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Structural studies of transformation and precipitation, especially in potassium nitrate.Odlyha, Marianne. January 1970 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Sc.) -- University of Adelaide, Dept. of Physical and Inorganic Chemistry, 1971.
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Análisis de las estrategias de manipulación nacionalistas y emocionales en la cobertura de las noticias de la campaña terrestre (1880 – 1881) de la Guerra del Guano y el Salitre (1879 – 1883) publicadas en el semanario La Ilustración española y americanaJuárez Toro, José Alonso 06 December 2021 (has links)
La investigación se propone analizar las estrategias de manipulación presentes en la cobertura de la etapa terrestre (1880 - 1881) de la Guerra del Guano y el Salitre (1879 - 1883) publicadas en el semanario La Ilustración española y americana. Para ello, se identifican las estrategias discursivas utilizadas por el medio, basándose en el nexo histórico y cultural que se tenía con los países protagonistas del conflicto (Chile, Perú y Bolivia) al ser estos sus ex colonias, aprovechando el contexto bélico que conlleva una carga emocional negativa debido a la sensación de peligro. El principal objetivo de este trabajo consiste en identificar, catalogar y analizar las características de las estrategias discursivas utilizadas en la narración de esta guerra, siendo una de las primeras investigaciones que abarca el cómo fue cubierto por la prensa extranjera uno de los conflictos más recordados en la historia del país. / The research aims to analyze the manipulation strategies present in the coverage of the terrestrial stage (1880-1881) of the Guano and Saltpeter War (1879-1883) published in the weekly La Ilustracion española y americana. For this, the discursive strategies used by the medium are identified, property in the historical and cultural nexus that was had with the countries leading the conflict (Chile, Peru and Bolivia) as these are their former colonies, taking advantage of the warlike context that entails a negative emotional charge due to the feeling of danger. The main objective of this work is to identify, catalog and analyze the characteristics of the discursive strategies used in the narration of this war, being one of the first investigations that covers how one of the most remembered conflicts in the world was covered by the foreign press. the history of the country. / Tesis
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"Deep" South: Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, and Environmental Knowledge, 1800-1974Warrick, Alyssa Diane 08 December 2017 (has links)
Mammoth Cave in Kentucky is the longest known cave in the world. This dissertation examines the history of how scientists and non-scientists alike contributed to a growing body of knowledge about Mammoth Cave and how that knowledge in turn affected land use decisions in the surrounding neighborhood. During the nineteenth century visitors traveled through Mammoth Cave along with their guides, gaining knowledge of the cave by using their senses and spreading that knowledge through travel narratives. After the Civil War, cave guides, now free men who chose to stay in the neighborhood, used the cave as a way to build and support their community. New technologies and new visitors reconstructed the Mammoth Cave experience. Competing knowledge of locals and science-minded individuals, new technologies to spread the cave experience, and a growing tourism industry in America spurred the Kentucky Cave Wars during the late-nineteenth century. In the twentieth century, cutthroat competition between caves crystallized support for a national park at Mammoth Cave. Park promoters met resistance. Cave owners’ knowledge of what they owned underground helped them resist condemnation. Those affected by the coming of the national park made their protests known on the landscape, in newspapers, and in courtrooms. The introduction of New Deal workers, primarily the Civilian Conservation Corps, at Mammoth Cave and a skeleton staff of National Park Service officials faced antagonism from the local community. Important discoveries inside Mammoth Cave hastened the park’s creation, but not without lingering bitterness that would affect later preservation efforts. The inability of the park promoters to acquire two caves around Mammoth Cave was a failure for the national park campaign but a boon for exploration. The postwar period saw returning veterans and their families swarming national parks. While the parking lots at Mammoth Cave grew crowded and the Park Service attempted to balance preservation and development for the enjoyment of the visiting public, underground explorers were pushing the cave’s known extent to new lengths. This new knowledge inspired a new generation of environmentalists and preservationists to use the Wilderness Act to advocate for a cave wilderness designation at Mammoth Cave National Park.
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