Journal articles on the topic 'St. Petersburg Florida'

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1

Museum, Salvador Dali. "The Average Bureaucrat." Public Voices 3, no. 2 (April 11, 2017): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.22140/pv.362.

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Baber, M. "Hands-On History for Local Youth and University Students." Practicing Anthropology 20, no. 1 (January 1, 1998): 28–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/praa.20.1.e22x464118441303.

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Community involvement was a critical feature that we emphasized in the Central Avenue Project. This aspect of public heritage programming, and applied anthropology in general, is based on interrelated concerns with legitimacy and accuracy in representation and collaboration as a core value. Another goal of the project was to engage young people from the surrounding neighborhoods in learning about and helping to present the history that their parents and grandparents had lived and created. In this regard, we followed examples in similar projects done by Steve Barlow in Memphis (Ghostwriters: Connecting in an Inner City Neighborhood. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Baton Rouge, LA. 1996) and Evelyn Philips in St Petersburg (An Ethnohistorical Analysis of the Political Economy of Ethnicity among African Americans in St. Petersburg Florida. Doctoral Dissertation. University of South Florida, 1994).
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3

Lester, David. "Suicide by Jumping from Bridges." Perceptual and Motor Skills 100, no. 3 (June 2005): 628. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pms.100.3.628-628.

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The Sunshine Skyway Bridge in St. Petersburg, Florida, has crisis emergency telephones and a police presence. Although the number of suicides from the bridge has declined, it is too soon to test the statistical significance of the decline.
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4

Logan, Robert A. "Two Editorial Pages after Tornillo." Newspaper Research Journal 7, no. 4 (June 1986): 29–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953298600700403.

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The study examines how two Florida newspapers' editorial pages treated state senate and mayoral races before and after Florida's right of access/reply state statute was found unconstitutional in the Tornillo decision. Assessed were how editorials, opinion editorials and letters to the editor changed in the St. Petersburg Times and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune after the 1974 decision. Arguments that Florida newspapers might provide less access and discussion for unendorsed candidates were not substantiated.
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5

Hickey, John J. "Circular convection during subsurface injection of liquid waste, St. Petersburg, Florida." Water Resources Research 25, no. 7 (July 1989): 1481–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/wr025i007p01481.

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6

Johnson, William D. "Dual Distribution Systems: The Public Utility Perspective." Water Science and Technology 24, no. 9 (November 1, 1991): 343–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.1991.0263.

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Diminishing water resources are a worldwide problem. Many countries face serious water supply issues in the near future. The United States has not escaped the problem of providing adequate water for its needs. Rapid population expansion in semi-arid locales, and growth in areas where groundwater resources are sensitive to saltwater intrusion have forced local officials to search for alternatives to satisfy a growing demand for water. The City of St Petersburg, Florida, developed and is operating one of the world's largest urban water reuse systems. The program has been very successful in reducing potable water demands. The city has learned a great deal during the past fourteen years that the system has been in service. The purpose of this paper is to share the history of the development of the St Petersburg Water Reuse System and what has been learned during its operation.
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7

Rigos, Platon N., and Richard Diamond. "Neighbourhood policy and responsiveness after regime change: The case of St Petersburg, Florida." Space and Polity 2, no. 2 (November 1998): 145–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13562579808721777.

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8

Logan, Robert. "Balance of Editorial Commentary in Four Florida Newspapers during the 1984 Presidential Campaign." Newspaper Research Journal 8, no. 3 (March 1987): 71–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953298700800308.

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Do editorial sections publish a positive ratio of favorable to unfavorable commentary about endorsed candidates and a negative ratio of favorable to unfavorable commentary about unendorsed candidates? A content analysis of the editorial sections of the Miami Herald, St. Petersburg Times, Orlando Sentinel and Tampa Tribune revealed mixed support for the hypothesis. The findings suggest editorial sections in some newspapers may be more internally balanced in their political commentary than previously believed.
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9

Hurley, Andrew, and R. Bruce Stephenson. "Visions of Eden: Environmentalism, Urban Planning, and City Building in St. Petersburg, Florida, 1900-1995." Technology and Culture 39, no. 4 (October 1998): 806. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1215876.

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10

McFarland, Robert E., and Bruce R. Stephenson. "Visions of Eden: Environmentalism, Urban Planning, and City Building in St. Petersburg, Florida, 1900-1995." Journal of Southern History 64, no. 4 (November 1998): 772. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2587567.

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11

Keller, Mollie, and R. Bruce Stephenson. "Visions of Eden: Environmentalism, Urban Planning, and City Building in St. Petersburg, Florida, 1900-1955." Environmental History 3, no. 1 (January 1998): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3985431.

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12

Barnes, Ramon M. "Foreword. 1990 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry: St. Petersburg, Florida, USA, January 8th–13th, 1990." J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 5, no. 6 (1990): 417–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/ja9900500417.

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13

Dorsey, Joseph W. "Restorative Environmental Justice: Assessing Brownfield Initiatives, Revitalization, and Community Economic Development in St. Petersburg, Florida." Environmental Justice 2, no. 2 (June 2009): 69–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/env.2008.0546.

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14

Bednarek, Janet R. Daly, and R. Bruce Stephenson. "Visions of Eden: Environmentalism, Urban Planning, and City Building in St. Petersburg, Florida, 1900-1995." American Historical Review 103, no. 5 (December 1998): 1715. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2650147.

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15

Frederickson, Kari, and R. Bruce Stephenson. "Visions of Eden: Environmentalism, Urban Planning, and City Building in St. Petersburg, Florida, 1900-1995." Journal of American History 85, no. 2 (September 1998): 709. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2567847.

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16

Phillips, Evelyn Newman. "Doing More Than Heads: African American Women Healing, Resisting, and Uplifting Others in St. Petersburg, Florida." Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies 22, no. 2 (2001): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3347053.

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17

Hurley, Andrew. "Visions of Eden: Environmentalism, Urban Planning, and City Building in St. Petersburg, Florida, 1900-1995 (review)." Technology and Culture 39, no. 4 (1998): 806–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tech.1998.0089.

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18

Strom, Elizabeth, and Margarethe Kusenbach. "Bohemia growth machine: Street art as an urban development tool in Florida." Visual Inquiry 9, no. 1 (September 1, 2020): 59–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/vi_00010_1.

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Meanings and functions of street art have, in recent decades, diversified in the United States as well as globally. Today, we find street art initiatives and mural festivals in many cities, where they are applauded for fostering local development and tourism while also producing less tangible branding and marketing outcomes. Our research, based on ethnographic fieldwork and secondary data analysis in three Florida cities, suggests that street art initiatives can indeed become, in essence, handmaids to real estate development; however, the degree to which this is the case is variable, and it is by no means inevitable that the only long-term outcome will be the cultural obliteration and physical displacement of current residents. The article’s analysis describes and compares mural scenes in key redeveloping neighbourhoods in three Florida cities (Tampa, St. Petersburg and Miami) that, we argue, represent a diversity, and perhaps even a trajectory, of cities’ appropriation of street art as a development tool.
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19

Baccari, Rochelle. "Everybody's Business: The Care of Sick Children." Practicing Anthropology 15, no. 1 (January 1, 1993): 19–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/praa.15.1.g12v78u266417215.

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My internship was with Honeywell Corporation in St. Petersburg, Florida, working on a project closely associated with the Pinellas County Task Force on Day Care for Mildly Ill Children. According to my faculty mentors at the University of South Florida (USF), it was "out of sequence" in the sense that I was involved in it before I had met all the pre-internship requirements of the applied anthropology program. This came about because in early 1989 I went along with a faculty member to a meeting of that task force (then called ProjectLink because its aim was to connect business firms with providers of day care). In the course of the meeting I volunteered, or was volunteered, to begin some of the research necessary to carry out the task force aim of developing company-sponsored day care for children who were mildly ill. Before I knew it, I was deeply involved in addressing a fascinating set of problems and needs of modern urban life.
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20

Dickey, Tom. "A Report on the Second Meeting of The Oceanography Society: St. Petersburg, Florida, March 25–28, 1991." Oceanography 4, no. 2 (1991): 93–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.1991.12.

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21

Wolstenholme, Philip, Jose Jimenez, Anand Mody, Steven Marshall, and Kimberly Meyer. "The Sulfur Cycle and Its Impact on Hydrogen Sulfide Emissions: an Investigation at the City of St. Petersburg, Florida." Proceedings of the Water Environment Federation 2014, no. 12 (October 1, 2014): 1328–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.2175/193864714815940037.

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22

Wolstenholme, Philip, Chris Muller, Houston Flippin, and Anand Mody. "The Sulfur Cycle and Its Impact on Hydrogen Sulfide Emissions: an Investigation at the City of St. Petersburg, Florida." Proceedings of the Water Environment Federation 2014, no. 3 (October 1, 2014): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2175/193864714816099770.

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23

Stack, Steven. "Crisis Phones - Suicide Prevention Versus Suggestion/Contagion Effects." Crisis 36, no. 3 (May 2015): 220–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/0227-5910/a000313.

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Abstract. Background: There has been no systematic work on the short- or long-term impact of the installation of crisis phones on suicides from bridges. The present study addresses this issue. Method: Data refer to 219 suicides from 1954 through 2013 on the Skyway Bridge in St. Petersburg, Florida. Six crisis phones with signs were installed in July 1999. Results: In the first decade after installation, the phones were used by 27 suicidal persons and credited with preventing 26 or 2.6 suicides a year. However, the net suicide count increased from 48 in the 13 years before installation of phones to 106 the following 13 years or by 4.5 additional suicides/year (t =3.512, p < .001). Conclusion: Although the phones prevented some suicides, there was a net increase after installation. The findings are interpreted with reference to suggestion/contagion effects including the emergence of a controversial bridge suicide blog.
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24

Stoddard, K., B. Braun, L. Dukes III, and M. A. Koorland. "Building Professional Dispositions in Pre-Service Special Educators: Assessment and Instructional Tactics." Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice 4, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): 33–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.53761/1.4.1.4.

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Teacher preparation programs, in part due to national accreditation mandates, are beginning to examine assessment and instruction of teacher trainees’ professional behavior and dispositions more carefully than in the past. The faculty at University of South Florida St. Petersburg developed the Professional Behavior Assessment tool (PBA) for rating levels of competence within six professional behavior domains; punctuality, reaction to supervision, collaboration with colleagues, effort, enthusiasm, and ethical professionalism. Four pre-service teachers (PST) were taught the characteristics of the six domains employing written scenarios and rubrics of the PBA. Initially, the pre-service teachers held very different perceptions than faculty regarding behavior expected within each domain. After instruction the PST’s were able to use the PBA to rate scenarios similarly to faculty. Following training, PST’s reported better understanding regarding the level of expected professional behavior in the schools. As the semester progressed, faculty noted improvement in pre-service professional behavior in field settings.
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25

Amankwah, Ernest K., and Greg A. Hale. "Hispanic Ethnicity and the Risk of Pediatric Leukemia Relapse." Clinical Pediatrics 57, no. 6 (September 20, 2017): 656–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0009922817732147.

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Limited knowledge currently exists on the disparity in pediatric leukemia relapse. This study compared the risk of pediatric leukemia relapse between Hispanic and non-Hispanic Whites. Study participants were children (<20 years) diagnosed with leukemia from January 2006 to December 2014 at the Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, St. Petersburg, Florida. Hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for relapse-free survival were calculated using adjusted Cox regression. The study included 35 Hispanic and 94 non-Hispanic Whites. Among patients <10 years old, there was a significantly higher risk of relapse in Hispanic compared to non-Hispanic Whites (hazard ratio = 6.19, 95% confidence interval = 1.15-33.27). No association was observed for patients aged ≥10 years nor all participants combined. Although the finding of this study may suggest that ethnic disparity in pediatric leukemia relapse may exist in younger children, our finding is limited by the small sample size from a single institution. Therefore, future larger multiinstitutional studies are warranted.
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26

Platt, Harold L. "The emergence of urban environmental history." Urban History 26, no. 1 (May 1999): 89–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926899000164.

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The three books under review represent the origins and promise of a relatively new field of study, urban environmental history. Joel Tarr's collection of previously published essays retraces the intellectual odyssey of its single most important pioneer. Concerned about contemporary pollution problems, he has spent a quarter of a century exploring the frontiers of scholarship on the relationship between cities and their technologies. In contrast, monographs by R. Bruce Stephenson and Andrew Hurley are typical of current trends to build on this foundation, enriching and broadening its parameters from a wide variety of perspectives. Here the insights of town planning and social history illuminate case studies of St Petersburg, Florida, and Gary, Indiana, respectively. Other recent works draw heavily upon the sciences, especially medicine and public health. Reversing decades of academic fragmentation – knowing more and more about less and less – the study of the urban environment is encouraging creative applications of cross-disciplinary and comparative approaches.
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27

Recchio, Thomas. "Embodied Scholarship: A Performance History of William Richard Waldron’s Lizzie Leigh; or, The Murder Near the Old Mill (1863)." Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film 47, no. 1 (June 15, 2019): 43–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748372719853234.

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Through a reflective account of the process by which William Richard Waldron’s Lizzie Leigh was staged by the Theatre Caucus at the 2018 North American Victorian Studies Association conference held in St Petersburg, Florida, I hope to present a picture of what it might mean to figure scholarship as an act of embodiment through performance as both a stimulus for and a mode of inquiry. Towards that end, I offer a process narrative that tracks the selection, editing, infrastructure planning, rehearsal, and performance of the play in an effort to capture the intentional, inadvertent, and retrospective avenues of inquiry that emerged through that process, with an emphasis on tracking as fully as possible the performance history of the play, of which the North American Victorian Studies Association performance became a part. In addition to documenting the performance history of the play in Victorian Britain, I will also document the career of the play’s author in relation to the changes in decade and in venue of performances of the play in order to suggest the appeal and staying power of an under-valued piece of Victorian theatrical culture that still can speak to audiences today.
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Payne, Darwin. "Robert N. Pierce, A Sacred Trust: Nelson Poynter and the St. Petersburg Times. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1993. 409 pp. Cloth, $34.95." American Journalism 11, no. 4 (October 1994): 378–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08821127.1994.10731678.

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Loomba, Rohit S., Justin T. Tretter, Timothy J. Mohun, Robert H. Anderson, Scott Kramer, and Diane E. Spicer. "Identification and Morphogenesis of Vestibular Atrial Septal Defects." Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease 7, no. 3 (September 10, 2020): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcdd7030035.

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Background: The vestibular atrial septal defect is an interatrial communication located in the antero-inferior portion of the atrial septum. Reflecting either inadequate muscularization of the vestibular spine and mesenchymal cap during development, or excessive apoptosis within the developing antero-inferior septal component, the vestibular defect represents an infrequently recognized true deficiency of the atrial septum. We reviewed necropsy specimens from three separate archives to establish the frequency of such vestibular defects and their associated cardiac findings, providing additional analysis from developing mouse hearts to illustrate their potential morphogenesis. Materials and methods: We analyzed the hearts in the Farouk S. Idriss Cardiac Registry at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago, IL, the Van Mierop Archive at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, and the archive at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Heart Institute in St. Petersburg, Florida, identifying all those exhibiting a vestibular atrial septal defect, along with the associated intracardiac malformations. We then assessed potential mechanisms for the existence of such defects, based on the assessment of 450 datasets of developing mouse hearts prepared using the technique of episcopic microscopy. Results: We analyzed a total of 2100 specimens. Of these, 68 (3%) were found to have a vestibular atrial septal defect. Comparable defects were identified in 10 developing mouse embryos sacrificed at embryonic data 15.5, by which stage the antero-inferior component of the atrial septum is usually normally formed. Conclusion: The vestibular defect is a true septal defect located in the muscular antero-inferior rim of the oval fossa. Our retrospective review of autopsied hearts suggests that the defect may be more common than previously thought. Increased awareness of the location of the defect should optimize its future clinical identification. We suggest that the defect exists because of failure, during embryonic development, of union of the components that bind the leading edge of the primary atrial septum to the atrioventricular junctions, either because of inadequate muscularisation or excessive apoptosis.
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Cepeda, Javier A., Jacob Workman, Sarah Stromberg, Janelle Garcia, A. J. Caberto, Catherine Jackson, Evelyn Shiang, Sachiv Chakravarti, and Jasmine Reese. "191. Impact of COVID-19 Risk Mitigation Interventions on Drug Overdose in the Emergency Department Among Adolescents and Young Adults in St. Petersburg, Florida." Journal of Adolescent Health 70, no. 4 (April 2022): S99—S100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2022.01.108.

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Kaari, Jennifer. "Librarian-Lead Faculty Learning Communities Offer Opportunities for Collaboration." Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 17, no. 2 (June 15, 2022): 123–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.18438/eblip30115.

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A Review of: Burress, T., Mann, E., & Neville, T. (2020). Exploring data literacy via a librarian-faculty learning community: A case study. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 46(1). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2019.102076 Abstract Objective – To describe a librarian-lead faculty learning community (FLC) focused on data literacy. Design – Case study. Setting – A public university in Florida. Subjects – 10 participants in the FLC. Methods – Two librarians proposed the Data Literacy Across the Curriculum FLC as part of the University of South Florida St. Petersburg Center for Innovation in Teaching and Learning. Participants were recruited from all full-time instructional faculty. The group met for monthly 90-minute meetings throughout the fall and spring semesters. Meetings were focused on group goal-setting, lightning talks, open discussion, data tool demonstrations, and the planning and development of work projects. In addition, the group designed an informal survey on the use of data tools across the institution. Main Results – At the conclusion of the year-long FLC, the group developed a frame for data literacy competencies that can be utilized across the curriculum. The FLC participants created a Data Literacy Faculty Toolkit that presented that theoretical framework, as well as providing sample activities and other resources to help faculty to practically implement that framework into their instruction. The student success librarian also integrated data literacy into the first-year student information literacy curriculum. Conclusion – Participation and facilitation of the FLC by librarians served to further librarian-faculty collaboration, as well as demonstrating library value. The work of the Data Literacy Across the Curriculum FLC raised awareness about information and data literacy on campus, and provided support to faculty members looking to further integrate data literacy into their instruction.
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O'Rourke, Timothy G., and Rickey Vallier. "Resurgent Governors in the Federal System." Political Science Teacher 1, no. 4 (1988): 5–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0896082800000350.

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The time is July 1988, and baseball fever is rising. With barely a glimmer of hope remaining, “Big Jim” Thompson steps into the batter's box to swat a ninth inning “home run” that prevents the White Sox from going down to defeat—or more accurately—from going down to Florida. Such is the stuff of legends, although the real story is hardly less dramatic. Seated at a desk at home plate of Comiskey Park, Illinois Governor James Thompson signed a $ 150 million financing package for the construction of a new stadium that will keep the White Sox in Chicago and fore-close the team's removal to St. Petersburg. With vigorous lobbying from the Governor, the Illinois General Assembly, in the closing minutes of its 1988 session, had narrowly approved the stadium legislation.The news from Chicago, however, is more than a baseball story. The news tells us a great deal about modern governors in domestic policy making. They are more activist than their counterparts a generation or so ago, particularly in the realm of homestate economic development. Though most governors do not serve as long as Thompson–by late 1988, he had been governor for nearly 12 years–modern governors, as compared to their 1950s counterparts, are staying in office longer and, perhaps as a consequence, acquiring greater national influence.
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Polyakova, Evgeniya, and Mikhail Manokin. "Cultural Professions in Modern-Day Russia: Statistical Portrait of the Workers." Journal of Economic Sociology 22, no. 1 (2021): 35–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.17323/1726-3247-2021-1-35-60.

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In this study, we aim to provide a statistical portrait of employment in the cultural field with regard to occupations on the Russian labor market. The data from the ‘Comprehensive Monitoring of Living Conditions’ are used to illustrate the main differences in the socio-demographic and occupational characteristics of culturally employed respondents and other professional groups. Additionally, the most relevant factors that may have an impact on individuals’ probability to be cultural workers are analyzed. Our study is based on the theoretical frameworks of U. Beck, R. Florida, J. Urry, and Z. Bauman. We also consider the possible Soviet legacy of the contemporary Russian culture, which may interconnect with labor conditions in this field, using S. Fitzpatrick’s works. We also provide an overview of other relevant studies. Our findings show that a larger number of cultural workers among the respondents are librarians, archivists, teachers of music and art schools, linguists, museum workers, journalists, and writers. The results on the statistical portrait display that on average, the cultural workers are highly educated married women in their forties or older who live predominantly in the largest regions of the Russian Federation (Moscow and Moscow region, St. Petersburg). Almost three-quarters of the group have relevant education. They are mostly regular full-time employees with a daytime work schedule. We have also found that the most influential factors for becoming cultural workers are the region of residence and relevant professional education.
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Owens, Edward H., Jacqueline Michel, Richard A. Davis, and Kay Stritzke. "BEACH CLEANING AND THE ROLE OF TECHNICAL SUPPORT IN THE 1993 TAMPA BAY SPILL." International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings 1995, no. 1 (February 1, 1995): 627–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.7901/2169-3358-1995-1-627.

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ABSTRACT This paper reports on the decision-making process and shoreline cleanup methods used following the oiling of 23 km (14 mi) of oceanfront sand beaches in the St. Petersburg, Florida, area in August 1993. Although cleanup of sand beaches usually is relatively straightforward, in this instance the high recreational use of the beaches during the traditional Labor Day weekend in early September created pressure to deal with the shoreline oiling in a rapid and efficient manner. Achieving this goal required a coordinated effort by all participants in the response operation. Key points include the following:The importance and value of consensus among state, federal, and responsible party representativesUse of systematic beach survey measurements and data to determine the extent and type of surface and subsurface oiling and to define the scope of the problemField testing, evaluation, and final development of recommendations for cleanupUse of heavy equipment and the development of cost estimates for alternative methods in the context of timing and tradeoffs. The consensus reached by the technical support group for the cleanup operations involved a combination of manual removal, mechanical removal, surf-washing, and tilling. The possible effects of sediment removal were evaluated through use of beach profile and sand budget information from a long-term monitoring program. This spill response emphasized the role and importance of technical support and the interaction with field supervisors and operators, to develop appropriate and successful cleanup strategies and techniques.
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Mihailova, Mihaela. "To Dally with Dalí: Deepfake (Inter)faces in the Art Museum." Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 27, no. 4 (July 26, 2021): 882–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13548565211029401.

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This essay focuses on the nascent symbiotic relationship between deepfakes and art museums and galleries, as demonstrated by three case studies. The first one, housed at the Dalí Museum in St Petersburg, Florida, is a life-size talking avatar of the artist generated from archival footage. The second one, Warriors by James Coupe, revisits Walter Hill’s 1979 film of the same name using deepfake algorithms to insert visitors’ faces into key scenes, sorting them into gangs based on data-driven analysis of their demographic and economic markers. Finally, Gillian Wearing’s fake ad, Wearing Gillian, uses deepfake technology to enable a series of actors to appear on screen with the artist’s face as a way of interrogating questions of identity in a networked digital world. Based on these works, my article examines museums’ employment of deepfakes for advertising, audience engagement, and educational outreach, and the curatorial, ethical, and creative opportunities and challenges involved therein. While deepfake esthetics will be discussed wherever relevant, this is not a formalist analysis; my goal is not to focus on close readings of the deepfake pieces themselves, however fascinating their esthetics. Instead, I will look at the promotional and critical discourse around them in order to unpack the ways in which the acquisition of creative deepfake works by cultural institutions functions as a legitimizing force that is already shifting the narrative regarding the artistic value and social functions of this technology.
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36

Gibbs, Nikki. "Reviewer Acknowledgements." Applied Economics and Finance 8, no. 1 (December 29, 2020): 78. http://dx.doi.org/10.11114/aef.v8i1.5117.

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Applied Economics and Finance (AEF) would like to acknowledge the following reviewers for their assistance with peer review of manuscripts for this issue. Many authors, regardless of whether AEF publishes their work, appreciate the helpful feedback provided by the reviewers. Their comments and suggestions were of great help to the authors in improving the quality of their papers. Each of the reviewers listed below returned at least one review for this issue.Reviewers for Volume 8, Number 1 Andrey Kudryavtsev, The Max Stern Yezreel Valley Academic College, IsraelAyoub Taha Sidahmed, SIU, SudanDilshodjon Rakhmonov, Tashkent State University of Economics, UzbekistanDimitrios Koumparoulis, University of the People, USADjebali Nesrine, University of Jendouba, TunisiaDyah Wulan Sari, Airlangga University, IndonesiaFarhat Iqbal, University of Balochistan, PakistanHedieh Shadmani, Fairfield University, USAIan McFarlane, University of Reading, UKKembo Bwana, College of Business Education, TanzaniaMahmoud Mohammed Sabra, Al Azhar University-Gaza, PalestineMamdouh Abdelmoula M. Abdelsalam, Minufiya University, EgyptMarco Mele, University of Teramo, ItalyMarco Muscettola, Independent Researcher-Credit Risk Manager, ItalyMojeed Idowu John Odumeso-Jimoh, Noble Integrated Resources & Management, NigeriaNuno Crespo, ISCTE-IUL, PortugalOlena Sokolovska, St. Petersburg State University, RussiaRamona Orastean, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, RomaniaRichard Nguyen, Alliant International University, USARomeo Victor Ionescu, Dunarea de Jos University, RomaniaShahram Fattahi, Razi University, IranSherry Jensen, Florida Institute of Technology, USASzabolcs Blazsek, Universidad Francisco Marroquín, GuatemalaVictoria Cociug, Academy of Sciences of Moldova, MoldovaY. Saidi, M’sila University, Algeria Nikki GibbsEditorial AssistantOn behalf of,The Editorial Board of Applied Economics and FinanceRedfame Publishing9450 SW Gemini Dr. #99416Beaverton, OR 97008, USAURL: http://aef.redfame.com
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Mauseth, Gary S., Jane S. Urquhart-Donnelly, and Roy R. Lewis. "Compensatory Restoration of Mangrove Habitat Following the Tampa Bay Oil Spill." International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings 2001, no. 1 (March 1, 2001): 761–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.7901/2169-3358-2001-1-761.

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ABSTRACT In 1993, an incident involving three vessels near the entrance to Tampa Bay, near St. Petersburg, Florida, resulted in a discharge approximately 300,000 gallons of No. 6. fuel oil into the waters off Egmont Key. The oil contacted the shores from Egmont Key to locations approximately 14 miles to the north. Oil also entered Boca Ciega Bay through John's Pass and impacted four small islands that supported mature overwash mangrove forest. A cooperative damage assessment process was developed between the Responsible Parties (RPs) and the trustees for the natural resources: the state of Florida, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). Through the cooperative process, several alternatives for primary and compensatory restoration were developed. In considering alternatives to compensate for impacts to epibenthic communities, fish and bird habitats, wetlands, and mangrove communities, the trustees and the RPs considered purchase of shoreline habitat and restoration of mangrove forest at several sites. The RP developed a proposal to purchase and deed into public ownership in perpetuity, a 10.67-acre parcel of land on the west bank of Cross Bayou in Boca Ciega Bay that had been used as a disposal site for dredge spoil in the past. This site consisted of approximately 5.0 acres of uplands, 4.4 acres of mangrove forest, and 1.4 acres of nonmangrove intertidal and subtidal habitat. The objective of the project was to establish a typical Tampa Bay mangrove forest and a roadside buffer free of exotic plant species. The secondary goals were to establish a typical Tampa Bay salt marsh dominated by smooth cordgrass (Spartina spp.) as a successional precursor to mangrove recruitment by seeds and seedlings. Tidal exchange through the site was reestablished to improve water quality and increase export of mangrove detritus and import of high-quality tidal waters. The project was designed and constructed by the RPs with the approval and supervision of the trustees. The project was completed and title transferred to Pinellas County, Florida in summer 1999. A monitoring program was developed and performance criteria established by trustee representatives and the RPs. The monitoring program currently is being conducted and has met performance criteria to date. This project demonstrates the positive result of trustees and the RPs working together to provide compensation to the environment.
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Atchison, Christie M., Ernest Amankwah, Jean Wilhelm, Shilpa Arlikar, Brian R. Branchford, Arabela Stock, Michael Streiff, et al. "Risk factors for hospital-associated venous thromboembolism in critically ill children following cardiothoracic surgery or therapeutic cardiac catheterisation." Cardiology in the Young 28, no. 2 (November 8, 2017): 234–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951117001755.

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AbstractBackgroundPaediatric hospital-associated venous thromboembolism is a leading quality and safety concern at children’s hospitals.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine risk factors for hospital-associated venous thromboembolism in critically ill children following cardiothoracic surgery or therapeutic cardiac catheterisation.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective, case–control study of children admitted to the cardiovascular intensive care unit at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital (St. Petersburg, Florida, United States of America) from 2006 to 2013. Hospital-associated venous thromboembolism cases were identified based on ICD-9 discharge codes and validated using radiological record review. We randomly selected two contemporaneous cardiovascular intensive care unit controls without hospital-associated venous thromboembolism for each hospital-associated venous thromboembolism case, and limited the study population to patients who had undergone cardiothoracic surgery or therapeutic cardiac catheterisation. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for associations between putative risk factors and hospital-associated venous thromboembolism were determined using univariate and multivariate logistic regression.ResultsAmong 2718 admissions to the cardiovascular intensive care unit during the study period, 65 met the criteria for hospital-associated venous thromboembolism (occurrence rate, 2%). Restriction to cases and controls having undergone the procedures of interest yielded a final study population of 57 hospital-associated venous thromboembolism cases and 76 controls. In a multiple logistic regression model, major infection (odds ratio=5.77, 95% confidence interval=1.06–31.4), age ⩽1 year (odds ratio=6.75, 95% confidence interval=1.13–160), and central venous catheterisation (odds ratio=7.36, 95% confidence interval=1.13–47.8) were found to be statistically significant independent risk factors for hospital-associated venous thromboembolism in these children. Patients with all three factors had a markedly increased post-test probability of having hospital-associated venous thromboembolism.ConclusionMajor infection, infancy, and central venous catheterisation are independent risk factors for hospital-associated venous thromboembolism in critically ill children following cardiothoracic surgery or cardiac catheter-based intervention, which, in combination, define a high-risk group for hospital-associated venous thromboembolism.
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Bosquilia, Raoni Wainer Duarte, Cristopher Michael Usher Neale, Sergio Nascimento Duarte, Silvio Frosini de Barros Ferraz, Pedro Paulo Da Silva Barros, and Frank Edgar Muller-Karger. "VALIDATION OF A HYBRID EVAPOTRANSPIRATION MODEL USING SATELLITE IMAGERY AND PRECIPITATION-FLOW DATA." IRRIGA 26, no. 3 (November 18, 2021): 460–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.15809/irriga.2021v26n3p460-475.

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VALIDATION OF A HYBRID EVAPOTRANSPIRATION MODEL USING SATELLITE IMAGERY AND PRECIPITATION-FLOW DATA RAONI WAINER DUARTE BOSQUILIA1; CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL USHER NEALE2; SERGIO NASCIMENTO DUARTE3; SILVIO FROSINI DE BARROS FERRAZ3; PEDRO PAULO DA SILVA BARROS4 AND FRANK EDGAR MULLER-KARGER5 1 Federal Technological University of Paraná (UTFPR), Dois Vizinhos Campus, Estrada para Boa Esperança, km 4, CEP 85660-000, Dois Vizinhos, Paraná, Brazil, e-mail: raonibosquilia@utfpr.edu.br 2 University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Water for Food Institute, 2021 Transformation Dr Suite 3220, zipcode 68588, Lincoln, NE, USA, e-mail: cneale@nebraska.edu 3 University of São Paulo (USP), Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture (ESALQ), Av. Pádua Dias, 235, CEP 13418-900, Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil, e-mail: snduarte@usp.br; silvio.ferraz@usp.br 4 Federal University of Uberlândia (UFU), Campus Monte Carmelo, Rodovia LMG 746, Km 1, CEP 38500-000, Monte Carmelo, MG, Brazil, e-mail: pedropaulo.barros@ufu.br 5 University of South Florida, Saint Petersburg, College of Marine Sciences, 830 1st St S, zipcode 33701, St. Petersburg, FL, USA, e-mail: carib@usf.edu 1 ABSTRACT To quantify the water balance in watersheds, it is necessary to know the components of the hydrologic cycle, especially evapotranspiration (ET). Many studies have been conducted using a single-source model such as SEBAL to estimate the actual ET (ETa) from satellite imagery; however, other models have been developed and continuously improved, such as the Two Source Energy Balance (TSEB). This study evaluated ETa estimation performed by a hybrid TSEB ET model programmed in the Spatial Evapotranspiration Modeling Interface (SETMI) using satellite imagery. The evaluation was conducted over two full hydrological years, developing a new methodology to convert hourly ETa data to monthly and annual data. The results of applying the TSEB/SETMI model to Landsat 8 imagery were validated to a water balance calculation from field measurements in three representative watersheds in Corumbataí, SP, Brazil. Thus, it was concluded that the adjustment applied to monthly and annual ET data produced results statistically correlated to those obtained through a simplified annual water balance, confirming that the developed methodology can be used to estimate monthly and annual ET from Landsat 8 imagery and the hybrid ET model. Keywords: Landsat 8, two source energy balance, remote sensing, water balance BOSQUILIA, R. W. D.; NEALE, C. M. U.; DUARTE, S. N.; FERRAZ, S. F. B.; BARROS, P. P. S.; MULLER-KARGER, F. E. VALIDAÇÃO DE UM MODELO HÍBRIDO DE EVAPOTRANSPIRAÇÃO UTILIZANDO IMAGENS DE SATÉLITE E DADOS DE CHUVA-VAZÃO 2 RESUMO Para quantificar o balanço hídrico em bacias hidrográficas, é necessário conhecer os componentes do ciclo hidrológico, especialmente, a evapotranspiração (ET). Muitos estudos têm sido realizados utilizando um modelo de fonte única como o SEBAL para estimar a ET real (ETa) a partir de imagens de satélite; contudo, outros modelos têm sido desenvolvidos e continuamente melhorados, tais como o Balanço Energético de Duas Fontes (TSEB). Este estudo avaliou a estimativa da ETa realizada por um modelo de ET híbrido de TSEB programado na Interface de Modelagem de Evapotranspiração Espacial (SETMI) utilizando imagens de satélite. A avaliação foi realizada ao longo de dois anos hidrológicos completos, desenvolvendo-se uma nova metodologia para converter os dados de ETa horários em dados mensais e anuais. Os resultados da aplicação do modelo TSEB/SETMI às imagens do Landsat 8 foram validados contra um de cálculo do balanço hídrico a partir de medições de campo em três bacias hidrográficas representativas de Corumbataí, SP, Brasil. Assim, concluiu-se que o ajustamento aplicado aos dados mensais e anuais da ET produziu resultados estatisticamente correlacionados aos obtidos através de um balanço hídrico anual simplificado, confirmando que a metodologia desenvolvida pode ser empregada em estimativas mensais e anuais da ET a partir de imagens do satélite Landsat 8 e do modelo de ET híbrido. Palavras-chave: Landsat 8, balanço energético de duas fontes, sensoriamento remoto, balanço hídrico
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40

Morgan, Gary S., and Richard C. Hulbert. "Overview of the geology and vertebrate biochronology of the Leisey Shell Pit Local Fauna, Hillsborough County, Florida." Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History 37, no. 1 (March 14, 1995): 1–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.58782/flmnh.sdnh9875.

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The Leisey Shell Pit Local Fauna was collected from two adjacent commercial shell mines located 7 km southwest of Ruskin and less than 1 km inland from Tampa Bay in Hillsborough County, Florida Leisey Shell Pit is one of the most diverse Irvingtonian vertebrate faunas in North America, composed of at least 203 species: 14 sharks, 9 rays, 50 bony fish, 3 amphibians, 26 reptiles. 52 birds, and 49 mammals. Leisey 1A and Leisey 3A are the largest of the four principal sites that constitute the Leisey Shell Pit Local Fauna. Leisey 1A has extensive samples of large mammals, in particular: the camelids Palaeolama mirifica and Hemiauchenia macrocephala, two species of Equus, the primitive mammoth Mammuthus hayi, the ground sloths Paramylodon harlani and Nothrotheriops texanus, the giant tapir Tapirus haysii, the peccary Platygonus vetus, the gracile sabercat Smilodon gracilis, the short-faced bear Arctodus pristinus, and the canid Canis edwardii. The large mammal fauna from Leisey 3A is dominated by associated juvenile skeletons of Hemiauchenia macrocephala, while its diverse microvertebrate assemblage contains important samples of freshwater fish, sirens, aquatic snakes, birds, and small mammals. Sediments in the Leisey Shell Pit are referred to four formations, each of which has produced vertebrate fossils. At the base of the stratigraphic section is an indurated, tan to light gray dolostone referred to the Arcadia Formation. A horse tooth identified as "Merychippus" tertius derived from this unit is indicative of an early Barstovian age (early middle Miocene). Reworked sediments on top of the Arcadia Formation contain several land mammals, including the horses Nannippus aztecus, Neohipparion eurystyle, and Cormohipparion ingenuum, whose association is characteristic of Florida late early Hemphillian (late Miocene) faunas. Phosphatic gravel and spheroidal metaquartzite pebbles in this unit are typical of the upper Bone Valley Formation. The major concentrations of vertebrate fossils in the Leisey Shell Pit occur in thin, irregular layers of organic-rich sediment distributed throughout about 7 m of sandy marine shell beds referred to the Bermont Formation which unconformably overlies the Arcadia Formation. The large assemblage of land mammals from these organic units in the Bermont Formation is early Irvingtonian (early Pleistocene) in age. Shell beds of the Fort Thompson Formation occur in the Leisey section above an erosional unconformity at the top of the Bermont Formation. The Fort Thompson shell beds contain a distinctly younger mammalian fauna, including the bison Bison sp., the cotton rat Sigmodon hispidus, and the tapir Tapirus veroensis, typical of the late Pleistocene (Rancholabrean). Geochronological data derived from paleomagnetic analysis, strontium isotope geochronology, sea levels, and molluscan and vertebrate biochronology have been incorporated in a multidisciplinary effort to determine the age of the Bermont Formation at the Leisey Shell Pit. Molluscan biochronology implies an early or middle Pleistocene age, whereas mammalian biochronology is considerably more precise strongly favoring an early Pleistocene age between 1.6 and 1.0 Ma. All paleomagnetic samples from the Bermont Formation at Leisey have reversed polarity and are referred to the Matuyama Chron, indicating an age greater than 0.78 Ma. The Leisey Bermont section does not correlate to the Jaramillo Subchron of normal polarity between 1.07 and 0.99 Ma. It is also unlikely the Leisey beds were deposited during the youngest portion of the Matuyama between 0.99 and 0.78 Ma. The combination of data from magnetic polarity, mammalian biochronology, and sea level strongly indicates that the Bermont Formation at Leisey is older than 1.07 Ma and younger than 1.55 Ma. Strontium isotope ratios from Chione cancellata (Mollusca) shells from Leisey indicate an age between 1 and 2 Ma. Leisey is younger than Florida's best known earliest Irvingtonian (latest Pliocene) faunas, Inglis 1A and De Solo Shell Pit, based on the presence of five genera unknown in North America before the Pleistocene: Nothrotheriops, Lutra, Castoroides, Palaeolama, and Mammuthus. Four rodents from Leisey, Geomys pinetis, Erethizon dorsatum, Sigmodon libitinus, and Ondatra annectens, differ at the species level from their congeners at Inglis and De Soto. Leisey also lacks various Blancan holdover species found in the two older faunas, including the dwarf Florida form of Megatonyx leptostomus, Chasmaporthetes ossifragus, Trigonictis macrodon, and Capromeryx arizonensis. The occurrence of numerous species at Leisey that are unknown after the early Irvingtonian, including Glyptotherium arizonae, Pachyarmatherium leiseyi, Holmesina floridanus, Nothrotheriops texanus, Sigmodon libitinus, and Canis edwardii, further constrains the age of this fauna, ruling out a middle Irvingtonian or younger age assignment The Leisey mammalian fauna correlates most closely with the late early Irvingtonian, between about 1.6 and 1.0 Ma. Other Florida faunas similar in age to Leisey are Haile 16A, Haile 21A, Crystal River Power Plant, Pool Branch, Payne Creek Mine, Rigby Shell Pit and Punta Gorda. Of these sites Haile 16A is probably somewhat older (between 1.6 and 1.3 Ma) based on the occurrence of several holdovers from Florida late Blancan and earliest Irvingtonian faunas, including Sylvilagus webbi, Geomys propinetis, and Trigonictis. Western early Irvingtonian faunas that are correlatives of Leisey include: Gilliland, Texas; Holloman, Oklahoma; Kentuck, Nash, and Wathena in Kansas; Sappa, Nebraska; and Java, South Dakota. Among these sites, Leisey has the largest number of diagnostic laxa in common with the Gilliland Local Fauna, including Glyptotherium arizonae, a medium-sized Holmesina floridanus, Nothrotheriops texanus, Canis edwardii, Tapirus haysii and primitive Mammuthus. Leisey and other late early Irvingtonian faunas are younger than earliest Irvingtonian faunas (2.0 to 1.6 Ma) such as Curtis Ranch Arizona and Inglis 1A and De Soto Shell Pit of Florida, and are older than middle Irvingtonian faunas (1.0-0.6 Ma), including: the type Irvington fauna from California; Cudahy, Kansas; Conard Fissure, Arkansas; Cumberland Cave, Maryland; Port Kennedy Cave, Pennsylvania; Hamilton Cave, West Virginia; and the Florida equivalent McLeod Limerock Mine. The occurrence of land mammals in estuarine, freshwater, and terrestrial units within the predominantly nearshore marine late Pliocene and Pleistocene shell bed sequence of southern peninsular Florida (Pinecrest Beds, Caloosahatchee Formation, Bermont Formation, and Fort Thompson Formation in ascending stratigraphic order) has allowed a precision in dating these deposits not previously possible. The Pinecrest Beds, the uppermost unit of the Tamiami Formation, contain land mammal faunas of late Blancan age (2.5-2.0 Ma) based on the association of Nannippus and a large suite of Neotropical immigrants, including Dasypus, Holmesina, Glyptotherium, Glossotherium, Eremotherium, and Neochoerus. Florida late Blancan faunas derived from the Pinecrest Beds, or found in association with Pinecrest molluscan faunas, include Macasphalt Shell Pit, Acline Shell Pit, St. Petersburg Times, Kissimmee River, Brighton Canal, and Lehigh Acres. Vertebrate faunas from the overlying Caloosahatchee Formation lack typical Blancan forms, including Borophagus, Nannippus, Equus (Dolichohippus), and Rhynchotherium, and contain taxa typical of earliest Irvingtonian (2.0-1.6 Ma) faunas, such as Inglis 1A. The two richest earliest Irvingtonian faunas from the Caloosahatchee Formation in southern Florida are the De Soto Shell Pit and Forsberg Shell Pit. Vertebrate faunas from the Bermont Formation are late early Irvingtonian (1.6-1.0 Ma) in age, and are typified by the Leisey Shell Pit, as well as Rigby Shell Pit, Crystal River Power Plant, and Punta Gorda. Vertebrate faunas associated with the Fort Thompson Formation typically contain Bison and other tan characteristic of the Rancholabrean Land Mammal Age.
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41

Wister, Robert J. "Catholic Parish Life on Florida's West Coast, 1860–1968. By Michael J. McNally. St. Petersburg, Fla.: Catholic Media Ministries, 1996. xix + 503 pp. $18.95." Church History 67, no. 1 (March 1998): 198–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3170842.

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42

"St. Petersburg, Florida." Raven: A Journal of Vexillology 9 (2002): 305–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/raven2002/20039/10121.

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43

"Race Riots in St. Petersburg, Florida." Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, no. 14 (1996): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2962815.

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44

"Pi All Month." Mathematics Teacher 107, no. 7 (March 2014): 496–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mathteacher.107.7.0496.

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Students analyze a photograph to solve mathematical questions related to the images captured in the photograph. This month, photographs of the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, serve a generous helping of pi from the editors.
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"Vernetzt und skalierbar." packREPORT 53, no. 6 (2021): 44–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.51202/0342-3743-2021-6-044.

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In unserer Serie zum Thema Smart Packaging beleuchten wir heute die zunehmende Vernetzung in der Konsumgüterindustrie. Jabil Packaging Solutions aus St. Petersburg, Florida, hat kürzlich eine vernetzte Verpackungsplattform auf den Markt gebracht, die es Unternehmen der Konsumgüterindustrie ermöglichen soll, Kunden ein neues Benutzererlebnis zu bieten.
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46

"Circular convection during subsurface injection of liquid waste, St Petersburg, Florida." International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences & Geomechanics Abstracts 27, no. 2 (April 1990): A67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0148-9062(90)94880-3.

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47

Hallock, Thomas. "Draining Paradise: A Tour of Salt Creek in St. Petersburg, Florida." Southern Spaces, April 12, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.18737/w52918.

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48

"Reproductive Health 2005 Meeting Abstracts, September 7–10, 2005, St. Petersburg, Florida." Contraception 72, no. 3 (September 2005): 229. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2005.06.058.

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49

"1990 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry St. Petersburg, Florida, January 8–13, 1990." Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy 44, no. 1 (January 1989): 123. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0584-8547(89)80150-8.

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50

"Gary Litman, Ph.D., Director of University of South Florida College of Medicine, Children's Research Institute, St. Petersburg, Florida." Zebrafish 2, no. 2 (August 2005): 77–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/zeb.2005.2.77.

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