Academic literature on the topic 'Cowra'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cowra"

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Roper, MM, and DM Halsall. "Use of products of straw decomposition by N2-fixing (C2H2-reducing) populations of bacteria in three soils from wheat-growing areas." Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 37, no. 1 (1986): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ar9860001.

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The potential for N2 fixation by free-living bacteria using straw as a source of energy was evaluated in three soils (one from Gunnedah and two from Cowra) representative of the wheat belt in New South Wales. All three soils had a history of straw incorporation. The abilities of the respective microbial populations to use a range of carbon sources, including potential products of decomposition of straw, was determined and compared with the size and composition of each population. Neutral to alkaline (pH 7.4) soil of high (51%) clay content from Gunnedah produced higher rates of nitrogenase activity with straw than more acid (pH 5.6) lower (17%) clay containing soil from Cowra (site B). Gunnedah soil also contained a larger population of N2-fixing bacteria which used a broader range of energy sources than soil from either Cowra site B or Cowra site W (pH 5.8, clay content 34%). There was little difference in the composition of the N2-fixing populations in each of the soils except that Azotobacter spp. were absent from the acid Cowra soils. It was concluded that the difference in behaviour of the respective N2-fixing populations was primarily due to the physical characteristics of the soil affecting the numbers and activities of diazotrophic microorganisms. In addition some soil environments failed to support specific organisms.
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Best, John. "High on a hill in Cowra." Medical Journal of Australia 149, no. 11-12 (December 1988): 692–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.5694/j.1326-5377.1988.tb120826.x.

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Wild, JP. "Reminiscences." Australian Journal of Physics 47, no. 5 (1994): 497. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ph940497.

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I would like to take up something that John Whiteoak said at the symposium yesterday in relation to Cowra or Parkes as the possible site for the 64-m telescope. In my memory, what really happened was that E. G. (Taffy) Bowen was determined to locate the telescope on the Nepean River near Camden. It would have been a very beautiful, but very noisy site, and most people were resigned to having the telescope there. But I argued very strongly that it should go 'over the mountains'. Taffy was good enough to arrange a meeting of radio the result that a group, an unlikely team consisting of B. Y. (Bernie) Mills, W. N. (Chris) Christiansen and me, set out to look for an alternative site, and we finished up at Cowra. We were going to recommend Cowra but Chris had second thoughts, and said he would like to push on a little further-and he found this magnificent site near Parkes. So it was really Chris's discovery. was left to Kevin Sheridan, Frank Gardner and me, with the aid of a low-flying aircraft, to do some tests to make sure that the site did not suffer from interference from industrial noise from the town of Parkes itself.
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Packer, IJ, GJ Hamilton, and TB Koen. "Runoff, soil loss and soil physical property changes of light textured surface soils from long term tillage treatments." Soil Research 30, no. 5 (1992): 789. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sr9920789.

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A long-term tillage trial was conducted (1981 to 1987) on loamy textured soils to quantify changes in runoff, soil loss and some soil physical properties due to conservation tillage practices. Two sites were established, one at Cowra on a sandy loam textured soil, and the other at Grenfell on a loamy textured soil. The tillage treatments imposed were direct drilling (DD), reduced tillage (RT) and traditional tillage (TT), with grazing at both sites, and a direct drilling ungrazed (NT) treatment at Cowra only. Runoff and soil loss were measured using a rainfall simulator, and sorptivity (S), saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ksat), bulk density to 40 mm (BD4) and 100 mm (BD10), organic carbon (OC) and water stable aggregates (WSA) were measured annually. Runoff decreased significantly in the minimum soil disturbance treatments (NT and DD) at Cowra. Runoff did not decrease in the stubble incorporation treatments despite a significant increase in OC and WSA. Decreases in runoff were due to the development and maintenance of porosity, particularly macropores. Changes in other soil physical properties were generally not significant owing to temporal variability. The regression relationship between OC and WSA, although significant, had little practical value because of high prediction error. Although improvements in soil physical properties were measured, a period of at least five years of cropping at both sites was required before they became significant and consistent.
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Desmarchelier, JM, and T. Ghaly. "Effects of raising the receival moisture content on the storability of Australian wheat." Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 33, no. 7 (1993): 909. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ea9930909.

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The receival moisture content of wheat was raised experimentally from 12 to 13% (w/w, wet basis) at sites near Cowra and Forbes (New South Wales) and Port Giles (South Australia) that were fitted with cooling (aeration), during the 1989-90 and 1990-91 seasons. At Cowra and Forbes, no wheat was received above 12% moisture content. At Port Giles, large quantities of wheat were received in the range 12.1-13.0% moisture content, reaching a maximum of 56% of receivals in 1 bin. However, the average moisture content in each bin did not exceed 12.0% and changed, on average, only 0.01% during aerated storage. No significant effect on quality was detected from studies on viability, bread-making quality, and mycotoxins. All wheat was successfully passed for export, meeting all normal standards including the 'nil tolerance' for live insects.
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Horiuchi, Lynne, and Anoma Pieris. "Temporal Cities: Commemoration at Manzanar, California and Cowra, Australia." Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas 3, no. 3 (October 4, 2017): 292–321. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23523085-00303003.

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This article compares two former Pacific War incarceration histories in the us and Australia, inquiring how their narratives of confinement and redress might be interpreted spatially and materially, and how these sensibilities are incorporated into contemporary heritage strategies including, in these examples, through Japanese garden designs. At the Manzanar Historic Site in California, the efforts of several generations advocating for civil rights and preservation of the Manzanar Relocation Center have overlapped with the National Park Service’s efforts to fulfil its federal mandates to preserve and restore the historic site. Conversely at Cowra, New South Wales, these histories are interwoven with post-war commemorative spaces, aimed at drawing visitors to former incarceration sites and encouraging contemplation of these difficult histories. This article analyses their complex creative processes and interpretive strategies as useful for drawing these isolated national stories into broader global interrogations of their significance.
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Lennox, P. G., M. A. Forster, and I. S. Williams. "Emplacement and deformation ages of the Wyangala Granite, Cowra, NSW." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 61, no. 4 (April 7, 2014): 607–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08120099.2014.897648.

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Fogarty, N. M., and J. G. Mulholland. "Annual lambing performance of crossbred ewes in out-of-season and accelerated lamb production systems." Animal Production Science 53, no. 10 (2013): 1093. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/an12269.

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The average annual lamb production of 1182 crossbred ewes was evaluated in three lamb production systems over 4 years at two sites (Cowra and Wagga Wagga). The lamb production systems were: accelerated 8-monthly joinings with two flocks joined 4 months apart (Ac8), spring joining with an autumn back-up joining (SpB), and annual autumn joining (AuA). The Ac8 and SpB systems were evaluated at Cowra and the SpB and AuA systems were evaluated at Wagga Wagga. Two genotypes of ewes, Border Leicester × Merino (BLM) and Hyfer (Dorset × Merino composite), were used at both sites, with natural joinings to Dorset, Suffolk or Hyfer rams. Four traits were analysed separately at each site to evaluate the average performance per ewe joined per year: number of lambings, number of lambs born, number of lambs weaned and total weight of lamb weaned. Analyses were also undertaken using only spring joining data. At Cowra ewes in the Ac8 system had more lambings (1.23 vs 0.87), lambs born (1.88 vs 1.28), lambs weaned (1.47 vs 1.00) and weight of lamb weaned (31.1 vs 21.5 kg) than ewes in the SpB system (P < 0.01). At Wagga Wagga the AuA system had significantly more lambs born (1.37 vs 1.13), lambs weaned (1.08 vs 0.95) and weight weaned (26.1 vs 21.9 kg) than the SpB system (P < 0.01). The system × breed interaction was significant for all traits because the BLM ewes were greater than Hyfer ewes in the AuA, but the reverse in the SpB system. At both sites the advantage of the back-up joining over only joining in spring was greater for the BLM than the Hyfer ewes. The relative performance of the various lamb production systems for each ewe breed is presented. An accelerated lambing system is likely to be more successful using ewes that have an extended breeding season and good out-of-season breeding performance.
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Hocking, P. J., and M. Stapper. "Effects of sowing time and nitrogen fertiliser on canola and wheat, and nitrogen fertiliser on Indian mustard. I. Dry matter production, grain yield, and yield components." Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 52, no. 6 (2001): 623. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ar00113.

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Canola, Indian mustard, and wheat were grown under dryland conditions at Ariah Park and Cowra (canola only) in the cropping belt of New South Wales, Australia, to determine the effects of sowing time (canola and wheat) and nitrogen (N) fertiliser on the growth, grain yield, and yield components of the crops. Compared with an April sowing, the grain yield of canola at Ariah Park was reduced by 35% for a May sowing and by 67% for a July sowing. Canola yield at Cowra was reduced by 45% between early and late May sowings. Wheat yield declined by 35% between the May and July sowings at Ariah Park. Grain yields of canola and wheat at Ariah Park responded to N fertiliser in the April and May sowings, but not in the July sowing. Indian mustard had a higher yield than thecomparable sowing of canola. Canola yields at Cowra were more responsive to N fertiliser than at Ariah Park, and increased from 0.5 to 2.9 t/ha with 100 kg N/ha. For each day that sowing canola was delayed at both sites after Aprill—early May, anthesis was delayed on average by 0.52 days. For Dollarbird wheat, the delay in anthesis was 0.39 days per day sowing was delayed. Dry matter accumulation by the oilseeds was greatest during flowering, but before anthesis for wheat. Late sowing had little effect on the proportions of dry matter accumulated in a particular growth period. Irrespective of sowing time, grain yields and dry-matter harvest indices of the oilseeds were similar to values for wheat when differences in the biosynthetic costs of grain and straw production were taken into account. Late sowing usually resulted in a greater reduction in canola oil concentration than high N fertiliser rates. Canola oil concentration was reduced by 1.7 percentage points per 1mp;deg;C increase in mean temperature during grain filling as a result of sowing late. It was concluded that N fertiliser could not compensate for the yield reduction in canola and wheat due to sowing late. Early sowing was essential to achieve high oil levels in canola.
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Fogarty, N. M., and J. G. Mulholland. "Seasonal reproductive performance of crossbred ewes in intensive lamb-production systems." Animal Production Science 54, no. 6 (2014): 791. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/an12434.

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The lambing performance of 1179 crossbred ewes with 5540 joining records in three seasons (autumn, winter and spring) at two sites (Cowra and Wagga Wagga) was evaluated in three lamb-production systems (spring joining with autumn backup matings at both locations, with accelerated lambing at Cowra or annual autumn joining at Wagga Wagga) over 4 years. Two genotypes of ewes, Border Leicester × Merino (BLM) and Hyfer (Dorset × Merino composite), were used at both sites, with natural matings to Dorset, Suffolk or Hyfer rams. The following five traits were analysed separately at each site to evaluate ewe lambing performance: fertility, litter size, lambs born (per ewe joined), lambs weaned (per ewe joined) and weight of lamb weaned (per ewe joined). The mixed model included fixed effects for season of joining, ewe breed, ram group, ewe prejoining weight (spline) and their interactions, with ewe fitted as a random effect. The autumn (February) joinings had higher ewe fertility, litter size and overall lamb production than did joinings in spring (October and November), with winter (June) being intermediate. At the autumn joinings, the BLM ewes had higher fertility, lambs weaned and weight of lamb weaned than did the Hyfer ewes, although this was reversed at the spring joinings, causing significant season × ewe breed interactions. While litter size was larger in the autumn than in the spring for both breeds there was a much smaller seasonal effect among the Hyfer than BLM ewes. Prejoining ewe weight had a significant effect on all reproduction traits, with generally a curvilinear response with increasing weight. The interactions of weight with season × ewe breed were significant (P < 0.001) for all traits at Cowra and most traits at Wagga Wagga. Ram group was significant (P < 0.05) for most traits, with ewes joined to Hyfer rams having higher fertility than those joined to Suffolk. and with Dorset rams being intermediate. At Wagga Wagga, this was the case for spring joinings, but there was no difference between the ram groups in autumn, causing a significant ram × season interaction (P < 0.001). Ewe repeatability ranged from 0.15 to 0.25 for all traits. Using suitable breeds or genotypes, together with optimising management, could improve out-of-season lamb production.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cowra"

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Macdonald, Gaynor (Gaynor Marilyn) 1948. "The Koori way : the dynamics of cultural distinctiveness in settled Australia." Phd thesis, Department of Anthropology, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5433.

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Geeves, Guy William, and not available. "Aggregate Breakdown and Soil Surface Sealing under Rainfall." The Australian National University, 1997. http://thesis.anu.edu.au./public/adt-ANU20010702.142014.

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Aggregate breakdown is an important process controlling the availability of fine soil material necessary for structural sealing of soil surfaces under rainfall. It may be caused by slaking resulting from rapid soil wetting and by physical dispersion resulting from direct and indirect energetic raindrop impacts. Relationships have been proposed by others predicting steady infiltration rate and saturated hydraulic conductivity from final aggregate size following high energy rainfall on initially dry, uncovered soil surfaces. Under these extreme conditions, both rapid wetting and energetic raindrop impact result in maximum aggregate breakdown and surface sealing. Knowledge of the relative importance of these two agents under less severe conditions and knowledge of how increased aggregate stability due to conservative soil management may ameliorate them should improve prediction and management of aggregate breakdown and surface sealing. ¶ This study has isolated and quantified effects of rapid soil wetting and energetic raindrop impact on aggregate breakdown and surface sealing. Simulated rainfall was applied to re-packed soils from differing tillage treatments on light textured soils from near Cowra and Condobolin in New South Wales, Australia. Aggregate breakdown was assessed using aggregate size distribution, determined by wet sieving and summarised by a range of statistics. The degree of breakdown was assessed after 66 mm of simulated rainfall whilst the rate of change in aggregate size distribution was assessed by sampling after 5, 10, 15, 30 and 60 mm. The degree of surface sealing was assessed using final surface hydraulic conductivity after 66 mm rainfall calculated from inferred infiltration and measured sub-seal soil water potential. The rate of surface sealing was assessed prior to ponding using cumulative rainfall volume at ponding and throughout the post-ponding phase by decline in surface hydraulic conductivity as a function of cumulative rainfall kinetic energy. Two levels of raindrop kinetic energy flux and three wetting treatments were used to isolate effects of these agents of aggregate breakdown and surface sealing. ¶ Significant surface aggregate breakdown was observed when either rapid soil wetting or highly energetic raindrop impact were allowed to occur. The majority of the data suggest a negative interaction between the two agents. When soil was initially dry rapid soil wetting was the dominant agent causing rapid aggregate breakdown, generally within the first 5 mm of rainfall. When rapid soil wetting was prevented by tension pre-wetting, energetic raindrop impact was the dominant agent and was able to cause aggregate breakdown of an almost equivalent degree. This breakdown occurred over a period lasting for up to 30 mm of rainfall. In contrast, the rate and degree of surface sealing were influenced primarily by raindrop kinetic energy with highly energetic impact leading to significant surface sealing, irrespective of soil wetting. For the soils studied, it was concluded that structural sealing of surface soil, could be significantly reduced by protecting the soil surface from energetic raindrop impact but that prevention of surface aggregate breakdown required amelioration of both processes. ¶ In addition to the negative interaction referred to above, a positive interaction was observed whereby energetic raindrop impact occurring concurrently with rapid soil wetting caused a greater degree of aggregate breakdown and a greater degree of surface sealing than energetic raindrop impact occurring subsequent to rapid soil wetting. The effect on surface sealing may be explained by the effect of lower sub-seal water potential that necessarily results from initially dry soil condition required for concurrent rapid wetting. However, the effect on aggregate breakdown remains unexplained. ¶ Notwithstanding the above, permeability was reduced under high kinetic energy rainfall even when soil wetting was reduced to very slow rates by tension pre-wetting. Likewise, surface sealing did occur under low kinetic energy rainfall for the least stable soil following rapid soil wetting. It was concluded that threshold soil wetting rates and threshold rainfall energy levels, proposed by others, are either not applicable to these soils or are negligible. ¶ The rate and degree of aggregate breakdown was also dependent on the soil with the Cowra soil being more stable than the Condobolin soil. Greater aggregate stability brought about by conservative tillage treatments at both soil locations retarded and reduced surface sealing. Unvalidated simulation modelling was used to illustrate possible effects for the soil water balance. In contrast to the conclusions of Loch (1994b), that were based on soils throughout eastern Queensland, the soil water balance simulations predicted that the residual benefits in ameliorating surface sealing resulting from improved aggregate stability could significantly reduce point runoff under the lower intensity winter rainfalls experienced in southern New South Wales. ¶ Limited testing with Condobolin soil following tension pre-wetting showed that rainfall intensity, varying over the range from 16.5 to 66 mm h-1, had little effect on the decline in surface hydraulic conductivity as a function of cumulative rainfall kinetic energy. This contrasts with greater seal permeability under higher rainfall intensities observed by Romkens et al. (1985) and others. It is proposed that an alternative explanation exists for the observations of Romkens et al. based on reduction in seal permeability due to lower sub-seal water potential under lower intensity rainfall. ¶ Post-ponding reduction in K[subscript sat] under high kinetic energy rainfall exhibited exponential decline as a function of cumulative raindrop kinetic energy as proposed by Moore (1981b). However, inferred rates of decline prior to ponding were more rapid than measured post-ponding rates suggesting that infiltration models using only a single exponential rate of surface K[subscript sat] decline based on post-ponding measurements may be in error. Potential for error is greatest at early times for loose soil that is highly susceptible to sealing. ¶ Pre-ponding decline in surface aggregation was also relatively more rapid than post-ponding decline. This discrepancy was evident irrespective of soil pre-wetting. From this it was concluded that the more rapid initial aggregate breakdown and surface sealing was due, at least in part, to processes other than aggregate slaking due to rapid soil wetting. An explanation has been proposed as follows. Raindrops initially fall on aggregates that have not been subjected to rainfall and therefore each drop has the capacity to cause greater aggregate breakdown than subsequent raindrops that fall on aggregates or soil fragments that have been strong enough to survive preceding rainfall impacts. Such a mechanism could provide an alternative explanation of the findings of Baumhardt et al. (1991) who found that less cumulative raindrop kinetic energy was necessary to achieve a given reduction in surface conductance when the cumulative energy was supplied through lower energy drops. ¶ Relationships predicting rates of surface sealing using aggregate breakdown under rainfall and aggregate stability were evaluated. Post-ponding infiltration rate and surface K[subscript sat] were related to aggregate size by exponential functions. The proportion of surface aggregates less than 0.125 mm in diameter provided slightly more consistent relationships. Parameters of fitted relationships differed among wetting pre-treatments suggesting that the influence of sub-seal water potential on surface K[subscript sat] must be considered whenever such relationships are developed or applied. Aggregate stability determined by wet sieving was related to rainfall volume required for ponding, final K[subscript sat] and final aggregate size but only for initially dry soil suggesting that such relationships may be unique to the rainfall, soils and flow conditions used to develop them. ¶ This study has established the relative importance of rapid soil wetting and energetic raindrop impact in both aggregate breakdown and surface sealing over a range of antecedent soil water and rainfall conditions. It has quantified the effectiveness of culturally induced aggregate stability in ameliorating effects of these two important agents and illustrated the potentially significant consequences for the soil water balance. It has quantified temporal patterns of surface sealing and aggregate breakdown and proposed an alternative mechanism explaining more rapid aggregate breakdown during the initial stages of rainfall. It has identified possible explanations for effects of rainfall intensity on surface sealing observed in other studies. It has also partially evaluated a mechanism proposed to explain important effects of subseal water potential on seal permeability found in this and other studies. These significant findings have been used with the findings of other studies to amend the conceptual model proposed by Le Bissonnias (1990). The amended model gives a more complete description of the relationships between parameters and processes determining aggregate breakdown and structural surface sealing under rainfall.
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Humes, Cathryn Amanda. "Cobra." Kent State University Honors College / OhioLINK, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ksuhonors1398805873.

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Justo, Casaretto Renzo Alejandro, and Llancce Angela Lisset Ordóñez. "Análisis de riesgos cualitativo aplicado al tramo Piedras Blancas - Cora Cora del proyecto Conservación Vial Cora Cora." Bachelor's thesis, Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas (UPC), 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10757/558686.

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Todos los proyectos están expuestos a riesgos que pueden afectar su objetivo. Los riesgos son eventos o condiciones que al ocurrir pueden generar un impacto negativo o positivo en el objetivo del proyecto. Es decir, los riesgos pueden convertirse en problemas para el proyecto si no se reconocen a tiempo. Por otro lado, en los últimos años, el gobierno peruano ha estado desarrollando proyectos de carreteras, los cuales van a ir aumentando. Por ese motivo, a través del presente trabajo de investigación, se pretende evidenciar la importancia de implementar una gestión de riesgos en los proyectos de conservación vial a partir de la etapa de ejecución de la propuesta. Esta gestión concluiría en una retroalimentación para futuros proyectos similares de la empresa constructora. La estructura del presente estudio consiste en identificar y analizar los riesgos utilizando las técnicas y herramientas propuestas por diferentes especialistas en gestión del riesgo. El trabajo concluye con el desarrollo de un plan de respuesta para maximizar las oportunidades y minimizar las amenazas, con el fin de asegurar el costo, la calidad y el plazo del proyecto.
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Dunn, Mark. "Cora." Fogler Library, University of Maine, 2001. http://www.library.umaine.edu/theses/pdf/DunnMX2001.pdf.

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Tolley, Rebecca. "Cora Weiss." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2011. https://www.amzn.com/1851099603.

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Kato, Megumi Humanities &amp Social Sciences Australian Defence Force Academy UNSW. "Representations of Japan and Japanese people in Australian literature." Awarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of Humanities and Social Sciences, 2005. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/38718.

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This thesis is a broadly chronological study of representations of Japan and the Japanese in Australian novels, stories and memoirs from the late nineteenth century to the twenty-first century. Adopting Edward Said???s Orientalist notion of the `Other???, it attempts to elaborate patterns in which Australian authors describe and evaluate the Japanese. As well as examining these patterns of representation, this thesis outlines the course of their development and change over the years, how they relate to the context in which they occur, and how they contribute to the formation of wider Australian views on Japan and the Japanese. The thesis considers the role of certain Australian authors in formulating images and ideas of the Japanese ???Other???. These authors, ranging from fiction writers to journalists, scholars and war memoirists, act as observers, interpreters, translators, and sometimes ???traitors??? in their cross-cultural interactions. The thesis includes work from within and outside ???mainstream??? writings, thus expanding the contexts of Australian literary history. The major ???periods??? of Australian literature discussed in this thesis include: the 1880s to World War II; the Pacific War; the post-war period; and the multicultural period (1980s to 2000). While a comprehensive examination of available literature reveals the powerful and continuing influence of the Pacific War, images of ???the stranger???, ???the enemy??? and later ???the ally??? or ???partner??? are shown to vary according to authors, situations and wider international relations. This thesis also examines gender issues, which are often brought into sharp relief in cross-cultural representations. While typical East-West power-relationships are reflected in gender relations, more complex approaches are also taken by some authors. This thesis argues that, while certain patterns recur, such as versions of the ???Cho-Cho-San??? or ???Madame Butterfly??? story, Japan-related works have given some Australian authors, especially women, opportunities to reveal more ???liberated??? viewpoints than seemed possible in their own cultural context. As the first extensive study of Japan in Australian literary consciousness, this thesis brings to the surface many neglected texts. It shows a pattern of changing interests and interactions between two nations whose economic interactions have usually been explored more deeply than their literary and cultural relations.
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Catanzaro, Ariadne Castilho. "Depois do jogo, antes do jogo: um estudo de Corra Lola Corra." Universidade Anhembi Morumbi, 2009. http://sitios.anhembi.br/tedesimplificado/handle/TEDE/1425.

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Esta pesquisa teve como objetivo um estudo do filme Corra Lola Corra, de 1998, dirigido pelo alemão Tom Tykwer. A análise feita neste trabalho teve como base os principais fatos históricos que podem ter influenciado o roteiro e as escolhas estéticas do filme. A partir de um breve sobrevôo pelo século XX e fatos marcantes especificamente da década de 1990, buscamos elementos do filme que caracterizam o mesmo como um produto audiovisual da cultura pós-moderna, ou ainda, enquanto um produto da cultura da mídia. Para isso percorremos fatos como a emancipação feminina, a revolução tecnológica, a globalização e a desterritorialização cultural enquanto importantes fatores históricos e sociais que influenciam o roteiro do filme. As características do cinema da década de 1990, a estética do videoclipe, o hibridismo, a hipertextualidade, a cultura da mídia e a formação de múltiplas identidades foram os fatores audiovisuais que influenciaram a estética escolhida para a narrativa de Corra Lola Corra.
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Kölln, Johanna. "Humanisierung von Cobra venom factor." [S.l.] : [s.n.], 2003. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=96864029X.

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Agam-Segal, Reshef. "Cora Diamond's Moral Philosophy." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.486964.

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The dissertation explores and critically evaluates Cora Diamond's moral philosophy, understood as an adaptation ofWittgenstein's more general philosophical ideas and methods. In particular, it examines Diamond's 'Wittgensteinian aversion to theoretical thinking in ethics. Even loyal Wittgensteinians sometimes (mis)use Wittgenstein's ideas to advance various deniable theories, including forms of realism and anti-realism in moral philosophy, and varieties of ethical relativism and conservativism. Diamond's moral philosophy, by contrast, maintains a non-theoretical stance which, nevertheless, offers a satisfying philosophical alternative to theorybuilding. Part One distinguishes Diamond's 'realistic spirit' from Sabina Lovibond's philosophical realism. I argue that Lovibond's McDowellian quietism is covertly committed to various theses. I explain Diamond's rejection of Lovibond's conception of ethics as a subject matter, and the differences between their appeals to the ideas of form oflife, and their attacks on the conception oflanguage as rule-governed. Part Two argues that Elizabeth Anscombe's Wittgensteinian rejection of the notion ofself-legislation unwittingly reflects dogmatic views of our conceptual life. I explain how Diamond's use of the Wittgensteinian idea of a picture, and her clarification of the grammar of secondary uses, help in attaining a more realistic view of our conceptual life. This part, and the next, examines the importance of the imagination in ordinary uses oflanguage, and in philosophy. Part Three distinguishes Diamond's conception of grammar and language games from that of Norman Malcolm. It also distinguishes Diamond's conceptions of the imagination, of moral philosophy, and of the good of philosophy in general, from those ofIris Murdoch. I examine Malcolm's and Murdoch's views as reflected in their discussions of Anselm's ontological argument. Malcolm uses Wittgensteinian tools dogmatically, while Murdoch's correctives to Malcolm themselves tum out to verge on dogmatism. I show how Murdoch's views can be given a Wittgensteinian inflection without becoming philosophical theses. This, however, reveals that Diamond's realistic spirit must also struggle against temptations to disregard some possibilities of our conceptual life that are created by the Wittgensteinian philosophical vocabulary itself.
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Books on the topic "Cowra"

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Harry, Gordon. Voyage from shame: The Cowra breakout and afterwards. Queensland, Australia: University of Queensland Press, 1994.

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Nagase, Takashi. The double-edged dagger: The Cowra Incident of 1944. Winchester: Sarsen Press, 1994.

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Escape to death: The Japanese break-out at Cowra, 1944. Milsons Point, NSW: Random House Australia, 1994.

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Hutton Symposium on the Origin of Granites and Related Rocks (2nd 1991 Australian Academy of Science). Second Hutton Symposium on Granites and Related Rocks, Canberra 1991: Enclaves in the S-type Cowra Granodiorite : excursion guide, 25 September 1991. Canberra: Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics, 1992.

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Willebrandt, Avery. Spitting cobra =: Cobra escupidora. New York, NY: Gareth Stevens Pub., 2012.

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O'Donnell, Jessica. Egyptian cobra =: Cobra egipcia. New York, NY: Gareth Stevens Pub., 2012.

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Helder, Herberto. Cobra. Madrid: Cuaderna de poesía portuguesa, 1990.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. Cobra. New York: Berkley Books, 2002.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. Cobra. New York: Baen Books, 1985.

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Cobra. New York: Jove Books, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cowra"

1

Trendowicz, Adam, and Ross Jeffery. "CoBRA." In Software Project Effort Estimation, 349–64. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03629-8_15.

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Lee, Changhoon, Jongsung Kim, Seokhie Hong, Jaechul Sung, and Sangjin Lee. "Related-Key Differential Attacks on Cobra-S128, Cobra-F64a, and Cobra-F64b." In Progress in Cryptology – Mycrypt 2005, 244–62. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11554868_18.

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Hoff, Karin. "Sandel, Cora." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_20921-1.

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Lim, T. K. "Garcinia cowa." In Edible Medicinal And Non-Medicinal Plants, 29–34. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1764-0_4.

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Hindman, Neil. "Remembering Cora." In Association for Women in Mathematics Series, 5–7. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51593-9_2.

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Kurczynski, Karen. "Surrealism into Cobra." In The Cobra Movement in Postwar Europe, 79–133. New York: Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351034500-3.

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Bawalan, D. D. "Copra: the Philippines." In Crop Post-Harvest: Science and Technology, Volume 2, 197–206. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Science Ltd, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470751022.ch10.

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Vogel, Carl-Wilhelm, Brian E. Hew, and David C. Fritzinger. "Cobra Venom Factor." In Handbook of Venoms and Toxins of Reptiles, 323–38. 2nd ed. Second edition. | Boca Raton : CRC Press, 2021.: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429054204-24.

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Pereyra, Maria Cristina, Stefania Marcantognini, Alexander M. Stokolos, and Wilfredo Urbina. "Remembering Cora Sadosky." In Harmonic Analysis, Partial Differential Equations, Complex Analysis, Banach Spaces, and Operator Theory (Volume 1), 29–52. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30961-3_3.

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Khare, C. P. "Garcinia cowa Roxb." In Indian Medicinal Plants, 1. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-70638-2_663.

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Conference papers on the topic "Cowra"

1

Hao, Tian, Ruogu Zhou, and Guoliang Xing. "COBRA." In the 10th international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2307636.2307645.

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Wang, Yixiao, Keith E. Green, and Ian D. Walker. "CoPRA." In CHI'16: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2851581.2892333.

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Ye, Zi, and Hammad Khalid. "Cobra." In the 28th of the international conference extended abstracts. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1753846.1754154.

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Schaffer, Péter, and István Vajda. "Cora." In the 10th ACM Symposium. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1298126.1298190.

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Kamusella, P., and F. Scheer. "Pneumoscrotum – Cobra sign." In 99. Deutscher Röntgenkongress. Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1641535.

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Rode, Jeremy P., Mark J. Hsu, David Smith, and Anis Husain. "Collaborative Beamfocusing Radio (COBRA)." In SPIE Defense, Security, and Sensing, edited by Sohail A. Dianat and Michael D. Zoltowski. SPIE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2018142.

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Mierzejewski, Piotr, and Christopher Pulsinelli. "The 'X' side of Cobra." In the 2009 Conference of the Center for Advanced Studies. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1723028.1723075.

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Zuber, Kai, Osvaldo Civitarese, Ivan Stekl, and Jouni Suhonen. "Status of the COBRA experiment." In WORKSHOP ON CIRCULATION OF DOUBLE-BETA-DECAY MATRIX. AIP, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3266093.

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Kadam, Sagar. "Lubdhanam cora short film." In SIGGRAPH Asia 2012 Computer Animation Festival. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2407603.2407634.

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Yeh, P. C., P. Y. Chang, J. M. Yang, P. H. Wu, and M. C. Liu. "Bolt Bearing Strength of Commingled Boron/Glass Fiber Reinforced Aluminum Laminates." In ASME 2012 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2012-85925.

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Abstract:
The bearing properties of recently developed hybrid fiber/metal laminates, or COmmingled Boron/glass fiber Reinforced Aluminum laminates (COBRA), are investigated in this study. The bolt-type bearing tests on GLass REinforced aluminum laminates (GLARE), non-commingled hybrid boron/glass/aluminum fiber/metal laminates (HFML) and COBRA were carried out as a function of e/D ratio, metal volume fraction, fiber volume fraction, and fiber orientation. Experimental results show that with the same joint geometry and metal volume fraction, the commingling of boron fibers improves the bearing strength of fiber/metal laminates. The bearing strength of COBRA with longitudinal fibers is lower than that with transverse fibers due to the fact that shearout failure takes place before maximum bearing strength is reached. The experimental results show that, with only either transverse fiber orientation or longitudinal fiber orientation, COBRA with 18% boron fiber volume fraction possesses a higher bearing strength when compared to HFML with 6% boron fiber volume fraction. In addition to the properties in COBRA with parallel-plies commingled prepreg, the bearing properties of various COBRA with [0°/90°] and [0°/90°/90°/0°] cross-ply commingled prepregs are also discussed.
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Reports on the topic "Cowra"

1

Brown, Douglas M. COBRA: The Base Closure Cost Model. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada219009.

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Baldwin, D. L. Tritium analyses of COBRA-1A2 beryllium pebbles. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/335405.

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Rector, D. R., and T. E. Michener. COBRA-SFS modifications and cask model optimization. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6242345.

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Ott, L. J. (Boiling water reactor (BWR) CORA experiments). Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6434331.

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Wheeler, C. L., and R. E. Dodge. INGEN: A COBRA-NC input generator user's manual. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6935474.

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Wright, Robert, and Jr. COBRA II Correlation Study & Field Performance Summary. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, November 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada337597.

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Rector, D. R., T. E. Michener, and J. M. Cuta. Verification and validation of COBRA-SFS transient analysis capability. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/335183.

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Webb, B. J. COBRA-IV PC: A personal computer version of COBRA-IV-I for thermal-hydraulic analysis of rod bundle nuclear fuel elements and cores. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/5655065.

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Baldwin, D. L. Thermal ramp tritium release in COBRA-1A2 C03 beryllium pebbles. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/335403.

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Oliver, B. M. Helium analyses of 1-mm beryllium microspheres from COBRA-1A2. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/335404.

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