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1

Taylor, Anthea School of English UNSW. "Stones, ripples, waves: refiguring The first stone media event". Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of English, 2005. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/22506.

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This interdisciplinary study critically revisits the Australian print media???s engagement with Helen Garner???s controversial work of ???non-fiction???, The First Stone (1995). Print news media engagement with the book, marked by intense discursive contestation over feminism, has been constituted both by feminists and other critics as a significant cultural signpost. However, the highly visible print media event following the book???s publication raised a plethora of critical questions and dilemmas that remain unsatisfactorily addressed. Building upon John Fiske???s work on media events as sites of maximum visibility and discursive turbulence (Fiske: 1996), this study re-theorises the public dialogue following The First Stone???s publication in terms of four constitutive elements: narrative, celebrity, audience, and history and conflict. Through an analysis of these four diverse yet interconnected aspects of the media event, I create a critical space not only for its limitations to emerge but also the frequently overlooked possibilities it offers in terms of the wider feminism and print media culture relationship. As part of its central aim to refigure The First Stone media event, this thesis argues against prior characterisations of the debate as constitutive of either a monologic articulation of conservative, antifeminist voices or an unmitigated attack on its author by a homogenous feminism. In particular, I use this media event as indicative of the sophistication and complexity of media engagement with contemporary feminism, despite both continued derision and overly simplistic celebration of this relationship. Texts subject to analysis here include: The First Stone, various ???mainstream??? media representations and self-representations of three ???celebrity feminists??? (Helen Garner, Anne Summers and Jenna Mead), letters to the editor of newspapers and magazines, ???popular??? feminist books by Kathy Bail and Virginia Trioli, and a number of media texts in which those claiming a feminist subject position and those sympathetic to feminism act as either news sources or columnists/commentators. Although Garner???s narrative is throughout identified to be deeply problematic, I argue that the media event it precipitated provides valuable insights into both the opportunities and the constraints of the print media-feminism nexus in 1990s Australia.
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2

Owen, Neil R. "Targeting of stones and identification of stone fragmentation in shock wave lithotripsy /". Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/5895.

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3

Linn, William Michael II. "Western myths of knowledge| Particles of stone and waves of elixir". Thesis, Pacifica Graduate Institute, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3702860.

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Classical, scientific, and Abrahamic origin stories of knowledge establish grounds. Upon excavating these grounds, this dissertation has found repeated and entangled emphases on isolation related to a materially grounded cosmology. The core evidence for this position comes from their comparable displays of the psyche/mind/soul/spirit’s entry into and/or imprisonment within body, the symbolic restraint of Classical and Abrahamic progenitors with stone, and the initiation of philosophy—according to Aristotle—with a theory of materialism. Symbolic interpretations of the religious myths are supported by commentary from within the respective traditions.

Following a consideration of the existential implications of a material ground and (fundamentally) isolated self-image, the work considers mythic liberations of progenitors from stone and Einstein’s liberation of scientific traditions from material reductionism. As Einstein’s labors included an integration of wave dynamics into the way matter is seen, Herakles’ and Christ’s liberations of Prometheus and Adam are actuated by symbolic fluids. Later, their transcendence and atonement(s) are actuated by fluid. As is shown, Classical, Christian, and scientific knowledge narratives all contain reactions to a material ground of being contingent with the integration/imbibing of waves/fluids. The primary examples for this include the hydra-blood that freed Prometheus from stone and Herakles from life, the nectar of immortality he drank upon his death, the wine-blood of Christ that freed Adam from stone and his followers from mortality, and the form of waves and fields Einstein added to the theoretical particle.

This dissertation argues that the reason fluids have played such integral roles in the historical and symbolic transcendence of material/embodied isolation and Classical atoms (isolated matter) is because—unlike material particulates—fluids and waves are capable of union and harmony. My read of particle-wave duality is as a new foundation that challenges atomized cosmologies and worldviews leading many towards a vision of self as estranged from other. My final argument is that each of these prominent Western knowledge traditions present stories that follow a meta-narrative arc defined by an initial commitment to a materially grounded cosmology that is later enhanced—if not healed—by theoretical waves and symbolic elixirs.

Keywords: Mythology, Philosophy, Science, Religion, Wave

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4

Fanning, Patricia C. "Beyond the divide: a new geoarchaeology of Aboriginal stone artefact scatters in Western NSW, Australia". Australia : Macquarie University, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/45010.

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Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of the Environment, 2002.
Includes bibliographical references: p. 228-232.
Geomorphology, archaeology and geoarchaeology: introduction and background -- Surface stone artefact scatters: why can we see them? -- Geomorphic controls on spatial patterning of the surface stone artefact record -- A temporal framework for interpreting surface artefact scatters in Western NSW -- Synthesis: stone artefact scatters in a dynamic landscape.
Surface scatters of stone artefacts are the most ubiquitous feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeological record, yet the most underutilized by archaeologists in developing models of Aboriginal prehistory. Among the many reasons for this are the lack of understanding of geomorphic processes that have exposed them, and the lack of a suitable chronological framework for investigating Aboriginal 'use of place'. This thesis addresses both of these issues. -- In arid western NSW, erosion and deposition accelerated as a result of the introduction of sheep grazing in the mid 1800s has resulted in exposure of artefact scatters in some areas, burial in others, and complete removal in those parts of the landscape subject to concentrated flood flows. The result is a patchwork of artefact scatters exhibiting various degrees of preservation, exposure and visibility. My research at Stud Creek, in Sturt National Park in far western NSW, develops artefact and landscape survey protocols to accommodate this dynamic geomorphic setting. A sampling strategy stratified on the basis of landscape morphodynamics is presented that allows archaeologists to target areas of maximum artefact exposure and minimum post-discard disturbance. Differential artefact visibility at the time of the survey is accommodated by incorporating measures of surface cover which quantify the effects of various ephemeral environmental processes, such as deposition of sediments, vegetation growth, and bioturbation, on artefact count. -- While surface stone artefact scatters lack the stratigraphy usually considered necessary for establishing the timing of Aboriginal occupation, a combination of radiocarbon determinations on associated heat-retainer ovens, and stratigraphic analysis and dating of the valley fills which underlie the scatters, allows a two-stage chronology for huntergatherer activity to be developed. In the Stud Creek study area, dating of the valley fill by OSL established a maximum age of 2,040±100 y for surface artefact scatters. The heatretainer ovens ranged in age from 1630±30 y BP to 220±55 y BP. Bayesian statistical analysis of the sample of 28 radiocarbon determinations supported the notion, already established from analysis of the artefacts, that the Stud Creek valley was occupied intermittently for short durations over a relatively long period of time, rather than intensively occupied at any one time. Furthermore, a gap in oven building between about 800 and 1100 years ago was evident. Environmental explanations for this gap are explored, but the paiaeoenvironmental record for this part of the Australian arid zone is too sparse and too coarse to provide explanations of human behaviour on time scales of just a few hundred years. -- Having established a model for Stud Creek of episodic landscape change throughout the late Pleistocene and Holocene, right up to European contact, its veracity was evaluated in a pilot study at another location within the region. The length of the archaeological record preserved in three geomorphically distinct locations at Fowlers Gap, 250 km south of Stud Creek, is a function of geomorphic dynamics, with a record of a few hundred years from sites located on channel margins and low terraces, and the longest record thus far of around 5,000 years from high terrace surfaces more remote from active channel incision. But even here, the record is not continuous, and like Stud Creek, the gaps are interpreted to indicate that Aboriginal people moved into and out of these places intermittently throughout the mid to late Holocene. -- I conclude that episodic nonequilibrium characterizes the geomorphic history of these arid landscapes, with impacts on the preservation of the archaeological record. Dating of both archaeological and landform features shows that the landscape, and the archaeological record it preserves, are both spatially and temporally disjointed. Models of Aboriginal hunter-gatherer behaviour and settlement patterns must take account of these discontinuities in an archaeological record that is controlled by geomorphic activity. -- I propose a new geoarchaeological framework for landscape-based studies of surface artefact scatters that incorporates geomorphic analysis and dating of landscapes, as well as tool typology, into the interpretation of spatial and temporal patterns of Aboriginal huntergatherer 'use of place'.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
vii, 232 p. ill., maps
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5

McLeod, Rebecca. ""No stone unturned" : women in industry in Britain in two world wars /". Title page, contents and conclusion only, 1995. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09AR/09arm1641.pdf.

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6

Doelman, Trudy. "Time to quarry : the archaeology of stone procurement in Nortwestern New South Wales, Australia /". Oxford : Achaeopress, 2008. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb413101776.

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7

Vithana, H. P. V. "The effect of stone protrusion on the incipient motion of rock armour under the action of regular waves". Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2013. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1388034/.

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Rock armour is often used to protect the seabed around offshore structures like oil platforms, wind farms, undersea cables etc. This thesis describes a laboratory study to investigate the effect of stone protrusion on threshold movement of rock armour under regular waves. Tests were carried out to investigate the incipient motion of light weight test spheres of differing density and diameter in the range, d = 9.5mm-31.8mm, resting on a rough bed of 19mm glass marbles in a wave flume. In past studies, researchers have used turbulence measurements, shear plate apparatus, hot film techniques etc., to quantify the bed shear stress. In the present study, shear stress was deduced from direct measurements of pressure on the surface of a 50mm spherical bed element. Advance flow measurement techniques such as Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV) and Volumetric Three-component Velocimetry (V3V) were also carried out for flow measurement and visualisation. It was found that the Shields critical shear stress increased when stone protrusion was gradually reduced following an exponential relationship. For each wave period a different Shields shear stress versus protrusion curve was obtained. When the wave period increased the curve shifted towards that for currents previously obtained by Fenton & Abbot (1977) and Chin & Chiew (1993) suggesting that for longer wave periods under the field conditions where high Reynolds/KC number flows exist, the curve obtained for currents is applicable. The method of rock armour placement crucially influences the stability of a bed protection. Significant reduction in bed damage can be achieved by placing stones to an optimum protrusion level of 0.2d above mean bed level. A model bed protection made of crushed natural rocks (anthracite) showed that the damage to a “levelled” bed is 50% less than in a randomly placed bed. This is because the fraction of the exposed stones increases when rocks are dumped from a barge or a side stone dumping vessel as opposed to reduced exposure observed in a levelled bed.
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8

Brandt, Christina. "Skallet från forntiden : en osteologisk analys av hundben från stenålderslokalerna Hemmor och Gullrum på Gotland samt en teoretisk studie av hundens rituella och funktionella roll under neolitikum". Thesis, Gotland University, Institutionen för kultur, energi och miljö, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hgo:diva-533.

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The bark from prehistory – an osteological analysis on dog bones from the Stone Age settlements of Hemmor and Gullrum at Gotland and a theoretic study of the secular and sacred roles of the dog during the Neolithic.

Dog bones from two Pitted Ware Culture (around 2500 BC) settlements, Hemmor in När parish and Gullrum in Näs parish/Havdhem parish, at southern Gotland, Sweden are analyzed. The analysis contains a study of age, withers height and size estimation as well as skeletal changes and pathologies. The attempt of the analysis is to highlight the secular and sacred role of the dog during the Neolithic at Gotland. The dog bones were collected during excavations in the years 1890 and 1903 and were found across the entire surfaces of the settlements.

Although there were no specific dog breeds during the Stone Age, the dogs at Hemmor and Gullrum show a wide range of size (withers height spans from 39,74 cm to 56,47 cm) and may therefore have been used for different purposes depending on their size. The dogs were not eaten, but evidence of skinning is found. The results are compared with other analysis made on dog bones from similar settlements.

The analysis is complemented with a theoretic study of the functions of dogs in other parts of the world. Ethnologic studies of traditional societies show the importance and wide range of functions in which the dogs are used and can give us an idea of the corresponding functions at a Neolithic Gotland. The functions vary from pet and guardian of the settlement to fishing, hunting and ritual purposes.

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9

Gale, David. "Stone tools employed in prehistoric metal mining : a functional study of cobblestone tools from prehistoric metalliferous mines in England and Wales in relation to mining strategies by use-wear analysis and cobble morphometry". Thesis, University of Bradford, 1995. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.765262.

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10

Lidman, Erika. "Gömt bakom symbolen : en studie om gropkeramisk dekor på Gotland". Thesis, Högskolan på Gotland, Institutionen för kultur, energi och miljö, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hgo:diva-1912.

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This thesis analyses the decoration on the pots of the Pitted Ware Culture on Gotland. The pottery from this period is richly decorated with various ornaments, the most common are the pits but other types of decoration occur. The purpose of this study is to get an insight into what the patterns meant to the people that made and used them and what role these may have played in their lives. The author will analyse the decoration on potsherds found from the three Pitted Ware sites of Visby, Ajvide and Hemmor on Gotland. This will be used in a comparative analysis to investigate if differences and/or similarities of the pattern occur between and among the sites. A comparative study of various ceramic found in dated graves with various temporal status from the site Ajvide is also done to see if changes in the patterning occur with time. Since pits are common on most pottery from all the sites from this time they will not be used in these analyses but the focus will be on other type of pattern.
Neolitiska livsstilar
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11

Steele, Brad. "Non-equilibrium melting and sublimation of graphene simulated with two interatomic potentials". Scholar Commons, 2013. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4586.

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The mechanisms of the sublimation of graphene at zero pressure and the condensation of carbon vapor is investigated by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The interatomic interactions are described by the Reactive Empirical Bond Order potential (REBO). It is found that graphene sublimates at a temperature of 5,200 K. At the onset of sublimation, defects that contain several pentagons and heptagons are formed, that are shown to evolve from double vacancies and stone wales defects. These defects consisting of pentagons and heptagons act as nucleation sites for the gaseous phase. The influence of the interatomic interactions on the sublimation process are also investigated by comparing the results using the REBO potential with the Screened Environment Dependent (SED)-REBO potential. Two-dimensional MD simulations are also performed, and it is found that graphene melts at a much higher temperature and forms many more point defects than in three dimensions. It is also observed that carbon chains make up the two-dimensional molten state. The isothermal equation of state of gaseous and liquid carbon, as well as the coexistence of the two phases is calculated at 6,000 K and up to a few GPa. The analysis shows that the material that forms immediately following the phase transformation in graphene is actually a coexistence of liquid and gaseous phases, but it is primarily two-fold coordinated, so it is mostly a gas, hence the identification of the phase transformation as sublimation. The coexistence pressure for liquid and gaseous carbon is found using the Maxwell Construction to be 0.0365 GPa at 6,000 K. It was previously believed that carbon vapor consists exclusively of carbon chains. We find that under compression, at a pressure lower than the coexistence pressure, carbon vapor develops a small amount (6 %) of sp2 bonds indicating a slight non-chain bonding character. The diffusion coefficient of this dense gas is calculated to be in between that of the liquid and gaseous phases.
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12

Leutelt, Michael Verfasser], Lutz [Akademischer Betreuer] [Leisering y John [Akademischer Betreuer] Boli. "Perspectives on policy transfer: “Dropping Stones, Making Waves”: how international organizations promote “social cash transfer programs” in the Global South / Michael Leutelt ; Lutz Leisering, John Boli". Bielefeld : Universitätsbibliothek Bielefeld, 2017. http://d-nb.info/1134865562/34.

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13

Edenmo, Roger. "Prestigeekonomi under yngre stenåldern : Gåvoutbyten och regionala identiteter i den svenska båtyxekulturen". Doctoral thesis, Uppsala universitet, Arkeologi, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-9349.

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The thesis identifies and discusses some fundamental changes that took place during the middle neolithic period in Sweden, with the introduction of the Boat Axe Culture. The possibility of intrepreting the Corded Ware Cultures by way of networks, identified through the regional designes of battle axes, are proposed. With the aid of a reconsideration of the typology of the Swedish boat axes, ethnographic examples of gift-exchanges, and a theoretical reappraisal of the implications of archaeological praxis for prehistorc life-worlds, new possibillities for interpreting the changing role of such prestige items as the boat-axes are presented. A new chronological scheme is also presented for the Swedish boat axes, with a tripartite division of the latter middle neolithic into MN BI-III. The value of the boat axe is further considered to be explicable only in terms of a prestige item, dependent on a system of exchange for its continual valuation. Central to this discussion is the relationship between value and exchange. Several regions within the Swedish Boat Axe Culture are identified, and the boat axes in two of these regions in the southern part of the Mälar valley are thoroughly examined. It is shown that during the cours of the Boat Axe period, the emphasis gradually changed from a regional to an intra-regional focus concerning the development of types and special designes of the boat axes. Identified similarities and dissimilarities of contemporary boat axes within and between regions are explained as a result of a parallel change in gift exchanges, from a regional focus to an intra-regional focus. An hierarchical ordering of the latter middle neolithic soceity is also identified, where only a portion of the boat-axes were selected as burial gifts. This development is chartered onto the broader neolithic development in Sweden, with special focus on the role of prestige items such as battle axes. A fundamental change is identified as taking place during the Boat Axe period, when the full implications of a prestige economy were implemented and the major strategies for power settled on the inter-regional level.
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14

Fornander, Elin. "The Wild Side of the Neolithic : A study of Pitted Ware diet and ideology through analysis of stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes in skeletal material from Korsnäs, Grödinge parish, Södermanland". Thesis, Stockholm University, Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-1144.

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The Pitted Ware Culture site Korsnäs in Södermanland, Sweden presents a, for the region, unique amount of preserved organic material suitable for chemical analyses. Human and faunal skeletal material has been subjected to stable isotope analysis with the aim of examining whether the diet of the Korsnäs people correlates with the seal-based subsistence of Pitted Ware Culture groups on the Baltic islands. Further, the relationship between the faunal assemblage and the human diet has been studied, and the debated question of whether the Pitted Ware people kept domestic pigs has been addressed. Ten new radiocarbon dates are presented, which place the excavated area of the site in Middle Neolithic A, with a continuity of several hundred years. The results show that the diet of the Korsnäs people was predominantly based on seal, and seal hunting was probably an essential part of the Pitted Ware Culture identity. Based on the dietary pattern of the species, it is argued that the pigs were not domestic. The faunal assemblage, dominated by seal and pig bones, does not correlate with the dietary pattern, and it is suggested that wild boar might have been hunted and sacrificed and/or ritually eaten on certain occasions.

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15

Andersson, Helena. "Gotländska stenåldersstudier : Människor och djur, platser och landskap". Doctoral thesis, Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för arkeologi och antikens kultur, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-127911.

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This thesis deals mainly with the Middle Neolithic period (ca. 3200-2300 BC) on the island of Gotland in the Baltic Sea. The aim is to deepen the understanding of how the islanders related to their surroundings, to the landscape, to places, to objects, to animals and to humans, both living and dead. The archaeological material is studied downwards and up with a focus on practices, especially the handling and deposition of materials and objects in graves, within sites and in the landscape. The study is comparative and the Middle Neolithic is described in relation to the Early Neolithic and the Mesolithic period on the island. From a long term perspective the island is presented as a region where strong continuity can be identified, regarding both way of life and economy. In contrast, substantial changes did occur through time regarding the islander’s conceptions of the world and of social relations. This in turn affected the way they looked upon the landscape, different sites and animals, as well as other human beings. During the Mesolithic, the islanders first saw it as possible to create their world, their micro-cosmos, wherever they were, and they saw themselves as living in symbiosis with seals. With time, though, they started to relate, to connect and to identify themselves with the island, its landscape and its material, with axe sites and a growing group identity as results. The growing group identity culminated during the Early Neolithic with a dualistic conception of the world and with ritualised depositions in border zones. The Middle Neolithic is presented as a period when earlier boundaries were dissolved. This concerned, for example, boundaries towards the world around the islanders and they were no longer keeping themselves to their own sphere. At the same time individuals became socially important. It became accepted and also vital to give expression to personal identity, which was done through objects, materials and animals. Despite this, group identity continued to be an important part in their lives. This is most evident through the specific Pitted Ware sites, where the dead were also treated and buried. These places were sites for ritual and social practices, situated in visible, central and easy accessible locations, like gates in and out of the islands’ different areas. The dead were very important for the islanders. In the beginning of MN B they started to adopt aspects from the Battle Axe culture, but they never embraced Battle Axe grave customs. Instead they held on to the Pitted Ware way of dealing with the dead and buried, and to the Pitted Ware sites, through the whole period, with large burial grounds as a result.
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16

Medard, Veronique. "Le nazisme raconté aux enfants d'europe. Le cas de six romans : joseph joffo : un sac de billes et simon et l'enfant, judith kerr : when hitler stole pink rabbit et bombs on aunt dainty, hans peter richter : damals war es friedrich et wir waren dabei". Thesis, Paris 3, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA030100/document.

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Comment raconter le nazisme aux enfants ? En particulier comment trois auteurs de littérature de jeunesse racontent-ils la guerre ? Chacun des six romans a ses particularités liées à son auteur et à la perception nationale de l'histoire européenne. Les romans de Joseph Joffo se passent en France sous l'occupation allemande et le régime de Vichy ; ceux de Judith Kerr présentent l'exil d'une famille juive allemande en Suisse, en France puis en Angleterre ; ceux de Hans Peter Richter racontent l'ascension du nazisme en Allemagne. La dureté de la Deuxième Guerre Mondiale est rendue supportable par l'instinct de survie des héros : enfants comme tous les autres ils sortent vivants des difficultés et des dangers qu'ils croisent. Ces romans ont à la fois un rôle de mémoire collective et de préparation à la vie
How to explain Nazism to children? How, in particular, do three youth literature authors talk about war? Each of the six novels has distinctive features related to its author and to the national perception of European history. Joseph Joffo's novels are set in France under the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime; those of Judith Kerr present the exile of a Jewish German family in Switzerland, France and eventually England; Hans Peter Richter's novels describe the rise of Nazism in Germany. The harshness of World War II becomes bearable thanks to the survival instinct of the protagonists: everyday children, prevailing over hardships and dangers. These novels play a dual role, acting as collective memory and preparing for adulthood
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17

Eriksson, Albin. "En gropkeramisk rundtur på Gotland : GIS-analyser av gropkeramiska lokaler på Gotland och osteologiska bedömningar av resursutnyttjande". Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-394103.

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The aim of this master thesis is to expand on the understanding of the resource utilisation on the 19 Gotlandic Pitted Ware Culture sites: Ajvide, Alvena, Fridtorp, Grausne, Gullrum,Gumbalde, Hau, Hemmor, Hoburgen, Ire, Kinner/Tjauls, Rangvide, Barshalder, Stenstugu,Stora Förvar, Sudergårds II, Visby, Västerbjers and Västerbys. The study utilises theoretical frameworks such as Site Catchment Analysis, Site Territorial Analysis and Optimal ForagingTheory and is based on two main questions: Which animals did the diet on each site consist of? And are there any apparent connections between diet and topography/environment? To answer these questions, osteological records have been studied to get an idea of the animal food resources utilised on each site. ArcGIS has also been used to create height- and soil maps with contemporary shorelines which show how the sites were located in the middle Neolithic Gotlandic landscape. The study has shown that most sites appear to have included a variety of animals like pig/boar, cattle, sheep/goat, fish, seal, porpoise and birds in their diet. The sites with the lowest number of confirmed animals also tend to have undergone the least archaeological investigation, suggesting that further excavations on these sites might unearth more animal species. Additional discoveries show a small albeit noticeable emphasis on marine animal resources, especially porpoise, on southern sites. Sites located in areas mostly consisting of sandy, meager soils also show an increased marine resource utilisation. This might suggest that the area around these sites were somewhat barren and lacking in terrestrial prey animals.
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18

ORSI, VALENTINA. "Persistenze e discontinuita' nella tradizione ceramica dell'Alta Mesopotamia tra la fine del Terzo e l'inizio del Secondo millennio a.C.. il contributo degli scavi di Tell Barri e Tell Mozan (Siria)". Doctoral thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2158/560486.

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Il periodo tra la fine del III e l'inizio del II millennio a.C. in Alta Mesopotamia rappresenta nella storia e nell'archeologia del Vicino Oriente Antico una 'Media Aetas', un'età oscura tra la fioritura delle culture urbane del Bronzo Antico a metà del III millennio a.C. e lo sviluppo degli stati amorrei del Bronzo Medio, alla fine del XIX sec. a.C. L'identificazione nella sequenza archeologica di Tell Barri, l'antica città di Kahat, dell'orizzonte ceramico coevo alla 'crisi urbana' che precede la diffusione della ceramica dipinta del Khabur, associata ad un nuovo fenomeno di sedentarizzazione, permette di ridefinire la cronologia degli eventi nella regione, e di delineare i processi di interazione tra le diverse realtà sociali alto mesopotamiche in quella fase formativa che sta alla base del successivo sviluppo culturale di II millennio a.C.
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19

Rodrigues, João Nuno Barbosa. "Extended Stone-Wales defects in graphene". Doctoral thesis, 2013. https://repositorio-aberto.up.pt/handle/10216/65933.

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Rodrigues, João Nuno Barbosa. "Extended Stone-Wales defects in graphene". Tese, 2013. https://repositorio-aberto.up.pt/handle/10216/65933.

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21

Chuan-WeiLee y 李傳偉. "Functionalization of biindenedione toward preparation of the fragment Stone-Wales nanographene". Thesis, 2019. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/f85w98.

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"The effect of shock wave delivery rate on stone clearance, pain tolerance and renal injury in extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy". 2011. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5894729.

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by Lo, Kin Yin Anthony.
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 168-195).
Abstracts in English and Chinese.
Abstract --- p.i
Declaration --- p.V
Publications and Conference Presentations --- p.vi
Scholarships and Awards --- p.vii
Acknowledgements --- p.viii
Table of contents --- p.X
Abbreviations --- p.xiv
List of Figures --- p.xvi
List of Tables --- p.xvii
Chapter 1. --- General Introduction --- p.1
Chapter 2. --- Literature Review --- p.7
Chapter 2.1 --- Introduction of nephrolithasis and surgical management --- p.9
Chapter 2.1.1 --- Epidemology and physiochemistry --- p.9
Chapter 2.1.2 --- Surgical management of nephrolithasis parallel with stone factors --- p.15
Chapter 2.2 --- Extracorpoeral Shock Wave Lithotripsy in present study --- p.17
Chapter 2.2.1 --- The 4th generation - Sonolith Vision electroconductive lithotripter --- p.18
Chapter 2.2.2 --- The role of shock wave delivery rate in treatment outcome and its prediction --- p.23
Chapter 2.2.3 --- Patient-controlled analgesia during Shock Wave Lithotripsy treatment and its pain management --- p.29
Chapter 2.2.4 --- Shock wave induced renal injury & the use of urinary biomarker --- p.35
Chapter 3. --- Materials and Methods --- p.62
Chapter 3.1 --- Study Design --- p.63
Chapter 3.2 --- Patient Selection --- p.64
Chapter 3.3 --- Treatment Protocol --- p.63
Chapter 3.4 --- Sample size calculation --- p.68
Chapter 3.5 --- Statistical analysis --- p.68
Chapter 4. --- The effect of shock wave delivery rate on treatment outcome and its prediction --- p.69
Chapter 4.1 --- Introduction --- p.70
Chapter 4.2 --- Materials and Methods --- p.72
Chapter 4.2.1 --- ESWL treatment protocol --- p.72
Chapter 4.2.2 --- Outcome Assessment --- p.73
Chapter 4.2.3 --- Mathematical model development --- p.75
Chapter 4.2.4 --- Statistical analysis --- p.76
Chapter 4.3 --- Results --- p.77
Chapter 4.3.1 --- Baseline characteristics and treatment modalities --- p.78
Chapter 4.3.2 --- ESWL treatment outcome --- p.79
Chapter 4.3.3 --- Mathematical model --- p.81
Chapter 4.4 --- Discussion --- p.82
Chapter 4.4.1 --- Overall treatment outcome improved by the use of slower rate --- p.82
Chapter 4.4.2 --- When should we use fast/slow rate? --- p.86
Chapter 4.4.3 --- Mathematical model to predict ESWL outcome --- p.88
Chapter 4.5 --- Conclusion --- p.91
Chapter 5. --- The role of shock wave delivery rate and patient-controlled analgesia in pain --- p.101
Chapter 5.1 --- Introduction --- p.102
Chapter 5.2 --- Materials and Methods --- p.104
Chapter 5.2.1 --- ESWL treatment protocol and PCA settings --- p.104
Chapter 5.2.2 --- Outcome Assessment --- p.105
Chapter 5.2.3 --- Statistical analysis --- p.107
Chapter 5.3 --- Results --- p.108
Chapter 5.3.1 --- Baseline characteristics and treatment modalities --- p.108
Chapter 5.3.2 --- Pain experience and satisfaction with PCA at different shock wave delivery rates --- p.108
Chapter 5.3.3 --- Correlation between rate pain --- p.110
Chapter 5.3.4 --- Vital signs --- p.110
Chapter 5.4 --- Discussion --- p.111
Chapter 5.4.1 --- Adverse complication was mild with PCA using alfentanil --- p.111
Chapter 5.4.2 --- Less pain experience with 60 SWs/min --- p.112
Chapter 5.4.3 --- Why PCA usage was the same in both groups? --- p.112
Chapter 5.4.4 --- No correlation with treatment outcome --- p.114
Chapter 5.5 --- Conclusion --- p.115
Chapter 6. --- "The relations among rate of shock wave delivery, induced renal injury and acute complications" --- p.128
Chapter 6.1 --- Introduction --- p.129
Chapter 6.2 --- Materials and Methods --- p.130
Chapter 6.2.1 --- ESWL treatment protocol --- p.130
Chapter 6.2.2 --- Outcome Assessment --- p.131
Chapter 6.2.3 --- Statistical analysis --- p.136
Chapter 6.3 --- Results --- p.137
Chapter 6.3.1 --- Baseline characteristics and treatment modalities --- p.137
Chapter 6.3.2 --- Quality control of creatinine and NAG --- p.137
Chapter 6.3.3 --- Standard curves ofIL-18 and NGAL --- p.137
Chapter 6.3.4 --- Higher levels of urinary NAG and IL-18 in 60 SWs/min group --- p.138
Chapter 6.3.5 --- Similar levels of urinary NGAL in both groups --- p.138
Chapter 6.3.6 --- Unplanned hospital visits were similar in both groups --- p.139
Chapter 6.4 --- Discussion --- p.140
Chapter 6.4.1 --- More tubular damages caused by slower rate --- p.140
Chapter 6.4.2 --- Escalated inflammatory activities in 60 SWs/min --- p.141
Chapter 6.4.3 --- Vascular damage and ischemic insults were the same in both groups? --- p.142
Chapter 6.4.4 --- Post-operative complications are similar in both groups --- p.142
Chapter 6.4.5 --- 60 SWs/min vs. 120 SWs/min - What makes the difference in renal injury? --- p.143
Chapter 6.5 --- Conclusion --- p.145
Chapter 7. --- Discussion --- p.154
Chapter 7.1 --- General discussion --- p.155
Chapter 8. --- Conclusion --- p.158
Chapter 8.1 --- General conclusion --- p.159
Appendix --- p.160
Appendix I --- p.161
Appendix II --- p.163
References --- p.167
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