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Episcopal careers and administration in late twelfth-century England : the bishops of Bath 1174-1205Marriott, Charles January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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The use of capacitance-resistance models to optimize injection allocation and well location in water floodsWeber, Daniel Brent 23 October 2009 (has links)
Reservoir management strategies traditionally attempt to combine and balance
complex geophysical, petrophysical, thermodynamic and economic factors to determine
an optimal method to recover hydrocarbons from a given reservoir. Reservoir simulators
have traditionally been too large and run times too long to allow for rigorous solution in
conjunction with an optimization algorithm. It has also proven very difficult to marry an
optimizer with the large set of nonlinear partial differential equations required for
accurate reservoir simulation.
A simple capacitance-resistance model (CRM) that characterizes the connectivity
between injection and production wells can determine an injection scheme maximizes the
value of the reservoir asset. Model parameters are identified using linear and nonlinear
regression. The model is then used together with a nonlinear optimization algorithm to
compute a set of future injection rates which maximize discounted net profit. This
research demonstrates that this simple dynamic model provides an excellent match to
historic data. Based on three case studies examining actual reservoirs, the optimal injection schemes based on the capacitance-resistive model yield a predicted increase in
hydrocarbon recovery of up to 60% over the extrapolated exponential historic decline.
An advantage of using a simple model is its ability to describe large reservoirs in
a straightforward way with computation times that are short to moderate. However,
applying the CRM to large reservoirs with many wells presents several new challenges.
Reservoirs with hundreds of wells have longer production histories – new wells are
created, wells are shut in for varying periods of time and production wells are converted
to injection wells. Additionally, ensuring that the production data to which the CRM is
fit are free from contamination or corruption is important. Several modeling techniques
and heuristics are presented that provide a simple, accurate reservoir model that can be
used to optimize the value of the reservoir over future time periods.
In addition to optimizing reservoir performance by allocating injection, this
research presents a few methods that use the CRM to find optimal well locations for new
injectors. These algorithms are still in their infancy and represent the best ideas for future research. / text
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Well Water Testing and Understanding the ResultsFarrell-Poe, Kitt, Jones-McLean, Lisa, McLean, Scott 04 1900 (has links)
6 pp. / 1. Drinking Water Wells; 2. Private Water Well Components; 3. Do Deeper Wells Mean Better Water; 4. Maintaining Your Private Well Water System; 5. Private Well Protection; 6. Well Water Testing and Understanding the Results; 7. Obtaining a Water Sample for Bacterial Analysis; 8. Microorganisms in Private Water Wells; 9. Lead in Private Water Wells; 10. Nitrate in Private Water Wells; 11.Arsenic in Private Water Wells; 12. Matching Drinking Water Quality Problems to Treatment Methods; 13. Commonly Available Home Water Treatment Systems; 14. Hard Water: To Soften or Not to Soften; 15. Shock Chlorination of Private Water Wells / This fact sheet is one in a series of fifteen for private water well owners. The one- to four-page fact sheets will be assembled into a two-pocket folder entitled Private Well Owners Guide. The titles will also be a part of the Changing Rural Landscapes project whose goal is to educate exurban, small acreage residents. The authors have made every effort to align the fact sheets with the proposed Arizona Cooperative Extension booklet An Arizona Well Owners Guide to Water Sources, Quality, Sources, Testing, Treatment, and Well Maintenance by Artiola and Uhlman. The private well owner project was funded by both the University of Arizonas Water Sustainability Program-Technology and Research Initiative Fund and the USDA-CSREES Region 9 Water Quality Program.
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Matching Drinking Water Quality Problems to Treatment MethodsFarrell-Poe, Kitt, Jones-McLean, Lisa, McLean, Scott 04 1900 (has links)
6 pp. / 1. Drinking Water Wells; 2. Private Water Well Components; 3. Do Deeper Wells Mean Better Water; 4. Maintaining Your Private Well Water System; 5. Private Well Protection; 6. Well Water Testing and Understanding the Results; 7. Obtaining a Water Sample for Bacterial Analysis; 8. Microorganisms in Private Water Wells; 9. Lead in Private Water Wells; 10. Nitrate in Private Water Wells; 11.Arsenic in Private Water Wells; 12. Matching Drinking Water Quality Problems to Treatment Methods; 13. Commonly Available Home Water Treatment Systems; 14. Hard Water: To Soften or Not to Soften; 15. Shock Chlorination of Private Water Wells / This fact sheet is one in a series of fifteen for private water well owners. The one- to four-page fact sheets will be assembled into a two-pocket folder entitled Private Well Owners Guide. The titles will also be a part of the Changing Rural Landscapes project whose goal is to educate exurban, small acreage residents. The authors have made every effort to align the fact sheets with the proposed Arizona Cooperative Extension booklet An Arizona Well Owners Guide to Water Sources, Quality, Testing, Treatment, and Well Maintenance by Artiola and Uhlman. The private well owner project was funded by both the University of Arizonas Water Sustainability Program-Technology and Research Initiative Fund and the USDA-CSREES Region 9 Water Quality Program.
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Nitrate Contamination Potential in Arizona Groundwater: Implications for Drinking Water WellsUhlman, Kristine, Artiola, Janick 07 1900 (has links)
4 pp. / This fact sheet is to be taken from research conducted by Uhlman and Rahman and published on the WRRC web site as: "Predicting Ground Water Vulnerability to Nitrate in Arizona". Funded by TRIF and peer reviewed by ADEQ. It also follows on "Arizona Well Owner's Guide to Water Supply" and also "Arizona Drinking Water Well Contaminants" (part 1 already submitted, part 2 in process). / Arizona's arid environment and aquifer types allow for the persistence of nitrate contamination in ground water. Agricultural practices and the prevalence of septic systems contributes to this water quality concern, resulting in nitrate exceeding the EPA Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) in several locations across the state. Working with known nitrate concentrations in 6,800 wells across the state, this fact sheet presents maps showing the probability of nitrate contamination of ground water exceeding the MCL. The importance of monitoring your domestic water supply well for nitrate is emphasized.
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Assessment controls on reservoir performance and the affects of granulation seam mechanics in the Bredasdorp Basin, South Africa.Schalkwyk, Hugh Je-Marco January 2006 (has links)
<p>The Bredasdorp Basin is one of the largest hydrocarbon producing blocks within Southern Africa. The E-M field is situated approximate 50 km west from the FA platform and was brought into commission due to the potential hydrocarbons it may hold. If this field is brought up to full producing capability it will extend the lifespan of the refining station in Mosselbay, situated on the south coast of South Africa, by approximately 8 to 10 years. An unexpected pressure drop within the E-M field caused the suite not to perform optimally and thus further analysis was imminent to assess and alleviate the predicament. The first step within the project was to determine what might have cause the pressure drop and thus we had to go back to cores drilled by Soekor now known as Petroleum South Africa, in the early 1980&rsquo / s.</p>
<p><br>
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</br>Analyses of the cores exposed a high presence of granulation seams. The granulation seams were mainly subjected within sand units within the cores. This was caused by rolling of sand grains over one another rearranging themselves due to pressure exerted through compaction and faulting, creating seal like fractures within the sand. These fractures caused these sand units to compartmentalize and prohibit flow from one on block to the next. With advance inquiry it was discovered that there was a shale unit situated within the reservoir dividing the reservoir into two main compartments. At this point it was determined to use Petrel which is windows based software for 3D visualization with a user interface based on the Windows Microsoft standards. This is easy as well as user friendly software thus the choice to go with it. The software uses shared earth modeling tool bringing about reservoir disciplines trough common data modelling. This is one of the best modelling applications in the available and it was for this reason that it was chosen to apply within the given aspects of the project A lack of data was available to model the granulation seams but with the data acquired during the core analyses it was possible to model the shale unit and factor in the influences of the granulation seams to asses the extent of compartmentalization. The core revealed a thick shale layer dividing the reservoir within two sections which was not previously noted. This shale layer act as a buffer/barrier restricting flow from the bottom to the top halve of the reservoir. This layer is thickest at the crest of the 10km² / domal closure and thins toward the confines of the E-M suite. Small incisions, visible within the 3 dimensional models could serve as a guide for possible re-entry points for future drilling. These incisions which were formed through Lowstand and Highstand systems tracts with the rise and fall of the sea level. The Bredasdorp Basin consists mainly of tilting half graben structures that formed through rifting with the break-up of Gondwanaland. The model also revealed that these faults segregate the reservoir further creating bigger compartments. The reservoir is highly compartmentalized which will explain the pressure loss within the E-M suite. The production well was drilled within one of these compartments and when the confining pressure was relieved the pressure dropped and the production decrease. As recommendation, additional wells are required to appraise the E-M structure and determine to what extent the granulation seems has affected fluid flow as well as the degree of sedimentation that could impede fluid flow. There are areas still containing untapped resources thus the recommendation for extra wells.</p>
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Modernism and the politics of time : time and history in the work of H.G. Wells, D.H. Lawrence and Virginia WoolfShackleton, David January 2014 (has links)
This thesis argues for a revised understanding of time in modernist literature. It challenges the longstanding critical tradition that has used the French philosopher Henri Bergson's distinction between clock-time and durée to explicate time in the modernist novel. To do so, it replaces Stephen Kern's influential understanding of modernity as characterized by the solidification of a homogenous clock-time, with Peter Osborne’s notion of modernity as structured by a competing range of temporalizations of history. The following chapters then read the fictional and historical writings of H. G. Wells, D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf alongside such a conception of modernity, and show that all these writers explored different versions of historical time. Wells explored geological time in The Time Machine (1895) and An Outline of History (1920), Lawrence adapted Friedrich Nietzsche's thought of eternal recurrence in Women in Love (1920), Movements in European History (1921) and Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928), and Woolf imagined an aeviternal historical continuity and a phenomenological historical time in Between the Acts (1941). By addressing historical time, this thesis enables a reassessment of the politics of modernist time. It challenges the view that the purported modernist exploration of a Bergsonian private time constitutes an asocial and ahistorical retreat from the political. Rather, by transferring Osborne's notion of a 'politics of time' to the literary sphere, this study argues that the competing configurations of politically-charged historical time in literary modernism, form the analogue of the competing versions of such a time within modernity, emblematized by the contrasting accounts of historical time of Martin Heidegger and Walter Benjamin.
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The aeroplane as a modernist symbol : aviation in the works of H.G. Wells, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, and John Dos PassosHaji Amran, Rinni Marliyana January 2015 (has links)
This thesis investigates the rise of aviation and its influence on modernist literature in the first half of the twentieth century, arguing that the emergence of heavier-than-air flight facilitated experimentation and innovation in modernist writing in order to capture the new experience of flight and its impact on the modern world. Previous critical discussions largely focus on militarist and nationalist ideas and beliefs regarding the uses of the aeroplane, and in doing so overlook the diversity of attitudes and approaches towards aviation that had greater influence on modernist thought. Through a historicist reading of a selection of modernist texts, this study extends scholarly debates by linking alternative views of aviation and modernist literary and narrative experimentation. I begin my study by exploring how H.G. Wells's calls for the establishment of a world government (necessitated by the emergence of aviation) led to an increasingly assertive and urgent tone in his later writings. His works serve as a useful starting point to read the more experimental, modernist prose forms that follow in his wake. While Wells's texts were affected on a pragmatic level, those of the modernists were affected in a more imaginative, perceptual, and sensory way, which highlights the deeper extent to which aviation influenced modernist thought. For Virginia Woolf, the all-encompassing aerial view offered a new way of seeing the connections between living things, leading to an expanded narrative scope in her later writings. For William Faulkner, flight as aerial performance and spectacle was a liberating experience and became a metaphor for escape from an increasingly capitalistic and creativity-deprived world. John Dos Passos, in contrast, saw the effects of air travel as harmful to the human senses and perceptions of the world around, leading him to incorporate aspects of flight into his fast-paced, multi-modal narratives in order to convey and critique the disorienting and alienating experience of flight. Collectively, these chapters show that as much as the aeroplane was capable of causing mass destruction, it was also constructive in the way that it enabled these new ways of thinking, and it is this complex and paradoxical nature, this thesis proposes, that makes the aeroplane an important modernist symbol.
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Génération et détection optique d'ondes de spin dans les puits quantiques CdMnTe dopés n / Optical generation and detection of spin waves in n doped CdMnTe quantum wellBarate, Philippe 13 December 2010 (has links)
Ce manuscrit présente une étude sur les ondes de spin de vecteur d'onde nul par le moyen de la rotation Kerr résolue en temps. Les ondes de spin sont générées dans un puits quantique CdMnTe dopé n, ce qui introduit de la complexité dans le système. Le résultat principal de cette étude est l'apparition d'un anticroisement de mode d'excitation du gaz d'électron appelé onde de spin et du mode d'excitation des spins localisés sur les sites des ions magnétiques. Cet effet est provoqué par le couplage des deux systèmes de spin par l'interaction d'échange. On accède alors à la mesure de la polarisation du gaz bidimensionnel d'électrons qui ce compare très bien à la théorie tenant compte de l'augmentation de la polarisation par les effets à N-corps. Une partie de ce manuscrit est consacré à la mise en place expérimentale de la rotation Kerr résolue en temps. On étudie ensuite l'onde de spin pour les champs magnétiques hors résonance. On montre que le temps de relaxation de l'onde n'est pas encore complètement compris, même si nous décrivons un modèle de relaxation inhomogène. Puis nous étudions finalement la résonance où nous montrons que la description habituelle en champs moyen ne convient pas, et nous proposons un modèle au delà de cette approximation qui permet une mesure de la polarisation du gaz bidimensionnel d'électrons en accord avec la théorie. / This manuscript present a study of nul wave vector spin flip waves by time resolved Kerr rotation. Spin flip waves are generated in a n doped CdMnTe quantum well, increasing the complexity of the system. The main result of this study is the apparition of an anticrossing between the excitation mode of the electron gaz called spin flip wave and the excitation mode of localized spin on magnetic ions. This effect is caused by the coupling of the two spin sytem by the exchange interaction. We acces then to the gaz spin polarization which is compared to theorie explaining the enhancement of the polarization by many-body effects. A part of this manuscript is dedicated to the experimental set-up of the time resolved Kerr rotation. Next, we study the spin flip wave for magnetic field below the resonance. We show that the relaxation time of the spin wave is not well understand even if we describe a model of inhomogeneous relaxation. Finally we study the resonance and we show that the mean field description don't work and we propose a model beyond the mean field which allow a measurement of the spin polarization of electron gas in agreement with the theorie.
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Relationship of Social Concepts and Personality in the Third Grade of Travis Elementary School, Mineral Wells, TexasChristiansen, Anna Elizabeth 08 1900 (has links)
The value of proper concepts and an adjustable or adaptable personality are teaching factors to be considered in present-day education. The education for richer living must be through the main institutions of learning, the schools.
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