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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.
91

Alternative Controls for Helicoverpazea on Sweet Corn: Phytotoxicity and Pollination Inhibition from Direct Silk Applications

Jackson, Tori Lee January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
92

Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Predation on the American Lobster, Homarus americanus, across New England's Biogeographic Transition Zone

Brown, Curtis January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
93

Emerson a statement of New England transcendentalism as expressed in the philosophy of its chief exponent,

Gray, Henry David, January 1917 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1904. / Vita. Published also without thesis note. Bibliography: p. [105]-107.
94

A survey of the reading programs of private secondary schools of the New England, Middle Atlantic states, and the District of Columbia

Livingston, Elizabeth Linton January 1960 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University
95

Institutional mortgage lending in the nation and New England

Tuck, Edward, II January 1961 (has links)
Thesis (M.B.A)--Boston University.
96

An investigation of the small vocal ensemble in the secondary schools of southern New England

Roth, James Lawrence January 1961 (has links)
Thesis (M.M.)--Boston University.
97

A survey of business education in the public high schools of New England

Cohen, Irwin A., Morian, Sandra V., Oliveira, Humbert M., Peterson, Joanne A., Tutuny, Irene R., Wise, Doris E. January 1963 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University.
98

A study to determine the present status of music education with an emphasis on certain aspects of teaching load in public secondary schools of one hundred or more grade enrollment in New England

Ekman, Gudrun Erna January 1963 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University
99

Speaking, Silently Speaking: Thomas Shepard's "Confessions" and the Cultural Impact of Puritan Conversion on Early and Later America

Young, Alexander, Young, Alexander January 2012 (has links)
My dissertation reappraises the Puritan conversion narrative's influence on early and later American literature. It centers around the accounts recorded by the Reverend Thomas Shepard, minister to Cambridge's first church, and looks at how New England's earliest settlers represented their spiritual encounters. My study argues for Puritanism's continued cultural relevance by explaining how the inter-personal, social, and expressive energies that informed Puritan spiritual confession is both sustained and evolves in the 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. Chapter I accounts for the social, historical, and intellectual contexts in which the Puritan conversion narrative took place and outlines the scholarship it has received. Amid this scholarship I offer my analysis in Chapter II, pointing to the performance's formal, doctrinal, and expressive requirements to explain how believers delivered successful narratives and how they pushed the bounds of the religious doctrine that informed their accounts. Chapter III re-imagines the experience of Puritan conversion. It considers the performance from an affective framework and argues that the ambivalence endemic to spiritual assurance provoked in believers a psychogenic and narratological discord that promoted a form of self-understanding in which believers were unsure of themselves even as their spiritual communities were certain that their conversions were complete. Chapter III concludes by assessing the literary consequences of this relationship with reference to Benjamin Franklin's
100

A Data-Driven Study of the Water Table Fluctuations in New England over the Last 60 Years

Weider, 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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