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A Data-Driven Study of the Water Table Fluctuations in New England over the Last 60 YearsWeider, Kaitlyn M 01 January 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The scientific evidence that humans are directly influencing the Earth’s natural climate is increasingly compelling. Numerous studies suggest that climate change will lead to changes in the seasonality of surface water availability thereby increasing the need for groundwater development to offset those shortages. Research shows that the Northeast region of the U.S. is experiencing changes to its’ natural climate and hydrologic systems. This study provides the first instrumental long-term regional compilation and analysis of the water table response to the last 60 years of climate in New England. This investigation will evaluate the physical mechanisms and underlying mechanisms, natural variability and response of New England aquifers to climate variability.
Using 100 long term groundwater monitoring stations with 20 or more years of data coupled with 67 stream gages, 75 precipitation stations, and 43 temperature stations, several statistical analyses are performed. Groundwater trends are calculated as normalized anomalies and analyzed with respect to regional compiled precipitation, temperature, and streamflow anomalies to understand the sensitivity of the aquifer systems to change. Trend, regression, correlation and spectral analysis are preformed on groundwater data to identify statistical relationships with climate variables, hydrogeologic properties and the hydrologic setting.
Results suggest that regionally, New England aquifers respond strongly to annual and decadal changes in climate. Coherence in the relationship between groundwater and climate variables exists with a second order variability related to the hydrogeologic setting. The trend and regression analysis demonstrate that water level fluctuations are producing statistically significant results with increasing water levels over at least the past thirty years at most well sites. Long term cycles within the groundwater data suggest teleconnections with known sea surface temperature or pressure fluctuations such as ENSO, NAO, IPO and QBO. Anomalies of groundwater data within various geologic settings suggest that watershed characteristics; such as the surficial geology and topography of the region, play a role in the evolution of water levels in New England. These results have major implications for not only water management but the agriculture, forestry, fishing, and tourism industries as they all depend on the quantity and quality of water resources of the region.
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Cyclical sensitivity among New England standard metropolitan areas - an examination of certain hypothesesGery, Frank William, Jr. January 1963 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University / Statement of the Problem. - The major thesis is that cyclical sensitivity of New England Standard Metropolitan Areas is a function of any one or a combination of the following variables:
1. specialization in manufacturing industries as opposed to non-manufacturing industries,
2. specialization in durable goods industries as opposed to non-durable goods industries,
3. specialization in a few major "S.I.C. two-digit" manufacturing industries,
4. degree of transition in the structure of manufacturing [TRUNCATED]
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An analysis of the training needs of vocational rehabilitation counselors in New EnglandSapienza, Frieda A. January 1952 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University / It is the purpose of this study
to determine the extent of the need for an organized training
program on the graduate level for vocational rehabilitation
counselors. Specifically, the study proposes to discover:
l, The nature of professional training which a
selected group of vocational rehabilitation
counselors in the New England area would like
to develop through further education.
2, The extent of their personal interest in securing
such training through university study or extension
courses.
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Dinoflagellate cyst assemblages and environmental factors controlling their distribution in New England (USA) estuariesPospelova, Vera January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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The emergence of a racial prejudice towards the Indians in seventeenth century New England : some notes on an explanation /Lloyd, Peter January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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A Modern House for a New England Main StreetPfeffer, Erich John 12 November 2019 (has links)
Almost every New England town with colonial roots has a manicured Main Street, or some thoroughfare that is meticulously cared for in attempt to preserve and display its history through its architecture. Buildings range in age from as old as the town to as new as yesterday. However, in most cases, Main Street is not a true reflection of the complete history of a town. After a certain point in time, it was no longer acceptable to build in a manner reflective of the current conditions. If a new building was to be erected, only eclectic adaptations of past styles were deemed suitable, to achieve scenographic coherence. Resultantly, any significant truth to Main Street's architecture ceased to develop. A true reflection of the actual societal institution as manifested through the architecture of the town was lost. It is this loss that I refer to as "truth".
This thesis is about finding, and restoring, truth through the design of a new house on Main Street in Glastonbury, Connecticut. Glastonbury is a town full of colonial history, with more than 150 houses built before 1800, many of which exist on Main Street. The design for this house is not a direct condemnation of historic eclecticism; rather, it is an attempt to demonstrate how a house can be designed to reflect the true connection between time and place in the institution of "the house". The design acknowledges history through proportion, form, and scale, and it admits contemporary values through abstraction of details, use of materials, and organization of space. The product is a statement about how to design a house that comprehensively and truthfully reflects the spirit of its setting. / Master of Architecture
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The political economy of hotel-motel development : a case study of the industry in New EnglandKurtz, Daniel P. (Daniel Peter) January 1979 (has links)
Thesis. 1979. M.C.P.--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ROTCH. / Bibliography: leaves 172-177. / by Daniel P. Kurtz. / M.C.P.
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Dissent and identity in seventeenth-century New EnglandCarrington, Charlotte Victoria January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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An Unsettled Plantation: Nova Scotia’s New Englanders and the Creation of a British Colony, 1759-1776Montgomery, Alexandra Lunn 24 July 2012 (has links)
The New England Planters were the largest wave of Protestant migration into Nova Scotia prior to the American Revolution. Sponsored by the British government, they represent an attempt to make Nova Scotia a securely British colony in the wake of the Seven Years’ War and the Acadian deportation. Examining the experiences of several families, this thesis argues that the Planters, despite taking up lands in Nova Scotia, remained unsettled. The migration was staggered over a number of years, and Planters maintained close ties with New England. However, the Planters were unable to recreate New England culture completely. Increasing numbers of settlers from the British Isles and revolutionary suspicion marked out Planter Nova Scotia as a separate space, despite the close ties that individual Planters maintained with their homelands. The Revolution forced Planters to choose, but until then many existed between the worlds of Nova Scotia and New England.
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A selected, annotated edition of the letters of George Ripley, 1828-1841Fisher, Mathew D. January 1992 (has links)
The selected letters of George Ripley, 1828-1841, constitute an important source of information about New England Transcendentalism and its literary, philosophical, and political manifestations. These 36 letters from 1828 to 1841 chronicle Ripley's integral involvement in the most significant achievements of the Transcendentalists, translation of European literature, the various controversies with the Unitarian establishment, the formation of the Transcendental Club, and participation in the many reform movements of the period. Specifically, these letters detail Ripley's career as minister of Boston's Purchase Street Church, his missionary work for the American Unitarian Association, the production of his Specimens of Standard Foreign Literature, his relationships with many of the leading Transcendentalists, and his founding the experimental community, Brook Farm.Ripley's letters are presented here in fully edited form. Transcriptions were produced from photocopies of the original manuscripts, creating a genetic text which retains, as much as possible, the exact form of the handwritten letter. Each letter is fully annotated, and an index topeople, publications, and important ideas is provided. An extensive introductory essay outlines important events in Ripley's life and discusses the contribution the letters make both to an understanding of Ripley and to an important period in American letters. / Department of English
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