Results 101 to 110 of about 165,327 (328)
UA Geosciences Newsletter, (Fall 1996)
AZPEPP Seismic Station / Advisory Board Additions / Romero Collection at UA / News around the Department / Paleomag Crew in Alaska / Alumni News / The Desert Lab / Emeritus Profile: Paul Martin / Ev Lindsay Retires / In Memory of Orlo Childs / Metal ...
University of Arizona Department of Geosciences
core
Scanning Parametric Sediment Echosounder as Tool for Underwater Archaeological Prospection
ABSTRACT Underwater cultural heritage 3D prospection techniques, especially for remains that are partly buried in the ground, are only very rarely available and often can only be applied with considerable technical effort. To overcome this limitation, we evaluate a methodological adaption of widely used and available single channel parametric sediment ...
Dennis Wilken +5 more
wiley +1 more source
UA Geosciences Newsletter, Volume 5, Number 2 (Spring 2000)
Farewell to Suzanne and Paul / New Faculty Profiles / Julia Cole - New Views of Recent Climate Variability / Jonathan Overpeck - A Paleoclimatic Perspective on Global Warming / Mihai Ducea - Tectonics / Jon Pelletier - Characterizing and Modeling ...
University of Arizona Department of Geosciences
core
Model‐Enabled Knowledge Transfer Across Cell Lines, Culture Scales and Conditions
ABSTRACT Mechanistic models are central to quantitative understanding and optimization of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell culture processes, but their utility is often restricted by parameter sets calibrated for specific cell lines, scales, or operating conditions.
Luxi Yu +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Recent methodological development in phylogenetic inference has focused predominantly on molecular data. However, renewed interest in other data types, particularly morphological data, has followed from the increased recognition of the power of total evidence and tip‐dating approaches, including fossil data, for inference of time‐scaled trees ...
Melanie J. Hopkins +9 more
wiley +1 more source
Applying an intersectionality lens to expand equity in the geosciences
Geosciences remains one of the least diverse science disciplines. Recent efforts in the discipline have aimed to address leadership, organizational, and structural factors to increase engagement of diverse participants.
A. Nuñez, Jessica Rivera, T. Hallmark
semanticscholar +1 more source
UA Geosciences Newsletter, Volume 3, Number 2 (Spring 1997)
Letter from the Chair / Chuck Kluth Gives Short Course / News around the Department: Spence Titley Wins Top Honors / NSF-Arizona AMS Facility / Fall 1996 Degrees Awarded / GeoDaze 25th Anniversary / Alumni News / Alumni Achievement Awards / New Faculty ...
University of Arizona Department of Geosciences
core
ABSTRACT The concept of predictive maintenance in advanced manufacturing systems is crucial from the point of view of resource efficiency in the era of high competitiveness forced by energy transformation in the digital economy. Against the backdrop of sustainability and the opportunities a data cooperative offers, the combination of predictive ...
Christian Schachtner +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Can hydrophobic, shape‐selective zeolites efficiently remove the persistent pharmaceutical CBZ from water? This work moves beyond the static picture of interaction energies by modeling diffusion with umbrella sampling and machine‐learned potentials. Even high intrinsic diffusion barriers can be overcome through exergonic adsorption from water, yielding
Jakob Brauer +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Cadmium is a typical chalcophile element which occurs in various sulfide deposits. In the environmental system, cadmium as the nutritional requirement is utilized for the growth of microorganisms, and its cycle is greatly affected by the biological ...
WANG Dan-ni +4 more
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