Early History (early + history)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


New Light on the Early History of the Theatre in Shoreditch [with texts]

ENGLISH LITERARY RENAISSANCE, Issue 3 2006
DAVID MATEER
First page of article [source]


Early History and Evolution of Nutrition Science in the United States of America

FAMILY & CONSUMER SCIENCES RESEARCH JOURNAL, Issue 2 2009
Deanna L. Pucciarelli
Nutrition Science in the 21st century dates back to at least before the 5th century BCE. Whereas early theories on the relationship between food and health outcomes were founded on philosophical thought or divine intervention, today's nutritionists source their advice from empirical evidence. This essay delineates and reconstructs nutrition science as the discipline evolves and progresses through scientific stages of change in early North America. [source]


Inelastic response spectrum: Early history

EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING AND STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS, Issue 8 2008
Rafael Riddell
Abstract Detailing the time period from, roughly, 1950 through 1980, this Historical Note documents the development of the initial concept of the inelastic response spectrum and how it evolved to become the basis for rational procedures for earthquake-resistant design, which are used even today. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Women in special hospitals: understanding the presenting behaviour of women diagnosed with borderline personality disorder

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC & MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, Issue 4 2001
T. M. Wilkins RMNH Ad.Dip MA
This paper critically examines the development of the concept of borderline personality disorder (BPD) in terms of the assumed centrality of abnormal early environments and abusive relationships. It is suggested that if BPD is conceptualized as an expression of past experiences in adult life, information regarding early histories can assist in ,making sense' of later behaviour. The aim of this review therefore is to explore how histories of women diagnosed as BPD, within a High Secure Psychiatric Hospital, may facilitate an interpretation of the ,adaptive' nature of presenting ,symptomology'. Case note material is utilized to gain insight into specific aspects of childhood experiences that have been documented, and are thus deemed significant. These findings support the perception that the role of the early environment and associated relationships are significant within written accounts of women diagnosed as having BPD. By exploring the links between trauma and BPD, this article suggests that an understanding of the effects of trauma and the importance of relationships can offer a way forward for self-reflection and future care. [source]


The cranial morphology of Kayentachelys, an Early Jurassic cryptodire, and the early history of turtles

ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 3 2010
Eugene S. Gaffney
Abstract Gaffney, E.S. and Jenkins, F.A., Jr. 2010. The cranial morphology of Kayentachelys, an Early Jurassic cryptodire, and the early history of turtles. , Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 91: 335,368 The skull morphology of Kayentachelys aprixGaffney et al., 1987, a turtle from the Early Jurassic Kayenta Fm of northern Arizona, demonstrates the presence of cryptodiran synapomorphies in agreement with Gaffney et al. (1987, 1991, 2007), and contrary to the conclusions of Sterli and Joyce (2007), Joyce (2007), Sterli (2008), and Anquetin et al. (2008). Specific characters found in Kayentachelys and diagnostic of cryptodires include the processus trochlearis oticum, the curved processus pterygoideus externus with a vertical plate, and the prefrontal,vomer contact, which are confirmed as absent in the outgroups, specifically the Late Triassic Proganochelys. The Joyce (2007) analysis suffers from the reduction of the signal from skull characters, with a consequently greater reliance on shell characters, resulting in pleurodires being resolved at various positions within the cryptodires. Kayentachelys reveals what a primitive cryptodire would be expected to look like: a combination of primitive and derived characters, with the fewer derived characters providing the best test of its relationships to other turtles. Although incompletely known, the Mid-Late Jurassic Condorchelys, Heckeremys, and Eileanchelys may be early cryptodires close to Kayentachelys. We confirm the Late Triassic Proterochersis as a pleurodire, dating the pleurodire,cryptodire split as Late Triassic or earlier. [source]


Prediction of sea surface temperature from the global historical climatology network data

ENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 3 2004
Samuel S. P. Shen
Abstract This article describes a spatial prediction method that predicts the monthly sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly field from the land only data. The land data are from the Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCN). The prediction period is 1880,1999 and the prediction ocean domain extends from 60°S to 60°N with a spatial resolution 5°×5°. The prediction method is a regression over the basis of empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs). The EOFs are computed from the following data sets: (a) the Climate Prediction Center's optimally interpolated sea surface temperature (OI/SST) data (1982,1999); (b) the National Climatic Data Center's blended product of land-surface air temperature (1992,1999) produced from combining the Special Satellite Microwave Imager and GHCN; and (c) the National Centers for Environmental Prediction/National Center for Atmospheric Research Reanalysis data (1982,1999). The optimal prediction method minimizes the first- M -mode mean square error between the true and predicted anomalies over both land and ocean. In the optimization process, the data errors of the GHCN boxes are used, and their contribution to the prediction error is taken into account. The area-averaged root mean square error of prediction is calculated. Numerical experiments demonstrate that this EOF prediction method can accurately recover the global SST anomalies during some circulation patterns and add value to the SST bias correction in the early history of SST observations and the validation of general circulation models. Our results show that (i) the land only data can accurately predict the SST anomaly in the El Nino months when the temperature anomaly structure has very large correlation scales, and (ii) the predictions for La Nina, neutral, or transient months require more EOF modes because of the presence of the small scale structures in the anomaly field. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Radical Opinion in an Age of Reform: Thomas Perronet Thompson and the Westminster Review

HISTORY, Issue 281 2001
Michael J. Turner
Historians have long been interested in the growth of the nineteenth-century political press, and many commentators recognize the instrumentality of newspapers, pamphlets, prints and publications of all kinds in the development of radical opinion and popular participation in politics. This article is offered as a contribution to continuing debates about the links between radicalism and the press. Its purpose is to examine the establishment and early history of the Westminster Review, the leading radical periodical of the early nineteenth century. Special attention will be paid to the role of Thomas Perronet Thompson (1783-1869), who was associated with the review for several years as owner, editor and contributor. This article will demonstrate the importance of Thompson's involvement with the Westminster Review with reference to its politics, reputation, influence, management and status. Personal relationships which had a bearing on the review's early history - particularly those between Thompson, Jeremy Bentham, John Bowring and the Mills - will be examined, and there will also be discussion of editorial processes, journalistic standards, business rivalry, the nature of the Westminster Review's content, and its conflict with the Whig Edinburgh Review. [source]


Constraints on the early metamorphic evolution of Broken Hill, Australia, from in situ U-Pb dating and REE geochemistry of monazite

JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
C. R. M. McFARLANE
Abstract The Broken Hill Pb-Zn deposit, New South Wales Australia, is hosted in granulite facies gneisses of the Southern Curnamona Province (SCP) that have long been known to record a polydeformational and polymetamorphic history. The details of this potentially prolonged tectonothermal history have remained poorly understood because of a historical emphasis on conventional (i.e. grain mount) U-Pb zircon geochronology to reveal details of the sedimentary, magmatic and metamorphic history of the rock that crops out in the vicinity of the city of Broken Hill. An alternative approach to unravelling the metamorphic history of the granulite facies gneisses in and around Broken Hill is to date accessory minerals, such as monazite, that participate in sub-solidus metamorphic reactions. We have taken advantage of the high spatial resolution and high sensitivity afforded by SHRIMP monazite geochronology to reconstruct the early history of the metamorphic rocks at Broken Hill. In contrast to previous studies, in situ analysis of monazite grains preserved in their original textural context in polished thin sections is used. Guided by electron microprobe X-ray maps, SHRIMP U-Pb dates for three distinct monazite compositional domains record pulses of monazite growth at c. 1657 Ma, c.1630 Ma and c.1602 Ma. It is demonstrated that these ages correspond to monazite growth during lower amphibolite facies, upper amphibolite facies and granulite facies metamorphism, respectively. It is speculated that this progressive heating of the SCP crust may have been driven by inversion of the upper crust during the Olarian Orogeny that was pre-heated by magmatic underplating at c.1657 Ma. [source]


Surface-enhanced Raman sensors: early history and the development of sensors for quantitative biowarfare agent and glucose detection

JOURNAL OF RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY, Issue 6-7 2005
Christy L. Haynes
Abstract Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is a powerful technique for the sensitive and selective detection of low-concentration analytes. This paper includes a discussion of the early history of SERS, the concepts that must be appreciated to optimize the intensity of SERS and the development of SERS-based sensors. In order to achieve the lowest limits of detection, both the relationship between surface nanostructure and laser excitation wavelength, as well as the analyte/surface binding chemistry, must be carefully optimized. This work exploits the highly tunable nature of nanoparticle optical properties to establish the first set of optimization conditions. The SERS enhancement factor, EFSERS, is optimized when the energy of the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) lies between the energy of the excitation wavelength and the energy of the vibrational band of interest. With the narrow LSPRs used in this work, it is straightforward to achieve EFSERS , 108. These optimization conditions were exploited to develop SERS-based sensors for two important target molecules: a Bacillus anthracis biomarker and glucose in a serum protein mixture. Using these optimized film-over-nanosphere surfaces, an inexpensive, portable Raman spectrometer was used successfully to detect the infectious dose of Bacillus subtilis spores with only a 5-s data collection. The biomarker used to detect the Bacillus subtilis spores binds irreversibly to SERS substrates, whereas other important biomolecules, such as glucose, do not have any measurable binding affinity to a bare silver surface. To overcome this difficulty, a biocompatible partition layer was self-assembled on the SERS substrate before exposure to the analyte solution. Using the partition layer approach to concentrate glucose near the SERS-active substrate, physiological glucose concentrations can be detected even in the presence of interfering serum proteins. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Between Peirce (1878) and James (1898): G. Stanley Hall, the origins of pragmatism, and the history of psychology

JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, Issue 1 2009
David E. Leary
This article focuses on the 20-year gap between Charles S. Peirce's classic proposal of pragmatism in 1877,1878 and William James's equally classic call for pragmatism in 1898. It fills the gap by reviewing relevant developments in the work of Peirce and James and by introducing G. Stanley Hall, for the first time, as a figure in the history of pragmatism. In treating Hall and pragmatism, the article reveals a previously unnoted relation between the early history of pragmatism and the early history of the "new psychology" that Hall helped to pioneer. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


Environmental state of Lake Kariba and Zambezi River Valley: Lessons learned and not learned

LAKES & RESERVOIRS: RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2010
C. H. D. Magadza
Abstract Lake Kariba, still the largest reservoir in the world by volume, is 60 years old. It has undergone changes in its thermal properties, associated with global warming, which reflect in turn on its limnology. These changes include a shallower eipilimnion, higher heat content and increased tropicality to near equatorial status. The role of Lake Kariba with regard to its energy characteristics is discussed in light of global warming findings. The lake's water residence time has increased from 3.7 years to ,5.7 years, attributable to a reduced inflow from the Zambezi River. The phytoplankton communities have changed towards a cyanophyceae-dominated community, leading to a decline in entomostracan zooplankton, and a near collapse of the planktivorous Limnothrissa miodon fishery. Prolonged use of pesticides to control Glossina has led to measurable ecosystem level impacts on both terrestrial and aquatic biota. The impacts of the forced relocation of the Tonga people were still evident during this study. Siltation from resettlement areas has led to the loss of habitat and biodiversity in the inflowing streams to the lake. Unplanned shoreline development in the early history of the lake poses health problems. It is projected that global warming will cause the lake temperature to rise by ,4 °C by the end of the century. Higher temperatures will be accompanied by windier conditions, thereby enhancing the risks from storms on the lake. The appropriateness of administrative structures intended to manage the Zambezi River Basin environment also is discussed herein. It is concluded that the management protocol is institutionally a non-inclusive process lacking the capacity to involve other stakeholders in managing the lake's resources, and even less so in the integrated management of the basin. [source]


The decline of a regional fishing nation: The case of Ghana and West Africa

NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM, Issue 1 2004
John Atta-Mills
Abstract Inadequate trade policies, globalization of the fishing industry, dominance of Europe's distant water fleets, declarations of exclusive economic zones (EEZs) by neighbouring West African nations, overfishing and a lack of good governance contributed to the decline of Ghana as a regional fishing nation, a position it had held since the 18th century. The prohibitive cost of access arrangements limited Ghana's access to distant waters. The country's marine environments have been impacted by overexploitation of stocks and the use of destructive methods. Subsistence fishing has become the sole means of survival for many fishers. The decline of the fishing sector has limited the country's ability to meet domestic demand and threatened the economic and food security of many Ghanaians. The article traces the early history of Ghana's fisheries, their gradual decline during the last four decades, and outlines recommendations for policy changes to address the situation and steer the nation on a course towards sustainable fisheries. [source]


Special Interest Protectionism and the Antebellum Woolen Textile Industry

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY, Issue 5 2006
A Contemporary Issue in a Historical Context
Academic and nonacademic work focusing on special interest lobbying tends to ignore America's early history in favor of the 20th century, leaving the origins of the organized commercial lobby vague. Using the antebellum woolen textile industry as a case study, this article finds that this industry was one of the first to demonstrate the potential benefits of interstate, interindustry coalitions for rent-seeking activities. Using pressure tactics frequently observed today, but innovative for the time, the industry was not only successful in obtaining relatively high legislated tariffs by 1828, it also altered the traditional congressional avenues for obtaining information from aggrieved parties. This article clearly demonstrates that organized and public lobbying by commercial interests has a longer history than is typically recognized. [source]


The Earliest Evidence for Metal Bridle Parts

OXFORD JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
M.A. Littauer
Recent discoveries in different parts of the Near East have led the authors to reconsider the early history of metal driving bits. These now seem to go back into the third millennium BC, which is much earlier that the evidence previously indicated. The paper also includes a brief discussion of the links , if these existed at all , with early bridle bits made of organic materials from the southern Urals,Volga area. [source]


In the Shadows of Gompers: Lucy Robins and the Politics of Amnesty, 1918,1922

PEACE & CHANGE, Issue 1 2000
Kathleen Kennedy
This essay examines Lucy Robins's contributions to the amnesty movement. A protégé of Emma Goldman, Robins undertook her amnesty campaign at Goldman's behest. Frustrated with what she defined as the left's lack of "constructive" solutions, Robins shifted her political alliances and joined the American Federation of Labor. Robins's choice to pursue amnesty within the A.F. of L., the essay argues, sheds important light on the early history of the civil liberties movement and its relationship to labor politics. [source]


The Robinson-Hooper connection,

ANAESTHESIA, Issue 6 2006
A. Macdonald
Summary The search for a connection between James Robinson, the dental surgeon who on 19 December 1846 administered the first general anaesthetic in England by the inhalation of the vapour of ether, and William Hooper, the pharmaceutical chemist who produced the best publicised and most widely used of the early commercial ether vaporisers, has revealed hitherto unrecognised aspects of the early history of general anaesthesia. [source]


Zur frühen Geschichte der Paläocheloniologie von Schaumburg-Lippe.

BERICHTE ZUR WISSENSCHAFTSGESCHICHTE, Issue 4 2004
Die Rolle des Gymnasial-Professors Max Ballerstedt in der Naturwissenschaft
Abstract A survey is given on some new aspects of the early history to the palaeochelonology in Schaumburg-Lippe (Northern Germany). The very slow development of this is good reconstructable on base of authentic estates. It is the first time to made such a nearly complete reconstruction. [source]


Throwing Some Light on the Vast Darkness that is Analysis: Niels Henrik Abel's Critical Revision and the Concept of Absolute Convergence

CENTAURUS, Issue 1 2010
Henrik Kragh Sřrensen
During the first half of the nineteenth century, mathematical analysis underwent a transition from a predominantly formula-centred practice to a more concept-centred one. Central to this development was the reorientation of analysis originating in Augustin- Louis Cauchy's (1789,1857) treatment of infinite series in his Cours d'analyse. In this work, Cauchy set out to rigorize analysis, thereby critically examining and reproving central analytical results. One of Cauchy's first and most ardent followers was the Norwegian Niels Henrik Abel (1802,1829) who vowed to shed some light on the vast darkness in analysis. This paper investigates some important aspects of Abel's contribution to the reorientation in analysis. In particular, it stresses the role for critical revision in the process of rigorization. By critically examining past practice, the new practice sought to explain the relative success of the previous,now outdated,approach. This is illustrated by discussing a number of issues related to Abel's new proof of the binomial theorem (1826) including his reactions to the exception that he encountered to one of the central theorems of Cauchy's theory. Following this discussion, the formation of new concepts as the result of critical revisions is illustrated by analysing the early history of the concept of absolute convergence. Thereby, it is shown how a new concept was distilled, investigated, put to use and eventually superseded. [source]


Fashioning and Demarcation of the Danish Chemical Community in the 19th Century

CENTAURUS, Issue 3 2007
Anita Kildebćk Nielsen
The development of Danish chemistry in the 19th century was a complex process involving the establishment of boundaries for chemistry, creation of professional identities, and institutional constructions. Many of these factors can be analysed through detailed studies of the media carrying chemical information. This paper explores the development process by studying three Danish chemical periodicals published in the vernacular. By analysing their contents, editorial lines, and intended audiences, these three periodicals give specific information on the social evolution of chemistry and the process of demarcation of chemistry from non-chemistry. The analysis is linked to the early history of the Danish Chemical Society in order to address the question of what it meant to be a chemist in second half of the 19th-century Denmark. Taken together, examination of specific aspects of the society and the three periodicals provide new perspectives on the relationships between the three most important groups of chemical practitioners: academics, engineers, and pharmacists. [source]


Total Protein Methods and Their Potential Utility to Reduce the Risk of Food Protein Adulteration

COMPREHENSIVE REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND FOOD SAFETY, Issue 4 2010
Jeffrey C. Moore
Adulteration incidents exploiting this analytical vulnerability (for example, melamine) demonstrate that these methods are no longer sufficient to protect the public health. This article explores the challenges and opportunities to move beyond total nitrogen based methods for total protein measurement. First, it explores the early history of protein measurement science, complexities of current global protein measurement activities, and ideal analytical performance characteristics for new methods. Second, it comprehensively reviews the pros and cons of current and emerging approaches for protein measurement, including their selectivity for protein, ability to detect adulteration, and practicality for routine use throughout the supply chain. It concludes that some existing highly selective methods for food protein measurement have potential for routine quality control. It also concludes that their successful implementation will require matrix-specific validation and the use of supporting reference materials. These methods may be suitable only for food ingredients that have a low degree of compositional variability and are not complex finished food products. [source]