Academic literature on the topic 'Tourbe blonde'

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Journal articles on the topic "Tourbe blonde"

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Du Mez, Kristin Kobes. "The Beauty of the Lilies: Femininity, Innocence, and the Sweet Gospel of Uldine Utley." Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation 15, no. 2 (2005): 209–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/rac.2005.15.2.209.

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AbstractIn the 1920s, a child evangelist by the name of Uldine Utley toured the United States, attracting large crowds and captivating the press. She enjoyed the support of ministers from a wide variety of denominations, though her most ardent proponent was the famous fundamentalist preacher John Roach Straton. In many ways, Utley's success seems to counter existing narratives of early-twentieth-century religious history. Her revivalist ministry developed in an era that saw the decline of revivalism, and she rose to prominence during the height of the fundamentalist-modernist controversy. Clai
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Tourbe blonde"

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Vidal-Beaudet, Laure. "Organisation et fonctionnement hydrodynamique de mélanges limon argileux - tourbe blonde : essais mécaniques sous chargements répétés." Rennes, Agrocampus Ouest, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998NSARD026.

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Le comportement mecanique d'un limon argileux, seul ou en melange volumique avec 20% ou 40% de tourbe blonde est etudie pour differentes humidites initiales. Les materiaux sont soumis a 100 cycles de chargement-relachement et des pression de chargement de 30 a 500 kpa. Une fonction simple permet de representer correctement la variation d'indice de vide sur les 80 derniers cycles et d'estimer une valeur limite de tassement pour un nombre de cycles infini. L'utilisation d'un modele de melange permet de proposer des hypotheses d'interaction entre les composants en fonction de la teneur en eau ini
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Grosbellet, Claire. "Evolution et effets sur la structuration du sol de la matière organique apportée en grande quantité." Phd thesis, Université d'Angers, 2008. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00487882.

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Les ANTHROPOSOLS RECONSTITUÉS sont définis comme des sols fortement modifiés par l'activité humaine, et fabriqués à partir de matériaux naturels ou transformés. Ces sols présentent une grande variabilité spatiale et temporelle de leurs propriétés physiques, et sont caractérisés par l'incorporation de grandes quantités de matière organique. Les mécanismes de décomposition de cette matière organique sont étudiés, ainsi que son influence en termes de structuration du sol et de modification des propriétés hydriques. Des mélanges avec trois produits organiques (compost de déchets verts, compost de
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Books on the topic "Tourbe blonde"

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Sandler, Corey. The Official TurboGrafx-16 Game Encyclopdia. Bantam Books, 1990.

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Partridge, Christopher. Anesthetic Revelation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190459116.003.0004.

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This chapter explores the fascinating confluence of medicine and metaphysics during the nineteenth century, central to which was the discovery of anesthetics. Often a visit to the dentist led not only to a tooth extraction but also to a “sublime vision” and a revised understanding of the nature of reality. Accounts of such experiences inspired not only revealing popular works on the “laughing gas” phenomenon, such as Doctor Syntax in Paris or A Tour in Search of the Grotesque, but also discussions of the nature of mystical experience. This chapter analyzes the work of key figures influenced by
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Partridge, Christopher. High Culture. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190459116.001.0001.

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For a number of complex reasons, humans are fascinated by drugs and altered states. Even if only momentarily, psychoactive substances lift people out of the ennui and pain of their everyday lives and, in some cases, introduce them to new visions of reality. It is no surprise, therefore, that the use of recreational drugs is rising. While, sadly, this also means that levels of addiction are increasing, many have used drugs as technologies to induce moments of meaning-making transcendence. Beginning at the close of the eighteenth century, this book traces the quest for transcendence and meaning
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Book chapters on the topic "Tourbe blonde"

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Mikolashek, Jon B. "Land Crabs, Land Ironclads, Landships." In Blood, Guts, and Grease. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813177908.003.0003.

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The chapter covers the early history of what will become known as the tank and the creation of the United States Tank Corps. Patton is the first “tanker” in American military history. After leaving the staff of John J. Pershing, Patton embarks on an educational journey to learn about tanks. He attends tank school in France and tours the Renault tank factory. It is here that he learns to drive a tank and selects the Renault light tank for use by the United States Army. The Renault tank is covered in detail, and Patton prepares to establish the American light tank school in France.
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Moutu, Andrew. "From Tourism to Bandi and Naven Rituals." In Names are Thicker than Blood. British Academy, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264454.003.0004.

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This chapter first describes the kinds of interaction between people in Kanganamun, tourists, and tour operators, and then discusses a mock ritual display enacted as a spectacle for tourists. This mock ritual provides a context not only to engage with Harrison's most influential essay on ‘ritual as intellectual property’, but also serves as a prelude to a description of men's initiation (bandi) and ritual moieties in Central Iatmul. Finally, the chapter compares naven and bandi rituals, and considers the notion of ‘ritual condensation’ proposed by Houseman and Severi (1998).
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Walker, Greg. "Discordant Voices." In John Heywood. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198851516.003.0007.

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This chapter looks at Heywood’s most abrasive and experimental interlude, which sets a corrupt Pardoner against an enigmatic, elusive Friar in violent dispute over which of them merits alms from the audience. Rather than being merely a disorienting theatrical tour de force, in which both speakers are instructed to preach ‘even at the same time’, the chapter argues that the interlude was prompted by a specific act of bloody sacrilege committed by two priests in 1532. It suggests both the dramaturgical daring and subtlety of the interlude, and its capacity to reflect, powerfully, on the shocking implications of the priests’ violence, and the wider confessional rancour between the clergy and their critics in London in the period.
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Hewitt, Nancy A. "Practical Righteousness, 1854–1861." In Radical Friend. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469640327.003.0008.

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As the WNYASS dissolved, the Posts turned to less visible ways of advancing social justice. They became more involved with the Congregational Friends, now known as Progressive Friends, which promoted practical righteousness. A series of economic and medical crises also fostered more personal forms of action. The Posts assisted the increased flow of fugitives following the Fugitive Slave Act, but questioned Douglass’s and Nell’s support of armed resistance. Nell eventually persuaded Amy of its necessity. The Posts regularly housed abolitionists, spiritualists, and other activists; cared for friends and family who were ill or impoverished; aided abused wives; and joined protests against capital punishment. Amy accompanied Lucy Stone on two lecture tours, but she spent far more time corresponding with her extensive network of friends and family, keeping them apprized of political and personal developments. Harriet Jacobs, who was finishing Incidents in the Life of Slave Girl, regularly sought Amy’s advice and support. After John Brown’s 1859 raid, the Posts helped Douglass escape to Canada, reigniting their friendship. By spring 1861, with the nation at war, Amy helped organize a gathering with Douglass and other speakers to help direct “this bloody struggle, that it may end in Emancipation.”
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Colby, Jason M. "The Legacy of Capture." In Orca. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673093.003.0023.

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It was a quiet day in the summer of 1983 when the shots rang out in Robson Bight. Just minutes earlier, researcher Dave Briggs had been watching A4 pod visiting the rubbing beaches. The orcas had then headed in the direction of nearby purse seine vessels, and something had clearly gone wrong. Rushing down to the water, Briggs signaled a nearby whale-watching boat, which picked him up and motored out to investigate. Soon after, two orcas approached the vessel. It was the pod’s matriarch, A10, and her young calf, A47, both of whom had been shot. The horrified passengers watched as the injured mother pushed her child toward the tour boat. “We could see the wound oozing blood,” Briggs recounted. “It really seemed that she was showing us: Look what you humans have done.” Jim Borrowman learned of the shooting within minutes. An environmental activist and whale-watching entrepreneur based in nearby Telegraph Cove, he jumped into his Zodiac—a small, inflatable boat—and raced to the area. “I saw A10 with a bullet hole in the side of her face,” he recalled. “I just couldn’t believe it.” Over the years, Borrowman had seen many gunshot wounds on orcas, but this seemed a senseless act of violence reminiscent of an earlier era. Appearances aside, the incident underscored how far the human relationship with the species had come. No longer the indistinguishable black masses of the past, each orca in the Pacific Northwest now had an alphanumeric label, a family tree, and even affectionate nicknames. Once considered menacing pests, killer whales had become symbols of the region’s new environmental values and prime attractions for its tourist industry. Writing in the early 1980s, naturalist Erich Hoyt had little doubt that the display of killer whales at oceanariums had caused this shift. “The most important result of the captiveorca era has been the almost overnight change in public opinion,” he observed. “People today no longer fear and hate the species; they have fallen in love with them.”
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Conference papers on the topic "Tourbe blonde"

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Kozlov, Valentine I., Victor F. Morskov, Valentine I. Kishko, Vladimir G. Sokolov, Oleg A. Terman, and Natalia I. Afanasyeva. "Laser analyzer of capillary blood flow in microcirculation diagnosis." In Volga Laser Tour '93, edited by Valery V. Tuchin. SPIE, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.178998.

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Brill, Gregory E., and Valery V. Tuchin. "Nontrivial phenomena in laser light interaction with biotissues and blood." In Volga Laser Tour '93, edited by Valery V. Tuchin. SPIE, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.179019.

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Brill, Gregory E., Lyudmila S. Filimonovskaya, Sergei N. Grigoriev, et al. "Reaction of blood-formed elements to transcutaneous laser irradiation in short-term stress." In Volga Laser Tour '93, edited by Valery V. Tuchin. SPIE, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.179017.

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Baranova, L. N., and V. E. Kholmogorov. "Study of the damping effect of human blood plasma by the after effect of optical irradiation on erythrocytes." In Volga Laser Tour '93, edited by Valery V. Tuchin. SPIE, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.178988.

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Kochubey, Vyacheslav I., Boris A. Medvedev, Yuliya G. Sedova, and Valentina Y. Stepanova. "Method of preparation of samples for spectroscopic study of interaction of laser irradiation with blood and bone marrow." In Volga Laser Tour '93, edited by Valery V. Tuchin. SPIE, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.178997.

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Sas, G. "DEFECTS IN SERINE PROTEASE INHIBITORS." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1643714.

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Several serine protease inhibitorsof plasma inhibit the activated coagulation enzymes but only antithrombin III(AT-III)and heparin cofactor II (HC-II) are implicated in the pathogenesisof the familial thrombosis. Since thefirst publication (1965) many thrombophilic families with reduced AT-III synthesis have been investigated. These studies have proved that the disorder is associated with a high risk forvenous thrombosis and the inheritanceis autosomal dominant. The AT-III activity in the plasma of the affected patients is about 50% of the normalvalue.In recent years the heterogeneity of the i
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