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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Wissenschaft als literarischer Stoff: Fiktion um die deutsche Atomphysik Analysen und Hintergründe zu Jorge Volpis "En busca de Klingsor" /

Hunziker, Andreas. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Diss. phil.-hist. Bern. / Titel von Hülle.
2

"Musa del Septentrión" a caballo entre dos estéticas

Matorras, Rosa Maria, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2005. / Title from first page of PDF file. Document formatted into pages; contains viii, 316 p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 279-316). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center
3

A study of the religious attitudes and concepts of the people of Escalante, Utah, from 1876 to 1930 /

Allred, Elwood Byron. January 1932 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Brigham Young University. Division of Religion.
4

Late Holocene flooding on the Escalante River, south-central Utah

Webb, Robert H. January 1985 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D. - Geosciences)--University of Arizona, 1985. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 187-204).
5

The distribution of plant types in the Escalante Desert of Utah with relation to soil conditions

Lambert, Carlyle B. 17 May 1940 (has links)
This problem was a study of plant species in the Escalante Desert, Utah, in relation to soil conditions. The plants were surveyed by the transect-plot method. The plants and soils were analyzed by percentage-frequency techniques. There is no measurable correlation between soil series and the dominant plants which occur on the soils. There is no correlation between soil types and the plants that are dominant on the soil types. There is a definite correlation between textural classes of the soil and the plants that are dominant on these classes.
6

Late Holocene flooding on the Escalante River, south-central Utah

Webb, Robert H. January 1985 (has links)
The late Holocene flood history and associated channel changes were reconstructed for the Escalante River in south-central Utah. Analyses of flood deposits at 8 sites in the bedrock canyon indicate that the frequency of large floods was at a maximum 1100 to 900 yrs BP and in historic times in a 2000 year record. The largest flood occurred approximately 900 to 1000 yrs BP and was 7 times the largest flood recorded at a gaging station. The paleoflood discharges were close to the "maximum expected flood" derived from a regional flood envelope curve, and the 100-yr flood was increased 220% to 800 cubic meters per second (cms) with the addition of four historic flood discharges. Possible nonstationarity in the distribution due to channel changes and climatic shifts reduced the reliability of statistical flood-frequency analyses. The additional parameters of the "largest recorded flood" in 2000 years of paleoflood record -- 720 ems -- and the "maximum expected flood" -- 1180 cms -- were added to the flood-frequency summary. Channel changes in the upstream alluvial channel were related to flood-frequency changes. Valley-margin stratigraphy representing 1600 years of deposition indicated that after 1100 yrs BP, a time of increased frequency of large floods, a marshy floodplain was converted to a dry, fire-swept meadow and an arroyo 24-m wide and 2.5-m deep formed. This arroyo quickly filled with sediments between 500 and 400 yrs BP and a smaller channel then formed and persisted until settlement of the basin. Floods between 1909 and 1940 transformed the small channel into an arroyo up to 100-m wide and 17-m deep. The cause for flood-frequency and consequent channel changes on the Escalante River is complicated. Land-use practices caused pronounced changes in watershed and floodplain conditions. A subtle shift in climate increased the amount of summer precipitation and intensity of storms. The inability to test either the land-use practices or climatic shift hypotheses independently precludes the determination of a regional cause for arroyos.
7

Fremont Site Distribution in the Upper Escalante River Drainage

Harris, Deborah C. 13 March 2009 (has links) (PDF)
A Fremont site distribution model for the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument during the period A.D. 500—1050/1100 posits that the Fremont subsistence strategy (seasonal mobility with dependence on both agriculture and hunting/foraging) is reflected by a site pattern of low-investment, seasonal or short-term habitation sites and isolated storage facilities at "lowland" elevations, and high-investment, long-term residence sites at "upland" elevations (McFadden 1998, 2000). This research assesses the model to evaluate its general precision, looking particularly at its success in modeling site locations for long-term residential versus seasonal/short-term habitation sites. A database including more than 400 Fremont sites was created to evaluate the model. Data variables examined in this thesis included elevation, distance-to-water, and primary landform. Analysis of the elevation data demonstrates that the McFadden model does not fit the actual distribution of Fremont sites identified from survey. Further analysis also established that distance-to-water is not an effective variable in accurately modeling Fremont site patterning over this region. The association between functional site types and primary landforms, however, does appear to more accurately reflect site distribution as observed on the ground. Based on these results, a new model for Fremont site distribution in the upper Escalante River drainage is proposed.
8

Ethnographic Assessment of Kaibab Paiute Cultural Resources In Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Utah

Stoffle, Richard W., Carroll, Kristen, Eisenberg, Amy, Amato, John January 2004 (has links)
This report is a Southern Paiute ethnographic study of the Grand Staircase- Escalante NM. This is the first report of activities conducted by the University of Arizona regarding Kaibab Paiute ethnographic resources currently within the boundaries of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (GSENM). The GSENM is a very large area that has been carved out of some of the most topographically and ecologically diverse lands in North America and contain a range of important Southern Paiute cultural resources and places. The Kaibab Paiute people were one of a number of Southern Paiute districts of the Southern Paiute nation who traditionally and aboriginally occupied and used the biotic and abiotic resources of this area. This study details the physical, prehistoric, historic, and cultural ties between the Southern Paiutes and the GSENM. In addition, this report presents the current relations of Southern Paiutes to this cultural landscape and the ways in which resource appropriation from the past continues to impact expressions of power in the present.
9

Reconstructing the Holocene Arroyo History of the Upper Escalante River, Southern Utah, Using Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) and Radiocarbon Dating

Hayden, Anne E. 01 December 2011 (has links)
Arroyos are steep-walled, entrenched, typically ephemeral streams commonly found in dryland river systems that form when streams incise into previously deposited alluvial fill. Arroyos in the southwestern U.S. have been studied extensively following the historic period of arroyo cutting in the late 1800s and early 1900s A.D. The upper Escalante River in south-central Utah similarly began incising in 1909, and records evidence for past cut and fill cycles in well-exposed walls along the now continuous arroyo. Establishing robust geochronologies of past arroyo cycles in these fluvial settings has been difficult. Recent improvements in accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon (14C) and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating provide an opportunity to link more highly resolved fluvial records to existing paleoclimate records. This allows hypotheses regarding the causes of arroyo cycles to be tested, and for the role of climate versus intrabasinal characteristics to be examined. One major objective of this research was to examine the applicability of OSL and AMS 14C dating in the upper Escalante, as both methods have proved problematic in similar settings. In total, 37 ages were obtained, 21 OSL and 16 14C ages. The Holocene fluvial history of the upper Escalante River was reconstructed using these age results and stratigraphic relationships. The chronostratigraphic record developed in this study suggests that at least six arroyo cycles have occurred in the upper Escalante since the middle Holocene, with incision occurring ~4.4 – 4.2 ka, ~2.6 – 2.4 ka, ~1.8 – 1.5 ka, ~1.0 – 0.9 ka, ~0.5 - 0.4 ka, and during the historic period of arroyo entrenchment. While semi-synchronous arroyo cutting (indicative of a climate signal) appears to have occurred in the Paria and Escalante drainages over the last 1 ka, correlations between proximal drainages are less clear prior to 1 ka, although this may be due in part to preservation effects. Overall, linkages to specific climate regimes and correlations to regional drainages are difficult to identify, suggesting that internal geomorphic thresholds are important in determining when arroyo entrenchment occurs in individual catchments.
10

CLASSIC PERIOD HOHOKAM IN THE ESCALANTE RUIN GROUP

Doyel, David E. (David Elmond), 1946- January 1977 (has links)
No description available.

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