Period

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Period

  • abstinence period
  • acclimation period
  • accumulation period
  • active period
  • activity period
  • acute period
  • adaptation period
  • adjustment period
  • administration period
  • adolescent period
  • age period
  • aging period
  • antenatal period
  • application period
  • arid period
  • assessment period
  • atrial effective refractory period
  • atrial refractory period
  • audit period
  • autumn period
  • average follow-up period
  • average period
  • baseline period
  • breeding period
  • brief period
  • byzantine period
  • calendar period
  • calibration period
  • campaign period
  • census period
  • certain period
  • chick-rearing period
  • childhood period
  • circadian period
  • classic period
  • classical period
  • climatic period
  • cold period
  • cold war period
  • collection period
  • colonial period
  • commitment period
  • conditioning period
  • consecutive period
  • considerable period
  • consolidation period
  • contact period
  • continuous period
  • control period
  • convalescent period
  • cortical silent period
  • cretaceous period
  • crisis period
  • critical period
  • crucial period
  • culture period
  • current period
  • cycle period
  • d period
  • daily period
  • dark period
  • data collection period
  • day culture period
  • day experimental period
  • day observation period
  • day period
  • day washout period
  • defined period
  • delay period
  • deprivation period
  • development period
  • developmental period
  • diel period
  • different incubation period
  • different period
  • different time period
  • distinct period
  • dosing period
  • drought period
  • dry period
  • drying period
  • earliest period
  • early historic period
  • early islamic period
  • early medieval period
  • early modern period
  • early neonatal period
  • early period
  • early post-operative period
  • early post-transplant period
  • early postnatal period
  • early postoperative period
  • early postpartum period
  • effective refractory period
  • eight-year period
  • embryonic period
  • entire experimental period
  • entire follow-up period
  • entire observation period
  • entire period
  • entire storage period
  • entire study period
  • epidemic period
  • evaluation period
  • experimental period
  • exposure period
  • extended period
  • extended time period
  • fallow period
  • fasting period
  • feeding period
  • fermentation period
  • fertile period
  • fetal period
  • first period
  • five-year period
  • fixed period
  • flight period
  • flow period
  • flowering period
  • follow-up period
  • foraging period
  • formative period
  • four-month period
  • four-week period
  • four-year period
  • free period
  • frost period
  • functional refractory period
  • future period
  • gestation period
  • glacial period
  • grazing period
  • grow-out period
  • grower period
  • growing period
  • growth period
  • h incubation period
  • h period
  • h study period
  • h time period
  • hatching period
  • headache-free period
  • healing period
  • heart period
  • hellenistic period
  • historic period
  • historical period
  • hold period
  • holocene period
  • hour period
  • hr period
  • humid period
  • ice-free period
  • ii period
  • immediate post-transplant period
  • immediate postoperative period
  • immediate postpartum period
  • immersion period
  • implantation period
  • important period
  • incubation period
  • indefinite period
  • induction period
  • infection period
  • infusion period
  • inhibition period
  • initial period
  • initiation period
  • injection period
  • instrumental period
  • intensive observing period
  • intensive period
  • interglacial period
  • intermediate period
  • intervening period
  • intervention period
  • interwar period
  • intrapartum period
  • investigation period
  • ischemia period
  • ischemic period
  • islamic period
  • juvenile period
  • lactation period
  • lag period
  • larval period
  • last glacial period
  • last menstrual period
  • last period
  • late intermediate period
  • late period
  • late postoperative period
  • latency period
  • latent period
  • latter period
  • laying period
  • learning period
  • lengthy period
  • light period
  • limited period
  • limited time period
  • loading period
  • long follow-up period
  • long incubation period
  • long period
  • long time period
  • long-term period
  • longer follow-up period
  • longer incubation period
  • longer period
  • longer time period
  • main period
  • maintenance period
  • marketing period
  • mating period
  • maturation period
  • maximum period
  • mean follow-up period
  • mean observation period
  • mean period
  • measurement period
  • median follow-up period
  • median period
  • medieval period
  • medieval warm period
  • menstrual period
  • migration period
  • min exposure period
  • min observation period
  • min period
  • minimum follow-up period
  • minute period
  • modern period
  • monitoring period
  • monsoon period
  • month follow-up period
  • month period
  • month study period
  • moon period
  • neolithic period
  • neonatal period
  • nesting period
  • nestling period
  • new moon period
  • newborn period
  • next period
  • night period
  • nocturnal period
  • observation period
  • observational period
  • observing period
  • one period
  • one year period
  • one-month period
  • one-year period
  • operating period
  • orbital period
  • oscillation period
  • other period
  • overwintering period
  • oviposition period
  • past period
  • payback period
  • peak period
  • peri-implantation period
  • peri-operative period
  • periconceptional period
  • perinatal period
  • perioperative period
  • peripartum period
  • placebo period
  • placebo run-in period
  • planning period
  • pleistocene period
  • pollination period
  • post-crisi period
  • post-operative period
  • post-partum period
  • post-transplant period
  • post-treatment period
  • post-war period
  • postnatal period
  • postoperative follow-up period
  • postoperative period
  • postpartum period
  • postprandial period
  • posttransplant period
  • postwar period
  • pre-operative period
  • pre-oviposition period
  • pre-reproductive period
  • preceding period
  • precipitation period
  • prenatal period
  • preoperative period
  • preoviposition period
  • preschool period
  • preservation period
  • prolonged period
  • protracted period
  • pupal period
  • quaternary period
  • quiescent period
  • rainfall period
  • rate period
  • re-feeding period
  • rearing period
  • recall period
  • recent period
  • recording period
  • recovery period
  • recruitment period
  • refeeding period
  • reference period
  • refractory period
  • renaissance period
  • reperfusion period
  • reproductive period
  • research period
  • rest period
  • resting period
  • restricted period
  • retention period
  • return period
  • review period
  • ripening period
  • risk period
  • roman period
  • romantic period
  • rotation period
  • rotational period
  • run-in period
  • same period
  • same study period
  • same time period
  • sample period
  • sampling period
  • screening period
  • seasonal period
  • second period
  • seizure-free period
  • sensitive period
  • separate period
  • seven-year period
  • short period
  • short time period
  • shorter incubation period
  • shorter period
  • shorter time period
  • significant period
  • silent period
  • similar period
  • single period
  • six-month period
  • six-week period
  • six-year period
  • sleep period
  • spawning period
  • specific period
  • specific time period
  • spring period
  • stabilization period
  • stable period
  • start-up period
  • starvation period
  • stimulation period
  • storage period
  • studied period
  • study period
  • subsequent period
  • substantial period
  • successive period
  • suckling period
  • summer period
  • surveillance period
  • survey period
  • survival period
  • ten-year period
  • test period
  • testing period
  • therapy period
  • third period
  • thirty-year period
  • three-month period
  • three-week period
  • three-year period
  • time period
  • titration period
  • total period
  • training period
  • transient period
  • transition period
  • transitional period
  • treatment period
  • trial period
  • turbulent period
  • two-month period
  • two-year period
  • two-year study period
  • validation period
  • variable period
  • various period
  • various time period
  • varying period
  • vegetation period
  • very short period
  • vulnerable period
  • waiting period
  • war period
  • warm period
  • warmer period
  • wash-out period
  • washout period
  • wave period
  • weaning period
  • week experimental period
  • week follow-up period
  • week period
  • week study period
  • week treatment period
  • week washout period
  • wet period
  • whole experimental period
  • whole period
  • whole study period
  • window period
  • winter period
  • withdrawal period
  • year period

  • Terms modified by Period

  • period ad
  • period analysis
  • period b
  • period change
  • period duration
  • period effects
  • period february
  • period greater
  • period i
  • period january
  • period july
  • period lasting
  • period leading
  • period length
  • period longer
  • period may
  • period november
  • period october
  • period only
  • period prevalence
  • period return
  • period sample
  • period shows
  • period used
  • period variability

  • Selected Abstracts


    MANAGEMENT OF ANTIPLATELET THERAPY FOR ENDOSCOPIC PROCEDURES: OPTIMAL CESSATION PERIOD OF ANTIPLATELET THERAPY FOR JAPANESE

    DIGESTIVE ENDOSCOPY, Issue 4 2007
    Yoshiko Tamai
    Although antiplatelet agents are widely used for the treatment and prevention of thrombotic diseases, only a few studies have reported the validity of the cessation period prior to endoscopic procedures. In 2002, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) published a reference on the management of anticoagulation and antiplatelet therapy for endoscopic procedures, but it should be confirmed as appropriate for use in Asian patients. To evaluate the optimal cessation period of antiplatelet agents prior to endoscopic procedures for Japanese, we have studied: (i) the current clinically adopted cessation period of antiplatelet agents prior to invasive endoscopic procedures in Japan; (ii) the relationship between the cessation period of antiplatelet agents and complications around the invasive endoscopic procedures; (iii) colonic mucosal bleeding time after aspirin ingestion; and (iv) the time course of primary hemostasis after cessation of antiplatelet agents. We conclude that 3 days cessation period for aspirin, 5 days cessation for ticlopidine and 7 days cessation for aspirin + ticlopidine administration should be sufficient for Japanese. [source]


    THE RESPONSE OF PARTIALLY DEBRIS-COVERED VALLEY GLACIERS TO CLIMATE CHANGE: THE EXAMPLE OF THE PASTERZE GLACIER (AUSTRIA) IN THE PERIOD 1964 TO 2006

    GEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A: PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2008
    ANDREAS KELLERER-PIRKLBAUER
    ABSTRACT. Long-term observations of partly debris-covered glaciers have allowed us to assess the impact of supra-glacial debris on volumetric changes. In this paper, the behaviour of the partially debris-covered, 3.6 km2 tongue of Pasterze Glacier (47°05,N, 12°44,E) was studied in the context of ongoing climate changes. The right part of the glacier tongue is covered by a continuous supra-glacial debris mantle with variable thicknesses (a few centimetres to about 1 m). For the period 1964,2000 three digital elevation models (1964, 1981, 2000) and related debris-cover distributions were analysed. These datasets were compared with long-term series of glaciological field data (displacement, elevation change, glacier terminus behaviour) from the 1960s to 2006. Differences between the debriscovered and the clean ice parts were emphasised. Results show that volumetric losses increased by 2.3 times between the periods 1964,1981 and 1981,2000 with significant regional variations at the glacier tongue. Such variations are controlled by the glacier emergence velocity pattern, existence and thickness of supra-glacial debris, direct solar radiation, counter-radiation from the valley sides and their changes over time. The downward-increasing debris thickness is counteracting to a compensational stage against the common decrease of ablation with elevation. A continuous debris cover not less than 15 cm in thickness reduces ablation rates by 30,35%. No relationship exists between glacier retreat rates and summer air temperatures. Substantial and varying differences of the two different terminus parts occurred. Our findings clearly underline the importance of supra-glacial debris on mass balance and glacier tongue morphology. [source]


    CHARTING THE "TRANSITIONAL PERIOD": THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN TIME IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

    HISTORY AND THEORY, Issue 1 2006
    GÖRAN BLIX
    ABSTRACT This paper seeks to chart a concept of historical experience that French Romantic writers first developed to describe their own relationship to historical time: the notion of the "transitional period." At first, the term related strictly to the evolving periodic conception of history, one that required breaks, spaces, or zones of indeterminacy to bracket off periods imagined as organic wholes. These transitions, necessary devices in the new grammar of history, also began to attract interest on their own, conceived either as chaotic but creative times of transformation, or, more often, as slack periods of decadence that possessed no proper style but exhibited hybrid traits. Their real interest, however, lies in their reflexive application to the nineteenth century itself, by writers and historians such as Alfred de Musset, Chateaubriand, Michelet, and Renan, who in their effort to define their own period envisioned the "transitional period" as a passage between more coherent and stable historical formations. This prospective self-definition of the "age of history" from a future standpoint is very revealing; it shows not just the tension between its organic way of apprehending the past and its own self-perception, but it also opens a window on a new and paradoxical experience of time, one in which change is ceaseless and an end in itself. The paper also presents a critique of the way the term "modernity" has functioned, from Baudelaire's initial use to the present, to occlude the experience of transition that the Romantics highlighted. By imposing on the nineteenth-century sense of the transitory a heroic period designation, the term "modernity" denies precisely the reality it describes, and sublimates a widespread temporal malaise into its contrary. The paper concludes that the peculiarly "modern" mania for naming one's period is a function of transitional time, and that the concept coined by the Romantics still governs our contemporary experience. [source]


    INFLUENCE OF FROZEN PERIOD ON THE PROXIMATE COMPOSITION AND MICROBIOLOGICAL QUALITY OF NILE TILAPIA FISH (OREOCHROMIS NILOTICUS)

    JOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESSING AND PRESERVATION, Issue 4 2010
    SHIMELIS A. EMIRE
    ABSTRACT The rationale of the study was to investigate the influence of frozen period on quality of fish fillet. The proximate composition and microbiological analyses were carried out at 15 days interval on tilapia fish fillets during frozen storage. It was found that the protein, moisture and ash contents decreased significantly (P < 0.05) during the entire storage period. However, the fat content increased from 0.37 ± 0.01 to 0.56 ± 0.01 g/100 g of fillet. The total volatile bases nitrogen and pH values also increased significantly The total bacterial load in fresh fillets was reduced from 2.57 × 106 to 8.2 × 105 cfu/g after 90 days of frozen storage. The total coliforms decreased from 460 to 23 MPN/g and the fecal coliforms decreased from 23 MPN/g to undetectable level, respectively. Thus, a significant quality loss was observed for tilapia during storage. However, the present frozen conditions retained the fish material under acceptable microbiological conditions for human consumption. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The main challenge that fish industries face in developing countries like Ethiopia is to comply with consumer expectations, particularly on product quality. The quality of fresh fish is one of the key factors that govern the shelf life of the final product at low temperature preservation. The Ethiopian fish production and marketing enterprise is vested with the responsibility of inland fisheries processing and marketing. The enterprise, without any scientific basis, labeled the frozen tilapia fish shelf life to be 9 months. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the low-temperature (,18C) preservation technique practiced by the enterprise in order to evaluate the influence of frozen period on quality of a fish fillet. The results on changes in proximate composition and microbial load of Nile tilapia fish fillet enabled to determine the frozen period of a fish fillet that can be fit for human consumption devoid of deterioration. The results can also be used for further investigation and detailed research is required to help commercial processors beyond 90 days of frozen storage. [source]


    AN EMPIRICAL APPROACH FOR ASSESSMENT OF SAFE STORAGE PERIOD FOR BUTTON MUSHROOM (AGARICUS BISPORUS) BASED UPON COLOR CHANGES UNDER MODIFIED ATMOSPHERE PACKAGING

    JOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESSING AND PRESERVATION, Issue 2010
    SHASHI PAUL
    ABSTRACT White button mushroom accounts for 35,45% of the total mushroom produced in the world. Modified atmosphere packaging or MAP is a technology that, along with low temperature storage, helps in extending the shelf life and maintenance of quality of the produce packaged in polymeric films. The present study mathematically modeled the various transport processes associated with the mushroom under MAP at 15C and 75% relative humidity (RH) using the enzyme kinetics approach. Low density polyethylene (LDPE), polypropylene (PP) and oriented polypropylene (OPP) films were used to pack the mushroom. Numerical solutions to the transient state equations were programed in a computer programing language to predict the in-pack gaseous partial pressures at any instant of time. The model was experimentally validated, and a simple qualitative tool based upon optimum whiteness of mushroom was developed using the predictions to determine the safe period of storage. The predicted and experimental in-pack partial pressures of O2 and CO2 were in fair agreement with each other. In the OPP film packages, the O2 and CO2 levels stabilized around 6.87 and 12.93 kPa, respectively. Whereas, O2 levels decreased drastically in LDPE and PP film packages. A combination of predicted in-pack environment in all the film packages, storage time and whiteness of mushroom led to the conclusion that mushrooms can be stored safely for 32, 44 and 108 h in the gaseous environment available in the LDPE, PP and OPP film packages, respectively. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The empirical approach followed in this study through assimilation of various transient state in-pack variables with a single qualitative attribute of mushroom can serve as a measure of assessment of the mushroom's safe storage period under modified atmosphere packaging. Further, the mathematical approach suggested in this study can also serve as a benchmark for its application to other fruits and vegetables, taking into consideration their respective limiting qualitative characteristics. Thus, the results detailed in the study can be easily applied for their direct practical application during storage as well as for further academic exercises. [source]


    SELECTED DRYING CONDITIONS AND STORAGE PERIOD AND QUALITY OF WALNUT SELECTIONS

    JOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESSING AND PRESERVATION, Issue 2 2003
    M. A. KOYUNCU
    Walnut selections were hulled at harvest time, and 3 and 5 days after harvest to determine the effects of hulling time on postharvest quality. Walnuts removed from their hulls were stored shelled and unshelled under ambient conditions after being dried at selected conditions. Among the tested hulling dates, the best results were obtained from the walnuts hulled at harvest time. At the end of the storage period, the least quality losses were determined in the walnuts dried in the sun. Generally, quality losses in the shelled walnuts were greater than quality losses in the unshelled walnuts. According to the research results, walnuts removed from their hulls and dried under sun can be stored under ambient conditions (21 ± 1C and 50,65 RH) and retain acceptable quality for 12 months. [source]


    EFFECT OF STORAGE PERIOD AND EXPOSURE CONDITIONS ON THE QUALITY OF BOSANA EXTRA-VIRGIN OLIVE OIL

    JOURNAL OF FOOD QUALITY, Issue 2 2006
    VINCENZO VACCA
    ABSTRACT Changes in quality parameters, antioxidant compounds, oxidative stability and antioxidant activity during 18 months of storage of a monovarietal extra-virgin olive oil from Bosana cultivar, and exposed to light and dark, were studied. Analysis of data showed that all the parameters underwent significant changes during storage: free acidity, peroxide and ultraviolet (UV) spectrophotometric indexes remained below the limits reported in the EEC Regulations 2568/91 and 1989/03, and these are: ,0.8% for acidity, ,20 meq O2/kg for peroxide and ,2.50 and ,0.22 for K232 and K270, respectively. Phenol and, -tocopherol content decreased during storage (42.0 and 29.6%, respectively) while chlorophylls and carotenoids underwent a decrease until 8 months of storage (49% and 30%, respectively); after that, the values remained constant. Oxidative stability and antioxidant activity had not changed dramatically during 18 months. Phenols were significantly correlated to the antioxidant activity of the oil, while oxidative stability measured by Rancimat did not show any correlation with carotenoids, chlorophylls, phenols and, -tocopherol. Regarding exposure conditions, storage in the dark was better in retaining the quality of the oil, as expected. [source]


    THE DOUBLE-AXE: A CONTEXTUAL APPROACH TO THE UNDERSTANDING OF A CRETAN SYMBOL IN THE NEOPALATIAL PERIOD

    OXFORD JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 1 2010
    MATTHEW HAYSOM
    Summary The Double-Axe has always been considered as one of the most important religious symbols in Minoan Crete. This paper reassesses the significance of the Double-Axe and puts forward a new interpretation for it. It recognizes the great potential for change in symbolic meanings during the Bronze Age and seeks to understand the Double-Axe in as narrow a period as is realistically possible by filtering out evidence from other periods. Central to the argument is the principle that the meaning of symbols is contextually dependent. It builds, therefore, a new interpretation of the Double-Axe on the basis of as wide a range of contextual associations as possible, both within iconographic sources and in the wider material record. From these contextual associations, it suggests that in the Neopalatial period the Double-Axe was a symbol primarily associated with a social group which exercised power in the economic, military and religious realms and that it became a solely religious symbol only later. [source]


    YELLOW POTTERY PERIOD (670,540 BC)

    ACTA ARCHAEOLOGICA, Issue 1 2009
    Article first published online: 5 JUL 2010
    First page of article [source]


    PLAIN POTTERY PERIOD (650,870 AD)

    ACTA ARCHAEOLOGICA, Issue 1 2009
    Article first published online: 5 JUL 2010
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    SODOHOMÉ PERIOD (1000,1200 AD)

    ACTA ARCHAEOLOGICA, Issue 1 2009
    Article first published online: 5 JUL 2010
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    CERAMICS OF THE SODOHOMÉ PERIOD (1000,1200 AD)

    ACTA ARCHAEOLOGICA, Issue 1 2009
    Article first published online: 5 JUL 2010
    First page of article [source]


    ARCHAEOMAGNETIC FIELD INTENSITY DURING THE ROMAN PERIOD AT SIWA AND BAHRYN OASIS, EGYPT: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FIDELITY OF EGYPTIAN ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATA

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 3 2010
    R. LEONHARDT
    A preliminary survey was conducted in Siwa and Bahryn Oasis to test the possible influence of various rock magnetic and experimental constraints on the fidelity of the Egyptian archaeomagnetic field record. Five potsherds from the Roman era, which lasted from 1981 bp to 1555 bp, have been investigated. Archaeologists dated the localities to ,1620 bp. Ten ceramic specimens, two of each potsherd, were subjected to archaeointensity determination, including tests for domain state effects, magnetic anisotropy and magnetic cooling rate dependency. Six successful archaeointensity determinations are obtained from three individual cooling units, revealing an average field value of 37.7 ,T for the late Roman period in Siwa and Bahryn oasis, which is comparable to the present-day field strength. The error propagation of the individual uncertainties related to all applied experimental techniques results in a maximum uncertainty estimate of 4.4 ,T. The obtained field value is significantly smaller than early results and slightly smaller than some more recent determinations of the field intensity in Egypt. The difference is attributed to a combined effect of alteration, magnetic anisotropy and magnetic cooling rate dependencies. Along with other high-quality data from the south-east Mediterranean, our data suggest a field intensity minimum during the Egyptian Roman era. [source]


    RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE COLORATION AND THE FIRING TECHNOLOGY USED TO PRODUCE SUSA GLAZED CERAMICS OF THE END OF THE NEOLITHIC PERIOD*

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 5 2009
    S. LAHLIL
    Ancient decorated potteries from Susa (Mesopotamia) dating from 4200 to 3700 bc, were studied in order to determine the origin and the nature of the raw materials used, and to identify the technological processes applied to make the ceramic bodies and their decorations. Bulk compositions were determined by particle induced X-ray emission (PIXE), while the microstructure and the mineralogical phases were studied using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray analyses (EDX) and X-ray powder diffraction (XRD). The results showed that the raw materials used to elaborate these potteries were similar for all the ceramic bodies (carbonates and iron and magnesium-rich clays containing sand), and for all the decorations (iron oxides, silica, potassic and alumina sources). The variations of coloration of the ceramics and of their decorations were due to different firing temperatures. The ranges of firing temperatures used by potters were evaluated on the basis of mineral stability domains. [source]


    GEOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF VITREOUS ROCKS EXPLOITED DURING THE FORMATIVE PERIOD IN THE ATACAMA REGION, NORTHERN CHILE,

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 1 2009
    A. SEELENFREUND
    Petrographic analysis and geochemical characterization studies were carried out on vitreous dacite and/or rhyodacite artefacts from Formative period archaeological sites in the upper Salado River Basin in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile. These were compared with samples taken from two source areas located within the subregion, named Linzor and Paniri. Source samples and archaeological specimens were analysed by inductively coupled plasma , mass spectrometry (ICP,MS) combined with optical emission plasma , mass spectrometry (ICP,OES) and atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS). Results from the limited number of samples analysed indicate that the Linzor source seems to have been the primary source exploited during the Early and Late Formative periods in the Salado River Basin. [source]


    GLAZED CERAMIC MANUFACTURING IN SOUTHERN TUSCANY (ITALY): EVIDENCE OF TECHNOLOGICAL CONTINUITY THROUGHOUT THE MEDIEVAL PERIOD (10TH,14TH CENTURIES),

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 1 2008
    C. FORTINA
    Archaeometric investigation allowed the characterization of two important classes of ceramics: ,vetrina sparsa' and ,invetriata grezza'. Their archaeological peculiarity makes them particularly suited for tracing the evolution of glaze manufacturing in southern Tuscany throughout the medieval period (10th,14th centuries). These ceramics were found in different sites of historical importance, and also from a mining perspective. Local copper, lead, zinc and iron mineralizations supported the growth of several settlements in the vicinity of the mines. The many castles and different archaeological finds (ceramics, glazed ceramic, slag etc.) attest to the intense mineral exploitation of the area from at least the first millennium bc up to the modern period. In light of these geological and archaeological characteristics, archaeometric investigation was intended to provide insight into ancient technical knowledge of ceramic glazing and to determine the source area for raw materials in the medieval period (10th,14th centuries). Ceramic bodies were analysed through OM, XRDp, SEM,EDS and XRF, while coatings were investigated through SEM,EDS. Mineralogical, petrographic and chemical analyses revealed slightly different preparation and firing processes for the two classes of ceramics. These data suggest the continuity through the centuries of the ,vetrina sparsa' and ,invetriata grezza' production technology. The mineralogical phases, such as monazite, xenotime, zircon, barite, Ti oxide, ilmenite, titanite, tourmaline and ilvaite, and the lithic (intrusive and volcanic) fragments detected within the ceramic bodies suggest a source area in the vicinity of the Campiglia mining district. Lastly, the presence of Cu,Zn,Pb (Ag) and Fe sulphide mineralizations (materials used to produce glaze) in the area supports the hypothesis of local manufacture. [source]


    THE TECHNOLOGY OF ,GLAZED' RESERVED SLIP WARE,A FINE CERAMIC OF THE HARAPPAN PERIOD*

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 4 2005
    K. KRISHNAN
    ,Glazed' Reserved Slip Ware (RSW) is a high-quality glossy bichrome pottery of the Indus Valley civilization, and dates to the mature Harappan period (c. 2600,1900 bc). Scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray analysis indicates that the surface coat on RSW is composed of a pale grey vitrified clay slip, which overlies a black slip with significantly higher iron oxide. Hence the term ,sintered' Reserved Slip Ware is to be preferred. X-ray diffraction analysis indicates that both the pale and black slips contain hercynite, mullite and quartz, but observation by scanning electron microscopy shows that the black slips contain higher amounts of coarser-grained hercynite. The elemental data suggest that different clays were used to make the bodies and the slips. However, key element ratios are very close in associated black and pale slips. The grey slip may have been produced by elutriation of the fine, iron oxide-rich clay that was used to prepare the black slip. The pale grey slip was laid over the black and removed by combing to produce a bichrome effect, which evoked semi-precious materials such as agate. RSW was a specialist product that required significantly higher input skill and resources than the majority of Harappan clay-based ceramics. It is a further example of the range of sophisticated Harappan ceramic wares, which included faience, fired steatite and stoneware. [source]


    TRADE AND INDUSTRIAL ORGANISATION: JAPANESE AMMONIUM SULPHATE INDUSTRY IN THE INTERWAR PERIOD

    AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, Issue 1 2006
    Anil Khosla, Article first published online: 8 MAR 200
    chemical industry; industrial organisation; Japan; oligopoly Trade is considered an effective antidote to the exercise of domestic market power. This article, through an analysis of the structure, conduct and performance of the Japanese ammonium sulphate industry during the interwar period, shows that trade is not always a sufficient condition for domestic markets to become competitive. In industries exhibiting substantial economies of scale, availability and diffusion of technology, existence of surplus international capacity and the ability of domestic producers to deter imports can impede instantaneous adjustment of international supply to imbalances in demand and supply thereby allowing domestic producers to exercise their market power. [source]


    RELATIVE CONTRIBUTION OF THE PRENATAL VERSUS POSTNATAL PERIOD ON DEVELOPMENT OF HYPERTENSION AND GROWTH RATE OF THE SPONTANEOUSLY HYPERTENSIVE RAT

    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 1-2 2006
    Robert Di Nicolantonio
    SUMMARY 1To determine the relative roles of the prenatal and postnatal (preweaning) environment on the development of blood pressure and growth rate in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) of the Okamoto strain, we used combined embryo transfer and cross-fostering techniques between SHR and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats to produce offspring whose development was examined during the first 20 weeks of life. 2We measured litter sizes, bodyweights and tail-cuff blood pressures in offspring at 4, 8, 12 and 20 weeks of age. We also recorded heart, kidney and adrenal weights at 20 weeks of age, when the study concluded. 3We found that both the in utero and postnatal environments provided by the SHR mother could significantly affect WKY rat offspring growth rates, but blood pressure was unaffected in this strain. In SHR offspring, the SHR maternal in utero and suckling period both contributed to the rate of blood pressure development in the SHR, but not the final blood pressure of offspring at 20 weeks of age. This effect was greater for male than female offspring. Organ weights were largely unaffected by the perinatal environment in either strain. 4We conclude that although the SHR maternal in utero and immediate postnatal environment both contribute to the rate of blood pressure development in the SHR, they do not appear to contribute to the final blood pressure of offspring at maturity. The SHR maternal environment also alters growth rate that may, in turn, underlie these effects on SHR blood pressure development, particularly in males. [source]


    CAUSES OF MORTALITY IN CALIFORNIA SEA OTTERS DURING PERIODS OF POPULATION GROWTH AND DECLINE

    MARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE, Issue 1 2003
    JamesA.
    Abstract Elevated mortality appears to be the main reason for both sluggish growth and periods of decline in the threatened California sea otter population. We assessed causes of mortality from salvage records of 3,105 beach-cast carcasses recovered from 1968 through 1999, contrasting two periods of growth with two periods of decline. Overall, an estimated 40%-60% of the deaths were not recovered and 70% of the recovered carcasses died from unknown causes. Nonetheless, several common patterns were evident in the salvage records during the periods of population decline. These included greater percentages of (1) prime age animals (3,10 yr), (2) carcasses killed by great white shark attacks, (3) carcasses recovered in spring and summer, and (4) carcasses for which the cause of death was unknown. Neither sex composition nor the proportion of carcasses dying of infectious disease varied consistently between periods of population increase and decline. The population decline from 1976 to 1984 was likely due to incidental mortality in a set-net fishery, and the decline from 1995 to 1999 may be related to a developing live-fish fishery. Long-term trends unrelated to periods of growth and decline included a decrease in per capita pup production and mass/length ratios of adult carcasses over the 31-yr study. The generally high proportion of deaths from infectious disease suggests that this factor has contributed to the chronically sluggish growth rate of the California sea otter population. [source]


    Reflections on Latin American Rural Studies in the Neoliberal Globalization Period: A New Rurality?

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 6 2008
    Cristóbal Kay
    ABSTRACT This article explores the emergence over the last decade of a new approach to rural development studies in Latin America known as the ,new rurality'. The various interpretations and ambiguities of this approach as well as the ensuing debates are discussed. Analysis focuses on four major transformations in the rural economy and society which are usually highlighted by the ,new ruralists'. These changes are interpreted as arising from the region's neoliberal shift and its closer insertion into the global system. A novel distinction is made between reformist and communitarian proposals for a new rurality. The merits as well as the limitations of this new approach to rural studies are examined. [source]


    Cardiovascular responses to pacifier experience and feeding in newborn infants

    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
    Morris Cohen
    Abstract This study examined the effects of sucking on a pacifier immediately before feeding on cardiovascular responses to feeding. Twenty-eight bottle-feeding infants were studied at 12 to 40 hr of age. Blood pressure and heart rate measurements were made during three periods: Period 1,while infants rested in their cribs before a regularly scheduled feeding, Period 2,while being held by the feeder immediately before feeding, and Period 3,during the first 3 to 5 min of feeding. Half of the infants were given a pacifier during Period 2. Blood pressures and heart rates increased across the periods; however, increases in systolic blood pressure during feeding were reduced for the group of infants given a pacifier prior to feeding. We suggest that cardiovascular responses to feeding in infants are comprised of multiple elements. Most of the systolic blood pressure responses to feeding are elicited by sucking whereas the heart rate response is dependent on both sucking and nutrient intake. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 39: 34,39, 2001 [source]


    Palaeomonsoon variability in the southern fringe of the Badain Jaran Desert, China, since 130 ka BP

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 3 2006
    Quanzhou Gao
    Abstract Taking the Chagelebulu Stratigraphic Profile as a typical example, a comprehensive study has been conducted to elucidate the palaeoclimatic and geomorphic evolution patterns in the southern fringe of the Badain Jaran Desert, which were found to be complex and polycyclic in the past 130 ka. However, the fluctuating magnitude is not as remarkable as that in the eastern China sandy region. The shift in climate from interglacial to glacial and the uplift process of the Qinghai,Xizang Plateau are the two leading forces driving the evolution of the climate and desert landforms in this area. Seventeen cycles of cold, dry and warm, humid climatic stages were recognized in the Upper Pleistocene Series of the profile. The sharp uplift of the Qinghai,Xizang Plateau superimposed a cool and arid climatic trend in this area. As a result of the climatic changes, the desert in this area has undergone multiple stages of expansion and contraction since 130 ka bp. The middle Holocene Epoch and the early stage of the Late Pleistocene Period were the main periods when the sand dunes became stabilized, and the early and late phases of the Holocene Epoch and late phase of the Pleistocene Epoch were the main periods when the previously stabilized sand dunes became mobile. The late phase of the Pleistocene Epoch was the most mobile stage, when the aeolian sand activities formed the essential geomorphic pattern of the Badain Jaran Desert. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    A Rb/Sr record of catchment weathering response to Holocene climate change in Inner Mongolia

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 3 2006
    Zhangdong Jin
    Abstract Variation in the rubidium to strontium (Rb/Sr) ratio of the loess,palaeosol sequences has been proposed to reflect the degree of pedogenesis and weathering in the northwestern region of China. To characterize the Rb/Sr ratio of the dissolved loads of a single catchment, we analysed a 12·08 m sediment core from Daihai Lake in Inner Mongolia, north China. Dating control was provided by 210Pb, 137Cs and AMS- 14C. Sequential extraction experiments were conducted to investigate the concentrations of Rb and Sr on various chemical fractions in the lake sediments. Down-core variation in the Rb/Sr ratios provides a record of Holocene weathering history. From 9 to 3·5 ka bp, accelerated chemical weathering was experienced throughout the Daihai catchment under mainly warm and humid conditions, and this reached a maximum at c. 5 ka bp. However, weathering was reduced between c. 8·25 and 7·90 ka bp, which may reflect the global 8·2 ka cooling event. After c. 2·5 ka bp, increased Rb/Sr ratios with higher frequency of fluctuations indicate reduced weathering within the Daihai catchment. The highest Rb/Sr ratios in the Little Ice Age lake sediments indicate the weakest phase of Holocene chemical weathering, resulting from a marked reduction in Sr flux into the basin. The Rb/Sr record also shows an enhancement of chemical weathering under today's climate, but its intensity is less than that of the Medieval Warm Period. Increased Rb/Sr in lake sediment corresponding to reduced catchment weathering is in striking contrast to Rb/Sr decrease in the glacial loess layers in the loess,palaeosol sequence. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Politics, Locality, and Economic Restructuring: California's Central Coast Strawberry Industry in the Post,World War II Period,

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2000
    Miriam J. Wells
    Abstract: This article challenges overly economistic, static, and homogenizing representations of contemporary economic restructuring through an in-depth ethnographic case study of the central coast California strawberry industry in the post,World War II period. It demonstrates that restructuring is much more uneven in its incidence and complex in its motivation than usually portrayed, and that politics and human agency are at its core. Because of the place-based nature of certain economic activity and the grounded experience of political process, its explication requires a sensitivity to space and place. [source]


    Pharmacokinetics of Gabapentin during Delivery, in the Neonatal Period, and Lactation: Does a Fetal Accumulation Occur during Pregnancy?

    EPILEPSIA, Issue 10 2005
    Inger Öhman
    Summary:,Purpose: To study the pharmacokinetics of gabapentin (GBP) during delivery, lactation, and in the neonatal period. Methods: GBP concentrations in plasma and breast milk were determined with high-performance liquid chromatography in samples from six women treated with GBP and in their offspring. Blood samples were obtained at delivery from mothers, from the umbilical cord, and from the newborns on three occasions during 2 days after delivery. GBP concentration also was determined in breast milk and in blood collected from five of the mothers and suckling infants 2 weeks to 3 months after birth. Results: The umbilical cord/maternal plasma concentration ratios ranged from 1.3 to 2.1 (mean, 1.7). GBP plasma concentrations in the neonates declined with an estimated half-life of 14 h. Mean GBP plasma concentrations in the infants were 27% of the cord plasma levels (range, 12,36%) 24 h postpartum. The mean milk/maternal plasma concentration ratio was 1.0 (range, 0.7,1.3) from 2 weeks to 3 months. The infant dose of GBP was estimated to 0.2,1.3 mg/kg/day, equivalent to 1.3,3.8% of the weight-normalized dose received by the mother. The plasma concentrations in the breast-fed infants were ,12% of the mother's plasma levels, but no adverse effects were observed. Conclusions: Our limited observations suggest an active transplacental transport of GBP, with accumulation in the fetus as a consequence. We suggest that this could be by the specific L-type amino acid transporter 1 (LAT-1), which is expressed in the placenta. Newborns seem to have a slightly lower capacity to eliminate GBP than do adults. Transfer of GBP to breast milk is extensive, but plasma concentrations appear to be low in suckling infants. No adverse effects were observed in the newborn. Although more data are needed, our observations suggest that breastfeeding in conjunction with GBP treatment is safe. [source]


    Breeding Tubercles, Papillomatosis and Dominance Behaviour of Male Roach (Rutilus rutilus) During the Spawning Period

    ETHOLOGY, Issue 8 2004
    Raine Kortet
    We studied the relationship between the breeding tubercle ornamentation (i.e. skin roughness) and male pre-spawning dominance and courtship behaviour in roach (Rutilus rutilus) within an experimental laboratory system. Sexually mature fish were caught during their migration to their spawning pond and their behaviours were studied in an artificial spawning arena. Males behaved naturally both in terms of male,male interactions and attempts to achieve spawnings. Males having many, large breeding tubercles (i.e. rough skin) were significantly more often dominant in our dyadic trials than those with smooth skin. The dominant male in the trial exhibited a more active courtship behaviour than its subordinate rival. Papilloma skin disease did not affect the dominance rank. As a result of the relationship between skin roughness and male dominance, breeding tubercles may be used by the females as a cue for choosing a high-quality mate in a roach lek. Thus, breeding tubercles might offer a workable tool for examination of sexual selection among cyprinids. [source]


    Reconstruction of activity areas at a formative household in northwest Argentina

    GEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 4 2005
    María Marta Sampietro
    This paper analyzes the spatial pattern of landscapes and domestic unit activity areas at an archaeological site in northwest Argentina. The site is on a cone glacis in the Tafí Valley on the east side of Aconquija Mountain. The archaeological structures are associated with one of the earliest permanent villages of the region and date to the Formative Period of the Tafí culture (2296 ± 70 yr B.P. to 1140 ± 50 yr B.P.). Using photointerpretation, we distinguished two main structure types: agricultural structures, such as stone terraces, and circular houses. Statistical analysis of the different types of circular structures indicates that simple units had a uniform distribution, which reflects the main function of the area. The patio of one unit was excavated, and three burial cists were found under a Formative Period floor. Archaeological artifacts, together with 107 soil samples from the floor, were collected to establish activity areas within the domestic space. By analyzing soil chemistry (pH, calcium, organic and inorganic phosphorous) and ceramic and animal bone distributions, three major activity areas (animal processing, plant storage, and burials) were identified. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    A preliminary archaeological and environmental study of pre-Columbian burial towers at Huachacalla, Bolivian Altiplano

    GEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 7 2002
    Matti J. Rossi
    Chullpas are pre-Columbian burial towers built by indigenous Aymaras on the Bolivian Altiplano. Bolivian chullpas date back to the Late Intermediate Period (A.D. 1000,1476) and the Late Horizon (A.D. 1476,1532). We recorded 228 chullpas among 84 sites in the Huachacalla region of west-central Bolivia. In our study area, the chullpas are on debris flows and coarse alluvium in the proximal and medial segments of alluvial fans at the foot of two volcanoes. Grain-size, element, and mineralogical analysis of chullpa wall material and local sediment revealed that the burial towers are composed of calcareous sand that is readily available in alluvial fan deposits near the sites. Our data suggest that the Aymaras considered environmental factors, such as drainage and stability of the soil, when they selected the locations of chullpas, whereas cultural factors played a significant role in chullpa architecture. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    TEMPERATURE PROXY RECORDS COVERING THE LAST TWO MILLENNIA: A TABULAR AND VISUAL OVERVIEW

    GEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A: PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2009
    FREDRIK CHARPENTIER LJUNGQVIST
    ABSTRACT. Proxy data are our only source of knowledge of temperature variability in the period prior to instrumental temperature measurements. Until recently, very few quantitative palaeotemperature records extended back a millennium or more, but the number is now increasing. Here, the first systematic survey is presented, with graphic representations, of most quantitative temperature proxy data records covering the last two millennia that have been published in the peer-reviewed literature. In total, 71 series are presented together with basic essential information on each record. This overview will hopefully assist future palaeoclimatic research by facilitating an orientation among available palaeotemperature records and thus reduce the risk of missing less well-known proxy series. The records show an amplitude between maximum and minimum temperatures during the past two millennia on centennial timescales ranging from c. 0.5 to 4°C and averaging c. 1.5,2°C for both high and low latitudes, although these variations are not always occurring synchronous. Both the Medieval Warm Period, the Little Ice Age and the 20th century warming are clearly visible in most records, whereas the Roman Warm Period and the Dark Age Cold Period are less clearly discernible. [source]