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A survey of the reading programs of private secondary schools of the New England, Middle Atlantic states, and the District of ColumbiaLivingston, Elizabeth Linton January 1960 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University
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Trade of the Delaware district before the revolutionHanna, Mary Alice, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Bryn Mawr College, 1917. / Vita. "Reprinted from the Smith College studies in history 1917." Bibliography: p. [334]-338.
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Contributions to the autecology and ecosystematics of immature ceratopogonidae (Diptera), with emphasis on the tribes heteromyiini and sphaeromiini in the middle atlantic United StatesKnausenberger, Walter Ingolf 11 July 2009 (has links)
Biological and systematic study of the immature stages of the biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) has been infrequent, although the family is one of the largest in the order, with over 4,000 species worldwide, and is ubiquitous among aquatic/semiaquatic environments. An ecosystematic analysis is presented here of the Ceratopogonidae in Virginia and contiguous states based mainly on a diversified biological field survey, with particular attention to associating immature stages with adults, and acquisition of ecological data. I emphasized (a) extraction of larvae and pupae; (b) two methods of rearing, developed for this study: individual rearing(IR) with an agar-nematode technique, and collective rearing from the habitat substrate in rearing cartons(RC); and (c) field trapping of adults at the habitats.
In Section I, a faunistic assessment - the first of its sort - is provided of the total Virginia-region ceratopogonid fauna, in all developmental stages, with a focus on <i>Culicoides</i>, including a comparative evaluation of the relative abundance of the ceratopogonid genera with respect to methods of collecting and extracting.
High taxonomic richness of the ceratopogonid fauna in the Middle Atlantic states is reflected in the 150 described and 42 undescribed (new) species recovered. A detailed geographic checklist for the 222 species of Virginia and the five contiguous states is presented and interpreted. At least 54 Culicoides species are present in the Middle Atlantic u.s. About half of the larval species can be determined in Virginia. With the results of this study, 93% of breeding sites for the genus are known in Virginia, more than for any other state.
Section II assembles and synopsizes data on the autecology, life history, habitat, morphology, systematics, as well as geographic and seasonal occurrence of 28 species (3 new) and 10 genera in two related tribes of predaceous biting midges, Heteromyiini and Sphaeromiini (subfamily Ceratopogoninae). Shorelines are the "archetypical arena" in which these larvae thrive, typically above and below the water line. Their habitats and substrates are characterized in detail. The greatest diversity of larvae in these tribes consistently occurs in and along mid-reach streams{Order: 3 to 5).
Mechanisms of ecological partitioning by sympatric species, and the differential adaptive significance of larval, pupal and adult morphological characters are evaluated. Taxonomic and ecological diversity in these groups are clearly related. / Ph. D.
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Stumpage price expectations: an empirical analysis of nonindustrial private landowners in the Mid-Atlantic statesLawrence, Gerald D. January 1985 (has links)
Numerous empirical studies outside of forestry have analyzed the role of price expectations in different decision processes. Empirical studies using price expectations in forestry research is a relatively new field of endeavor. Past studies have typically ignored or given cursory treatment to the role of price expectations.
This study provides a review of studies in forestry that have attempted to incorporate price expectations into model formulations. Models are then developed to explain the short-run harvest, and long-run regeneration expenditure decisions by the non-industrial private forest owner, incorporating different distributed lag formulations to account for price expectations.
The estimated models for the short-run harvest decision, using cross sectional non-aggregated data, indicates that price expectations play a significant role in this decision process. Therefore, price expectations should be incorporated in some form, (i.e. different forms of distributed lags), to properly specify models. Estimated models for the long-run regeneration expenditure decision indicates a weak link between economic variables and the regeneration decision.
For both types of models, estimated coefficients for personal characteristics of landowners are in general considered insignificant, indicating the lack of influence that personal characteristics have on these decision processes / Master of Science
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Spatial and temporal trends of organic and elemental carbon as a component of PM2.5 within the New York metropolitan areaKurian, Steven. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Rutgers University, 2007. / "Graduate Program in Civil and Environmental Engineering." Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-76).
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