Spelling suggestions: "subject:"claim"" "subject:"clade""
1 |
Site activities and subsistence at Labras Lake a microwear study and contextual investigation of the Late Archaic, Late Woodland, and Mississippian components of a bluff-base site in St. Clair County, Illinois /Yerkes, Richard Wilfred, January 1984 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1984. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 335-362).
|
2 |
Equipping select local church leaders to increase missions giving by valuing and promoting the Cooperative ProgramChandler, Ben, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2006. / "December 1, 2006" Includes bibliographical references (l. 213-217 )
|
3 |
Equipping select local church leaders to increase missions giving by valuing and promoting the Cooperative programChandler, Ben, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2006. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 213-217 )
|
4 |
Hendrick Goltzius and the Netherlandish Chiaroscuro Woodcut /Bialler, Nancy Ann. January 1987 (has links)
Th. Ph. D.--History of art--New Haven (Conn.)--Yale University, 1983. / Bibliogr. p. 268-270.
|
5 |
Helium Isotope Dating of Pore Water in the St. Clair BasinHatch, David 04 1900 (has links)
<p> An age of approximately 55K years was found for the St.
Clair basin clays using helium isotope dating. This is
about 5 times larger than the date obtained from the
more accepted carbon-14 method and from other
geological evidence. Diffusion of helium from crustal
rocks against a flow of approximately 0.03-0.05 cm a· '
is the primary reason for this discrepancy. Mixing of
the groundwater with a meteoric component has an
opposite effect tending to lower the helium age. </p> / Thesis / Bachelor of Science (BSc)
|
6 |
Arthur St. Clair and the Struggle For Power in the Old Northwest, 1763-1803Kopper, Kevin Katrick 20 April 2005 (has links)
No description available.
|
7 |
La poursuite au cinéma : pérennité d’une forme esthétique / The chasing in movies : perenity of an aesthetic formMarcel, Philippe 26 June 2009 (has links)
La poursuite est une figure qui accompagne le cinéma depuis ses débuts jusqu’à en devenir, presque, la forme archétypale. Elle a constitué le principal mode de linéarisation des formes courtes du cinéma des premiers temps et reste un mode habituel de structuration des grands récits. Présence et absence de poursuites, existence sous des formes apparentées telles que la filature ou la déambulation, sont des éléments de caractérisation des films particulièrement intéressants. Leurs conditions d’élaboration et de réception sont à replacer dans leur contexte et à étudier dans une perspective d’une histoire des formes. Observer la place qui est donnée à la poursuite par quatre réalisateurs français, d’époques différentes, Louis Feuillade, René Clair, Jean-Pierre Melville et Philippe de Broca, conduit à mettre en évidence sa pérennité. L’analyse comparée de sa mise en scène chez ces cinéastes que tout, parfois, semble opposer, permet d’utiliser la poursuite comme un critère de distinction pour mettre en évidence la valeur symbolique et la signification intrinsèque de cette figure, tant comme forme esthétique que comme forme anthropologique. / The Notion of Chasing has been part of cinema life from the very beginning, so much so that it has almost become an archetypal form. It was the principal method of moving the plot forward in short films when cinema began and remained a normal method of structure for feature-films. The presence, or absence of chasing whether in a related form such as tailing someone or on foot, is an extremly interesting element of film characterisation. The condition of its elaboration and of reception must be put back into context and studied with the perspective of the history of the form. Studying the importance given to chasing by four French film directors of different eras, Louis Feuillade, René Clair, Jean-Pierre Melville et Philippe de Broca, will bring out the form’s perennity. Likewise comparing the director’s management of such scenes, especially since these four can on occasion seem like opposites, enables one to use chasing as an differentiating criteria that is particulary important when bringing out the value, both symbolic and intrinsic, of this form as an aesthetic and anthropological form.
|
8 |
Seismic exploration methods for hydrothermal dolomite reservoirs : a case study of the Trenton-Black River GroupsOgiesoba, Osareni Christopher. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
9 |
Four Indian-Related Novels by Lucia St. Clair RobsonHall, Kenneth Estes 01 January 2012 (has links)
Excerpt: Lucia St. Clair Robson began publishing historical novels in 1982 with Ride the Wind, which draws on the history of the Comanches, and has continued to work in the field of historical fiction. Four of her novels focus closely on historical personages: Ride the Wind (Cynthia Ann Parker and Quanah Parker); Light a Distant Fire (Osceola of the Seminoles); Walk in My Soul (Tiana Rogers of the Cherokee and Sam Houston); and Ghost Warrior(Lozen of the Chiricahua Apache).
|
10 |
Negotiating the Soundtrack: Music in Early Sound Film in the U.S. and France, 1926-1934Lewis, Hannah Rose January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines music's role in cinema in the early years of synchronized sound film in the United States and France. Working against the historical and technological determinism that often plagues narratives of the transition to sound, I investigate the myriad ways in which directors, producers, and composers approached the new technology. Films acted as artistic manifestoes on the new technology and its aesthetic potential as filmmakers experimented with the musical soundtrack. Through multi-site archival research and close analyses of films and their music, I point to the heterogeneity of film music practices during synchronized sound's nascent years, considering early sound films as sites of aesthetic contestation and negotiation. / Music
|
Page generated in 0.0337 seconds