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Fire on Abel's AltarTaliaferro, Charles R. 01 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a work of fiction in the form of a novel.
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Pioneer women and social memory: shifting energies, changing tensionsSchedlich-Day, Shannon January 2009 (has links)
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / This thesis examines how the ideal of the Australian pioneer woman has been so broadly circulated in Australian national social memory. Through the study of the dissemination of the social memory in a range of diverse sources, I will scrutinise the tensions that have existed around this ideal; how these tensions have been reconciled into a dominant narrative; and how they have shifted through the time of the inception of the legend to the present day. In its approach to the creation of social memory, to understand the changing influences of this particular memory in the Australian psyche, this thesis draws upon a number of types of sources for history that have tended to be overlooked – such as headstones, popular and family histories, and museum exhibitions. Significantly, the thesis will examine the role that such non-traditional accounts of the past have played in the transmission of social memory. Most people do not gain their knowledge of the past through intensive and exhaustive research; instead, they appropriate, as their own, the messages and meanings that they are fed through a variety of modes. The relationship between sources and social memory is a symbiotic one, where the sources are informed by social memory, and then in turn shape and elaborate social memory. In so many cases, the very creation of sources happens within the parameters of the national social memory. These sources are then drawn upon by subsequent generations to form their own social memory of pioneer women. This thesis will demonstrate that social memory is not rigid, but instead is subjected to shifting energies and changing tensions; and explain, through a discussion of a diverse range of sources through which it is disseminated, how memory remains fluid so that it is able to respond to the needs of the community that it serves. Australia’s pioneer woman remains an important aspect of the national identity – her creation and, thus, significance situated firmly in the present.
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The transition of a typical frontier, with illustrations from the life of Henry Hastings Sibley, fur trader, first delegate in Congress from Minnesota Territory and first governor of the state Minnesota ...Shortridge, Wilson Porter. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Minnesota, 1919. / Bibliography: p. 174-182. Also available in digital form on the Internet Archive Web site.
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TECTONIC DEVELOPMENT OF THE PIONEER STRUCTURAL COMPLEX, PIONEER MOUNTAINS, CENTRAL IDAHO (CORE, DETACHMENT, EXTENSION).WUST, STEPHEN LOUIS. January 1986 (has links)
The Pioneer Mountains of Idaho expose a lower plate core of Precambrian and Ordovician metasedimentary rocks, which are intruded by Cretaceous and Eocene plutonic bodies. The core is separated by a detachment fault from a surrounding upper plate of Paleozoic and Tertiary sedimentary and volcanic units. The detachment system developed during a Tertiary extensional event which overprinted Paleozoic and Mesozoic east-directed compressional features, and exhibits both brittle and ductile (mylonitic) deformation. Stretching lineations in the mylonite and striations along the detachment surface both cluster around N65W. Composite planar fabrics (s- and c-surfaces) in the mylonite and limited development of a mylonitic front along the NW side of the core both suggest a top-to-the-west sense of shear. Minimum translation is estimated at about 17 km. The Pioneer structural complex is one of a number of metamorphic core complexes present along the North American Cordillera. All exhibit Tertiary extensional deformation, expressed as detachment faults structurally adjacent to ductile mylonitic shear zones. Extension directions, as indicated by stretching lineations within mylonite and striations along detachment faults, fall into regional groups in which the directions are similar in trend throughout each group. Asymmetric fabrics on both small and large scales give senses of shear and indicate that tectonic vergence within each group is directed outward from a central axis. The regional consistency of extension directions implies a regional control of extension in metamorphic core complexes. Much of central Idaho, and possibly a large part of eastern Idaho as well, may be riding on the upper part of an extensive detachment terrane, of which the Pioneer complex exposes the deeper levels. The Pioneer complex, and other core complexes, owes its present elevation to isostatic uplift over an overthickened crustal welt of local scale. Larger-scale uplift may be due to a similar isostatic adjustment over a broad zone of crustal thickening from Mesozoic compressional tectonics and intrusion.
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Petticoat ambushBurke, John Patrick, 1928- January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
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Pioneer women and social memory: shifting energies, changing tensionsSchedlich-Day, Shannon January 2009 (has links)
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / This thesis examines how the ideal of the Australian pioneer woman has been so broadly circulated in Australian national social memory. Through the study of the dissemination of the social memory in a range of diverse sources, I will scrutinise the tensions that have existed around this ideal; how these tensions have been reconciled into a dominant narrative; and how they have shifted through the time of the inception of the legend to the present day. In its approach to the creation of social memory, to understand the changing influences of this particular memory in the Australian psyche, this thesis draws upon a number of types of sources for history that have tended to be overlooked – such as headstones, popular and family histories, and museum exhibitions. Significantly, the thesis will examine the role that such non-traditional accounts of the past have played in the transmission of social memory. Most people do not gain their knowledge of the past through intensive and exhaustive research; instead, they appropriate, as their own, the messages and meanings that they are fed through a variety of modes. The relationship between sources and social memory is a symbiotic one, where the sources are informed by social memory, and then in turn shape and elaborate social memory. In so many cases, the very creation of sources happens within the parameters of the national social memory. These sources are then drawn upon by subsequent generations to form their own social memory of pioneer women. This thesis will demonstrate that social memory is not rigid, but instead is subjected to shifting energies and changing tensions; and explain, through a discussion of a diverse range of sources through which it is disseminated, how memory remains fluid so that it is able to respond to the needs of the community that it serves. Australia’s pioneer woman remains an important aspect of the national identity – her creation and, thus, significance situated firmly in the present.
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The transition of a typical frontier with illustrations from the life of Henry Hastings Sibley, fur trader, first delegate in Congress from Minnesota Territory, and first governor of the state of Minnesota : a thesis /Shortridge, Wilson Porter, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Minnesota, 1919 / Pref. dated: 1922. Reproduction of original in the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign Campus) Library. Includes bibliographical references (p. 174-182) and index. Also issued in print and microfiche.
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The transition of a typical frontier with illustrations from the life of Henry Hastings Sibley, fur trader, first delegate in Congress from Minnesota Territory and first governor of the state of Minnesota ...Shortridge, Wilson Porter. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Minnesota, 1919. / Bibliography: p. 174-182.
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Norwegian pioneer women ethnicity on the Wisconsin agricultural frontier /Hagen, Monys Ann. January 1984 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1984. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 158-161).
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The rhetoric of the frontier and the frontier of rhetoric /Paul, Carly Kay. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. A.)--Brigham Young University. Dept. of English, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 99-102).
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