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1

Hydro Copper 2005 ( 2005 Santiago, Chile). Hydro Copper 2005: Proceedings of the III international Copper Hydrometallurgy Workshop, November 23-25, 2005, Santiago, Chile. Edited by Menacho Jorge M and Casas de Prada, Jesus M. Santiago: Departamento Ingenieria de Minas, Universidad de Chile, 2005.

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2

Gonzalez-Beca, C. J. G. Study of zinc and copper removal by iron (III) and (II) oxyhydroxides. [s.l.]: International Mine Water Association, 1985.

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3

Lorenzo, Nigro, and Sala Maura, eds. In the Palace of the Copper Axes: Khirbet al-Batrawy : the discovery of a forgotten city of the III millennium BC in Jordan = Nel Palazzo delle asce di rame : Khirbet al-Batrawy : la scoperta di una città dimenticata del III millennio a.C. in Giordania. Rome: La Sapienza Expedition to Palestine & Jordan, 2010.

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4

Guerra, Elena María García. Las acuñaciones de moneda de vellón durante el reinado de Felipe III. [Madrid]: Banco de España, Servicio de Estudios, 1999.

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5

Congresso Latino-Americano--Geração e Transmissão de Energia Elétrica (3rd 1997 Campos do Jordão, Brazil). III Congresso Latino-Americano--Geração e Transmissão de Energia Elétrica: 09 a 13 de novembro, Campos do Jordão, SP, Brasil. Guaratinguetá, SP, Brazil: Unesp, 1997.

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6

Bonev, Aleksandŭr. Bagachina: Selishte ot kŭsnata kamenno-medna epokha i trakiĭski kultov t︠s︡entŭr : III-I khili︠a︡doletie pr. Khr. Montana [Bulgaria]: OOD "Polimona", 1996.

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7

Las producciones metálicas del III y II milenio cal ANE en el suroeste de la Península Ibérica. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2010.

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8

Nikolaeva, N. A. Ėtno-kulʹturnye prot︠s︡essy na Severnom Kavkaze v III-II tys. do n.ė. v kontekste drevneĭ istorii Evropy i Blizhnego Vostoka: Vydelenie drevneevropeĭskoĭ linii razvitii︠a︡. Moskva: MGOU, 2011.

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9

Nuccia, Negroni Catacchio, and Centro studi di preistoria e archeologia., eds. Preistoria e protostoria in Etruria: Atti del settimo Incontro di studi : pastori e guerrieri nell'Etruria del IV e III millennio a.C. : la civiltà di Rinaldone a 100 anni dalle prime scoperte. Milano: Centro studi di preistoria e archeologia, 2006.

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10

Copper Proteins and Copper Enzymes: Volume III. CRC Press, 2018.

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11

Gomez, C., and C. A. Barahona. Copper 2003: Volume III - Mineral Processing. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2003.

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12

Solimano, Andres, and Diego Calderón Guajardo. The Copper Sector, Fiscal Rules, and Stabilization Funds in Chile. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817369.003.0010.

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Historically Chile’s economy has been dominated by mineral products (mainly copper) as a source of exports and fiscal revenues. Copper prices and other commodity prices are often volatile. Since the 1980s the authorities have developed various mechanisms to cope with copper price shocks and dampen their effects on the business cycle. These mechanisms include a fiscal rule and a stabilization fund under a flexible exchange rate and an inflation-targeting regime. Apparently, this macro framework has been associated (causality is another matter) with reasonably good macro outcomes. However, this framework entails more discretion and less flexibility than often portrayed. (i) The mechanisms described include frequent revisions in the target fiscal surplus. (ii) Sovereign wealth funds, while defining rules for accumulating resources in good times, provide no rules for using them in bad times. (iii) They entail a possible bias towards over-accumulation of funds, with an ensuing opportunity cost.
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13

Museum, Old Pueblo, ed. Copper III: 1991 national metal competition, December 10, 1991 - January 31, 1992, Old Pueblo Museum, Tucson, Arizona. Tucson: TheMuseum, 1991.

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14

Lei, Peng, Scott Ayton, and Ashley I. Bush. Metal-Protein Attenuating Compounds in Neurodegenerative Diseases. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190233563.003.0015.

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Neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer’s (AD), Parkinson’s disease (PD), Huntington’s disease (HD), and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are progressive diseases of the aging population with currently few therapeutic options. While aggregation and deposition of disease-specific proteins link the pathologies of these diseases, targeting these aggregating proteins with therapeutics has not yet been successful in clinical trial. This chapter profiles metals (copper, zinc, and iron) as alternative drug targets for neurodegeneration. Complex changes to metals occur in these neurodegenerative diseases. Accumulating evidences have demonstrated that perturbations to metal homeostasis contribute to the progression of neuronal dysfunction and death. Importantly, several phase II trials have shown that correcting metal dyshomeostasis improves clinical outcomes; the chapter argues that it is now time to explore the therapeutic utility of metal-based drugs in larger, phase III trials.
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15

Davor, Pavuna, Bozovic Ivan, Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers., and Oxxel GmbH Bremen, eds. Superconducting and related oxides, physics and nanoengineering III: 20-24 July, 1998, San Diego, California. Bellingham, Wash: SPIE, 1998.

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16

Raitz, Karl. Making Bourbon. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178752.001.0001.

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Kentucky distillers have produced bourbon and rye whiskeys for more than two centuries. Part I of this book examines the complexities associated with nineteenth-century distilling’s evolution from an artisanal craft practiced by farmers and millers to a large-scale mechanized industry that adopted increasingly refined production techniques. The change from waterpower to steam engines permitted the relocation of distilleries away from traditional sites along creeks or at large springs. Commercial-scale distilling was accompanied by increasing government taxes and oversight controls. Mechanized distilleries readily expanded production and increased their demand for labor, grains, cooperage, copper stills, and other metal fixtures. Improved transportation—turnpikes, steamboats, trains, and dams and locks—allowed distillers to extend their reach for grains and equipment while distributing their product to national and international markets. Industrial production produced large amounts of spent grains, or slop, which had to be disposed of by feeding it to livestock or dumping it in sinkholes and creeks. Industrialization also increased the risk of fire, explosions, personal injury, and livestock diseases. Overproduction during the last third of the nineteenth century, among other problems, forced many distilleries to stop production or close. The temperance movement eventually led to Prohibition, which was in effect nationwide from 1920 to 1933. A small number of distillers survived that period by making medicinal whiskey. Part II consists of two case studies that provide detailed information on the general process of mechanization and industrialization: the Henry McKenna Distillery in Nelson County, and James Stone’s Elkhorn Distillery in Scott County. Part III examines the process of claiming product identity through naming, copyright law, and the acknowledgment that tradition and heritage can be employed by contemporary distillers to market their whiskey. Distillers venerate the “old,” and reconstructing the past as a marketing strategy has demonstrated that the industry’s heritage resides on the landscape—much of it established in the nineteenth century in the form of historic buildings, traditional routes, distillery towns, and other features that can be conserved through historic preservation and utilized by contemporary whiskey makers.
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