Texas Panhandle. Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, 1986.

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G, Bebout Don, Harris Paul M. 1949-, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists. Permian Basin Section., University of Texas at Austin. Bureau of Economic Geology., and San Andres/Grayburg Research Conference and Field Trip (1986 : Midland, Tex.), eds. Geologic and engineering approaches in evaluation of San Andres/Grayburg hydrocarbon reservoirs--Permian Basin. Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, 1990.

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Dutton, Alan R. Hydrogeology and hydrochemical facies of the San Andres Formation in eastern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle. Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, 1986.

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Guinea, Miguel Angel García. Monasterio de San Andres de Arroyo. Becerril del Carpio: Iglesia de San Vicente, Iglesia de Santa Maria. Vallespinoso de Aguilar : iglesia de Santa Cecilia. Dpto. de Culrura, Diputación Provincial de Palencia, 1992.

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Major, R. P. Delineation of unrecovered mobile oil in a mature dolomite reservoir: East Penwell San Andres Unit, university lands, West Texas. Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, 1990.

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A, Garber Raymond, Keller David R, and Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Permian Basin Section., eds. Field guide to the Paleozoic section of the San Andres Mountains: 1994 annual field trip guidebook, Permian Basin Section-SEPM. Permian Basin Section-SEPM, 1994.

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Simposio de Literatura Boliviana (4th 1997 La Paz, Bolivia). Rastros de la crítica literaria boliviana: Memorias del IV Simposio de Literatura Boliviana, Carrera de Literatura, Universidad Mayor de San Andres. Edited by Mariaca Guillermo. Empresa Editoria Proins, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "San Andres"

1

Moya-Chaves, Deyanira S. "Linguistic Dispossession in Colombia: The Case of San Andres Island." In Land, Cultural Dispossession, and Resistance. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003483472-10.

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Postigo, Sergio, and María Fernanda Tamborini. "Entrepreneurship Education in Argentina: The Case of the San Andres University." In Business Education and Emerging Market Economies. Springer US, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-8072-9_17.

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Chuber, Stewart, and Walter C. Pusey. "Productive Permian Carbonate Cycles, San Andres Formation, Reeves Field, West Texas." In Casebooks in Earth Sciences. Springer New York, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-5040-1_19.

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Chaback, Joseph J., and Edward A. Turek. "Phase Behavior of Mixtures of San Andres Formation Oils with Acid Gases." In Equations of State. American Chemical Society, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bk-1986-0300.ch020.

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del Pilar Ramírez-Salazar, María, Rafael Ignacio Pérez-Uribe, Carlos Salcedo-Pérez, and Julieth Paola Juffington-Smith. "RISE Model: Its Application on Diving Enterprises Located in the San Andres Archipelago (Colombia)." In Entrepreneurship and Family Business Vitality. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15526-1_16.

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Craig, Dexter H. "Caves and Other Features of Permian Karst in San Andres Dolomite, Yates Field Reservoir, West Texas." In Paleokarst. Springer New York, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-3748-8_17.

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Mancera Pineda, José Ernesto, Brigitte Gavio, Adriana Santos-Martínez, Gustavo Arencibia Carballo, and Julián Prato. "Ciguatera in the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve: Projecting the Approach on HABs to Assess and Mitigate Their Impacts on Public Health, Fisheries and Tourism." In Disaster Risk Reduction. Springer Nature Singapore, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-97-6663-5_6.

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AbstractMicroalgae constitute the basis of marine food webs. However, the massive growth of some species and the toxicity of others may represent a serious threat to human health, fisheries, mariculture, and tourism. Evidence shows that global warming, climate change, nutrients, and sewage discharge favor microalgal blooms, which are becoming more frequent, intense, and lasting. In the Caribbean Sea, ciguatera poisoning, one of the syndromes caused by toxic dinoflagellates, has increased its incidence in the past three decades. Despite the potential risks, there is no management plan for this and other harmful algal blooms (HABs) in San Andres island, Colombia. We analyze the presence of toxic dinoflagellates along with the incidence of ciguatera in the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve (SBR). Considering that effective climate change adaptation and mitigation decisions are based on relationships between science and society, involving a wide variety of analytical methods to evaluate associated risks and benefits, we propose to evaluate the potential effects of HABs, focusing on the economic value of their impacts on fishing and tourism. We propose an early warning system conceptual model, based on a monitoring program, as a strategy to contribute to the governance and the management effectiveness of the different institutions of the SBR.
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Bryant, William A. "San Andreas Fault." In Encyclopedia of Natural Hazards. Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-4399-4_307.

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Prothero, Donald R. "The San Andreas Fault System." In California's Amazing Geology, 2nd ed. CRC Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003301837-11.

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Anonymous. "San Bernardino to Valencia: San Gabriel Mountains-San Andreas fault-Mojave Desert." In The San Andreas Transform Belt: Long Beach to San Francisco, California July 20–29, 1989. American Geophysical Union, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/ft309p0075.

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Conference papers on the topic "San Andres"

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Brelsford, Clay, Craig A. Kuiper, and Carl Rounding. "Well Casing Cathodic Protection Evaluation Program in the Spraberry (Trend Area) Field." In CORROSION 2003. NACE International, 2003. https://doi.org/10.5006/c2003-03201.

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Abstract A large independent oil and gas producer is currently undertaking a study of well casing failures in the Spraberry (Trend Area) Field located primarily in Midland County, Texas. Failure trend studies indicate a high incidence of external casing failures in the San Andres formation, a known saltwater-bearing and saltwater disposal formation. Several well casings were selected as candidates for down hole inspection logs to determine if cathodic protection could be a viable solution to the external corrosion problem. "Test" cathodic protection systems were installed and down hole tools were utilized both prior to and after energizing the systems to assess the external condition of the well casing. Anodic/cathodic areas and axial current flow patterns identified on the logs were correlated to previously conducted cement bond logs, casing inspection logs and gamma ray/neutron logs as well as areas of externally coated casing. Based on logging results and economic evaluation, implementation of a cathodic protection pilot project commenced on November 27, 2001.
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Wu, Yulin. "Simple Laboratory Screening Tests for Scale Inhibitors and Discussion of Field Results." In CORROSION 1992. NACE International, 1992. https://doi.org/10.5006/c1992-92021.

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Abstract This paper describes laboratory screening test methods for selecting calcium sulfate scale inhibitors for use in adsorption-squeeze and continuous injection applications, and discusses field application results of the selected inhibitor. Sixteen scale inhibitors obtained from five suppliers were screen-tested to evaluate their effectiveness for the applications. The major types of active ingredients in these inhibitors are acrylic acid polymer, phosphonate and phosphate ester. The motivation for developing the test methods was to solve the severe calcium sulfate scale (gypsum) problems occurring in the East Vacuum Grayburg-San Andres Unit (EVGSAU), New Mexico. The test method focused on developing a simple and effective method in the laboratory to select the best qualified inhibitor in a short period of time for the field adsorption-squeeze application, which is considered to be the most effective and economical method for solving this field scale problem. A crushed field core with specified particle size was used for the inhibitor adsorption and desorption study to establish the squeeze life. A modified precipitation method was developed to enhance the determination of inhibitor effectiveness. The best qualified adsorption-squeeze scale inhibitor selected from the laboratory screen-test was then applied in 27 wells of the EVGSAU. Other scale inhibitors were also tested to compare with the qualified inhibitor. The field test results confirm that the laboratory selected adsorption-squeeze inhibitor out-performed other inhibitors. The average squeeze life of the selected inhibitor at EVGSAU was 10.4 months, and the average squeeze life of others was 5.8 months. The selected inhibitor is a phosphonate based compound. The calcium sulfate scale problems were significantly reduced.
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Lucia, F. Jerry. "San Andres and Grayburg Imbibition Reservoirs." In SPE Permian Basin Oil and Gas Recovery Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/59691-ms.

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Stiles, L. H., and J. B. Magruder. "Reservoir Management in the Means San Andres Unit." In SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/20751-ms.

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Martinez, A. D., P. D. Ellis, and D. D. DeAragao. "Application of Hydraulic Fracturing Technologies, San Andres Formation, New Mexico." In Permian Basin Oil and Gas Recovery Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/27691-ms.

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White, William D., and T. E. Kelly. "The San Andres-Glorieta aquifer in west-central New Mexico." In 40th Annual Fall Field Conference. New Mexico Geological Society, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/ffc-40.331.

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Prieditis, John, and G. S. Paulett. "CO2-Foam Mobility Tests at Reservoir Conditions in San Andres Cores." In SPE/DOE Enhanced Oil Recovery Symposium. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/24178-ms.

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Erhardt, Andrea, and Vanessa Fichtner. "DIFFERING IMPACTS OF METEORIC DIAGENESIS IN THE PERMIAN SAN ANDRES FORMATION." In GSA 2020 Connects Online. Geological Society of America, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2020am-352534.

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Jamali, Ali, Amin Ettehadtavakkol, Marshall Watson, and Omar Zeinuddin. "Depressurizing Permian Basin San Andres Residual Oil Zones: A Feasibility Study." In SPE Liquids-Rich Basins Conference - North America. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/187482-ms.

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Serna, A., J. M. Amato, and G. Gehrels. "Proterozoic deformation of the San Andres Mountains, south-central New Mexico." In 2007 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting. New Mexico Geological Society, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/sm-2006.979.

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Reports on the topic "San Andres"

1

Wallace, Matthew, Robin Petrusak, and Vello Kuuskraa. Four County Permian Basin San Andres Residual Oil Zone (ROZ) Database. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1661590.

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Rutledge, J. T., T. D. Fairbanks, L. S. House, and M. B. Murphy. Microseismic monitoring as a tool for mapping fractures in the San Andres dolomite. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10123265.

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Rawling, Geoffrey C. Geology and hydrologic setting of selected springs on the San Andres National Wildlife Refuge. New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.58799/ofr-493.

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Berry, Roger, Jonathan Damp, Jeanne Dye, et al. Final Environmental Assessment for San Andres Water Line, Holloman Air Force Base, Otero County, New Mexico. Defense Technical Information Center, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada630815.

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Robinson, William C., Robert C. Trentham, Kevin Widner, and Richard Wienbrandt. An Integrated Study of the Grayburg/San Andres Reservoir, Foster and South Cowden Fields, Ector County, Texas. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/7917.

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Reeves, J. J., R. C. Trentham, R. Weinbrandt, and W. Flanders. An integrated study of the Grayburg/San Andres reservoir, Foster and South Cowden Fields, Ector County, Texas. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/212456.

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Weinbrandt, R., R. C. Trentham, and W. Robertson. An Integrated Study of the Grayburg/San Andres Reservoir, Foster and South Cowden Fields, Ector County, Texas. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/2211.

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Weinbrandt, Richard, Robert C. Trentham, and William Robinson. An Integrated Study of the Grayburg/San Andres Reservoir, Foster and South Cowden Fields, Ector County Texas. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/2212.

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Wallace, Matthew, Robin Petrusak, and Vello Kuuskraa. An Eight-County Appraisal of the San Andres Residual Oil Zone (ROZ) 'Fairway' of the Permian Basin. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1661587.

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Wallace, Matthew, Robin Petrusak, and Vello Kuuskraa. A Four-County Appraisal of the San Andres Residual Oil Zone (ROZ) 'Fairway' of the Permian Basin. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1661589.

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