81 |
Die strategie Schwarzenbergs am 13., 14. und 15. Oktober 1813Kaulfuss, Otto, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Berlin. / Vita. "Litteratur": leaf following p. 64.
|
82 |
Devastating victory and glorious defeat : the Mahabharata and Kosovo in national imaginings /Bakić-Hayden, Milica. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of South Asian Languages and Civilizations, June 1997. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
|
83 |
The Texts of the battle of Kadesh ... /Wilson, John Albert, January 1926 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Department of Oriental Languages and Literatures. / A Dissertation, submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Literature, in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Department of Oriental Languages and Literatures. Includes bibliographical references.
|
84 |
Music education in Prince George's County, Maryland, from 1950 to 1992 an oral history account of three prominent music educators and their times /Moore, Judy W. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Maryland, College Park, 2004. / Thesis research directed by: Music. Title from t.p. of PDF. Includes bibliographical references. Published by UMI Dissertation Services, Ann Arbor, Mich. Also available in paper.
|
85 |
Igneous Petrology, Geochronology, Alteration, and Mineralization Associated with Hydrothermal Systems in the Battle Mountain District, NevadaKing, Caleb Arnold, King, Caleb Arnold January 2017 (has links)
Eocene magmatism in the Great Basin is spatially and temporally associated with major gold mineralization and with the early stages of the westward retreat of magmatism from its eastern-most advance. The Battle Mountain Mining District in north-central Nevada is one of the more prominent areas of Eocene intrusive activity and Au-(Cu) mineralization. The district hosts Jurassic dikes, three centers of Cretaceous magmatism, as well as the major magmatic event of the late Eocene. This study, however, focuses on the youngest of the three events and looks in depth at the Eocene igneous centers across the district and their associated hydrothermal alteration and mineralization. The major areas of late Eocene magmatism and hydrothermal activity are at Elder Creek in the north, Copper Basin in the east, and Copper Canyon in the south, along with the smaller occurrences and deposits such as Buffalo Valley, Modoc, Long Peak, and Timber Canyon.
New U-Pb ages on zircons were determined for 38 igneous rocks from around the district. These ages along with the 67 previously published U-Pb, Ar-Ar, and K-Ar ages were used to constrain the timing of emplacement of all of the igneous centers of Eocene age to a contracted period beginning around 42 Ma and ending between 39 and 38 Ma. The internal consistency in the resulting U-Pb ages requires that many of the previous dates in the district, especially the K-Ar ages, should be viewed with caution. Inherited cores were found in the zircons from 37 of the 38 samples analyzed in this study. This includes both abundant Jurassic and Cretaceous cores that are likely derived from older igneous rocks in the subsurface, as well as abundant cores of other ages that resemble but do not fully match the reported detrital zircon populations of the allochthonous sedimentary rocks from the Roberts Mountains and Golconda allochthons. Populations of zircons that are not known from surficial exposures imply that other rocks may be present at depth provided the some of the inherited zircons to the magmas.
To better characterize the Eocene magmas, intrusive rocks were analyzed for major and selected trace elements, and their constituent minerals were analyzed by electron microprobe. Rock compositions are broadly calc-alkaline, metaluminous to weakly peraluminous, and range from quartz monzodiorites to high-silica rhyolites, with the majority of the rocks being granodiorites. Based on their titanite + magnetite ± ilmenite mineralogy and the compositions of biotite and hornblende, the igneous rocks are relatively oxidized with average ΔNNO values of +1.16 at 500 bars, +1.74 at 1000 bars and +2.29 at 2000 bars. Aluminum-in-hornblende with plagioclase thermobarometry on mineral rims indicates that the magmas were emplaced in the upper 5 km of the crust. Data from certain phenocryst interiors and from porphyritic dike swarms, however, reflects higher equilibration pressures and may indicate the position of an underlying source at a depth of 10-15 km. Overall these data characterize the Eocene magmatic system over ~10 km vertical extent.
Hydrogen isotopic evidence suggests a minimum of two major fluids sources in these hydrothermal systems to explain the origin of the diverse mineralization and alteration in the district. The Na-Ca(-K) types of alteration, which are observed in many parts of the district, suggest there is a large influx of external saline fluids that contained isotopically heavy hydrogen in all of the major Eocene deposits. The range of δD values for all actinolite samples associated with the Na-Ca(-K) types is from -19‰ to -59‰. These values represent a significant shift from the δD values of hydrous minerals in the magmas and in the associated potassic alteration where the range of δD values for biotite is from -35‰ to -82‰, for amphiboles it is from -55‰ to -92‰, and for secondary biotite is from -34‰ to -90‰. The values for unaltered igneous hornblende and biotite are akin to those of magmatic water, whereas the heavier isotopic compositions from actinolite plot in the fields of either basinal brines or metamorphic fluids. In contrast, the sulfur isotopic compositions from these systems are surprisingly homogeneous across the district.
Alteration assemblages characterized by petrographic and electron microprobe studies. Alteration of siliciclastic and igneous rocks includes: potassic, sericitic, sodic-calcic, calcic, and potassic-calcic alteration. Two types of skarn occur in the district. Fortitude-type skarns replace carbonate rocks and consist of hedenbergite + diopside + andradite + pyrrhotite with Au+Cu, mineralization whereas Labrador-type, potassic-calcic and calcic-ferric alteration and skarns replace feldspathic, silicic, and carbonate rocks, respectively, and consist of andradite + diopside + hematite + magnetite with Au+Cu mineralization. Taken together, the volume and distribution of these assemblages, along with fluid inclusion data, hydrogen isotope compositions, and petrologic considerations indicate two fluid sources: magmatic fluids generated potassic, sericitic, and Fortitude-type skarns, and moderately saline, non-magmatic fluids produced Na-Ca(-K) alteration mineral assemblages and Labrador-type skarns. Those features inferred to be magmatic-hydrothermal are restricted in their extent and related to particular intrusive phases, whereas the Na-Ca(-K) alteration features typically extend over several kilometers and are not correlated with any particular intrusive phase. Observations within the Battle Mountain district and regionally indicate that a variety of fluids – magmatic and non-magmatic – played significant roles in Eocene intrusion-centered hydrothermal systems. Consequently both fluid types need to be considered in interpreting Cenozoic metallogeny in the northern Great Basin.
|
86 |
Essays in Contest Theory:Simeonov, Dimitar January 2020 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Hideo Konishi / The majority of this work focuses on the theoretical analysis of collective action, group efficiency, and incentive mechanisms in team contests where individual outlays of heterogeneous agents are not observable. The reward allocation within the group is instead dependent on observable worker characteristics, modeled as individual abilities, as well as on the observable level of aggregate output. I study the incentives for free-riding and the group-size paradox under a very general set of intra-team allocation rules. I further derive the optimal allocation mechanism which rewards agents according to a general-logit specification based on their relative ability. I derive conditions under which a team's performance is most sensitive to the ability of its highest-skill members, while at the same time higher spread in the distribution of ability has a positive effect on group output. In the final chapter I shift attention to the problem of optimal player order choice in dynamic pairwise team battles. I show that even if player order choice is conducted endogenously and sequentially after observing the outcomes of earlier rounds, then complete randomization over remaining agents is always a subgame perfect equilibrium. The zero-sum nature of these type of contests implies that expected payoffs for each team are independent of whether the contest matching pairs are determined endogenously and sequentially or announced before the start of the game. In both cases the ex-ante payoffs are equivalent to those when an independent contest organizer randomly draws the matches. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Economics.
|
87 |
Battle at Bristol: What Did We Learn from College Football’s Biggest Event?Greene, Amanda, Smith, Natalie L., Russell, Kylie 13 April 2017 (has links)
No description available.
|
88 |
The anatomy of the British battle cruiser and British naval policy, 1904-1920 /Drolet, Marc, 1968- January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
|
89 |
THE MILLENNIAL BINDING OF SATAN: A LINGUISTIC APPROACH TO REVELATION 19:11—20:6Kurschner, Alan E. January 2019 (has links)
This study proposes that Revelation 19:11-21 and 20:1-6 are cohesively linked
with each other. The major implication for this is that the millennial binding of Satan
(20:1-3) and the millennial vindication of the saints (20:4-6) are consequent effects of
Christ’s victory at the eschatological battle (19:11-21). Christ’s Parousia then is the
occasion for the punishment of the millennial binding of Satan and the reward of the
coterminous millennial reign of the saints. Scholars who disconnect 20:1-6 from 19:11—
21 recapitulate the millennial binding of Satan and the vindication of the saints as the
interadvent period. Consequently, this non-sequential interpretation breaks John's
unified, cohesive message by creating a new semantic environment at 20:1. The
millennial contextual setting, however, does not begin at the chapter break, where many
interpreters inevitably place it. Rather than disrupting the cohesion by building a
semantic wall between 19:11-21 and 20:1-6, John chooses linguistic resources that
signal a semantic thread of continuity. This study models Halliday and Hasan's Systemic
Functional Linguistics (SFL) theory of cohesion, a robust linguistic theoretical
framework for discourse analysis. The analysis focuses on two types of textual meanings
within SFL. The first type, adapted in this study for Hellenistic Greek, is Ruqaiya Hasan’s Cohesive Harmony Analysis (CHA), a tool that identifies semantic relations
such as cohesive devices as ties, cohesive chains, and chain interactions. This model
quantifiably measures the degree of a reader’s perception of coherence in Rev 19:11—
20:6. The second type oftextual meaning devoted to the latter half ofthe study is the
discourse analytical tool ofInformation Flow (IF). It is an exegetical tool that analyzes a
further dimension of cohesion concerned with thematization and prominence, locating
lexicogrammatical resources in the ranks of clause, sentence, paragraph, section, and the
broader co-text of the discourse, in this case, the book of Revelation. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
|
90 |
Louisiana's Unique Conditions and Andrew Jackson's Martial Law Declaration, 1814-1815Jesko, Howard 10 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0289 seconds