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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Hickory County Historical Society"

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Chesnut, Pat. "Searls Historical Library, Nevada County Historical Society". California History 96, n.º 1 (2019): 137–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ch.2019.96.1.137.

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Perry, James. "The Monterey County Historical Society". California History 96, n.º 1 (2019): 97–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ch.2019.96.1.97.

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Engeman, Richard H., Kristin Teigen e McAndrew Burns. "Spotlight on Affiliates: Clatsop County Historical Society". Oregon Historical Quarterly 105, n.º 1 (2004): 144–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ohq.2004.0086.

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Engeman, Richard H., e Diane Disse. "Spotlight on Affiliates: Lincoln County Historical Society". Oregon Historical Quarterly 106, n.º 1 (2005): 146–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ohq.2005.0056.

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Baird, Jane E., e Mary S. Rolfes. "The County Historical Society: Financial and Reporting Issues". Journal of Business Case Studies (JBCS) 2, n.º 3 (1 de julho de 2006): 49–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/jbcs.v2i3.4896.

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Nanavati, William P., e Eric C. Grimm. "Humans, fire, and ecology in the southern Missouri Ozarks, USA". Holocene 30, n.º 1 (20 de setembro de 2019): 125–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683619875807.

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A multiproxy study from Sweeton Pond, Ozark County, Missouri, USA, provides a high-resolution 1900-year-long history of vegetation and fire in the southern Missouri Ozarks, where the modern vegetation is oak-hickory ( Quercus-Carya) forest. Pollen and charcoal data are compared with dendroecological data to assess how climate and fire shaped local vegetation history. Land use, particularly by the Osage tribe of Native Americans, is assessed from historical and archaeological records. Three cultural periods are superimposed on the paleoenvironmental history: (1) The Pre-Osage period, ending ~1500 CE, was characterized by open oak-hickory forest and frequent low-severity fires, suggesting interannual climate variability as a driver of vegetation and fire occurrence. At ~1360 CE, mesic tree species began to expand, while fire frequency remained low. (2) The Osage period (~1500–1820 CE) was characterized by the continued expansion of mesic, fire-sensitive species, especially elm ( Ulmus), in conjunction with cool, effectively wet conditions in the southern Missouri Ozarks. Despite climate conditions less favorable for fire, Osage expansion in the region was accompanied by increased fire and fire-dependent shortleaf pine ( Pinus echinata). The expansion of both fire-sensitive and fire-dependent taxa coincident with Osage occupation suggests that anthropogenic fire and land use was local in nature and increased landscape heterogeneity prior to Euro-American settlement. (3) The Euro-American period (since ~1820 CE) was characterized by increased disturbance pollen types (e.g. Ambrosia-type) at the expense of shortleaf pine pollen, resulting from increased settlement size and extensive agricultural and logging activities. During this period, forest clearance led to fuel fragmentation, reducing fire activity; after 1920 CE, fire was actively suppressed.
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Freeze, Noël Harris. "Stamford by James Collett and the Cowboy Country Museum, and: Gillespie County by Gillespie County Historical Society". Southwestern Historical Quarterly 117, n.º 4 (2014): 432–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/swh.2014.0050.

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Park, J. H., e J. Juzwik. "Fusarium Canker of Bitternut Hickory Caused by Fusarium solani in the North-Central and Northeastern United States". Plant Disease 96, n.º 3 (março de 2012): 455. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-09-11-0766.

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Multiple annual cankers were observed on the upper main stems of bitternut hickory (Carya cordiformis) exhibiting top dieback in Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, and Wisconsin during a 2006 to 2008 survey of declining hickory. The top-killed trees had normal-sized, green leaves below and the cankers were oval, sunken, and bounded by heavy callus that seemed to arrest further canker expansion. Fusarium solani was consistently isolated from the margins of inner bark lesions or discolored sapwood of the cankers. When cultured on potato dextrose agar, the isolates grew rapidly with abundant aerial mycelium. On carnation leaf agar, thick-walled macroconidia with 4 to 5 septa were produced in cream, blue-green, or blue sporodochia. Macroconidia were generally cylindrical with a blunt or rounded apical cell and a rounded or foot-shaped basal cell. Microconidia were oval to kidney shaped with 0 to 1 septa and were produced in false heads on elongate monophialides. Chlamydospores were formed singly or in pairs. These morphological characteristics are consistent with descriptions of F. solani (2). The identities of 42 representative isolates were confirmed by sequencing the translation elongation factor (tef) 1-α gene. BLAST analysis of the sequences from each isolate against the GenBank and FUSARIUM-ID database found 98 to 100% similarities to F. solani isolates (GenBank Accession Nos. DQ246841, DQ247025, DQ247282, and DQ247436 and FUSARIUM-ID isolate FD01041). Two haplotypes (BB and BC) were distinguished based on the tef 1-α gene sequences that differed by 10 bp. Pathogenicity tests were conducted with two isolates of each haplotype on asymptomatic C. cordiformis (12 to 21 cm in diameter) in forest stands. In May 2009 in Wabasha County, MN, 0.1-ml spore suspensions (1 × 104 macroconidia/ml) or sterile water was placed in one of three holes (0.6 cm in diameter) drilled to the cambium of 12 trees. The holes were sealed with moist cotton and moldable putty. A duplicate trial, but with BB and BC isolates from Wisconsin, was initiated in Chippewa County, WI in June 2009. The extent of inner bark necrosis was assessed 13 months after inoculation in both sites. Inoculations with F. solani in Minnesota resulted in inner bark lesions with average lengths of 20 and 30 mm for the BB and BC haplotypes, respectively. In Wisconsin, BB and BC haplotypes caused inner bark lesions with average lengths of 34 and 38 mm, respectively. While sunken or open cankers were found for all the BC isolate inoculations, relatively small and callus-bounded cankers were found for BB isolate inoculations. All control wounds were callus-closed with average wound lengths of 12 and 23 mm in Minnesota and Wisconsin, respectively. The same haplotype of F. solani used for inoculation was recovered from each canker as confirmed by analysis of tef 1-α gene sequences. F. solani was not obtained from control wounds. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a canker caused by F. solani on bitternut hickory (1). The same fungus has been previously reported to cause cankers on stems of other hardwood tree genera in the eastern United States and Canada. We hypothesize that numerous main-stem cankers caused by F. solani lead to top dieback of bitternut hickory. References: (1) D. F. Farr et al. Fungi on Plants and Plant Products in the United States. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1989. (2) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell Publishing, Ames, IA, 2006.
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Cerosky, Gregg A. ""Hard and Stirring Times": Middletown and the Civil War, Middlesex County Historical Society". Connecticut History Review 48, n.º 2 (1 de outubro de 2009): 224–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44370015.

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ROYSTON, TRICIA. "New London County Historical Society Resources on The War of 1812 and Southeastern Connecticut". Connecticut History Review 52, n.º 1 (1 de abril de 2013): 103–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44370171.

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Teses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Hickory County Historical Society"

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Mallison, Theodore R. "Summit County Historical Society: A Membership Program Case Study". University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1460121253.

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Parker, Jason Shaw. "Land tenure in the Sugar Creek watershed a contextual analysis of land tenure and social networks, intergenerational farm succession, and conservation use among farmers of Wayne County, Ohio /". Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University, 2006. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1147971583.

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Brunt, Matthew. "Analysis of Mammoth Cave Pre-Park Communities". TopSCHOLAR®, 2009. http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/132.

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Before the creation of Mammoth Cave National Park, this area was home to numerous communities, each with a sense of identity. To prepare for the creation of the National Park, all residents living within these communities were relocated, and many of these communities were lost to the passage of time. Today, public memory of these lost communities is being fostered by the descendents of the pre-park area. Through the use of a Historical Geographic Information System, 1920 Edmonson County manuscript census data, and statistical analysis, the demographic composition of these lost communities was explored. This project not only brought to light a past that is not well known, but also built interest in sustaining public memory of the Mammoth Cave pre-park area through the use of historical GIS and public participation.
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Badgley, Benjamin Joseph. "The making of a historical consciousness in Henry County, Indiana: a case study of the Henry County Historical Society, 1887-1950". Thesis, 2017. https://doi.org/10.7912/C2VD3G.

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The residents of Henry County, through the evolving practices of collecting and preserving local history, organized and developed a sustainable local historical society. The 1902 dedication ceremony, which signaled the beginning of the “museum” chapter of the HCHS, was only one of many steps in the institutionalization of local history in Henry County. The foundation of a sustainable local historical society is constructed upon permanent quarters and a historical collection. Additional requisite building blocks include wide public support, adequate and consistent funding, and a paid individual to facilitate and manage the museum, its collections, and various other day-to-day operations and activities. In Henry County, this blueprint for sustainability was greatly facilitated by the county’s territorial beginnings and its cultural development before the Civil War, as well as the county’s old settlers’ society movement and local history writing during the latter half of the nineteenth century. With this said, historical societies were “not created in a vacuum” but rather amid a complex historical framework encompassing local, regional, and national contexts. For Henry County, this framework consisted of many varied but constituent parts. The American Centennial in 1876, industrialization, Quakerism, the popularity of Civil War history and commemoration in Indiana that peaked around 1900, and a state historical movement and the simultaneous development of other historical organizations following the Indiana Centennial in 1916 were also instrumental in the county’s evolving dedication to preserving local history and the organization’s course toward sustainability.
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Peterson, Erik C. "Playing, learning, and using music in early Middle Indiana". Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/3804.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
This thesis is a study of how people in the nine counties of central Indiana learned, appreciated, and performed music from 1800 to 1840. A concluding proposal for a public history application of this research is included.
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Livros sobre o assunto "Hickory County Historical Society"

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Society, Hickory County Historical. Let us remember: Cemetery directory of Hickory County, Missouri. Hermitage, Mo: Index, 1990.

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Bambakidis, Elli. Montgomery County Historical Society collection. [Dayton, Ohio: Dayton and Montgomery County Public Library], 1995.

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Society, Trimble County Historical, ed. Trimble County heritage, 1989: Trimble County Historical Society. Frankfort, Ky.]: The Society, 1989.

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M, Berger Catherine, Berger Marion, Hostetler James 1936- e Pioneer Historical Society of Bedford County (Bedford County, Pa.), eds. The Pioneer Historical Society of Bedford County. [Bedford, Pa: Pioneer Historical Society of Bedford County, 1986.

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Society, Kenton County Historical, ed. Papers of the Kenton County Historical Society. Covington, Ky: The Society, 1990.

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Smith, Barnes Pat, Barnes Ted e Roane County Historical Society (Roane County, W. Va.), eds. Ancestor charts of the Roane County Historical Society, Roane County, WV. Spencer, WV: The Society, 1995.

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Stark, Thompson Donna, e Trimble County Historical Society, eds. Trimble County heritage: Trimble Co. Historical Society yearbook, 1988. [Frankfurt, Ky.]: The Society, 1988.

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Tosi, Laura. Videotape collection of the Bronx County Historical Society Research Library. Bronx, NY: The Bronx County Historical Society, 2004.

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Tosi, Laura. Audio collection of the Bronx County Historical Society Research Library. Bronx, N.Y: The Bronx County Historical Society, 2001.

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Ananymas e Fackenthal Publication. Bucks County Historical Society. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2023.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Hickory County Historical Society"

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Sevon, W. D. "The Hickory Run boulder field, a periglacial relict, Carbon County, Pennsylvania". In Centennial Field Guide Volume 5: Northeastern Section of the Geological Society of America, 75–76. Geological Society of America, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0-8137-5405-4.75.

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"Historic House Museums: The Johnson County Historical Society and the Mark Twain House". In Teaching History with Museums, 95–113. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203136416-12.

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Rippon, Stephen. "Conclusions". In Kingdom, Civitas, and County. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198759379.003.0019.

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Territorial structures feature in many studies of the past, but are the focus of very few. While books on Iron Age Britain are full of references to ‘tribes’ and ‘kingdoms’, their boundaries remain poorly defined. Although regional variation within Iron Age material culture was marked, it has traditionally been thought that Romanization led to a homogenization of society, its artefacts, and its architecture. Our understanding of Romano-British territorial identities remains poor and most studies have simply provided the seemingly obligatory map showing the names of civitates with or without schematic dotted lines between them. Within early medieval scholarship there has been a greater focus on territoriality and in particular the origins and development of kingdoms, but few attempts have been made to map their boundaries or the socioeconomic zones that may have underpinned them. Overall, our understanding of territorial structures in Britain during the late prehistoric and early historic periods is very poor. Until the 1960s—when the ‘culture-historical’ paradigm prevailed—the Iron Age, Roman, and early medieval periods were seen as having been characterized by frequent disruptions to society brought about by invasions and migrations. From the 1970s the idea that there may have been far greater continuity in the landscape gained favour, just as the idea that cultural change had to be brought about by mass migration went out of fashion. Most of the narratives on what happened in the post-Roman landscape were, however, based upon anecdotal evidence from a small number of well-known sites—Barnsley Park, Frocester, Latimer, Rivenhall, and the like—and so The Fields of Britannia (Rippon et al. 2015) attempted to explore the extent to which there may have been continuity within the countryside through an analysis of pollen sequences and excavated field systems. This suggested a considerable degree of potential continuity in most lowland regions, making a prima facie case that many Romano-British farmers continued to work the land, albeit with a shift in emphasis from arable to pasture. Following on from this, Kingdom, Civitas, and County has considered whether there may also have been continuity in the socio-economic and territorial structures within which communities lived their lives.
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Rippon, Stephen. "Kingdoms and regiones: The documentary evidence". In Kingdom, Civitas, and County. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198759379.003.0013.

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During the early medieval period eastern England was occupied by two major Anglo-Saxon kingdoms—the East Saxons and East Angles—alongside a region that Bede referred to as ‘Middle Anglia’. There has been a widespread assumption that Essex (‘the East Saxons’) and Suffolk and Norfolk (the ‘South Folk’ and ‘North Folk’ of East Anglia) were direct successors to these Anglo-Saxon kingdoms (e.g. Carver 1989, fig. 10.1; 2005, 498; Yorke 1990, 46, 61; Warner 1996, 4, plate 1; Pestell 2004, 12; Chester-Kadwell 2009, 46; Kemble 2012, 8; Gascoyne and Radford 2013, 176; Reynolds 2013, fig. 4), which would imply a strong degree of territorial continuity from at least the early medieval period through to the present day. There is, however, a recognition in the Regional Research Framework that regional differences within early medieval society across eastern England have seen little investigation (Medlycott 2011b, 58), something that the following chapters hope to address. This chapter will explore the documentary evidence for these early medieval kingdoms and their relationship to later counties, before turning to the archaeological evidence for Anglo- Saxon immigrants and their relationship to the native British population in Chapters 8–10. The clear differences between the Northern Thames Basin, East Anglia, and the South East Midlands that are still evident during the seventh to ninth centuries are outlined in Chapter 11. Finally, Chapter 12 explores the boundaries of the early medieval kingdoms, and in particular the series of dykes constructed in south-eastern Cambridgeshire.Table 7.1 provides a timeline of key historical dates for early medieval England, and key developments within the archaeological record. The earliest list of territorial entities is the Tribal Hidage. The original document has been lost—it only survives in a variety of later forms—but it is thought to have been written between the mid seventh and the ninth centuries (Hart 1970; 1977; Davies and Vierck 1974, 224–7; Yorke 1990, 10; Blair 1991, 8; 1999; Harrington and Welch 2014, 1). The Tribal Hidage lists at least thirteen peoples in and around eastern England, some of whom clearly occupied quite extensive areas, such as the East Angles (assessed as 30,000 hides), East Saxons (7,000 hides), and the Cilternsætna (4,000 hides).
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Faulkenbury, Evan. "The Big Picture Goals of Public History". In Teaching Public History, 57–74. University of North Carolina PressChapel Hill, NC, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469673301.003.0004.

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Abstract Halfway through Evan Faulkenbury’s fall 2019 introduction to public history course, he began emphasizing students’ Big Picture Goals. In addition to surveying public history’s multiple formats such as museums, historic sites, and oral history, Faulkenbury facilitated a partnership between his class, the Cortland County Historical Society, and the local tourism bureau. Their joint project used the digital platform Clio to create entries on fifty of Cortland County’s roadside historic markers. The project itself concluded with successes and failures, but the larger goal of making students aware of how public history can be a vehicle to accomplishing their own professional goals transformed the class in a positive way.
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Harrison, Laura. "From Mammies to Mommy Machines". In Brown Bodies, White Babies. NYU Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479808175.003.0004.

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This chapter examines how discourses of race are influenced by the economic and reproductive imperatives of society at different historical moments. The author compares historical examples of racialized reproduction to contemporary examples with an analysis of two legal cases involving cross-racial gestational surrogacy in the United States: Johnson v. Calvert and, more recently, Marion County Division of Children’s Services v. Melinger. The specifics of these two cases vary dramatically; most notably, African American surrogate Anna Johnson went to court for custody of the child she bore, while the more recent case focused on the parental fitness of the white intended father. However, in both instances racial difference between the surrogate and intended parents served the interests of the racially and economically privileged parties. Like cross-racial wet nursing, cross-racial gestational surrogacy is part of a complicated history of racialized reproductive labor in the United States.
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Taylor, William R. "Whistling in the Dark". In Cavalier and Yankee, 299–313. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195082845.003.0011.

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Abstract The Historical Isolationism of the antebellum Southerner, the fact that he felt increasingly cut off and isolated from the historical forces which were reshaping the society of the Western world left him more and more defensive and touchy about his place within the South. The social order which he had imposed on his household and the surrounding county-an order which required the subordination of woman, Negro slave and nonslaveholding white-was submitted to careful and uneasy scrutiny by the novelists, who often stumbled upon social tensions and expressed reservations of a very worrying sort. It was impossible to live in nineteenth-century America without sharing some of its new concerns and obsessions-its sentimental preoccupation with the family, its evangelical benevolence, its endorsement of democratic change and social mobility. And yet it was impossible to share these new civic values without discovering grave inconsistencies in the planter’s social code. The novels written by Southerners reflect better than any other source this attempt of the South to wrestle with the nineteenth century and with itself.
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Canny, Nicholas. "Fresh Unionist Re-Appraisals of the History of Early Modern Ireland". In Imagining Ireland's Pasts, 291–325. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808961.003.0010.

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Landowners were challenged both by political change and by historical arguments. Their contribution to debate took the form of county histories to illustrate how landowners had been responsible for improvement and communal leadership. These histories varied because the experience of no two counties was identical. However, most dated the introduction of civil order to the establishment of counties, they enumerated the ‘improvements’ introduced by individual proprietors, they decried absenteeism, and they rejoiced that sectarian strife had been kept at bay other than when it had been provoked by external provocateurs—usually Catholic clerics. George Hill, writing of Ulster counties, dissented from this narrative by attributing past disturbances to the unfair treatment accorded natives in the Ulster Plantation and to the indifference of principal landowners to communal welfare. For him, the bedrock of Ulster society was its Protestant tenant farmers and their willingness to co-operate with their Catholic counterparts.
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Sharples, Niall. "Introduction". In Social Relations in Later Prehistory. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199577712.003.0005.

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This book covers the first millennium BC in central southern Britain, or Wessex, a period and an area of considerable importance in understanding the evolution of human society in north-west Europe. Wessex is one of the most intensively studied areas in European prehistory and has a rich and varied archaeological record that provides a finely textured view of a past society that is just beyond the reach of the historical sources. This book was begun a long time ago and has emerged due to a number of different stimuli. My first significant involvement with Wessex was as a result of my employment as Director of the English Heritage excavations at Maiden Castle in Dorset. During this period I lived in Dorset and became very familiar with the archaeology of this county and the neighbouring county of Wiltshire. The excavations were written up promptly (Sharples 1991a, 1991c) and I was also able to produce a couple of short papers (Sharples 1990b, 1991b) on related issues. These papers were part of a series of publications that came to define a new archaeological understanding of the Wrst millennium BC. They provide a context for the creation of this book that is worth exploring. In the middle of the 1980s, understanding of the Iron Age of Wessex was dominated by the views of Professor Cunlifie, which were widely disseminated in a range of publications, but most comprehensively in his book Iron Age Communities in Britain (Cunlifie 1991, 2005). He presented a picture of Iron Age society where dominant elites lived within hillforts and each hillfort controlled a clearly defined territory. These permanently occupied settlements acted as central places that absorbed cereals and animal products from dependent communities in the surrounding landscape and exchanged these basic foodstuffs for materials not available in the region. The communities in hillforts controlled contact with neighbouring territories and were closely tied to ports, through which Continental trade was channelled. As the Iron Age progressed, the territories become larger and the hillforts become fewer until distinct tribal units ruled by kings become recognizable in the Late Iron Age.
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Caspari, Bernhard Christoffer, e Vegard Nicolaysen. "Sammensatte trusler og forsvaret av Nord-Norge: Hvordan kan sammensatt virkemiddelbruk avdekkes i Troms og Finnmark?" In Sikkerhetspolitikk og militærmakt i Arktis, 203–29. Cappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.23865/noasp.183.ch9.

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This chapter investigates hybrid threats and how this phenomenon poses a challenge to Northern Norway. The authors take a closer look at the Norwegian term for hybrid threats (sammensatte trusler), often understood as an hostile actor’s tailored application of different instruments of power to specific vulnerabilities across society (Cullen & Reichborn-Kjennerud, 2017, p. 3). In the following we exemplify what these instruments of power, or undesirable activities, may look like by describing both real events and hypothetical scenarios. Seeing Russia as a potential threat to Norwegian security, we point out some of the implications this has had on the relationship between the two countries. The text then discusses what distinguishes Troms and Finnmark county as an area of operation, with a particular focus on local and regional vulnerabilities within a societal, political, historical, infrastructural and informational perspective. We look at factors that may be exploited by a state actor such as Russia by highlighting some colliding interests in relation to Norwegian security policy and subsequently argue that mapping local and regional characteristics with a focus on vulnerabilities is important, as it indicates where a hostile actor may concentrate its activities. In addition, we evaluate the potential role that local and regional actors may have in the work of detecting these undesirable activities. In conclusion, we underline the importance of cooperation and communication between local and regional actors in both the state and private sectors, and within the civil and military domains, to protect Norwegian society.
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Trabalhos de conferências sobre o assunto "Hickory County Historical Society"

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Griego, Cory A., Victor E. French e Kevin M. Hobbs. "Historical Trends in Physical Properties of the Surficial Aquifer in Valencia County, New Mexico". In 2019 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting. Socorro, NM: New Mexico Geological Society, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/sm-2019.1465.

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Crossno, Peter F., Russell R. Miller III, Nathan C. Dean, Alan H. Morris e Boaz A. Markewitz. "Outcomes Among Pandemic 2009 Novel H1N1 Influenza Patients Fulfilling Historical Criteria For Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO): Salt Lake County Experience". In American Thoracic Society 2010 International Conference, May 14-19, 2010 • New Orleans. American Thoracic Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm-conference.2010.181.1_meetingabstracts.a6118.

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Little, Susan F. B., Ingar Walder e Daniel Cadol. "On the Development of a Retroactive Water Balance Derived From Historical Water Quality and Flow Data, Malmberget/vitåfors Iron Mine, Norrbotten County, Sweden". In 2016 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting. Socorro, NM: New Mexico Geological Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/sm-2016.468.

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Cherevko, Marina. "ETHNOGRAPHIC ALBUM OF QING DYNASTY HUANG QING ZHI GONG TU (IMAGES OF TRIBUTARIES OF THE RULING QING DYNASTY) AS A VALUABLE SOURCE OF INFORMATION ON TAIWANESE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES". In 9th International Conference ISSUES OF FAR EASTERN LITERATURES. St. Petersburg State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/9785288062049.19.

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In the third volume (卷, juan) of an 18th-century woodblock publication Images of Tributaries of the Ruling Qing Dynasty (Huang Qing zhi gong tu, 皇清职贡图), among others non-Han ethnic groups, there are thirteen illustrations of Taiwan’s indigenous peoples, including a brief description of their costumes, disposition, and customs. This volume contains illustrations of various types of Taiwanese “barbaric” natives that reveal a great deal about Qing imaginative conception of savagery. They are classified both by administrative divisions and by categories of civilized (熟番) and uncivilized (生番) depending on their adoption of Chinese culture. The entries begin with the civilized savages of Taiwan county, then south to Fengshan county, and then north to Zhuluo county, Zhanghua county, and finally Danshui sub prefecture. The submitted uncivilized savages follow again in sequence from south to north. Last are the uncivilized savages of the inner mountains. The illustrations thus proceed from the most civilized one through increasing degrees of savagery. In each of the thirteen pictures, the differences between the savage figures and civilized figures are emphasized. The depictions of the physical appearances of the civilized and uncivilized savages can demonstrate their relative levels of civilization. The Qing Dynasty’s ethnographical description, which recorded the social culture of the historical tribes, now became particularly valuable because of the lack of a great amount of information on the indigenous tribes of Taiwan. It is quite necessary to study the society, traditions and cultural features of Taiwanese indigenous people in different periods, especially after their integration into the Qing Empire. Huang Qing zhi gong tu is regarded as a very important source for a detailed investigation of different ethnical types of peoples who inhabited the island of Taiwan. We have to analyze the history of aboriginal culture alongside Chinese culture to gain a more rounded insight into the culture and history of Taiwan.
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Hinds, Stuart. "Revealing a Community's Heritage: the Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America". In Kansas LGBTQ Symposium. Fort Hays State University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.58809/wtob5998.

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The Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America (GLAMA) was founded in 2009 to collect, preserve, and make accessible the documents and artifacts that reflect the histories of the LGBTQ communities in the Kansas City region. Originally a partnership between the University of Missouri – Kansas City Special Collections and Archives Division, the Kansas City Museum, and the Jackson County Historical Society, by 2014 two of the partners retreated from the project and it has been solely an initiative at UMKC since. GLAMA has been wildly successful in many respects – response from community donors; interest on the part of student, faculty, and community researchers; and uncovering a previously hidden history of the region. This presentation will focus on the evolution of GLAMA, resources available to users, and public-facing projects that have emerged from the collections.
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