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1

Kent, D. H., F. E. Crackles, and R. R. Arnett. "Flora of the East Riding of Yorkshire." Kew Bulletin 46, no. 2 (1991): 363. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4110616.

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Harris, A. "Gorse in the East Riding of Yorkshire." Folk Life 30, no. 1 (1991): 17–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/043087791798238923.

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3

Wrathmell, Susan P. "Yorkshire East Riding and Hull Hearth Tax, 1672–3." Vernacular Architecture 48, no. 1 (2017): 139–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03055477.2017.1375818.

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4

Hilton, Clare. "The East Riding of Yorkshire Improving Access to Psychological Therapies Pathfinder Project – Struggles in relation to the inclusion of older people." FPOP Bulletin: Psychology of Older People 1, no. 106 (2009): 26–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpsfpop.2009.1.106.26.

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Hobbs, P. R. N., L. D. Jones, M. P. Kirkham, C. V. L. Pennington, D. J. R. Morgan, and C. Dashwood. "Coastal landslide monitoring at Aldbrough, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK." Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology 53, no. 1 (2019): 101–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/qjegh2018-210.

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van de Noort, Robert, Richard Middleton, Andrew Foxon, and Alex Bayliss. "The ‘Kilnsea-boat’, and some implications from the discovery of England's oldest plank boat remains." Antiquity 73, no. 279 (1999): 131–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00087913.

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A single plank with integral cleats, recently discovered on the East Riding of Yorkshire coast at Kilnsea, has been identified as a fragment of a Bronze Age plank boat, and dated to 1870–1670 BC. This makes the ‘Kilnsea-boat’ England's oldest dated plank built boat.
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7

Giles, Melanie. "Collecting the Past, Constructing Identity: The Antiquarian John Mortimer and The Driffield Museum of Antiquities and Geological Specimens." Antiquaries Journal 86 (September 2006): 279–316. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500000147.

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2005 marked the centenary of the publication of Forty Years Researches in the British and Saxon Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire by John Mortimer. This review explores the key concepts underpinning his work – those of progress and racial identity – and how they were developed both in the monograph and in the fieldwork and museum arrangements upon which the monograph was based. It argues that although Mortimer is best known for his work on the Neolithic and Bronze Age of East Yorkshire it was the material from Iron Age burials in the region that crystallized his thinking on these issues. The art
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Moon, Kevin, Jane Richardson, and Stuart Wrathmell. "Iron Age and Roman Settlement at Brough South, East Riding of Yorkshire." Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 92, no. 1 (2020): 45–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00844276.2020.1777788.

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Hatcher, Jane. "The Buildings of England. Yorkshire: York and the East Riding. By NikolausPevsnerand DavidNeave." Archaeological Journal 153, no. 1 (1996): 391. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00665983.1996.11078768.

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10

Hobbs, P. R. N., L. D. Jones, M. P. Kirkham, et al. "Establishment of a coastal landslide observatory at Aldbrough, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK." Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology 53, no. 1 (2019): 88–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/qjegh2018-209.

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11

MOSES, GARY. "Reshaping Rural Culture? The Church of England and Hiring Fairs in the East Riding of Yorkshire c. 1850–80." Rural History 13, no. 1 (2002): 61–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956793302000249.

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A previous article in Rural History entitled ‘“Rustic and Rude”: Hiring Fairs and their Critics in East Yorkshire c. 1850–75’, examined a critique of hiring fairs and farm service mounted by the Church of England in the East Riding of Yorkshire during the mid-Victorian period. This discussion builds upon that article by offering a more detailed examination of the actual attempts to reform and abolish hiring fairs that emanated from that critique. The article examines three stages of reform and abolition stretching over the mid-Victorian period: a first stage that centred upon imposing a system
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12

Forster, G. C. F. "Victoria County History: East Riding of Yorkshire. Vol. VII: Holderness Wapentake; Middle and North Divisions." English Historical Review 117, no. 474 (2002): 1247–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/117.474.1247.

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Davison, L. M. "Delays to filling up the gaps: evidence from school boards in the East Riding of Yorkshire." History of Education 22, no. 4 (1993): 353–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0046760930220403.

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O'Neill, Kirstie J. "Situating the ‘alternative’ within the ‘conventional’ – local food experiences from the East Riding of Yorkshire, UK." Journal of Rural Studies 35 (July 2014): 112–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2014.04.008.

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Zenner, Dominik, and Tim Allison. "Health of caravan park residents: A pilot cross-sectional study in the East Riding of Yorkshire." Health & Place 16, no. 2 (2010): 309–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2009.10.014.

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16

Watson, Emma. "Disciplined Disobedience? Women and the Survival of Catholicism in the North York Moors in the Reign of Elizabeth I." Studies in Church History 43 (2007): 295–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400003284.

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The history of post-Reformation Catholicism in Yorkshire can be divided into two distinct periods: pre- and post-1570. Only in the aftermath of the 1569 Northern Rebellion did the Elizabethan government begin to implement fully the 1559 religious settlement in the north, and to take firm action against those who persistently flouted religious laws by continuing to practise the traditional religion of their forefathers. In the Northern Province, serious efforts to enforce conformity and to evangelize did not begin until the arrival of Edmund Grindal as Archbishop of York in 1571. He was joined
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Crouch, David. "Civil and Social Engineering Projects in Early Angevin Yorkshire: The Bishops of Durham and The East Riding." Northern History 58, no. 1 (2021): 3–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0078172x.2020.1823103.

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Quiney, Anthony. "The Door Marked 'Pull': J. L. Pearson and His First Clients in the East Riding of Yorkshire." Architectural History 41 (1998): 208. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1568655.

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19

Pye, K., and S. J. Blott. "Spatial and temporal variations in soft-cliff erosion along the Holderness coast, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK." Journal of Coastal Conservation 19, no. 6 (2015): 785–808. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11852-015-0378-8.

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20

Gatenby, L. A. "Nutritional content of school meals in Hull and the East Riding of Yorkshire: a comparison of two schools." Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 20, no. 6 (2007): 538–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-277x.2007.00829.x.

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21

Pound, John. "Clerical Poverty in Early Sixteenth-Century England: Some East Anglian Evidence." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 37, no. 3 (1986): 389–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046900021461.

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The economic standing of the English parochial clergy in the early sixteenth century has been re-examined recently by Michael Zell, and the evidence at his disposal suggests that many of them were poverty-stricken in the extreme. He points to the large surplus of unendowed curates, chaplains and the like, and to the fact that when employment was available it was neither rewarding, in a monetary sense, nor necessarily secure. Stipends were officially regulated by an early fifteenth-century statute which set a maximum of £5 6s. 8d. per annum, and ‘evidence from all regions of England indicates t
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Fielding, John. "Hypnotherapy for smoking cessation in occupational health: Hull and East Riding Community Health NHS Trust and Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust." Health Psychology Update 11, no. 4 (2002): 13–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpshpu.2002.11.4.13.

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Richardson, Jane, Phil Weston, Diane Alldritt, et al. "Earlier Prehistoric Activity and a Later Iron Age and Roman Field System at Beacon Lagoons, Kilnsea, East Riding of Yorkshire." Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 86, no. 1 (2014): 3–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/0084427614z.00000000043.

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24

Sharpe, Allison E. "A Paget Memorial in Perspective: Aspects of A Seventeenth-Century Funerary Monument Erected to Richard Paget in St Mary's, Skirpenbeck, East Riding of Yorkshire." Antiquaries Journal 70, no. 1 (1990): 65–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000358150007030x.

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The undocumented memorial (pl. XIIa) to Richard Paget (d. 1636) and his two children in St Mary's, Skirpenbeck, some 12 miles east-north-east of York, has hitherto received little or no attention from scholars, other than a brief mention by Nikolaus Pevsner and a flawed description and conjectural attribution by K. A. Esdaile. Yet its form and its remarkable inscriptions, combined with a puzzling incongruity ofexecution, present the art historian with a number of intriguing problems. Among these are questions relating to its design and construction, the date of its erection, and the style and
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Deady, Rob, Mark Delaney, Eleanor Jones, and Peter Chandler. "Further interceptions of the Neotropical fungus gnat Sciophila fractinervis Edwards, 1940 (Diptera, Mycetophilidae) in Britain with comments and observations on its biology and spread." Biodiversity Data Journal 10 (December 14, 2022): e94812. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e94812.

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From 2020 onwards, several specimens of the Neotropical fungus gnat <i>Sciophila fractinervis</i> (Edwards, 1940) have been intercepted by Fera Science Ltd. on or near plant material in the United Kingdom originating from nurseries and glasshouses at four separate locations: Preston, Lancashire; Chichester, West Sussex; East Riding of Yorkshire; and Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, as well as a single interception from the Netherlands. Gnat interceptions were associated with a wide range of plant species: <i>Ficus benjamina</i>, <i>Ficus elastica</i>, Dracaena reflexa var. angustifolia, <i>Orig
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Richardson, Jane. "Bronze Age Cremations, Iron Age and Roman Settlement and Early Medieval Inhumations at the Langeled Receiving Facilities, Easington, East Riding of Yorkshire." Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 83, no. 1 (2011): 59–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/008442711x13033963454408.

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Cowman, Krista. "‘A Peculiarly English Institution’: Work, Rest, and Play in the Labour Church." Studies in Church History 37 (2002): 357–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400014856.

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The Labour Church held its first service in Charlton Hall, Manchester, in October 1891. The well-attended event was led by Revd Harold Rylett, a Unitarian minister from Hyde, and John Trevor, a former Unitarian and the driving force behind the idea. Counting the experiment a success, Trevor organized a follow-up meeting the next Sunday, at which the congregation overflowed from the hall into the surrounding streets. A new religious movement had begun. In the decade that followed, over fifty Labour Churches formed, mainly in Northern England, around the textile districts of the West Riding of Y
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28

Whiteman, Colin. "Classic Landforms of the East Riding of Yorkshire by A. W. Pringle. Geographical Association, Sheffield, 2003 (64 pp) £9.99 ISBN 1-84377-071-7." Journal of Quaternary Science 19, no. 8 (2004): 835. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jqs.861.

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29

King, Andrew, Helen Prior, and Caroline Waddington-Jones. "Connect Resound: Using online technology to deliver music education to remote communities." Journal of Music, Technology & Education 12, no. 2 (2019): 201–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jmte_00006_1.

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This article describes an action research project that aimed to widen participation for music education in schools in England (United Kingdom). The Connect Resound project involved a pilot stage in North Yorkshire (England, United Kingdom) followed by a roll-out to four further geographical regions of England: Cumbria; Durham/Darlington; East Riding of Yorkshire; and Cornwall. The project involved testing a technological framework created to bring music education to schools with little or no music instrumental lessons within primary schools at key stage 2 (pupils aged 7–11 years). The pilot an
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30

Carter, Esther, Caroline Douglas, and John Saxton. "Green2Gold: Piloting ‘Team GB Family Activity Trails’ as a green exercise project for improving wellbeing and outdoor physical activity engagement in the East Riding of Yorkshire." Graduate Journal of Sports Science, Coaching, Management, & Rehabilitation 1, no. 3 (2024): 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.19164/gjsscmr.v1i3.1503.

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Systematic review evidence suggests that participation in green exercise (GE; Coventry et al., 2021, SSM-Population Health, 16, 100934) including walking (Hanson and Jones, 2015, Brit J Sports Med, 49, 710-715) can positively impact health and wellbeing. The aim of the project, titled ‘Green2Gold’, was to collaborate with The British Olympic Association to co-create ‘Team GB Family Activity Trails’, a novel GE intervention, in two locations. Signposts were installed along the walking routes containing co-designed activities linked to Olympic sports, physical activity (PA), and nature. Each sig
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31

Appleyard, Sara. "A model of proactive care by an older people’s mental health care home team during Covid-19." FPOP Bulletin: Psychology of Older People 1, no. 159 (2022): 7–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpsfpop.2022.1.159.7.

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In 2020, reports of a novel coronavirus, Covid-19, started to be reported by the global media. When the virus reached Northern Europe it became increasingly apparent that healthcare workers in acute and community facilities were at risk of becoming ill, with staff shortages negatively impacting patient care. In the UK concerns mounted about hospitals becoming overwhelmed, and care homes placed at increased risk due to hospitals discharging into the care home sector. UK Health Trusts were considering how to redeploy staff to best manage the rapidly changing situation. A specialist mental health
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Scott, Ian Stuart, and Alastair Wray MacDonald. "An evaluation of overnight fixation to facilitate neuropathological examination in Coroner's autopsies: our experience of over 200 cases." Journal of Clinical Pathology 66, no. 1 (2012): 50–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jclinpath-2012-200839.

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AimsFollowing recent changes in Coroner's Rules, there has been a desire to examine brains at the time of autopsy, rather than after a prolonged period of immersion fixation. Examination of the fresh brain at postmortem can yield unsatisfactory results where detailed histological examination is required. We aim to provide a compromise, where detailed examination of the brain is possible, without the requirement for prolonged fixation, interference with funeral arrangements and delay in the Coronial process.MethodsA retrospective audit of over 200 neuropathology cases requested by HM Coroner fo
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Hilton, Clare, Sven Law, and Natasha Edgar. "Where have all the older people gone… three years passing? When will we ever learn, when will we ever learn? Still learning lessons in the East Riding of Yorkshire." FPOP Bulletin: Psychology of Older People 1, no. 113 (2011): 37–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpsfpop.2011.1.113.37.

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Hinde, Andrew, and Victoria Fairhurst. "Why Was Infant Mortality So High in Eastern England in the Mid Nineteenth Century?" Local Population Studies, no. 94 (June 30, 2015): 48–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.35488/lps94.2015.48.

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This paper re-examines the high rates of infant mortality observed in rural areas of eastern England in the early years of civil registration. Infant mortality rates in some rural registration districts in the East Riding of Yorkshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk were higher than those in the mill towns of Lancashire. After describing the areas affected, this paper considers three potential explanations: environmental factors, poor-quality child care associated with the employment of women in agriculture, and the possibility that the high rates were the artefactual consequence of migrant women
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35

Worsley, Giles. "The Buildings of England, Yorkshire: York and the East Riding. By Nikolaus Pevsner and David Neave. 2nd edn. Pp. 832, 124 pls. London: Penguin Books, 1995. ISBN 0-14-071061-2. £30.00." Antiquaries Journal 78 (March 1998): 478. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500500250.

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Worsley, Giles. "The Buildings of England, Yorkshire: York and the East Riding. By Nikolaus Pevsner and David Neave. 2nd edn. Pp. 832, 124 pls. London: Penguin Books, 1995. ISBN 0-14-071061-2. £30.00." Antiquaries Journal 78 (September 1998): 478. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500045169.

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PAREDES, CARLOS, CLARA GODOY, and RICARDO CASTEDO. "SOFT-CLIFF RETREAT, SELF-ORGANIZED CRITICAL PHENOMENA IN THE LIMIT OF PREDICTABILITY?" Fractals 23, no. 01 (2015): 1540009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218348x15400095.

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The coastal erosion along the world's coastlines is a natural process that occurs through the actions of marine and subaerial physico-chemical phenomena, waves, tides, and currents. The development of cliff erosion predictive models is limited due to the complex interactions between environmental processes and material properties over a wide range of temporal and spatial scales. As a result of this erosive action, gravity driven mass movements occur and the coastline moves inland. Like other studied earth natural and synthetically modelled phenomena characterized as self-organized critical (SO
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Falvey, Heather. "DavidNeave, SusanNeave, CatherineFerguson, and ElizabethParkinson, eds., Yorkshire East Riding Hearth Tax 1672-3 (London: British Record Society, 2016. Pp. xvi+600. 18 maps. 30 plates. 10 tables. ISBN 9780901505613 Hbk. £30 + £5 p&p [UK], £10 p&p [oversea." Economic History Review 70, no. 3 (2017): 1017–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ehr.12580.

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James, N. "From prehistory to the Middle Ages in Western Europe - Malcolm F. Fry. Coití: logboats from Northern Ireland (Northern Ireland Archaeological Monograph 4). xi+152 pages, 101 figures, 8 plates, 4 tables. 2000. Antrim: Greystone; 0-85640-676-7 paperback £19.99. - Probleme der Küstenforschung im südlichen Nordseegebiet Vol. 25. 326 pages, 186 figures, 29 tables. 1998. Wilhelmshaven: Niedersächsiches Institut für Historische Küstenforschung; 3-89598-629-1 (ISSN 0343-7965) hardback DM88. - Peter Halkon & Martin Millett(ed.). Rural settlement and industry: studies in the Iron Age and Roman archaeology of lowland east Yorkshire (Yorkshire Archaeological Report No. 4). xiv+245 pages, 122 figures, 93 tables. 1999. Leeds: Yorkshire Archaeological Society Roman Antiquities Section & East Riding Archaeological Society; 0-902122-90-8 paperback. - John Alexander & Joyce Pullinger. Roman Cambridge: excavations on Castle Hill 1956–1988 (Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society 88). 268 pages, 320 figures, 1 table. 2000. Cambridge: Cambridge Antiquarian Society; ISSN 0309-3606 paperback £14.50. - José María Blázquez Martínez & María Paz García-Gelabert Pérez. Castulo, Jaén, España, II: el conjunto arquitectónico del Olivar (BAR International Series 789). 389 pages, 53 figures, 80 plates. 1999. Oxford: Archaeopress; 1-841 71-106-3 paperback £59. - Ken Dowden. European paganism: the realities of cult from antiquity to the Middle Ages. xxi+367 pages, 36 figures. 2000. London: Routledge; 0-415-12034-9 hardback £45. - Nigel Pennick. Celtic sacred landscapes. 224 pages, b&w figures. 2000. London: Thames & Hudson; 0-500-28201-3 paperback £9.95." Antiquity 74, no. 285 (2000): 717–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00120976.

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Hummler, Madeleine. "Britain - Bryony Coles. Beavers in Britain's Past (WARP Occasional Paper 19). x+242 pages, 158 illustrations. 2006. Oxford: Oxbow; 978-1-84217-2261 paperback £40. - Don Benson & Alasdair Whittle (ed.). Building Memories: The Neolithic Cotswold Long barrow at Ascott-Under-Wychwood Oxfordshire. xxxvi+380 pages, 269 illustrations, 24 colour plates. 57 tables. 2007. Oxford; Oxbow; 978-1-84217-236-0 hardback £55. - Stuart Needham, Keith Parfitt & Gill Varndell (ed.). The Ringlemere Cup: Precious Cups and the beginning ofthe Channel Bronze Age. x+116 pages, 67 illustrations, 14 colour plates, 5 tables. 2006. London: The British Museum; 978-086159-163-3 paperback. - John Lewis et al. Landscape Evolution in the Middle Thames Valley: Heathrow Terminal 5 Excavations Volume 1, Perry Oaks (Framework Archaeology Monograph 1). xii+250 pages, 122 b&w & colour figures, 56 colour plates, 30 tables, CD-ROM. 2006. Oxford & Salisbury; BAA, Oxford Archaeology & Wessex Archaeology; 978-0-9554519-0-4 hardback £15. - Ian Armit. Anatomy of an Iron Age Roundhouse: The Cnip Wheelhouse Excavations, Lewis. xxxvi+272 pages, 106 illustrations, 11 colour plates, 74 tables. 2006. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland; 978-0-903903-32-6 hardback. - Ray Howell. Searching for the Silures: An Iron Age tribe in South-East Wales. 160 pages, 41 illustrations, 15 colour plates. 2006. Stroud: Tempus; 978-0-7524-4014-9 paperback £19.99. - Martin Millett (ed.). Shiptonthorpe, East Yorkshire: archaeological studies of a Romano-British roadside settlement (Yorkshire Archaeological Report 5). xvi+344 pages, 140 illustrations, 92 tables. 2006. Leeds: Yorkshire Archaeological Society & East Riding Archaeological Society; 1-9035-6465-4 paperback £25+p&p. - Michael Fulford, Amanda Clarke & Hella Eckardt. Life and labour in late Roman Silchester: excavations in Insula IX since 1997 (Britannia Monograph Series 22). xviii+404 pages, 125 illustrations, 71 tables. 2006. London: Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies; 978-0-907764-33-5 paperback. - H.E.M. Cool. Eating and Drinking in Roman Britain. xvi+282 pages, 30 illustrations, 43 tables. 2006. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 978-0-521-80276-5 hardback £55 & $99; 978-0-521-00327-8 paperback £19.99 & $36.99." Antiquity 81, no. 312 (2007): 505. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00120411.

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Foreman, Martin, Peter Didsbury, Michael Oates, et al. "A Roman Lead Vessel from Rudston, East Riding of Yorkshire." Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, July 12, 2023, 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00844276.2023.2222597.

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Bankoff, Greg. "Wartime drainage and water level management in the East Riding of Yorkshire 1939–1945." Water History, May 25, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12685-024-00337-6.

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Hunter-Mann, Kurt, Margaret J. Darling, and H. E. M. Cool. "Excavations on a Roman Extra-Mural Site at Brough-on-Humber, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK." Internet Archaeology, no. 9 (2000). http://dx.doi.org/10.11141/ia.9.2.

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Newman, Richard. "‘Lest We Forget’: The Archaeology of Warfare, Conservation, Interpretation, and Engagement in Hull and the East Riding of Yorkshire." Historic Environment: Policy & Practice, April 17, 2023, 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17567505.2023.2202924.

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45

Deady, Rob, Mark Delaney, Eleanor Jones, and Peter Chandler. "Further interceptions of the Neotropical fungus gnat Sciophila fractinervis Edwards, 1940 (Diptera, Mycetophilidae) in Britain with comments and observations on its biology and spread." Biodiversity Data Journal 10 (December 14, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/bdj.10.e94812.

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From 2020 onwards, several specimens of the Neotropical fungus gnat Sciophila fractinervis (Edwards, 1940) have been intercepted by Fera Science Ltd. on or near plant material in the United Kingdom originating from nurseries and glasshouses at four separate locations: Preston, Lancashire; Chichester, West Sussex; East Riding of Yorkshire; and Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, as well as a single interception from the Netherlands. Gnat interceptions were associated with a wide range of plant species: Ficus benjamina, Ficus elastica, Dracaena reflexa var. angustifolia, Origanum vulgare, Rosmarinus
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46

Cole, Eddie, Deepa Narayanan, Ree Nee Tiam, John Shepherd, and Mark O. R. Hajjawi. "Faecal Immunochemical Test (FIT) Sensitivity; A Five Year Audit." British Journal of Biomedical Science 81 (May 29, 2024). http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/bjbs.2024.12862.

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Introduction: Colorectal cancer has a high prevalence and mortality rate in the United Kingdom. Cancerous colorectal lesions often bleed into the gastrointestinal lumen. The faecal immunochemical test (FIT) detects haemoglobin (Hb) in the faeces of patients and is used as a first line test in the diagnosis of colorectal cancer.Materials and Methods: A retrospective audit of all FIT performed and all colorectal cancers diagnosed in the Hull and East Riding of Yorkshire counties of the United Kingdom (population approximately 609,300) between 2018 and 2022 was conducted. FIT were performed using
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Mottram, Stewart, Hannah Worthen, and Briony McDonagh. "Time, Tide, and Tempestuous Flooding: Andrew Marvell’s ‘To his Coy Mistress’ in an Age of Storms." Review of English Studies, March 26, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1093/res/hgaf012.

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Abstract Why might Marvell complain ‘by the tide | Of Humber’ in ‘To his Coy Mistress’? This article reads these lines in light of little-known records of flood risk management, housed at East Riding of Yorkshire Archives, Beverley, to uncover a new approach to Marvell’s poem as shaped by the seventeenth-century ‘Age of Storms’. In winter 1646–1647, a series of storms left large swathes of land and multiple settlements east of Hull under water. The floodwaters remained on the ground long into 1647, leading to fines, recriminations, and arrests, as authorities sought to assign responsibility fo
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48

Carter, Esther, John Saxton, and Caroline Douglas. "73 Green2Gold: Creating and testing ‘Team GB Family Activity Trails’ for improving wellbeing and outdoor physical activity engagement in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England." European Journal of Public Health 34, Supplement_2 (2024). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckae114.073.

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Abstract Purpose Systematic review evidence suggests that undertaking green exercise (GE; Coventry et al., 2021) including walking (Hanson &amp; Jones, 2015) can positively impact health and wellbeing. The ‘Green2Gold’ project collaborated with The British Olympic Association to co-create ‘Team GB Family Activity Trails’, a novel GE intervention, in two locations. Signposts were installed along the walking routes containing co-designed activities linked to Olympic sports, physical activity (PA), and nature. Each signpost contained a unique QR code to provide users with additional activities on
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49

Wolstenholme, J. M., F. Cooper, R. E. Thomas, J. Ahmed, K. J. Parsons, and D. R. Parsons. "Automated identification of hedgerows and hedgerow gaps using deep learning." Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation, February 14, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1002/rse2.432.

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AbstractHedgerows are a key component of the UK landscape that form boundaries, borders and limits of land whilst providing vital landscape‐scale ecological connectivity for a range of organisms. They are diverse habitats in the agricultural landscape providing a range of ecosystem services. Poorly managed hedgerows often present with gaps, reducing their ecological connectivity, resulting in fragmented habitats. However, hedgerow gap frequency and spatial distributions are often unquantified at the landscape‐scale. Here we present a novel methodology based on deep learning (DL) that is couple
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50

Goodair, B., A. Reeves, and C. Rahal. "Is outsourcing healthcare to private providers associated with higher mortality rates in NHS England?" European Journal of Public Health 31, Supplement_3 (2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckab164.836.

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Abstract Background Outsourcing services to for-profit organisations within a publicly funded healthcare service which runs parallel to private provision in a ‘two-tier' system aims to increase the competition between healthcare providers, driving up their performance. However, some worry that contracting out health services to for-profit providers may lead to cost-cutting and poorer outcomes for patients. We aim to assess whether increased outsourcing to the private sector is associated with changes to treatable mortality rates, and, therefore, with the quality of healthcare. Methods We const
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