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Plant dispersion, seed predation, pollination and their effect on the fecundity of Baptisia spp. (Leguminosae)Johnson, Kathleen June Reed January 2011 (has links)
Typescript. / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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The wheat economy and the demand for manufactured goods, 1910-1930 : a quantitative studyWatson, Stephen. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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The wheat economy and the demand for manufactured goods, 1910-1930 : a quantitative studyWatson, Stephen. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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An assessment of the use of seeding, mowing, and burning in the restoration of an oldfield to tallgrass prairie in Lewisville, TexasWindhager, Steven. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Texas, 1999. / Title from PDF title page (viewed on Dec. 10, 2004). Includes bibliographical references (p. 259-272).
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Functional and mechanistic explanations for communal nesting by prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster) femalesHayes, Loren D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Miami University, Dept. of Zoology, 2004. / Title from second page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references.
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Functional groups, traits, and the performance of species in restoration /Roberts, Rachael E. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2008. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 83-92). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Extensive development of the Canadian Prairies : a micro analysis of the influence of technical changeWard, Anthony John January 1990 (has links)
This thesis examines the rate and pattern of settlement of the Canadian Prairies over the period of the 'Wheat Boom'. The principal aim of the work Is to explain the economic reasons for the late start to that settlement.
Economic growth of the Canadian Prairies did not begin until almost the turn of the 20th. century, long after the initial occupation of the American West. I hypothesise in this thesis that the delay in the development of the Canadian Prairies was principally due to an initial lack of appropriate technology. The growing season In Canada is shorter than that further south, leaving grain farmers with little time to sow in spring and harvest In the fall. The technology available in 1880 enabled farmers to crop less than 50 acres even in the best areas, making farming uneconomical over most of the Prairie area. The technology available to the Prairie farmer over the period is carefully examined to determine the effects of various changes which occurred.
In order to analyze the implications of technological change, a number of representative Prairie farms are modelled using the technique of dynamic linear programming. Five locations which were first occupied on different dates are analyzed, and for each location the value of capitalised rent for a typical new farm is calculated on four dates. The results of these calculations show that in 1880 most Prairie land was economically worthless. Over time all the hypothetical farms showed Increases in value, and settlement appears to have occurred on approximately the date at which the calculated value of the land rose above zero.
The reasons for the increases in the value of the land are examined, and the most important exogenous change appears to have been the improvement of mechanical farming equipment. The development of appropriate 'dry-farming' techniques was also important, but it is argued that this was endogenous to Prairie growth. Wheat prices did not begin to increase until about 1904 and therefore were not a cause of the start of the 'Wheat Boom', although they contribute significantly to farming profits by 1910. / Arts, Faculty of / Vancouver School of Economics / Graduate
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Regional geochemical reconnaissance and compositional variations in grain and forage crops on the Southern Canadian Interior PlainDoyle, Patrick J. January 1977 (has links)
The distribution of Cu, Fe, Mn, Zn, Mo and Se in earth surface materials on the Southern Canadian Interior Plain was examined with the aim of recommending appropriate methods of producing regional geochemical maps. Investigations were undertaken in three separate areas, one in each of the prairie provinces, selected to represent a range of environmental conditions.
In the Swan River - Dauphin area emphasis was placed on investigating the regional distribution of Mo in both soil and stream sediment. These patterns were related to data on the Mo status of plants and to information on Mo-induced Cu deficiency in cattle. In the Rosetown area of Saskatchewan, and the Red Deer area of Alberta, attention v/as focussed on examining variations in the Cu, Fe, Mn, Zn and Se content of soils; in the Rosetown area concentrations of these elements in whole wheat plants were also determined.
Procedures for regional geochemical mapping using stream sediment are well established. On the Southern Canadian Interior Plain, however, stream density is generally inadequate for routine application of these techniques. Although tributary drainages are relatively common in parts of southern Manitoba, results of investigations in the Swan River - Dauphin area indicate
that Mo concentrations in stream sediment typically reflect Mo levels in upstream soil, but not those of associated plants. In contrast to findings reported by V7ebb and his associates
in the United Kingdom, Manitoba stream sediment data are of little value in identifying areas where potentially toxic Mo concentrations are likely to occur in forage.
Reconnaissance surveys based on soil sampling, on the other hand, can be applied throughout the Canadian prairies. Results of studies around Rosetown and Red Deer indicate that regional compositional trends for soil may be efficiently described
in terms of variations among means estimated for individual
soil parent materials. In the Rosetown area, for example, over 70% of the total variance for Cu, Fe, Mn and Zn in A horizons
is attributable to differences among parent material means. This parent material effect appears, in turn, to be mainly a function of textural variations, with lowest concentrations
associated with sand-rich and highest with clay-rich deposits.
The importance of differences among means for soil associated
with individual surficial deposits is also emphasized, in the Rosetown area, by relatively strong positive relationships (r>0.73) between parent material based Mn, Fe and Cu means for wheat and soil. When data are considered on an individual sample basis relationships between plant and soil concentrations are generally much weaker (r< 0.40).
It is suggested, therefore, that on the Southern Canadian Interior Plain, regional geochemical maps can be efficiently produced using parent material based soil compositional data. The procedure recommended involves collection of A horizon samples at randomly chosen sites over each of the major parent
materials recognized, and estimation of geometric mean and deviation values for each deposit. Duncan's New Multiple Range test is used to identify significant differences among means,
and results are summarized in map form, showing only composition-ally distinctive parent materials or parent material groups. In view of close relationships noted between parent material based means for soils and plants, maps produced in this fashion should be useful in identifying areas where trace element excesses or deficiencies are limiting crop or livestock productivity. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
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The effect of slope aspect and position on the composition and size of woody vegetation in the Kansas tall-grass prairieBirdsell, Rodney January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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Works for trumpet by Canadian prairie composers in publicly accessible non-archival holdings : toward establishing a repertoire databaseFunk, Daniel Jacob 04 September 2007
<p>Trumpet repertoire listings currently available to the public are often unsuitable for music instructors as means of adequately selecting repertoire for their students. This thesis will first discuss shortcomings of current trumpet repertoire lists and how a new listing would better serve the purpose of selecting new and appropriate works. A repertoire database design is presented with its many features, both musical and
bibliographical. Further, technical considerations and issues concerning the implementation of such a database are discussed.</p>
<p>
Works for trumpet by Canadian Prairie composers was chosen as a body of repertoire to be cataloged in the database, as a means of presenting a prototype and therefore of limiting the number of initial database entries. Listing only works accessible in libraries and other public holdings warrants that pieces will be available for performance by the database users.
</p>
<p>
As the application of the proposed database to this specific body of repertoire demonstrates, the database will be helpful to trumpet instructors seeking repertoire for students, as well as professionals wishing to create varied programs for performances and recordings, which include Canadian Prairie trumpet repertoire.</p>
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