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Late Maritime Woodland (Ceramic) and Paleoindian end scrapers : stone tool technology /Dickinson, Pam January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.) in Quaternary Studies--University of Maine, 2001. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 102-116).
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Dairy herd management practices and farm productivity in Quebec and New Brunswick dairy herds.Bowman, John Stuart Thomas January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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The development of urban form through planning administration with special reference to Oromocto, N.B.Caragianis, Evanthia M. January 1958 (has links)
Through the centuries, urban form has developed in both a planned and a spontaneous way. In the Greek, Roman, Renaissance and Baroque periods there were some planned towns but the majority developed without following a predetermined pattern. [...]
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NB Power and Historical Institutionalism: Why the People of New Brunswick Could Not Accept the SaleBourque, Angelle 25 August 2011 (has links)
Why did the people of New Brunswick fail to accept the agreement between the governments of New Brunswick and Québec to sell NB Power to Hydro-Québec? This research seeks to answer that question by examining the arguments both for and against the proposed sale of NB Power using historical institutionalism. It determines that NB Power is on two concurrent paths that are linked, yet distinct. This research then determines that the agreement to sell NB Power was a critical juncture that failed, since it was never finalized, but succeeded in creating a new momentum for change in New Brunswick.
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Feasibility Of Left Side Rumble Strips On Rural Arterial Freeways In New BunswickMulkern, Matthew 01 May 2012 (has links)
This study evaluated the feasibility of adding rumble strips
to the left side of rural freeways in New Brunswick. A
review of 940 collisions that occurred on Route 2 and Route
95 was supplemented with an analysis of 547 incidents that
occurred on the Brun-Way owned and operated sections of
Route 2 and Route 95.
The study revealed that despite significantly more traffic
travelling in the right lane, a larger number of ROR crashes
occurred to the left side. Four Crash Modification Factors
(CMF’s) ranging from 0.87 to 0.96 were developed in order to
estimate the potential benefit of left side rumble strip installation. A left side specific CMF of 0.95 was developed for all crashes and a CMF of 0.93 was developed for Fatal
and Injury (FI) crashes. A benefit-cost analysis revealed that the B/C ratio of the installation of left side rumble strips ranged from 7.9 to 9.4.
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The professionalization of nursing : a study of the changing entry to practice requirements in New BrunswickRhéaume, Ann. January 1998 (has links)
This study is about the professionalization of nursing. Nursing leaders at the national level and in New Brunswick initiated a new education policy requiring the baccalaureate degree as entry to practice. The new education policy would eliminate the diploma programs which are two to three years in length in favour of the baccalaureate degree which is four years in length. This study demonstrates that the case of upgrading nurse education was a carefully planned event requiring the acceptance of groups within nursing and the government, and was not part of the occupation's natural evolution. / Publicly, nursing leaders argued that the increase in work complexity necessitates a more qualified and educated workforce. Less publicized reasons for the change were the desire to be perceived as a profession, the hope for more respect from other occupations, increased autonomy, and increased financial rewards. There was, as well, the desire to expand nursing tasks which would address the belief that traditional, valued nursing tasks were being taken on by other health care workers. / Four competing theoretical perspectives were used to interpret the education change in nursing: functionalist, human capital theory, the interactionist perspective, and conflict theory. The findings from this study support the explanatory power of both the interactionist perspective and conflict theory. The interactionist perspective, focusing on intra-occupational processes, suggests that the conflict between the professional nursing association in New Brunswick, who initiated the education policy change, and the provincial nursing union, who vehemently opposed the policy change, stems partially from differences in organizational memberships, beliefs about nursing roles and broader occupational goals. Conflict theory (in particular closure theory), describes how occupations pursuing a 'professional project' may define membership in such a way to exclude other subordinate groups (e.g. the use of credentials). Thus, the baccalaureate entry to practice may be interpreted as an exclusionary strategy which will close off opportunities to diploma nurses in an attempt to enhance nursing's status. In order to achieve this goal, nursing leaders needed the support of the provincial government.
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A biosystematic study of some species of birch (Betula) in eastern Canada /Glashan, Alexandra. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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Dairy herd management practices and farm productivity in Quebec and New Brunswick dairy herds.Bowman, John Stuart Thomas January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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The professionalization of nursing : a study of the changing entry to practice requirements in New BrunswickRhéaume, Ann. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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The development of urban form through planning administration with special reference to Oromocto, N.B.Caragianis, Evanthia M. January 1958 (has links)
No description available.
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