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1

Caldwell, David H., and Geoffrey P. Stell. "Achanduin Castle, Lismore, Argyll." Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports, no. 73 (2017): 1–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/issn.2056-7421.2017.73.1-69.

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Excavations were undertaken at Achanduin Castle, Lismore, Argyll (NGR: NM 8043 3927), over six seasons from 1970 to 1975 under the direction of the late Dennis John Turner (1932–2013), henceforward referred to as DJT. Partly funded by the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and with tools and equipment loaned by RCAHMS (now Historic Environment Scotland), the work was carried out in support of the RCAHMS’s programme of survey in the Lorn district of Argyll. Its purpose was to examine an apparently little-altered but much-ruined example of a castle of enclosure ascribable to a small but identifiably distinct group of rectangular, or near rectangular, courtyard castles. DJT concluded that it was built c 1295–1310 by the MacDougalls, and only later passed to the bishops of Argyll. The authors add their own observations on the excavations in a separate section. They note tenuous evidence for a pre-castle phase. The bulk of the report focuses on the erection and occupation of the castle, followed by abandonment, post-medieval occupation, collapse/demolition and recent times.
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2

McCardell, A., L. Davison, and A. Edwards. "The effect of nitrogen loading on on-site system design: a model for determining land application area size." Water Science and Technology 51, no. 10 (May 1, 2005): 259–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2005.0374.

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Designers of on-site wastewater management systems have six opportunities to remove pollutants of concern from the aqueous waste stream before it reaches ground or surface waters. These opportunities occur at source, at point of collection (primary treatment), secondary treatment, tertiary treatment, land application and buffers. This paper presents a computer based model for the sizing of on-site system land application areas applicable to the Lismore area in Northern New South Wales, a region of high rainfall. Inputs to the model include daily climatic data, soil type, number of people loading the system and size of housing allotment. Constraints include allowable phosphorus export, nitrogen export and hydraulic percolation. In the Lismore area nitrogen is the nutrient of most concern. In areas close to environmentally sensitive waterways, and in dense developments, the allowable annual nitrogen export becomes the main factor determining the land application area size. The model offers system designers the opportunity to test various combinations of nitrogen attenuation strategies (source control, secondary treatment) in order to create a solution which offers an acceptable nitrogen export rate while meeting the client's household and financial needs. The model runs on an Excel spreadsheet and has been developed by Lismore City Council.
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3

Redhouse, D. I., M. Anderson, T. Cockerell, S. Gilmour, R. Housley, C. Malone, and S. Stoddart. "Power in context: the Lismore landscape project." Antiquity 76, no. 294 (December 2002): 945–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00091699.

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4

Stevens, Jacquelyn E., J. Brendan Murphy, and Fred W. Chandler. "Geochemistry of the Namurian Lismore Formation, northern mainland Nova Scotia: sedimentation and tectonic activity along the southern flank of the Maritimes Basin." Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 36, no. 10 (October 1, 1999): 1655–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e99-078.

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Geochemical and isotopic data from the clastic rocks of the Namurian Lismore Formation in mainland Nova Scotia identify key episodes of tectonic activity during the development of the Maritimes Basin in Atlantic Canada. The Lismore Formation forms part of the Mabou Group and is an upward-coarsening 2500 m thick fluvial sequence deposited in the Merigomish sub-basin along the southern flank of the Maritimes Basin. Based on stratigraphic evidence, the Lismore Formation can be divided into upper and lower members which reflect variations in depositional environment and paleoclimate. The geochemical and isotopic data may also be subdivided into two groupings that primarily reflect varying contributions from accessory phases, clay minerals, or rock fragments. This subdivision occurs 115 m above the base of the upper member. The data from the lower grouping (group A) show an important contribution from underlying Silurian rocks, with a relatively minor contribution from Late Devonian granitoid rocks from the adjacent Cobequid Highlands and possibly metasedimentary rocks from the Meguma Terrane to the south. The data from the upper grouping (group B) reveal a more important contribution from the Cobequid Highlands granitoid rocks. This variation in geochemistry is thought to constrain the age of renewed motion and uplift along the faults along the southern flank of the Maritimes Basin and, more generally, suggests that geochemical and isotopic data of continental clastic rocks may help constrain the age of tectonic events that influence deposition of basin-fill rocks.
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5

Morrison, M. A., G. L. Hendry, and P. T. Leat. "Regional and tectonic implications of parallel Caledonian and Permo-Carboniferous lamprophyre dyke swarms from Lismore, Ardgour." Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences 77, no. 4 (1987): 279–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263593300023178.

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ABSTRACTGeochemical data are presented for 166 minor intrusions collected across the axis of the Ardgour swarm in the Isle of Lismore. The intrusions can be divided into: an alkali basalt-camptonite-monchiquite group resembling other Scottish Permo-Carboniferous dykes; a group of calc-alkaline (shoshonitic) lamprophyres, diorites and porphyrites with affinities to the late Silurian-early Devonian appinite suite of Scotland; and Tertiary dolerites. The different groups cannot be unambiguously distinguished in the field and secondary alteration precludes petrographic division in many cases. The data indicate that Caledonian and Permo-Carboniferous lamprophyres have probably been confused in previous accounts of dyke distributions in the region. In Lismore the two groups have identical azimuths but the Caledonian intrusions appear to have a greater aggregate volume. The implications for tectonic and regional models of the area are discussed.
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6

Matthews, D. "The Potential Impact of a Proposed Dam on a Platypus Population: A Baseline Study." Australian Mammalogy 20, no. 2 (1998): 310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/am98322.

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The population of the far North Coast of New South Wales is growing rapidly. It is estimated that the number of people served by the Rous County water supply will increase threefold in the next fifty years. Steps are being taken to manage demand and to provide an additional source of water by pumping from the Wilson River at Lismore. It is recognised that a new dam will eventually be required. The dam currently providing the bulk of the Rous County supply is on Rocky Creek near Dorroughby. A second dam is planned for Rocky Creek about 10 km downstream from the existing dam. This will be built near Dunoon about 20 km to the north of Lismore. A preliminary study of the distribution of platypuses in the affected area has been carried out using a program of passive observation. Of the nine pools observed in the program platypuses have been seen in seven. No attempt has been made to estimate the actual size of the platypus population. There appears to be sufficient evidence that the building of the proposed dam could have an impact on the platypus. Recommendations have been addressed to the planners of the dam urging that special provision be made to minimise its impact on the platypus population.
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7

Smith, Margaret K. "Kinship and Kingship: Identity and Authority in the Book of Lismore." Peritia 27 (January 2016): 121–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.perit.5.112199.

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8

MacDonald, Iain G. "The attack on Bishop George Lauder of Argyll in the Auchinleck Chronicle." Innes Review 61, no. 2 (November 2010): 111–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/inr.2010.0101.

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This article investigates the violent encounter between George Lauder, bishop of Argyll (1427–73) and two of his Gaelic-speaking cathedral clergymen at Lismore in August 1452, an incident which is described in the Auchinleck Chronicle. Setting it within the ecclesiastical context of the time it argues that it is wrong to depict this simply as a confrontation between highlander and lowlander, but as the consequence of the ecclesiastical politics pursued by the bishop, which were exacerbated by ongoing political problems in Lorn.
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9

Tipton, Gemma. "Titled/untitled, Gemma Tipton, Lismore Castle Arts, Co Waterford, May - September 2007." Circa, no. 121 (2007): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25564838.

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10

CULLEN, MURRAY. "Potential Organic Waste Collection from Commercial Sources in Lismore: A Case Study." Australasian Journal of Environmental Management 4, no. 4 (January 1997): 239–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14486563.1997.10648387.

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11

Wessell, Adele. "‘A very very great part of our life’: Storytelling about the Richmond River." Australasian Journal of Popular Culture 10, no. 1 (December 1, 2021): 7–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ajpc_00035_1.

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Acts of remembering a river may have a performative function in environmental history and debates around human impact and waterways. The process of remembering and search for meaning are shaped in the present moment when the Richmond is one of the most degraded river systems on the east coast of Australia. Imbued with sentimentality, however, residents speak to the fundamental importance of the river to their lives as they were growing up in and around Lismore. Such histories may provide context for understanding contemporary affective responses to rivers and how emotion shapes our relationships with nature more broadly.
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12

O'Sullivan, Moira. "Book Review: My Cause is Just: Jeremiah Joseph Doyle, First Bishop of Lismore." Pacifica: Australasian Theological Studies 13, no. 1 (February 2000): 121–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1030570x0001300125.

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13

Haby, M. M., J. K. Peat, G. B. Marks, A. J. Woolcock, and S. R. Leeder. "Asthma in preschool children: prevalence and risk factors." Thorax 56, no. 8 (August 1, 2001): 589–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thx.56.8.589.

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BACKGROUNDThe prevalence of asthma in children has increased in many countries over recent years. To plan effective interventions to reverse this trend we need a better understanding of the risk factors for asthma in early life. This study was undertaken to measure the prevalence of, and risk factors for, asthma in preschool children.METHODSParents of children aged 3–5 years living in two cities (Lismore, n=383; Wagga Wagga, n=591) in New South Wales, Australia were surveyed by questionnaire to ascertain the presence of asthma and various proposed risk factors for asthma in their children. Recent asthma was defined as ever having been diagnosed with asthma andhaving cough or wheeze in the last 12 monthsand having used an asthma medication in the last 12 months. Atopy was measured by skin prick tests to six common allergens.RESULTSThe prevalence of recent asthma was 22% in Lismore and 18% in Wagga Wagga. Factors which increased the risk of recent asthma were: atopy (odds ratio (OR) 2.35, 95% CI 1.49 to 3.72), having a parent with a history of asthma (OR 2.05, 95% CI 1.34 to 3.16), having had a serious respiratory infection in the first 2 years of life (OR 1.93, 95% CI 1.25 to 2.99), and a high dietary intake of polyunsaturated fats (OR 2.03, 95% CI 1.15 to 3.60). Breast feeding (OR 0.41, 95% CI 0.22 to 0.74) and having three or more older siblings (OR 0.16, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.71) decreased the risk of recent asthma.CONCLUSIONSOf the factors tested, those that have the greatest potential to be modified to reduce the risk of asthma are breast feeding and consumption of polyunsaturated fats.
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14

Pavía Dopazo, Naiara. "Margarita Isabel O´Brien: condesa jacobita y dama de la monarquía española." Brocar. Cuadernos de Investigación Histórica, no. 36 (June 21, 2012): 65–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.18172/brocar.1564.

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Se traza aquí el perfil político de Margarita Isabel O’Brien, ejemplo de cortesana y espía en las cortes europeas de mediados del siglo XVIII, que sirvió a los intereses de la Monarquía hispánica, como agente de Ensenada y de Huéscar en París, y a los de la causa Estuardo, la sagrada causa jacobita, desde su matrimonio en 1726 con el conde de Lismore. Aceptada por Isabel de Farnesio en su corte, desempeñó el papel de dueña de honor de la reina. Su correspondencia con Don Fernando de Silva Álvarez de Toledo, duque de Huéscar, conservada en el Archivo de la Casa de Alba, es la fuente fundamental de este trabajo.
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15

PENNING-ROWSELL, EDMUND C., and DAVID INGLE SMITH. "SELF-HELP FLOOD HAZARD MITIGATION: THE ECONOMICS OF HOUSE-RAISING IN LISMORE, NSW, AUSTRALIA." Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 78, no. 3 (June 1987): 176–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9663.1987.tb00578.x.

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16

Barry, D. B. "North Coast Aboriginal Studies Kit, North Coast Institute of Aboriginal Community Education. Lismore, 1984." Aboriginal Child at School 13, no. 1 (March 1985): 61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0310582200013651.

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17

Summer, Kate, and Amanda Reichelt-Brushett. "Trace element contaminant uptake in phytocap vegetation and implications for koala habitat, Lismore, Australia." Environmental Science and Pollution Research 25, no. 24 (June 14, 2018): 24281–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-018-2441-0.

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18

Spencer, HJ, C. Palmer, and K. Parry-Jones. "Movements of Fruit-bats in eastern Australia, determined by using radio-tracking." Wildlife Research 18, no. 4 (1991): 463. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9910463.

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Results from a long-term radio-tracking study of pteropodid fruit-bats are reported. Grey-headed fruit bats (Pteropus poliocephalus) captured from seven colonies in eastern New South Wales, Australia, were fitted with collar-mounted radio transmitters to permit their movements to be monitored over the following year. The sheepskin-lined leather collars were well tolerated by the bats over periods of 6-18 months. Bats moved between major colony sites for distances of up to 750 km, with movements occurring in both northerly and southerly directions. One bat from Lismore had a feeding range of 25 km, whereas in Sydney bats flew up to 17 km each night to feeding sites. There was considerable interchange between bats in adjacent colonies.
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19

Huscroft, Richard. "Edward I’s government and the Irish church: a neglected document from the Waterford—Lismore controversy." Irish Historical Studies 32, no. 127 (May 2001): 423–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400015091.

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The union of the neighbouring episcopal sees of Lismore and Waterford on 16 June 1363 brought to an end a history of disputes and sometimes violent disagreements between the two bishoprics which had lasted for almost two centuries since the arrival of the English invaders in Ireland. The early history of this conflict, up to 1228, has already been dealt with in detail, while its conclusion, from 1325 onwards, has also been treated in outline. What happened between 1228 and 1325, however, has never been discussed, and while this note does not in any way purport to fill this gap, the document upon which it focuses, which dates from 1285, adds something to the stock of knowledge on this topic. It has been in print in summarised translation for well over a century, but it has never been published in full, analysed or put in context, and it has been quite ignored in all previous discussions of this controversy. It gives rise to some interesting questions about the relationship between the English and Irish administrations at the end of the thirteenth century, however, and about how important decisions were taken at the heart of Edward I’s government. It also casts intriguing light on a difficult time in the career of Stephen of Fulbourn, bishop of Waterford, perhaps Edward Fs most important and powerful servant in Ireland until his death in July 1288.
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20

Daly, Michelle D., Megan E. Passey, and Amanda J. Harvey. "Another opportunity for prevention: assessing alcohol use by women attending breast screening services in Lismore, NSW." New South Wales Public Health Bulletin 20, no. 6 (2009): 90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/nb07121.

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21

Mews, Constant J. "The flight of Carthach (Mochuda) from Rahan to Lismore: lineage and identity in early medieval Ireland." Early Medieval Europe 21, no. 1 (January 7, 2013): 1–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/emed.12007.

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22

Passey, Megan, Jane Bolitho, John Scantleton, and Bruce Flaherty. "The Magistrates Early Referral Into Treatment (MERIT) Pilot Program: Court Outcomes and Recidivism." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 40, no. 2 (August 2007): 199–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1375/acri.40.2.199.

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Diversion programs for drug offenders have proliferated in the last decade in the belief that treatment of underlying drug use will decrease an individual's criminal activity. The NSW Magistrates Early Referral Into Treatment (MERIT) program diverts adult offenders with significant drug problems, on bail, from the court to a 3-month intensive drug treatment program. This article reports on the criminal justice outcomes of the Lismore MERIT Pilot Program. Findings indicate that participants who completed the program were significantly less likely to reoffend, took longer to reoffend and received less severe sentences than those who did not complete the program. The reduction in reoffending is significantly associated with program completion even when other factors associated with recidivism are controlled for, including previous incarceration. Overall these findings contribute to the growing literature indicating that providing treatment for offenders with illicit drug problems can be an effective crime reduction strategy.
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23

Carter, K. E., and R. Stoker. "Responses of non-irrigated and irrigated garden peas to phosphorus and potassium on Lismore stony silt loam." New Zealand Journal of Experimental Agriculture 16, no. 1 (January 1988): 11–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03015521.1988.10425608.

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24

Fuller, B. W., T. L. Anderson, R. W. Kieckhefer, T. Wang, W. W. Chambers, and J. M. Jenson. "Seed and Rescue Treatments, 1990." Insecticide and Acaricide Tests 16, no. 1 (January 1, 1991): 239–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/iat/16.1.239a.

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Abstract Winter wheat 'Arapahoe' was planted (10 Sep) in a Lismore silty clay loam soil in 17.5 cm rows using a ten-row International drill near the Northern Grain Insects Research Laboratory, Brookings, S. Dak. The experiment was setup using a complete randomized design with 4 replications of each treatment. One m2 screen cages were placed over wheat which was then artificially infested (25 Sep) with laboratory reared Russian wheat aphid (RWA), Diuraphis noxia (Mordvilko). Pretreatment counts indicated 19.2 RWA/tiller (individual leaf blade) were present. Rescue applications (16 Oct) were applied using a hand held spray boom with 6 nozzles (Teejet 8002), 12 inch spacing, 25 psi and 20 gal/acre delivery rate. The 7 DAT RWA count was made by randomly selecting 4 tillers from each quadrant within the meter square cage. Additionally, a 21 DAT count (6 Nov) of RAW/16 tillers was made in the same manner from each cage to determine residual control or RWA resurgence.
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25

Boetel, M. A., R. L. Gibson, S. L. Hanson, and D. D. Walgenbach. "Russian Wheat Aphid Insecticide Efficacy Trials, 1989." Insecticide and Acaricide Tests 15, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/iat/15.1.305a.

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Abstract Winter wheat was planted on 25 Aug in a Lismore silty clay loam soil in 15.2 cm rows using a 16-row John Deere press drill near the Northern Grain Insects Research Laboratory, Brookings, SD. Wheat plots were artificially infested on 12 Sep with laboratory-reared RWA. Pretreatment counts indicated the presence of favorable RWA populations (x = 412.6) within the cages. A completely random design was used with 4 and 6 cages (1.0 m2) being placed in sprayed and untreated plots, respectively. A CO2-powered backpack sprayer was used to apply treatments on 26 Sep. The sprayer was calibrated to deliver 20 gal/acre at 25 psi from a hand-held boom equipped with 6 (Teejet 8002) nozzles spaced 12 inches apart. Posttreatment (6- and 17-d) RWA counts were made by randomly selecting 4 leaves from each of the quadrants within cages. RWA count data were subjected to logarithmic [log (count + 1)] transformation and analyzed using ANOVA.
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26

Clarke, GM, and JA McKenzie. "Genetic Architecture and Adaptation: Quantitative Analysis of Sheep and Refuse Tip Populations of the Australian Sheep Blowfly, Lucilia cuprina." Australian Journal of Biological Sciences 40, no. 1 (1987): 47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bi9870047.

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Phenotypic differentiation between geographic areas and between sheep and adjacent refuse tip populations was assessed by quantitative analysis of population samples of L. cuprina from New South Wales (Lismore) and Victoria (Mansfield). In addition the genetic structure of populations has been defined and compared by biometrical analysis techniques. For all morphological and fitness characters examined significant phenotypic differentiation was observed both between geographic localities and between sheep and non-sheep populations of each locality. Diallel analysis of the populations revealed architectural differences between sheep and non-sheep populations for both fecundity and egg hatchability. Sheep populations only, regardless of locality, displayed dominant gene effects on these fitness traits. The results suggest that refuse tip populations may be other than transients and that the differentiation may reflect differing patterns of adaptation and history of selection of the populations. The relevance of such differentiation to the successful establishment of a chemical and/or autocidal control zone is considered.
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27

Darab, Sandy, Yvonne Hartman, and Emma E. Pittaway. "Building Community Resilience: Lessons from Flood-affected Residents in a Regional Australian Town." International Journal of Community and Social Development 2, no. 4 (December 2020): 409–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2516602620981553.

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This article discusses the relevance and usefulness of a community development approach and community resilience in coping with natural disasters such as floods and their impact. In March 2017, a major flood in Lismore, Australia, resulted in extensive damage to homes and businesses and caused severe disruption and distress to some residents. A small qualitative study of 20 residents was conducted to understand how they were affected in flooded areas in terms of their housing and other impacts. The narrative and thematic analysis of respondents’ stories ‘from the ground’ highlighted both the problems with some institutional responses to the flood and the strength of the community response. One of the key findings was the resilience shown by some parts of the community during and after the flood, particularly in terms of communal self-organisation. This article interrogates that finding in-depth and argues that it provides valuable insights into community resilience and a community development approach, which need to be consciously cultivated to combat the impact of disasters.
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Firth, D. J., R. D. B. Whalley, and G. G. Johns. "Legume groundcovers have mixed effects on growth and yield ofMacadamia integrifolia." Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 43, no. 4 (2003): 419. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ea01170.

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The effects of Lotus pedunculatus (cv. Grasslands Maku) and Arachis pintoi (cv. Amarillo) groundcovers on growth and yield of 1-, 4- and 14-year-old macadamia orchards were investigated over 5 years near Lismore in northern New South Wales. Bare control plots were used at all sites, along with an unmown groundcover in the oldest orchard. Vegetative growth was assessed in terms of shoot extension, trunk diameter and canopy volume. The groundcovers had the greatest effect on vegetative growth of the trees when they were established into an existing sward, followed by the 4-year-old trees, and then the 14-year-old trees. Yields were collected from the 4- and 14-year-old trees and were generally similar under bare soil or groundcovers, with smaller or similar canopy volumes. Nut quality was not consistently affected by the groundcovers, whereas nut-drop was delayed. Acceptable yields can be obtained in macadamias with groundcovers, with potential benefits in terms of soil structure, fertility and stability. Mown and unmown plots have similar productivity.
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Harris, JM, and RL Goldingay. "A community-based survey of the koala Phascolarctos cinereus in the Lismore region of north-eastern New South Wales." Australian Mammalogy 25, no. 2 (2003): 155. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/am03155.

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A community-based survey was undertaken in the Lismore Local Government Area (LGA) of north-eastern New South Wales to provide a basis for the development of a Shire-wide koala management plan. A questionnaire and maps were distributed to identify community attitudes towards P. cinereus conservation and management, as well as to document locations of sightings. There were 1121 surveys returned from 23,751 distributed (4.7% returned) across 18,000 ratepayers (6.2% response). Respondents indicated the frequency with which P. cinereus were seen in different suburbs, whether they had young or were sick, and provided 840 map-based records. Ten percent of respondents saw P. cinereus on at least a weekly basis, highlighting the importance of this LGA for the conservation of this species. More than 80% of respondents considered that roving dogs, land clearing, road traffic and housing development were serious threats to long-term P. cinereus survival. More than 90% of respondents supported restrictions on dogs, tree-planting programs, as well as planning activities to protect P. cinereus habitat while 85% approved of protection zones to control development within P. cinereus habitat. These results if representative of the entire community suggest strong support for the development of conservation options for P. cinereus. The study also confirms the usefulness of conducting such community-wide surveys for conspicuous threatened species.
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Fuller, B. W., R. L. Gibson, D. D. Walgenbach, N. C. Elliott, and M. A. Boetel. "Russian Wheat Aphid Control." Insecticide and Acaricide Tests 15, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/iat/15.1.307.

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Abstract EVALUATION OF PLANTING-TIME AND POSTPLANTING INSECTICIDES, 1988: Winter wheat was planted on 29 Aug in a Lismore silty clay loam soil in 17.5 cm rows using a ten-row International drill near the Northern Grain Insects Research Laboratory, Brookings, SD. The experimental design was a 4 replicate, randomized complete block with 20 treatments, plus a control. The 6 planting-time treatments were applied in the furrow on 29 Aug. Furadan 4 F was injected into the furrow through small plastic tubes fixed adjacent to disc furrow openers using a small pump attached to the drill. On 7 Sep, 21 screen cages (1.0 m2) were set over each replicate. Plants within the cages were infested with laboratory-reared Russian wheat aphids on 8 Sep, followed by a light rain. On 4 Oct, aphid numbers were sampled from 16 tillers per cage. On 7 Oct, foliar insecticides (except Cygon) were applied using a 4-nozzle (1.5 LE Even Flat) hand-held spray boom at 15 psi and 13.4 gal/acre. Cygon was applied in the same way on 12 Oct. The number of aphids/16 tillers was determined on 14 and 28 Oct.
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31

Vaughan, Brett, Paul Orrock, and Sandra Grace. "Reliability of a viva assessment of clinical reasoning in an Australian pre-professional osteopathy program assessed using generalizability theory." Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 14 (January 20, 2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.3352/jeehp.2017.14.1.

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Clinical reasoning is situation-dependent and case-specific; therefore, assessments incorporating different patient presentations are warranted. The present study aimed to determine the reliability of a multi-station case-based viva assessment of clinical reasoning in an Australian pre-registration osteopathy program using generalizability theory. Students (from years 4 and 5) and examiners were recruited from the osteopathy program at Southern Cross University, Lismore, Australia. The study took place on a single day in the student teaching clinic. Examiners were trained before the examination. Students were allocated to 1 of 3 rounds consisting of 5 10-minute stations in an objective structured clinical examination-style. Generalizability analysis was used to explore the reliability of the examination. Fifteen students and 5 faculty members participated in the study. The examination produced a generalizability coefficient of 0.53, with 18 stations required to achieve a generalizability coefficient of 0.80. The reliability estimations were acceptable and the psychometric findings related to the marking rubric and overall scores were acceptable; however, further work is required in examiner training and ensuring consistent case difficulty to improve the reliability of the examination.
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Saunders, Robert A., and Rhys Crilley. "Pissing On the Past: The Highland Clearances, Effigial Resistance and the Everyday Politics of the Urinal." Millennium: Journal of International Studies 47, no. 3 (April 26, 2019): 444–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0305829819840422.

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When and where one can urinate is increasingly politicised around the globe. As an example of bio-political power, the provision, regulation and access to public toilets reflects larger structures in any given society. However, there is another side to micturition, that is the use of urine as a manifestation of bodily power over another/others. This article analyses the politics of the urinal through a close reading of the men’s toilet in The Lismore pub in Partick, Scotland, thus bringing together these two threads via the concept of everyday effigial resistance. In our interrogation of a politicised urinal that asks users to ‘piss’ on historical figures associated with the Highland Clearances, we aim to push International Relations to follow Enloe’s call for the study of ‘mundane practices… and the most intimate spaces’ by considering the most banal aspects of the human condition as part of its remit. Our case study serves as an explicit political intervention, one which through its geographic and geopolitical scales makes an argument for engaging with the mundane, vernacular and vulgar in everyday IR. Pisser sur le passé : les dédouanements des hautes terres, la résistance à l’effigie et la politique quotidienne de l’urinoir
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LaMonica, Haley M., Frank Iorfino, Grace Yeeun Lee, Sarah Piper, Jo-An Occhipinti, Tracey A. Davenport, Shane Cross, et al. "Informing the Future of Integrated Digital and Clinical Mental Health Care: Synthesis of the Outcomes From Project Synergy." JMIR Mental Health 9, no. 3 (March 9, 2022): e33060. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/33060.

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Background Globally, there are fundamental shortcomings in mental health care systems, including restricted access, siloed services, interventions that are poorly matched to service users’ needs, underuse of personal outcome monitoring to track progress, exclusion of family and carers, and suboptimal experiences of care. Health information technologies (HITs) hold great potential to improve these aspects that underpin the enhanced quality of mental health care. Objective Project Synergy aimed to co-design, implement, and evaluate novel HITs, as exemplified by the InnoWell Platform, to work with standard health care organizations. The goals were to deliver improved outcomes for specific populations under focus and support organizations to enact significant system-level reforms. Methods Participating health care organizations included the following: Open Arms–Veterans & Families Counselling (in Sydney and Lismore, New South Wales [NSW]); NSW North Coast headspace centers for youth (Port Macquarie, Coffs Harbour, Grafton, Lismore, and Tweed Heads); the Butterfly Foundation’s National Helpline for eating disorders; Kildare Road Medical Centre for enhanced primary care; and Connect to Wellbeing North Coast NSW (administered by Neami National), for population-based intake and assessment. Service users, families and carers, health professionals, and administrators of services across Australia were actively engaged in the configuration of the InnoWell Platform to meet service needs, identify barriers to and facilitators of quality mental health care, and highlight potentially the best points in the service pathway to integrate the InnoWell Platform. The locally configured InnoWell Platform was then implemented within the respective services. A mixed methods approach, including surveys, semistructured interviews, and workshops, was used to evaluate the impact of the InnoWell Platform. A participatory systems modeling approach involving co-design with local stakeholders was also undertaken to simulate the likely impact of the platform in combination with other services being considered for implementation within the North Coast Primary Health Network to explore resulting impacts on mental health outcomes, including suicide prevention. Results Despite overwhelming support for integrating digital health solutions into mental health service settings and promising impacts of the platform simulated under idealized implementation conditions, our results emphasized that successful implementation is dependent on health professional and service readiness for change, leadership at the local service level, the appropriateness and responsiveness of the technology for the target end users, and, critically, funding models being available to support implementation. The key places of interoperability of digital solutions and a willingness to use technology to coordinate health care system use were also highlighted. Conclusions Although the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in the widespread acceptance of very basic digital health solutions, Project Synergy highlights the critical need to support equity of access to HITs, provide funding for digital infrastructure and digital mental health care, and actively promote the use of technology-enabled, coordinated systems of care.
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ZA, Raudhatun Nuzul, and Rizky Swastika Renjani. "Effectiveness Of Dismenorhoe Senam In Reducing Dismenorhoe Events In Students In Midwife Study Program In Ubudiyah University Of Indonesia Banda Aceh." Journal of Midwifery 5, no. 1 (February 21, 2021): 36. http://dx.doi.org/10.25077/jom.5.1.36-41.2020.

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Background: Dysmenorrhea is a physical disorder in women who experience menstrual disorders/stomach cramps. Exercise can increase endorphin production (can increase the body's natural pain), can increase serotonin levels. Gymnastics is one of the relaxation techniques that can be used to reduce pain. In Research Purpose Introduced to Identify Problems of the Dismenorhoe Program in Reducing Dismenorhoe in the Study Program at the Midwifery University, Yogyakarta University, Indonesia. This type of research is a quasi-experimental design with one group pretest-posttest design. The sampling technique is probability sampling, with a sample of 20 respondents, a data collection tool using a Lismore gymnastic observation sheet and a healing scale sheet. Statistical analysis was performed with a Test (T) test. Research results obtained from the analysis of sig. (2-tailed) obtained 0,000 which is significantly very significant or very positive which is higher than α = 0.05. If it is acceptable, it must be accepted, done before and after dysmenorrhoea exercises. It was concluded as the effectiveness of gymnastic dysmenorrhea on the reduction of menstrual pain in a female midwifery study program at the Ubudiyah University of Indonesia. Freed so that the help of gymnastic therapy is used as an alternative intervention to reduce menstrual pain.
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ZA, Raudhatun Nuzul, and Rizky Swastika Renjani. "Effectiveness Of Dismenorhoe Senam In Reducing Dismenorhoe Events In Students In Midwife Study Program In Ubudiyah University Of Indonesia Banda Aceh." Journal of Midwifery 4, no. 2 (June 7, 2020): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.25077/jom.4.2.27-32.2019.

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Dysmenorrhea is a physical disorder in women who experience menstrual disorders/stomach cramps. Exercise can increase endorphin production (can increase the body's natural pain), can increase serotonin levels. Gymnastics is one of the relaxation techniques that can be used to reduce pain. In Research Purpose Introduced to Identify Problems of the Dismenorhoe Program in Reducing Dismenorhoe in the Study Program at the Midwifery University, Yogyakarta University, Indonesia. This type of research is a quasi-experimental design with one group pretest-posttest design. The sampling technique is probability sampling, with a sample of 20 respondents, a data collection tool using a Lismore gymnastic observation sheet and a healing scale sheet. Statistical analysis was performed with a Test (T) test. Research results obtained from the analysis of sig. (2-tailed) obtained 0,000 which is significantly very significant or very positive which is higher than α = 0.05. If it is acceptable, it must be accepted, done before and after dysmenorrhoea exercises. It was concluded as the effectiveness of gymnastic dysmenorrhea on the reduction of menstrual pain in a female midwifery study program at the Ubudiyah University of Indonesia. Freed so that the help of gymnastic therapy is used as an alternative intervention to reduce menstrual pain.
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36

Goldingay, Ross L., and Barbara Dobner. "Home range areas of koalas in an urban area of north-east New South Wales." Australian Mammalogy 36, no. 1 (2014): 74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/am12049.

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Conserving wildlife within urban areas requires knowledge of habitat requirements and population processes, and the management of threatening factors. The koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is one species that is adversely affected by urban development. Sick and injured koalas in the Lismore urban area are regularly taken into care. We radio-tracked koalas released from care in order to estimate home-range areas and to determine their fate. Koalas were tracked for periods of 90–742 days; 7 of 10 survived for a period of at least one year. Home ranges defined by the minimum convex polygon (MCP100%) were large (mean ± s.e. = 37.4 ± 8.2 ha). Analysis using the 95% Fixed Kernel revealed home-range areas of 8.0 ± 1.7 ha. Analysis of the habitat composition of each MCP home range showed that they included 4.3 ± 0.9 ha of primary habitat (dominated by their primary food trees). These home ranges contained 27.6 ± 6.8 ha of non-habitat (cleared or developed land). Koalas crossed roads within their home ranges at least 5–53 times; one crossed the Bruxner Highway near a roundabout at least 32 times over his 2-year tracking period. Future management should include strategic food tree planting that enhances habitat connectivity and minimises the risk of car strike or dog attack.
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Eby, P. "Seasonal movements of grey-headed flying-foxes, Pteropus poliocephalus (Chiroptera : Pteropodidae), from two maternity camps in northern New South Wales." Wildlife Research 18, no. 5 (1991): 547. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9910547.

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Seasonal movements of 22 Pteropus poliocephalus, from two maternity camps in north-eastern New South Wales, were monitored from January to June 1989 using radiotelemetry. The animals moved independently in time and space among various communal roosts located 8-610 km from the maternity camp sites. Generally, P. poliocephalus from a camp near rainforest (Currie Park, Lismore) remained within 50 km of the maternity site. These localised movements were attributed to the continued availability of fruits in the rainforest throughout the study. Animals from a maternity camp surrounded by sclerophyll forest (Susan I., Grafton) undertook long migrations south (median distance 342.5 km, n = 11) to camps containing up to 200 000 P. poliocephalus of both sexes. These large aggregations formed during the mating season and comprised individuals drawn from various previous sites. Thus, P. poliocephalus in northern and central N.S.W. appear to function as a single breeding population and should be managed as such. After mid-May, animals from Susan I. returned to north-eastern N.S.W. There was high correlation between movements of P. poliocephalus from the camp at Susan I. and the flowering patterns of certain species of Myrtaceae and Proteaceae. It is hypothesised that flowering attractive to apiarists is also attractive to P. poliocephalus and that information from apiarists could be used by wildlife managers to predict large aggregations of the animals.
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Lincoln, Robyn. "Book Reviews : FEAR OR FAVOUR: SEXUAL ASSAULT OF YOUNG PRISONERS David Heilpern Lismore, Southern Cross University Press, 1998, v, 254 pp., $29.95 (paperback)." Journal of Sociology 35, no. 1 (March 1999): 100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/144078339903500111.

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39

McDonald, M. W., M. Rawlings, P. A. Butcher, and J. C. Bell. "Regional divergence and inbreeding in Eucalyptus cladocalyx (Myrtaceae)." Australian Journal of Botany 51, no. 4 (2003): 393. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt02106.

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Eucalyptus cladocalyx F.Muell. is a widely cultivated tree in dryland southern Australia. It is grown for firewood, timber production and as a windbreak and ornamental species. Natural populations of E. cladocalyx are endemic to South Australia where they occur in three disjunct regions. This study assessed the mating system and patterns of genetic diversity in natural populations of E. cladocalyx by using allozymes. Populations had relatively low levels of genetic diversity (HE = 0.148) and high levels of genetic divergence (θ = 0.26) among populations, similar to other regionally distributed eucalypts. Populations clustered into three distinct groups, which corresponded to its disjunct natural distribution. Genetic differentiation among populations and between regions was highly significant. Relatively high levels of inbreeding (tm = 0.57) were detected in natural populations of E.�cladocalyx. Outcrossing rates were highly variable among families, ranging from 0 to 100%. One-third of families from four populations had outcrossing rates that were not significantly different from zero. The origins of three commercially significant, cultivated stands of E. cladocalyx were also assessed. Allozyme profiles of cultivated stands from Wail and Lismore in western Victoria suggested origins in the Wirrabara region of the southern Flinders Ranges, while a cultivated stand of E. cladocalyx var. nana Hort. ex Yates had an allozyme profile consistent with origins in the Eyre Peninsula region. The results are discussed in relation to the species' morphological variation, biogeography and the implications for its domestication and conservation.
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Lowe, Gail E., Mervyn Shepherd, Terry J. Rose, and Carolyn Raymond. "Effect of Stock Plant Growing Medium and Density upon a Cutting Propagation System for Tea Tree, Melaleuca alternifolia." Plants 11, no. 18 (September 16, 2022): 2421. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11182421.

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To offer a viable alternative to seedling deployment of tea tree, clones will require the development of an efficient, robust, and vegetative propagation system for the large number of plants needed for plantations (i.e., typically 33,000 plants/ha). This study investigated the productivity of an intensive management system for tea tree stock plants and rooted cuttings grown in a subtropical environment (Lismore, NSW, Australia). Three stock plant densities (30, 100, and 200 plants/m2) were tested in coir and potting mix media (consisting of peat+perlite+vermiculite), with 11 settings of cuttings undertaken between April 2019 and March 2020. All stock plants in each media type survived 11 harvests and remained productive; however after 13 months, many plants in the coir media, appeared chlorotic and showed symptoms of iron deficiency. Rooting and cutting survival rates using the mini cutting technique were high, ranging from a maximum mean monthly setting value of 87.7% ± 4 at 84 days post-setting in potting mix, to a minimum of 80.4% ± 3.7 in coir. The most productive treatment was at high stock plant density in potting mix which had the potential to produce 13,440 plants/year/m2. Overall coir appeared less productive, but the pattern of difference among treatments was similar. For the highest system productivity, it is recommended to grow stock plants in potting mix at high densities and modulate temperatures to between 18 °C and 28 °C. Late spring and early summer were the best time for harvesting and setting tea tree mini cuttings in the subtropics.
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41

Di, H. J., and K. C. Cameron. "Effects of temperature and application rate of a nitrification inhibitor, dicyandiamide (DCD), on nitrification rate and microbial biomass in a grazed pasture soil." Soil Research 42, no. 8 (2004): 927. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sr04050.

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Abstract. The nitrification inhibitor dicyandiamide (DCD) has recently been shown to be effective in reducing nitrate leaching from grazed pasture soils. The objective of this study was to determine the influence of temperature and application rate on the effectiveness of DCD in nitrification inhibition. Possible effects on soil microbial biomass were also determined. The soil, Lismore silt loam (Pallic orthic brown soil; Udic Haplustept loamy skeletal), was incubated at a moisture content near field capacity under 2 temperatures (8 or 20°C). Urea was applied at 25 kg N/ha and dairy cow urine at 1000 kg N/ha. DCD was applied at 2 rates equivalent to 7.5 or 15 kg/ha. The results show that at a soil temperature of 8°C, the half-life of DCD was 111–116 days. The half-life of NH4+ changed from 44 days without DCD to 243–491 days when DCD was applied. In contrast, at a soil temperature of 20°C the half-life of DCD was 18–25 days. The half-life of NH4+ changed from 22 days without DCD to 64–55 days with DCD. The 2 different rates of DCD had a small effect on the NH4+ concentration in the soil. The application of DCD did not have a significant effect on soil microbial biomass. DCD would therefore be most effective in inhibiting nitrification and thus reducing nitrate leaching in late autumn–winter–early spring in most parts of New Zealand when daily average soil temperatures are generally below 10°C and when drainage is high.
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Di, H. J., and K. C. Cameron. "Nitrate leaching and pasture production from different nitrogen sources on a shallow stoney soil under flood-irrigated dairy pasture." Soil Research 40, no. 2 (2002): 317. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sr01015.

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The leaching of nitrate (NO3–) in intensive agricultural production systems, e.g. dairy pastures, is a major environmental concern in many countries. In this lysimeter study we determined the amount of NO3– leached following the application of urea, dairy effluent, urine returns, and pasture renovation to a freedraining Lismore stony silt loam (Udic Haplustept loamy skeletal) growing a mixture of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and white clover (Trifolium repens) pasture. The study showed that NO3–-N leaching losses ranged from 112 to 162 kg N/ha per year, depending on the amount and forms of N applied and pasture conditions. Nitrate leaching under the urine patches was the main contributor to the N leaching loss in a grazed paddock. Nitrate leaching losses were lower for urine applied in the spring (29% of N applied) than for urine applied in the autumn (38–58%). The application of urea or dairy effluent only contributed a small proportion to the total NO3– leaching loss in a grazed paddock. Pasture renovation by direct-drilling may also have caused an increase in NO3– leaching (c. 31 kg N/ha) in the first year. Modelled annual average NO3–-N concentrations in the mixed recharge water in the acquifer were significantly lower than those measured under the rooting zone due to dilution effects by recharge water from other sources (3.9 v. 13–27 mg N/L). Herbage nitrogen offtake and dry matter yield were higher in the urine treatments than in the non-urine treatments. groundwater, denitrification, mineralisation, grazing, forage.
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43

Huett, D. O., and I. Vimpany. "Revised diagnostic leaf nutrient standards for macadamia growing in Australia." Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 47, no. 7 (2007): 869. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ea06133.

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Leaf nutrient analyses are widely used to determine the nutritional status of macadamia orchards. A commercial database was developed from 2186 observations collected from 186 farms across 56 geographical areas spanning New South Wales and Queensland. The data were collected over 10 years, with 1 to 9 sequential annual observations on each farm. An experimental database was also developed where several of the most popular commercial cultivars growing in the Lismore area of New South Wales and the Bundaberg area of Queensland were sampled at monthly intervals over a 2–3 year period. Two canopy sampling heights were used to confirm the effect of shading (irradiance) on leaf nutrient composition. This latter study confirmed that spring was an appropriate time to sample and that irradiated leaves, usually located in an upper canopy position, should be sampled. The most important change to the recommended leaf nutrient standards was the increase in the leaf nitrogen range from 1.3–1.4% to 1.4–1.7% for all cultivars except 344, where we recommend 1.6–2.0%. The study also confirmed that the adequate concentration range for zinc should be much lower than originally recommended. We recommend concentrations of 6–15 mg/kg. Minor changes were made to most other macro- and micronutrients. We also advise caution when interpreting the analyses of some nutrients because concentrations can change over the spring period. The revised leaf nutrient standards were developed from two large and comprehensive databases and reliably represent adequate leaf nutrient concentrations in productive, well-managed macadamia orchards in Australia. A single leaf analysis will not reliably indicate the nutritional status of a macadamia orchard. Additional information is required on trends in leaf and soil analyses over time as well as fertiliser, yield and management history.
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Wyse, Rebecca, Tessa Delaney, Pennie Gibbins, Kylie Ball, Karen Campbell, Sze Lin Yoong, Kirsty Seward, et al. "Cluster randomised controlled trial of an online intervention to improve healthy food purchases from primary school canteens: a study protocol of the ‘click & crunch’ trial." BMJ Open 9, no. 9 (September 2019): e030538. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030538.

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IntroductionSchool canteens are the most frequently accessed take-away food outlet by Australian children. The rapid development of online lunch ordering systems for school canteens presents new opportunities to deliver novel public health nutrition interventions to school-aged children. This study aims to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a behavioural intervention in reducing the energy, saturated fat, sugar and sodium content of online canteen lunch orders for primary school children.Methods and analysisThe study will employ a cluster randomised controlled trial design. Twenty-six primary schools in New South Wales, Australia, that have an existing online canteen ordering system will be randomised to receive either a multi-strategy behavioural intervention or a control (the standard online canteen ordering system). The intervention will be integrated into the existing online canteen system and will seek to encourage the purchase of healthier food and drinks for school lunch orders (ie, items lower in energy, saturated fat, sugar and sodium). The behavioural intervention will use evidence-based choice architecture strategies to redesign the online menu and ordering system including: menu labelling, placement, prompting and provision of feedback and incentives. The primary trial outcomes will be the mean energy (kilojoules), saturated fat (grams), sugar (grams) and sodium (milligrams) content of lunch orders placed via the online system, and will be assessed 12 months after baseline data collection.Ethics and disseminationThe study was approved by the ethics committees of the University of Newcastle (H-2017–0402) and the New South Wales Department of Education and Communities (SERAP 2018065), and the Catholic Education Office Dioceses of Sydney, Parramatta, Lismore, Maitland-Newcastle, Bathurst, Canberra-Goulburn, Wollongong, Wagga Wagga and Wilcannia-Forbes. Study results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, reports, presentations at relevant national and international conferences and via briefings to key stakeholders. Results will be used to inform future implementation of public health nutrition interventions through school canteens, and may be transferable to other food settings or online systems for ordering food.Trial registration numberACTRN12618000855224.
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Challinor, Kurt, Joan Lancaster, and Richard Rymarz. "‘And Now I’m Teaching in a Catholic School’ – The Experiences of Early Career Teachers (ECT) in Lismore Catholic Schools and What Can Be Learned to Support Their Formation: A Preliminary Study." Paedagogia Christiana 49, no. 1 (January 15, 2023): 121–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.12775/pch.2022.007.

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This study is a preliminary investigation of early career teachers (ECT) working in Catholic schools in a large regional Australian diocese. The key aim of the study is to better understand the factors influencing early career teachers, who begin their teaching careers in Catholic schools, and to apprehend their early experiences as teachers to cater for their continuous formation needs. Key findings identify the openness of ECTs to faith-based experiences and the challenges faced in teaching in a Catholic school. Recommendations for early career teacher support and formation are provided considering the findings of this study
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Fitzpatrick, Mike. "Mac Giolla Phádraig Clerics 1394-1534 AD: Part I." Journal of the Fitzpatrick Clan Society 2 (October 1, 2021): 42–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.48151/fitzpatrickclansociety00521.

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Mac Giolla Phádraig Clerics 1394-1534 AD is a three-part series, which provides an account of all known individual Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics in the late medieval era and details their temporalities, occupations, familial associations, and broader networks. The ultimate goal of the series is the full contextualisation of all available historical records relating to Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics alongside the genealogical record that can be extracted by twenty-first century science – that being the science of Y-DNA. The Papal Registers, in particular, record numerous occurrences of Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics, predominantly in the dioceses of Cill Dalua (Killaloe) and Osraí (Ossory), from the late fourteenth to the early sixteenth century. Yet, no small intrigue surrounds their emergence. Part I of Mac Giolla Phádraig Clerics 1394-1534 AD examines the context surrounding the earliest appointments of Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics, which is in neither Cill Dalua nor Osraí but the diocese of Luimneach (Limerick). Once that context is understood, a pattern of associations emerges. A ‘coincidental’ twenty-first century surname match from the Fitzpatrick Y-DNA project leads to a review of the relationship between the FitzMaurice of Ciarraí (Kerry) clerics and Jordan Purcell, Bishop of Cork and Cloyne (1429-1472). The ‘coincidence’ then leads to an examination of a close Y-DNA match between men of the surnames Purcell and Hennessey. That match, coupled with the understanding that Nicholas Ó hAonghusa (O’Hennessey), elected Bishop of Lismore and Waterford (1480-1483) but with opposition, is considered a member of Purcell’s household, transforms the ‘coincidence’ into a curiosity. Part I morphs into a conversation, likely uncomfortable for some, relating to clerical concubinage, illegitimacy, and the ‘lubricity’ of the prioress and her nuns at the Augustinian nunnery of St Catherine's O’Conyll. The nunnery was located at Mainistir na gCailleach Dubh (Monasternagalliaghduff), which lay just a stone’s throw from where Bishop Jordan Purcell and Matthew Mac Giolla Phádraig, the first Mac Giolla Phádraig cleric recorded in the Papal Registers, emerged. Part I makes no judgments and draws no firm conclusions but prepares the reader for Part II by ending with some questions. Do the Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics of Osraí, who rose to prominence in the late-fifteenth century, have their origins in Deasmhumhain (Desmond)? Could the paternal lineages of Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics be, at least from the mid-fourteenth century, with the house of the Geraldine FitzMaurice clerics of Ciarraí? And, could some of the modern-day descendants of the Mac Giolla Phádraig clerics be those Costigans, FitzGeralds, and Fitzpatricks who are found under haplotype R-A1488?
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Emme, Michael J., and Angela Nairne Grigor. "Arthur Lismer: Visionary Art Educator." Canadian Journal of Education / Revue canadienne de l'éducation 26, no. 3 (2001): 378. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1602215.

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48

Prabu, M., S. Selvasekarapandian, A. R. Kulkarni, G. Hirankumar, and A. Sakunthala. "Ionic conductivity studies on LiSmO2 by impedance spectroscopy." Ionics 16, no. 4 (February 17, 2010): 317–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11581-010-0420-7.

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Brandon, Laura. "Double Exposure: Photography and the Great War Paintings of Frank Johnston, Arthur Lismer, and Frederick Varley." RACAR : Revue d'art canadienne 39, no. 2 (December 9, 2014): 14–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1027746ar.

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Pendant la Première Guerre mondiale, trois artistes membres du futur Groupe des Sept – Frank Johnston (1888–1949), Frederick Varley (1881–1969) et Arthur Lismer (1885–1969) – ont utilisé le médium photographique pour créer des oeuvres dédiées au thème de la guerre. Johnston et Lismer n’ont jamais reconnu avoir utilisé la photographie dans leurs peintures de guerre, mais ont gardé certaines de leurs images sources dans leurs archives personnelles. Varley n’a conservé aucune photo de guerre et a rarement discuté publiquement de son usage de la photographie. De surcroît, ses biographes ont plutôt eu tendance à minimiser cet aspect de son travail et à hiérarchiser la peinture par rapport à la photographie. Le modèle se répète : après l’établissement du Fonds de souvenirs de guerre canadiens en décembre 1916, la photographie, malgré sa popularité, a été reléguée à un rôle secondaire de commercialisation visant à générer des revenus pour des commandes et des achats d’autres oeuvres d’art.
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PROBYN, Elspeth. "Les usages de la sexualité chez Foucault." Sociologie et sociétés 29, no. 1 (September 30, 2002): 21–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/001596ar.

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Résumé Cet article expose de façon schématique comment certains aspects de la pensée de Foucault dépassent les deux pôles qui ont défini la plupart des débats dans le champ des études gaies et lesbiennes à propos de la sexualité : Pessentia-lisme et le constructivisme social.
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