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I made this drawing in 2016 as cover for our prison newsletter. I have been in prison for many years. I wanted this drawing to be a metaphor of what I think is the usual relationship between prison staff and prisoners. The snake represents the prevailing
Tatipikalawan, Pris
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famous Newton–Puiseux polygonal algebraic ...
V. Dragović, I. Goryuchkina
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Long-term (1990–2019) monitoring of forest cover changes in the humid tropics
Three decades of satellite observations provide unprecedented information about forest change trajectories in the humid tropics. Accurate characterization of tropical moist forest changes is needed to support conservation policies and to quantify their ...
C. Vancutsem +9 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The front cover of this issue displays a picture taken from Daniel Slåttnes’ “Anthro-botanical investigations from the ...
Lina Ingeborgrud, Martin Anfinsen
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Rebecca ...
Ivana Suboticki
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Continuous cover forestry in Europe: usage and the knowledge gaps and challenges to wider adoption
There is increasing interest across Europe in adopting forest management strategies, which promote species and structural diversity through the use of irregular silvicultural systems, an approach often described as continuous cover forestry (CCF ...
W. Mason +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Land cover information plays a vital role in many aspects of life, from scientific and economic to political. Accurate information about land cover affects the accuracy of all subsequent applications, therefore accurate and timely land cover information ...
Phan Thanh Noi, V. Kuch, L. Lehnert
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About the cover: Euler and Königsberg’s Bridges: A historical view
Graph theory almost certainly began when, in 1735, Leonhard Euler solved a popular puzzle about bridges. The East Prussian city of Konigsberg (now Kalin- ingrad) occupies both banks of the River Pregel and an island, Kneiphof, which lies in the river at ...
G. Alexanderson
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