Academic literature on the topic 'Rodez county'

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Journal articles on the topic "Rodez county"

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Barra, Séamus de. "Geriatracht arís... Rodeo sa West County." Comhar 50, no. 10 (1991): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25571603.

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Brada, Josef C., Zdenek Drabek, and M. Fabricio Perez. "The Effect of Home-country and Host-country Corruption on Foreign Direct Investment." Review of Development Economics 16, no. 4 (October 18, 2012): 640–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12009.

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Bandyopadhyay, Subhayu, Dustin Chambers, and Jonathan Munemo. "Foreign Aid, Illegal Immigration, and Host Country Welfare." Review of Development Economics 18, no. 2 (April 2, 2014): 372–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12090.

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Nakagawa, Mariko, and Shonosuke Sugasawa. "Linguistic distance and economic development: A cross‐country analysis." Review of Development Economics 26, no. 2 (December 29, 2021): 793–834. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12850.

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Chundakkadan, Radeef, and Subash Sasidharan. "Gender gap and access to finance: A cross‐country analysis." Review of Development Economics 26, no. 1 (October 14, 2021): 180–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12830.

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Beladi, Hamid, and Saibal Kar. "Skilled and Unskilled Immigrants and Entrepreneurship in a Developed Country." Review of Development Economics 19, no. 3 (July 15, 2015): 666–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12155.

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Cuberes, David, Sadia Priyanka, and Marc Teignier. "The determinants of entrepreneurship gender gaps: A cross-country analysis." Review of Development Economics 23, no. 1 (September 19, 2018): 72–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12537.

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Jalles, João Tovar, and Luiz Mello. "Cross‐country evidence on the determinants of inclusive growth episodes." Review of Development Economics 23, no. 4 (June 14, 2019): 1818–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12605.

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Mayer-Foulkes, David. "A Cross-country Causal Panorama of Human Development and Sustainability." Review of Development Economics 17, no. 2 (April 19, 2013): 235–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12029.

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Djajić, Slobodan. "Temporary Migration and the Flow of Savings to the Source Country." Review of Development Economics 18, no. 1 (January 21, 2014): 162–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12076.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Rodez county"

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真梨, 永冨, and Mari Nagatomi. "Tokyo rodeo : transnational country music and the crisis of Japanese masculinities." Thesis, https://doors.doshisha.ac.jp/opac/opac_link/bibid/BB13100462/?lang=0, 2019. https://doors.doshisha.ac.jp/opac/opac_link/bibid/BB13100462/?lang=0.

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本論文は、日本人男性とカントリー音楽を事例とした、日本人のアメリカ文化との遭遇に関する研究である。本論文では、なぜ日本人男性がアメリカのカントリー音楽とそのシンボルであるカウボーイを消費したかについて考察する。日本人男性は、これらの「典型的」とも言われるアメリカのシンボルを通して、日本の国家建設や、方向性に必要不可欠な、日本人男性性について議論していたと主張する。
This dissertation is a case study about the Japanese encounter with American culture by dealing with Japanese men and American country music. I investigate why Japanese men consumed American country music and cowboy images that served as the music's main symbol. Those Japanese men's encounter with American country music shows us that Japanese men received this music from the US in multifaceted ways, rather than simply as a way to understand US-Japan relations. I argue that these Japanese men used American country music and cowboy images to debate about Japanese masculinity, which was intrinsic to Japanese nation-building, aims and identities.
博士(アメリカ研究)
Doctor of Philosophy in American Studies
同志社大学
Doshisha University
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Javonena, Anne-Charlotte. "Châteaux et domaines castraux, outils de contrôle des réseaux de communication au Moyen Âge : l'exemple de la vallée du Lot (XIIIe -XVe siècles)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Clermont Auvergne (2021-...), 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022UCFAL018.

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Pendant longtemps, les relations entre les réseaux de communication et les sites castraux ont été associées à la fiscalité seigneuriale (perception de droits de péage) ou encore à un contexte militaire (en cherchant à bloquer le trafic dans une intention défensive). Toutefois, la coordination des maillages routiers, fluviaux et castraux fait apparaître en creux de nombreuses relations dynamiques entre les territoires, leur organisation économique, politique ou encore sociale. La question décisive revient à intégrer ces nouvelles perspectives à une représentation dynamique de la pratique des territoires pour définir les conditions réelles d'interrelation entre les sites castraux et les réseaux de communication au cours du second Moyen Âge. Le cadre géographique de cette thèse, la vallée du Lot, depuis sa source jusqu'à son confluent sur un parcours de 485 km, permet de considérer la permanence des relations sociales et spatiales dans un rapport réciproque d'organisation et de structuration, caractérisée par une pluralité d'ensembles politiques et de luttes d'influence entre individus. La présence de ces différents acteurs de pouvoir (grands princes territoriaux, seigneuries plus modestes, oligarchie et aristocratie locale), dont les seigneuries et les châteaux, les logis seigneuriaux ou aristocratiques s'imposent le long de cette rivière, peuvent faire dialoguer entre eux les espaces, la politique, les sociétés et l'économie pour ainsi détailler les phénomènes dynamiques qui se rapportent à la structuration viaire, fluviale et castrale des territoires observés. Cette étude est enrichie par le dépouillement de sources écrites collectées, entre autres, dans neuf dépôts d'archives départementales, à la BnF, aux archives nationales ou encore au Public record Office de Londres. Ce travail historique s'intéresse ainsi aux différents acteurs du pouvoir riverains du Lot et à leurs instruments de domination du sol afin de mieux cerner leurs logiques de pouvoir et de gestion territoriale quel que soit leur rang social
For a long time, the relations between communication networks and castral sites have been associated with seigniorial taxation (tolls) or military activities (by stopping the trafic). Nevertheless, the coordination of roads, rivers, waterways and castles make appear many dynamic relationships between territories, their economic, political or social organization. The decisive question is to integrate these new perspectives into a representation of the practice of territories to define the real conditions of interrelationship between castral sites and communication networks during the end of the early medieval period and the late Middle Ages. The geographical framework of this thesis, the Lot valley from its source to its confluence, on a course of 485 kilometers (301 miles), allows us to consider the reciprocal permanence of social and spatial relations characterized by a plurality of political groups and struggles of influence between individuals. These different powers (great territorial princes, modest lordships, oligarchy and local aristocracy), whose seigniories and castral domains obtrude along this river, can make spaces, politics, societies and economy interact together to explain the dynamic phenomena that relate to the road, river and castles of the territories observed. This study is enriched by the analysis of archives collected, in nine departmental archive repositories, at the National Library of France (BnF), at the national archives of France or at the Public Record Office of London. This historical work focuses on the various actors of power bordering the Lot and their instruments of land domination in order to understand their logic of power and territorial management regardless of their social rank
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Books on the topic "Rodez county"

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Duncan, Bette Wolf. Rodeo country: Cowboy western poetry. Runnells, UT: B-D Publications, 2006.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. His country girl. New York: Steeple Hill Books, 2011.

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Lemon, Andrea. Rodeo girls go round the outside. Ringwood, Vic., Australia: McPhee Gribble, 1996.

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Hart, Jillian. His country girl. New York: Harlequin, 2011.

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True country hero. New York: Avon Impulse, 2015.

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Cowboy Comes Back: Cowboy Country, Going Back - 22. Totonto: Harlequin, 2009.

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Evans, James George. Distribution of minor elements in the Rodeo Creek NE and Welches Canyon quadrangles, Eureka County, Nevada. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1986.

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Richardson, Myrtle H. Changes rode the winds: The third volume of the history of Edwards County, Kansas, and the surrounding area from 1926 to 1940. Lewis, Kan: Lewis Press, 1986.

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Jobe, Sybil Shipley. From out of the past rode all of these Brittons: A genealogical history of the William Britton, Sr. family of Greene County, TN. Neosho, MO (1218 Peterson Rd., Neosho 64850): S.S. Jobe, 1986.

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Fhirbhisigh, Dubhaltach Mac. The genealogies, tribes, and customs of Hy-fiachrach, commonly called O'Dowda's country: Now first published from the Book of Lecan, in the library of the Royal Irish Academy, and from the genealogical manuscript of Duald Mac Firbis, in the library of Lord Roden. Kansas: Irish Genealogical Foundation, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Rodez county"

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Yarger, Lisa. "Nurses on Horseback." In Lovie. University of North Carolina Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469630052.003.0007.

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Lovie visits the world-famous Frontier Nursing Service (FNS), the first program in the United States to employ nurse-midwives. Founded in 1925 in a tri-county area of Kentucky’s Appalachian Mountains by Mary Breckinridge, a wealthy socialite and nurse, the FNS compiled a remarkable record and won the admiration of physicians and health professionals from around the country and the world. FNS midwives, originally recruited from the United Kingdom but later trained on site, rode horseback through creek beds and narrow coves to provide health care and deliver babies in remote mountain cabins. Lovie recounts how her three-month stint at the FNS sealed her interest in becoming a nurse-midwife.
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Cather, Willa. "IX." In O Pioneers!, edited by Marilee Lindemann. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199552320.003.0017.

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On Sunday afternoon, a month after Carl Linstrum’s arrival, he rode with Emil up into the French country to attend a Catholic fair. He sat for most of the afternoon in the basement of the church, where the fair was held, talking to Marie...
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Twain, Mark. "Chapter XV Sandy’s Tale." In A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199540587.003.0016.

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“And so I’m proprietor of some knights,” said I, as we rode off. “Who would ever have supposed that I should live to list up assets of that sort. I shan’t know what to do with them; unless I raffle them off. How...
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Bolick, Harry, Tony Russell, T. DeWayne Moore, Joyce A. Cauthen, and David Evans. "The Meridian Hustlers." In Fiddle Tunes from Mississippi, 340–41. University Press of Mississippi, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496835796.003.0026.

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This three-piece string band, consisting of fiddle, banjo, and guitar, recorded for Paramount-the only known old-time act from Mississippi to do so-in Chicago in June 1929. In September 1929, the Meridian Hustlers placed first in the Band category at a Labor Day rodeo on the Meridian fairgrounds. (An otherwise unidentified “Leake County Band” placed second.) In February 1930, Radio Digest reported that the “Meridian Hustlers Orchestra from Meridian, Miss.” were broadcasting on WAPI Birmingham, Alabama. These fugitive sightings apart, little has been discovered about this band.
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Irons, Peter. "“I Thanked God Right Then and There”." In White Men's Law, 155–72. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190914943.003.0009.

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This chapter tells the stories of the Black parents and children who challenged school segregation in the five cases decided by the Supreme Court in 1954 under the caption Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas. The first case, chosen by Thurgood Marshall to show the unequal facilities for Black and White students, came from the small town of Summerton, South Carolina, in which Black children walked to schools in former sharecroppers’ cabins while White children rode buses to schools with four times the funding of Black schools. The next case, in rural Prince Edward County, Virginia, began with a strike by Black high school students to protest conditions at their overcrowded schools, where classes were held in unheated tar-paper shacks. The third case challenged segregation in the nation’s capital, led by a Black parent whose daughter was turned away from the all-White junior high nearest her home and sent to an overcrowded all-Black school. The fourth case, from New Castle County, Delaware, began when two Black mothers each protested the inferior schools their children were forced to attend. The final, and most famous, case began in Topeka, Kansas, whose four elementary schools were the only ones segregated in the state, when a father tried to enroll his nine-year-old daughter in the all-White school nearest her home rather than the Black school, a long walk and bus ride away. A federal appeals court cited the Plessy case as binding precedent but almost invited the Supreme Court to overrule it.
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Milward, John. "American Tune." In Americanaland, 126–36. University of Illinois Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043918.003.0010.

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This chapter highlights Merle Haggard's song “Okie from Muskogee,” which made him a player in the late-sixties culture wars and helped fortify a wall between rock and country music just as the Byrds and the Flying Burrito Brothers were taking their latest music to the Fillmore. Politics was not new to country music. In 1944, Jimmie Davis rode the popularity of his song “You Are My Sunshine” to the governorship of Louisiana. Davis called for racial segregation at the same time Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger gave modern folk music its leftist pedigree. When rock and roll became the music of teenage America in the 1950s and of the counterculture of the 1960s, country music offered a more traditional sanctuary. According to Bill Malone, “country music seemed a safe retreat to many because it suggested 'bedrock' American values of solidity, respect for authority, old time religion, home-based virtues, and patriotism.”
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Hudson, Berkley. "A Racial Crucible." In O. N. Pruitt's Possum Town, 151–63. University of North Carolina Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469662701.003.0016.

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In Mississippi and around the world, racial and ethnic identification has been used to justify segregation, fear, misunderstanding, hatred, and violence. In 1922, the Ku Klux Klan rode on horseback along Main Street in front of Pruitt’s studio, and he documented that. In 1933 and 1934, Pruitt photographed two of Mississippi’s last legal executions by rope hanging outside the Lowndes County Courthouse; Black men were convicted of killing white people. The district attorney in both cases was John C. Stennis, who would serve as US senator for more than four decades (1947–89) and become a prominent Democrat in the battles over integration. In July 1935, the Lowndes County sheriff called Pruitt to come photograph the bodies of two Black farmers, Bert Moore and Dooley Morton, who were lynched by three dozen white men in a Black churchyard. Two decades later, Pruitt would photograph Black dentist Emmett J. Stringer, who was president of the Mississippi chapter of the National Association for Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). His visible NAACP leadership made him a target for Klan harassment—and assassination plots. NAACP colleagues already had been killed under mysterious circumstances.
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Harbert, Benjamin J. "Surfaces." In Instrument of the State, 143–86. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197517505.003.0005.

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Abstract In the late 1960s and 1970s, Angola’s engagement with the public grew. On the one hand, the prison used outside performances as a public relations tool. On the other hand, prisoners took advantage of Louisiana’s economic turn to tourism to raise money. Chapter 4 examines how prisoners engage surfaces of the prison—boundaries where they interact with outsiders. These meeting places develop out of negotiations with an administration under fire for mismanagement and underfunded. The alliances that form help fund music programs and offer slim chances for release as the concept of prisoners’ rights develop. The chapter is split between following the Westernaires, a country band that played the new rodeo and toured Louisiana on a bus, and the rise of club banquets, where Black musicians provided music for newly empowered prisoner clubs and their outside partner organizations.
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Thaggert, Miriam. "Terminus." In Riding Jane Crow, 121–34. University of Illinois Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252044526.003.0006.

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The conclusion studies the train travel experiences of the person who coined the term “Jane Crow,” Pauli Murray. Murray’s narrative, “Three Thousand Miles on a Dime in Ten Days,” and Murray’s private papers are among the few places where pleasurable Black “female” train riding occurs. Murray presented as male when train riding. The section compares Murray’s recording of public accounts of train travel to Murray’s more candid accounts preserved in a photograph album and a scrapbook. These items are Murray’s mobile archives that reflect a queered, Jane Crow(ed) identity. Significantly, Murray rode on freight cars, train compartments that escape the rigid class demarcations of first- or second-class cars. That the individual most responsible for coining the term “Jane Crow” also embodies the engagement of travel, identity, and the archive offers one of the most fitting conclusions to a counter-archive of Black women’s travel narratives.
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Fox, Dov. "Procreation Imposed." In Birth Rights and Wrongs, 113–26. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190675721.003.0009.

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A negligently failed abortion, birth control, or sterilization foists on plaintiffs the very pregnancy or parenthood they enlisted professional assistance to avoid. Courts refuse to remedy these reproductive injuries on the ground that babies are blessings. But this repudiates plaintiffs’ moral agency to decide what’s good for their own lives. It’s specious and patronizing to think that all unsuspecting parents will come to be glad that misconduct rode roughshod over their decisions to be sterilized, use contraception, or have an abortion. And courts shouldn’t dismiss complaints in which causation is uncertain, provided that plaintiffs can show that negligence increased the chances of unwanted procreation by a non-insignificant degree. But it’s only fair to hold defendants liable for whatever portion of the reproductive injury their negligence caused, or the corresponding chance that their misconduct is to blame for causing it. Plaintiffs shouldn’t be denied the compensation they’re entitled to just because they exercised their protected liberties to decline abortion or adoption. Insisting that negligence victims cut off ties with a fetus or child as a condition of recovery disrespects their interest in making reproductive decisions for themselves. Forcing their hand yet again only exacerbates that injury to such a meaningful part of their lives that specialists had previously given them legitimate reason to expect. Raising the unplanned child may be worse for them than the childless future they’d hoped for—but abortion or adoption may be worse than either of those.
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Conference papers on the topic "Rodez county"

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Honda, Hiroshi. "Partnering to Succeed: Keys to Managing Technology Development, Risk and Globalization." In ASME 2001 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2001/ts-23403.

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Abstract The subject symposium on “Partnering to Succeed: Keys to Managing Technology Development, Risk and Globalization” is held under the sponsorship of Engineering and Technology Management (E&TM) Group at the 2001 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition (IMECE) with its congress highlight topic of “Progress Through Partnerships: Team Approaches for Today’s Economy,” following a success of the 2000 ASME IMECE E&TM Group Symposium on “Successfully Managing the Risk and Development of Your Business and Technology” with its congress highlight topic of “Beyond the Traditional Boundaries.” The 2000 symposium counted over 500 attendees (1), (2), increased by more than 2.5 times from about 200 attendees for all the sessions organized for IMECE 1999 by three divisions of the E&TM Group. The original proposal for these 2000 and 2001 IMECE symposia, shown in Appendix, was submitted to then E&TM Group Vice President Arnold Rothstein by the author at the Technology & Society (T&S) and Management Division Executive Committee and E&TM Group Operating Board meetings at IMECE 1999 in Nashville. E&TM Group Representative Kenneth Home and session track leaders were instrumental in carrying out these symposia, with the cooperation and support of Arnold Rothstein and his successor Jeff Rode, Division Chairs John Paul and Robert Bums (T&S), Steven Nichols (Management Division), and David Pyatt (Safety Engineering and Risk Analysis Division (SERAD)) and other members of the division executive committees and the group operating board. The current paper introduces key issues to be discussed at the subject “twenty-six session” symposium for ASME 2001 IMECE, with trends of our time and the originally proposed symposium concept taken into consideration.
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Reports on the topic "Rodez county"

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Distribution of minor elements in the Rodeo Creek NE and Welches Canyon quadrangles, Eureka County, Nevada. US Geological Survey, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/b1657.

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