Correspondence and Memoranda, 1860-1908
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Landmarks Preservation Commission March 24, 2009, Designation List 411 LP-2311 NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN MUSEUM
Landmarks Preservation Commission March 24, 2009, Designation List 411 LP-2311 NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN MUSEUM (now LIBRARY) BUILDING, FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, and TULIP TREE ALLEE, Watson Drive and Garden Way, New York Botanical Garden, Bronx Park, the Bronx; Museum Building designed 1896, built 1898-1901, Robert W. Gibson, architect; Fountain 1901-05, Carl (Charles) E. Tefft, sculptor, Gibson, architect; Allee planted 1903-11. Landmark Site: Borough of the Bronx Tax Map 3272, Lot 1 in part, consisting of the property bounded by a line that corresponds to the outermost edges of the rear (eastern) portion of the original 1898-1901 Museum (now Library) Building (excluding the International Plant Science Center, Harriet Barnes Pratt Library Wing, and Jeannette Kittredge Watson Science and Education Building), the southernmost edge of the original Museum (now Library) Building (excluding the Annex) and a line extending southwesterly to Garden Way, the eastern curbline of Garden Way to a point on a line extending southwesterly from the northernmost edge of the original Museum (now Library) Building, and northeasterly along said line and the northernmost edge of the original Museum (now Library) Building, to the point of beginning. On October 28, 2008, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the New York Botanical Garden Museum (now Library) Building, Fountain of Life, and Tulip Tree Allee and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 5). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Six people spoke in favor of designation, including representatives of the New York Botanical Garden, Municipal Art Society of New York, Historic Districts Council, Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America, and New York Landmarks Conservancy. -
A Timeline of Significant Events in the Development of North American Mammalogy
SpecialSpecial PublicationsPublications MuseumMuseum ofof TexasTexas TechTech UniversityUniversity NumberNumber xx66 21 Novemberxx XXXX 20102017 A Timeline of SignificantTitle Events in the Development of North American Mammalogy Molecular Biology Structural Biology Biochemistry Microbiology Genomics Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Computer Science Statistics Physical Chemistry Information Technology Mathematics David J. Schmidly, Robert D. Bradley, Lisa C. Bradley, and Richard D. Stevens Front cover: This figure depicts a chronological presentation of some of the significant events, technological breakthroughs, and iconic personalities in the history of North American mammalogy. Red lines and arrows depict the chronological flow (i.e., top row – read left to right, middle row – read right to left, and third row – read left to right). See text and tables for expanded interpretation of the importance of each person or event. Top row: The first three panels (from left) are associated with the time period entitled “The Emergence Phase (16th‒18th Centuries)” – Mark Catesby’s 1748 map of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, Thomas Jefferson, and Charles Willson Peale; the next two panels represent “The Discovery Phase (19th Century)” – Spencer Fullerton Baird and C. Hart Merriam. Middle row: The first two panels (from right) represent “The Natural History Phase (1901‒1960)” – Joseph Grinnell and E. Raymond Hall; the next three panels (from right) depict “The Theoretical and Technological Phase (1961‒2000)” – illustration of Robert H. MacArthur and Edward O. Wilson’s theory of island biogeography, karyogram depicting g-banded chromosomes, and photograph of electrophoretic mobility of proteins from an allozyme analysis. Bottom row: These four panels (from left) represent the “Big Data Phase (2001‒present)” – chromatogram illustrating a DNA sequence, bioinformatics and computational biology, phylogenetic tree of mammals, and storage banks for a supercomputer. -
Dinosaur Wars Program Transcript
Page 1 Dinosaur Wars Program Transcript Narrator: For more than a century, Americans have had a love affair with dinosaurs. Extinct for millions of years, they were barely known until giant, fossil bones were discovered in the mid-nineteenth century. Two American scientists, Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh, led the way to many of these discoveries, at the forefront of the young field of paleontology. Jacques Gauthier, Paleontologist: Every iconic dinosaur every kid grows up with, apatosaurus, triceratops, stegosaurus, allosaurus, these guys went out into the American West and they found that stuff. Narrator: Cope and Marsh shed light on the deep past in a way no one had ever been able to do before. They unearthed more than 130 dinosaur species and some of the first fossil evidence supporting Darwin’s new theory of evolution. Mark Jaffe, Writer: Unfortunately there was a more sordid element, too, which was their insatiable hatred for each other, which often just baffled and exasperated everyone around them. Peter Dodson, Paleontologist: They began life as friends. Then things unraveled… and unraveled in quite a spectacular way. Narrator: Cope and Marsh locked horns for decades, in one of the most bitter scientific rivalries in American history. Constantly vying for leadership in their young field, they competed ruthlessly to secure gigantic bones in the American West. They put American science on the world stage and nearly destroyed one another in the process. Page 2 In the summer of 1868, a small group of scientists boarded a Union Pacific train for a sightseeing excursion through the heart of the newly-opened American West. -
Take Three More Recent Books
Take Three more recenT books Minnesota’s Geologist: The Life of Newton Horace Winchell How Could You Do This? 50 Years by Sue Leaf (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2020, of Property- Tax- base Sharing in 280 p., Cloth, $29.95). Newton Horace Winchell (1839–1914) ven- Minnesota by Paul Gilje (St. Paul, tured with his crew throughout the state as head of the Minnesota MN: Center for Policy Design, 2021, Geological and Natural History Survey, charting the prehistory 192 p., Paper, $9.99). Policy wonks of the region, its era of inland seas, its volcanic activity, and will concur with the word “drama” its several ice ages, laying the foundation for the monumental used by the publisher to describe the five-volume Geology of Minnesota. Winchell grew up in North half- century history of Minnesota’s East, New York, near Winchell Mountain, named for the family property tax- base sharing law (more who lived in the area for almost a century. Maturing from a 15-year-old schoolteacher popularly known as the metropolitan who knew nothing about rocks to a 17-year-old who moved himself to Ann Arbor, fiscal disparities law) that began in Michigan, for higher education, Winchell at age 25 dedicated himself to geological 1968 with extensive controversy and scientific inquiry. His passionate and adventurous life story, told for the first time extends to the present day. A group of by environmental historian Sue Leaf, guides readers through the geologic history of bipartisan legislators created a more the state. Winchell strove for his work to be accessible to the nonprofessional and equitable way for municipalities of expanded his efforts to include mentoring young geologists, founding the American varying levels of wealth to compete Geological Society, and being the founding editor of American Geologist, the first jour- for tax revenues. -
Impersonality and the Cultural Work of Modernist Aesthetics Heather Arvidson a Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment Of
Impersonality and the Cultural Work of Modernist Aesthetics Heather Arvidson A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2014 Reading Committee: Jessica Burstein, Chair Carolyn Allen Gillian Harkins Program Authorized to Offer Degree: English ©Copyright 2014 Heather Arvidson University of Washington Abstract Impersonality and the Cultural Work of Modernist Aesthetics Heather Arvidson Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Associate Professor Jessica Burstein English Department This dissertation reanimates the multiple cultural and aesthetic debates that converged on the word impersonality in the first decades of the twentieth century, arguing that the term far exceeds the domain of high modernist aesthetics to which literary studies has consigned it. Although British and American writers of the 1920s and 1930s produced a substantial body of commentary on the unprecedented consolidation of impersonal structures of authority, social organization, and technological mediation of the period, the legacy of impersonality as an emergent cultural concept has been confined to the aesthetic innovations of a narrow set of writers. “Impersonality and the Cultural Work of Modernist Aesthetics” offers a corrective to this narrative, beginning with the claim that as human individuality seemed to become increasingly abstracted from urban life, the words impersonal and impersonality acquired significant discursive force, appearing in a range of publication types with marked regularity and emphasis but disputed valence and multiple meanings. In this context impersonality came to denote modernism’s characteristically dispassionate tone and fragmented or abstract forms, yet it also participated in a broader field of contemporaneous debate about the status of personhood, individualism, personality, and personal life. -
Earth in Upheaval – Velikovsky
KANSAS CITY, MO PUBLIC LIBRARY MAR 1989 JALS DATE DUE Earth in upheaval. 1 955 . Books by Immarvjel Velikoviky Earth in Upheaval Worlds in Collision Published by POCKET BOOKS Most Pot Ian Books arc available at special quantify discounts for hulk purchases for sales promotions premiums or fund raising SpeciaJ books* or txx)k e\( erj)ts can also tx.' created to ht specific needs FordetaJs write the office of the Vice President of Special Markets, Pocket Books, 12;K) Avenue of the Arm-mas New York New York 10020 EARTH IN UPHEAVAL Smnianue! Velikovsky F'OCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, IMC 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N Y 10020 Copyright 1955 by Immanuel Vehkovskv Published by arrangement with Doubledav tx Compauv, 1m Library of Congiess Catalog Card Number 55-11339 All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever For information address 6r Inc. Doubledav Company, , 245 Park Avenue, New York, N Y' 10017 ISBN 0-fi71-524f>5-tt Fust Pocket Books punting September 1977 10 9 H 7 6 POCKET and colophon ae registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, luc Printed in the USA ACKNOWLEDGMENTS WORKING ON Earth in Upheaval and on the essay (Address before the Graduate College Forum of Princeton University) added at the end of this volume, I have incurred a debt of gratitude to several scientists. Professor Walter S. Adams, for many years director of Mount Wilson Observatory, gave me all the in- formation and instruction for which I asked concern- ing the atmospheres of the planets, a field in which he is the outstanding authority. -
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences (4)5
PROCEEDINGS OF THE CALIFORNIA Academy of Sciences FOURTH SERIES Vol. V 1915 OS" SAN P^RANCISCO PUBLISHED BY THE ACADEMY 1915 COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATION George C. Edwards, Chairman C. E. Grunsky Barton Warren Evermann, Editor CONTENTS OF VOLUME V. Plates 1-19. PAGE Title-page i Contents iii Report of the President of the Academy for the Year 1914. By C. E. Grunsky 1 (Published March 26, 1915) Report of the Director of the Museum for the Year 1914. By Barton Warren Evermann - 1 1 (Published March 26, 1915) Fauna of the Type Tejon : Its Relation to the Cowlitz Phase of the Tejon Group of Washington. By Roy E. Dickerson. (Plates 1-11) 33 (Published June 15, 1915) A List of the Amphibians and Reptiles of Utah, with Notes on the Species in the Collection of the Academy. By John Van Den- burgh and Joseph R. Slevin. (Plates 12-14) 99 (Published June 15, 1915) Description of a New Subgenus (Arborimus) of Phenacomys, with a Contribution to Knowledge of the Habits and Distribution of Phenacomys longicaudus True. By Walter P. Taylor. (Plate 15) 1 1 1 (Published December 30, 1915) Tertiary Deposits of Northeastern Mexico. By E. T. Durable. (Plates 16-19) 163 (Published December 31, 1915) Report of the President of the Academy for the Year 1915. By C. E. Grunsky 195 (Published May 4, 1916) Report of the Director of the Museum for the Year 1915. By Barton Warren Evermann 203 (Published May 4, 1916) Index 225, 232 July 19, 1916 / f / ^3 F»ROCEDEDINGS OF THE CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES Fourth Series Vol. -
The Artifact
The Artifact A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America - Milwaukee Society Vol. 13 No. 2 Contents Letter from the President Letter from the President 1 - 2 Dr. Derek B. Counts, Assistant Professor of Power, Ideology, and the Emergence of the State in Classical Art and Archaeology, University of the Oaxaca Valley, Mexico 3 Wisconsin - Milwaukee The Archaeological Excavations at Kilteasheen, Ireland 4 Happy New Year and Greetings from the Blood and Power: Arena Spectacle and the Roman Milwaukee Society of the AIA. They say that Empire 5 in life few things are guaranteed; while that may be true for credit card interest rates and a The Forty Years of AIA in Milwaukee 6 - 8 Packers victory over New York, you can always count on a full and diverse annual Cyprus & the Antiquities Trade: An Interview lecture program from the Milwaukee Society! with Dr. Pavlos Flourentzos 8 - 10 On Sunday, February 10 we welcome th Professor Jason Sherman from UWM’s 109 Archaeological Institute of America Annual Meeting 11 Anthropology Department (local talent!), who will speak to us on recent archaeological work AIA-Milwaukee’s Field Trip to Oriental Institute in the Oaxaca Valley (Mexico) and what it can Museum 11 tell us about the emergence of the Zapotec state in the later first millennium B.C.E. In AIA-Milwaukee Society Lecture Calendar 12 March and April, we will host Professors Thomas Finan (Saint Louis University) and 2007-2008 Milwaukee Officers Alison Futrell (University of Arizona). On Derek Counts, President Sunday March 2, Professor Finan will [email protected] highlight the latest discoveries at Kilteasheen, Bettina Arnold, Vice-President Co. -
Florida State University Libraries
Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2017 Fossil Excavation, Museums, and Wyoming: American Paleontology, 1870-1915 Marlena Briane Cameron Follow this and additional works at the DigiNole: FSU's Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected] FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES FOSSIL EXCAVATION, MUSEUMS, AND WYOMING: AMERICAN PALEONTOLOGY, 1870-1915 By MARLENA BRIANE CAMERON A Thesis submitted to the Program in the History and Philosophy of Science in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2017 Marlena Cameron defended this thesis on July 17, 2017. The members of the supervisory committee were: Ronald E. Doel Professor Directing Thesis Michael Ruse Committee Member Kristina Buhrman Committee Member Sandra Varry Committee Member The Graduate School has verified and approved the above-named committee members, and certifies that the thesis has been approved in accordance with university requirements. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures ................................................................................................................................ iv Abstract ............................................................................................................................................v 1. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................1 2. THE BONE WARS ....................................................................................................................9 -
Cyperaceae of Puerto Rico. Arturo Gonzalez-Mas Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1964 Cyperaceae of Puerto Rico. Arturo Gonzalez-mas Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Gonzalez-mas, Arturo, "Cyperaceae of Puerto Rico." (1964). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 912. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/912 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This dissertation has been 64—8802 microfilmed exactly as received GONZALEZ—MAS, Arturo, 1923- CYPERACEAE OF PUERTO RICO. Louisiana State University, Ph.D., 1964 B o ta n y University Microfilms, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan CYPERACEAE OF PUERTO RICO A Dissertation I' Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of Botany and Plant Pathology by Arturo Gonzalez-Mas B.S., University of Puerto Rico, 1945 M.S., North Carolina State College, 1952 January, 1964 PLEASE NOTE: Not original copy. Small and unreadable print on some maps. Filmed as received. UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS, INC. ACKNOWLEDGMENT The author wishes to express his sincere gratitude to Dr. Clair A. Brown for his interest, guidance, and encouragement during the course of this investigation and for his helpful criticism in the preparation of the manuscript and illustrations. -
Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum
Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Volume 11 Article 10 2021 Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum Samantha A. Bomkamp University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.uwm.edu/fieldnotes Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons, Biological and Physical Anthropology Commons, Linguistic Anthropology Commons, Other Anthropology Commons, and the Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons Recommended Citation Bomkamp, Samantha A. (2021) "Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum," Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology: Vol. 11 , Article 10. Available at: https://dc.uwm.edu/fieldnotes/vol11/iss1/10 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by UWM Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology by an authorized administrator of UWM Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Volume 11 Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Volume 11 Number 1 May 2021 Published by the Anthropology Student Union (ASU) at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, USA Editor-in-Chief Ann S. Eberwein Editors Ashley Brennaman Heather Brinkman Cody Schumacher Jessica Skinner Editorial Committee Karissa Annis Laya Liebeseller Bill Balco Ciaran McDonnell Sarah Boncal Cheri Price Josh Driscoll Joshua Rivers Adrienne Frie Katherine Santell Kevin Gartski Katrina Schmidt Dominic Greenlee Tony Schultz Alexis Jordan Faculty -
SCIENCE Able Persons Will Consider the Progress of Man- of the Demands of the Farm for the Summer Kind, Not by the Years of Generations Merely, 1 Months
SCIENCE able persons will consider the progress of man- of the demands of the farm for the summer kind, not by the years of generations merely, 1 months. The boy very early displayed an in but by centuries or millenia. We may learn tense love of nature and a keen interest in by the history of mankind in the last 20,000 all its manifestations. While this did not years how near it has come to extinction; and meet with the wishes of his father there was we must recognize that it will take only a no active or unkind opposition, and from his little interference with natural instincts and mother he met only sympathy. a little interference with natural selection Dependent at first solely upon his own ef- during a few generations to bring the species, forts, without the aid of books or the ac- or one race of it, rather abruptly to an end, quaintance of naturalists, the boy showed :i just as other human races have come to an end great determination to interpret the life about in historical times. The human species must him. Later, when his attendance at Wilbra- eventually go the way of all species of which ham Academy led up to Cambridge and the we have a paleontological record; already there opportunity of studying under Louis Agas- are clear signs of a widc-spread deterioration in siz, he was prepared to make the most of this most complex and unstable of all animal every opportunity. 'IIowever, this zeal for types. A failure to be influenced by the find- tho constant study of nature, in addition to ings of the students of eugenics or a continu- the work necessary in helping on the farm, ance in our present fatuous belief in the resultcd in the overtaxing of his strength and potency of money to cure racial evils will the impairment of his health, a condition hasten the end.