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- Title
- Rescue of placental phenotype in a mechanistic model of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
- Author(s)
- Rosemary Oh-McGinnis (author), Aaron B. Bogutz (author), Kang Yun Lee (author), Michael J. Higgins (author), Louis Lefebvre (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
-
Background: Several imprinted genes have been implicated in the process of placentation. The distal region of mouse chromosome 7 (Chr 7) contains at least ten imprinted genes, several of which are expressed from the maternal homologue in the placenta. The corresponding paternal alleles of these genes are silenced in cis by an incompletely understood mechanism involving the formation of a repressive nuclear compartment mediated by the long noncoding RNA Kcnq1ot1 initiated from imprinting centre 2 (IC2). However, it is unknown whether some maternally expressed genes are silenced on the paternal homologue via a Kcnq1ot1-independent mechanism. We have previously reported that maternal inheritance of a large truncation of Chr7 encompassing the entire IC2-regulated domain (DelTel7 allele) leads to embryonic lethality at mid-gestation accompanied by severe placental abnormalities. Kcnq1ot1 expression can be abolished on the paternal chromosome by deleting IC2 (IC2KO allele). When the IC2KO mutation is paternally inherited, epigenetic silencing is lost in the region and the DelTel7 lethality is rescued in compound heterozygotes, leading to viable DelTel7/IC2KO mice.
Results: Considering the important functions of several IC2-regulated genes in placentation, we set out to determine whether these DelTel7/IC2KO rescued conceptuses develop normal placentae. We report no abnormalities with respect to the architecture and vasculature of the DelTel7/IC2KO rescued placentae. Imprinted expression of several of the IC2-regulated genes critical to placentation is also faithfully recapitulated in DelTel7/IC2KO placentae.
Conclusion: Taken together, our results demonstrate that all the distal chromosome 7 imprinted genes implicated in placental function are silenced by IC2 and Kcnq1ot1 on the paternal allele. Furthermore, our results demonstrate that the methylated maternal IC2 is not required for the regulation of nearby genes. The results show the potential for fully rescuing LQ trans placental abnormalities that are caused by imprinting defects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Mental rotation requires visual short-term memory: evidence from human electric cortical activity
- Author(s)
- David J. Prime (author), Pierre Joliecœur (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- The purpose of the present study was to seek evidence that mental rotation is accomplished by transforming a representation held in visual short-term memory (VSTM). In order to accomplish this goal, we utilized the sustained posterior contralateral negativity (SPCN), an electrophysiological index of the maintenance of information in VSTM. We hypothesized that if mental rotation is accomplished by transforming a representation held in VSTM, then the duration that this representation is maintained in VSTM should be related to the degree to which the representation must be rotated to reach the desired orientation. Therefore, the SPCN should offset at progressively longer latencies as the degree of rotation required increases. We tested this prediction in two experiments utilizing rotated alphanumeric characters. Experiment 1 utilized a normal versus mirror discrimination task that is known to require mental rotation. Experiment 2 utilized a letter versus digit discrimination, a task that does not require mental rotation. In Experiment 1, the offset latency of the SPCN wave increased with increases in the angle of rotation of the target. This effect indicates that targets were maintained in VSTM for longer durations as the angle of rotation increased. Experiment 2 revealed that target orientation did not affect SPCN offset latency when subjects did not adopt a mental rotation strategy, confirming that the effects on the SPCN latency effects observed in Experiment 1 were not due to the mere presentation of rotated patterns. Thus, these two experiments provide clear evidence that mental rotation involves representations maintained in VSTM.
- Subject(s)
- Mental rotation, Short-term memory, Human information processing
- Department
- Psychology, Humanities and Social Sciences
- Title
- MCL-1 localizes to sites of DNA damage and regulates DNA damage response
- Author(s)
- Sarwat Jamil (author), Cezar Stoica (author), Tillie-Louise Hackett (author), Vincent Duronio (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- MCL-1, a pro-survival member of the BCL-2 family, was previously shown to have functions in ATR-dependent Chk1 phosphorylation following DNA damage. To further delineate these functions, we explored possible differences in DNA damage response caused by lack of MCL-1 in mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs). As expected, Mcl-1(-/-) MEFs had delayed Chk1 phosphorylation following etoposide treatment, compared to wild type MEFs. However, their response to hydroxyurea, which causes a G(1)/S checkpoint response, was not significantly different. In addition, appearance of gamma-H2AX was delayed in the Mcl-1(-/-) MEFs treated with etoposide. We next investigated whether MCL-1 is present, together with other DNA damage response proteins, at the sites of DNA damage. Immunoprecipitation of etoposide-treated extracts with anti-MCL-1 antibody showed association of MCL-1 with gamma-H2AX as well as NBS1. Immunofluorescent staining for MCL-1 further showed increased co-staining of MCL-1 and NBS1 following DNA damage. By using a system that creates DNA double strand breaks at specific sites in the genome, we demonstrated that MCL-1 is recruited directly adjacent to the sites of damage. Finally, in a direct demonstration of the importance of MCL-1 in allowing proper repair of DNA damage, we found that treatment for two brief exposures to etoposide , followed by periods of recovery, which mimics the clinical situation of etoposide use, resulted in greater accumulation of chromosomal abnormalities in the MEFs that lacked MCL-1. Together, these data indicate an important role for MCL-1 in coordinating DNA damage mediated checkpoint response, and have broad implications for the importance of MCL-1 in maintenance of genome integrity.
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Environmental stresses mediate endophyte–grass interactions in a boreal archipelago
- Author(s)
- Nora M. Saona (author), Benedicte Riber Albrectsen (author), Lars Ericson (author), Dawn R. Bazely (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
-
Summary
1. Both evolutionary theory and empirical evidence from agricultural research support the view that asexual, vertically transmitted fungal endophytes are typically plant mutualists that develop high infection frequencies within host grass populations. In contrast, endophyte–grass interactions in natural ecosystems are more variable, spanning the range from mutualism to antagonism and comparatively little is known about their range of response to environmental stress.
2. We examined patterns in endophyte prevalence and endophyte–grass interactions across nutrient and grazing (from Greylag and Canada geese) gradients in 15 sites with different soil moisture levels in 13 island populations of the widespread grass Festuca rubra in a boreal archipelago in Sweden.
3. In the field, endophyte prevalence levels were generally low (range = 10–53%) compared with those reported from agricultural systems. Under mesic‐moist conditions endophyte prevalence was constantly low (mean prevalence = 15%) and was not affected by grazing pressure or nutrient availability. In contrast, under conditions of drought, endophyte prevalence increased from 10% to 53% with increasing nutrient availability and increasing grazing pressure.
4. In the field, we measured the production of flowering culms, as a proxy for host fitness, to determine how endophyte‐infected plants differed from uninfected plants. At dry sites, endophyte infection did not affect flowering culm production. In contrast, at mesic‐moist sites production of flowering culms in endophyte‐infected plants increased with the covarying effects of increasing nutrient availability and grazing pressure, indicating that the interaction switched from antagonistic to mutualistic.
5. A concurrent glasshouse experiment showed that in most situations, the host appears to incur some costs for harbouring endophytes. Uninfected grasses generally outperformed infected grasses (antagonistic interaction), while infected grasses outperformed uninfected grasses (mutualistic interaction) only in dry, nutrient‐rich conditions. Nutrient and water addition affected tiller production, leaf number and leaf length differently, suggesting that tillers responded with different strategies. This emphasizes that several response variables are needed to evaluate the interaction.
6. Synthesis. This study found complex patterns in endophyte prevalence that were not always correlated with culm production. These contrasting patterns suggest that the direction and strength of selection on infected plants is highly variable and depends upon a suite of interacting environmental variables that may fluctuate in the intensity of their impact, during the course of the host life cycle.
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Climate and anthropogenic change in aquatic environments: A cross ecosystem perspective
- Author(s)
- Julie E. Keister (author), D. Lani Pascual (author), Jessica L. Clasen (author), Kristine N. Hopfensperger (author), Noreen Kelly (author), Joel K. Llopiz (author), Serena M. Moseman (author), Laura E. Petes (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
-
The chapter, "Climate and anthropogenic change in aquatic environments: A cross ecosystem perspective" was written by the listed authors including Jessica L. Clasen (Douglas College Faculty). The Ecological Dissertations in the Aquatic Sciences (Eco-DAS) symposia bring together 35-40 recent PhD recipients for one week in alternate years. Eco-DAS VIII was held in 2008. Eco-DAS is sponsored by the Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education (C-MORE), the University of Hawai`i School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) and its Department of Oceanography, and the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO). The Proceedings of Eco-DAS VIII includes nine chapters published in open access.
In an effort to foster collaboration among researchers across diverse ecosystems, a group of early career scientists whose interests span the aquatic sciences, convened at the University of Hawai’i to participate in the 2008 Eco-DAS symposium. During a break out session of the symposium in which participants were charged with discussing how to best approach mitigation of climate and anthropogenic threats to aquatic ecosystems, participants concluded that effective mitigation will depend upon prioritizing threats across ecosystems. These priorities were documented using a thought experiment in which participants defined their ecosystem of expertise, and then ranked the highest-priority threats to them. Results revealed that marine (open ocean, deep sea, coastal oceans, and rocky intertidal) researchers ranked climate-related impacts (i.e., temperature and ocean acidification) as the highest priority threats whereas estuarine, marsh, wetland, stream, and lake/reservoir researchers ranked the direct anthropogenic impacts of land-use change and nutrient inputs (eutrophication) highest. With such a diverse group, it became apparent that working across ecosystems is limited by issues rang- ing from a lack of large-scale, long-term monitoring to provide baseline data, to broader questions of how changes in one ecosystem cascade across interconnected ecosystems. Here we summarize the discussions, offer insight into the rankings for specific ecosystems, and propose ideas of how past, current, and future research can be used to support a cross-ecosystem perspective on climate and anthropogenic change.
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Local governing and local democracy in British Columbia
- Author(s)
- Patrick Smith (author), Kevin Ginnell (author), Matthew Black (author), Michael Howlett (editor), Dennis Pilon (editor), Tracy Summerville (editor)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- Chapter: Analysis of the development of local democracy and local governing in BC and prospects for reform. Book: British Columbia remains Canada’s most politically dynamic province. This book — which includes coverage of the 2009 provincial election — provides an overview of BC’s institutions, key policy issues, and political culture, with concise chapters contributed by many of the province’s leading political scientists. -- From publisher description.
- Department
- Political Science
- Title
- The vulnerability of ecosystem trophic dynamics to anthropogenically induced environmental change: A comparative approach
- Author(s)
- Jessica L. Clasen (author), Joel K. Llopiz (author), Carrie E. H. Kissman (author), Daniel Marshalonis (author), D. Lani Pascual (author), Paul F. Kemp (editor)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
-
The chapter, "The vulnerability of ecosystem trophic dynamics to anthropogenically induced environmental change: A comparative approach" was written by the listed authors including Jessica L. Clasen (Douglas College Faculty). The Ecological Dissertations in the Aquatic Sciences (Eco-DAS) symposia bring together 35-40 recent PhD recipients for one week in alternate years. Eco-DAS VIII was held in 2008. Eco-DAS is sponsored by the Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education (C-MORE), the University of Hawai`i School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) and its Department of Oceanography, and the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO). The Proceedings of Eco-DAS VIII includes nine chapters published in open access.
We employed a comparative approach to review the vulnerability of the trophic interactions within aquatic systems to global threats associated with anthropogenic activities. The goal of this chapter was to identify and characterize mechanisms by which human-mediated environmental threats may modulate trophic dynamics across aquatic ecosystems. Trophic dynamics include some of the most obvious and pervasive factors influencing ecosystems and were used as a metric because of their importance and commonality across all aquatic environments. Our use of trophic dynamics proved to be insightful, illustrating that the flow of energy through aquatic food webs will be (or already has been) altered by invasive species, land-use change, nutrient loading, exposure to ultraviolet radiation, overharvesting, acidification, and increasing global temperatures. The response of trophic dynamics to these threats was often similar across oceans, estuaries, lakes, and rivers. This similarity proved to be interesting given the differences in both the level of concern expressed by scientists and the predicted variability in environment-specific responses. As the trophic interactions of an ecosystem are at the root of its function and structure, examining trophic dynamics could be an informative method for evaluating the response of aquatic environments to global threats. If future analyses validate the use of trophic dynamics as a metric, it is our hope that trophic dynamics can be used by scientists and politicians to mitigate the effects of human actions.
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Human rights policies, neoliberal discourse, and the neutralization of human rights issues in Canadian harassment and discrimination policies
- Author(s)
- Marni Westerman (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- This paper contemplates changes in the content of harassment and discrimination policies at Canadian universities. I argue that changes in discourse surrounding harassment and discrimination issues within institutions are more than simple adjustments to changes in case law: these changes represent a potentially problematic backgrounding of human rights issues within institutions that is fuelled by the neoliberal social and political context in which policies are developed. The changes represent a re-inscription of hegemonic discourses on anti-harassment issues because they downplay the demands of marginalized groups based on their historical oppression in favour of reprivatized and neutralized approaches to issues of ‘personal security’ and ‘respectful workplaces’. These changes are influenced by a social context that favours individual responsibility and the rejection of demands of so-called ‘special interest groups’. I argue that this represents an example of the effect of the neo- liberal turn in the Canadian social and political context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Department
- Sociology
- Title
- ‘Stand by your man’: women's political recruitment at the 2010 UK general election
- Author(s)
- Jeanette Ashe (author), Rosie Campbell (author), Sarah Childs (author), Elizabeth Evans (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- The year 2010 constituted a favourable opportunity for the greater descriptive representation of women in the UK Parliament. The parties were publicly competing over the issue; Parliament had its own Committee looking at it; and there were plenty of vacancies for candidates in each of the parties’ held seats, as many more MPs than usual stood down. The outcome was disappointing. There was an overall increase in the number of women MPs – up from 128 to 142 – but this was only a 2.5 per cent increase on 2005. Inter-party differences remain. The Liberal Democrats witnessed a decline in the number and percentage of their women MPs and candidates; the Tories saw a doubling of their number, with women now constituting 16 per cent of their parliamentary party; and Labour has both the largest number and percentage of women MPs. These patterns are best explained by the parties’ different attitudes towards equality guarantees – measures that, all other things being equal, return women MPs to Parliament. In other words, Labour's All Women Shortlists once again delivered. The other parties’ efforts were simply less efficient at translating women candidates into MPs. Looking to the future, the picture is far from rosy. The Coalition's plans for political reform will likely increase competition for selection at the next general election to women's detriment, and the impact of the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority raises the possibility that their supply might decrease too.
- Subject(s)
- Women legislators--Great Britain--History--21st century, Women--Political activity--Great Britain--History--21st century, Great Britain. Parliament--Elections, 2010, Great Britain--Politics and government--21st century
- Department
- Political Science, Humanities and Social Sciences
- Title
- Applications of the site-specific recombinase Cre to the study of genomic imprinting
- Author(s)
- Rosemary Oh-McGinnis (author), Meaghan Jones (author), Louis Lefebvre (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- The development of gene targeting approaches has had a tremendous impact on the functional analysis of the mouse genome. A specific application of this technique has been the adaptation of the bacteriophage P1 Cre/loxP site-specific recombinase system which allows for the precise recombination between two loxP sites, resulting in deletion or inversion of the intervening sequences. Because of the efficiency of this system, it can be applied to conditional deletions of relatively short coding sequences or regulatory elements but also to more extensive chromosomal rearrangement strategies. Both mechanistic and functional studies of genomic imprinting have benefited from the development of the Cre/loxP technology. Since imprinted genes within large chromosomal regions are regulated by the action of cis-acting sequences known as imprinting centers, chromosomal engineering approaches are particularly well suited to the elucidation of long-range mechanisms controlling the imprinting of autosomal genes. Here we review the applications of the Cre/loxP technology to the study of genomic imprinting, highlight important insights gained from these studies and discuss future directions in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Habitat use by western black widow spiders (Latrodectus hesperus) in coastal British Columbia: evidence of facultative group living
- Author(s)
- Maxence Salomon (author), Samantha Vibert (author), Robert G. Bennett (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- Animal social systems come in a wide range of forms characterized by different types of group-living relationships. Species that express facultative group-living behaviours, where individuals only associate under certain conditions or at certain times, are especially interesting for studying social evolution. We investigated the social structure of the western black widow spider (Latrodectus hesperus Chamberlin and Ivie, 1935) over 5 years in a coastal British Columbia habitat, and present the first comprehensive evidence of facultative group living in the genus Latrodectus Walckenaer, 1805. Latrodectus hesperus have a flexible social structure that varies seasonally, wherein individuals (mostly females) either form groups or live solitarily. In the fall and early winter, females spontaneously form groups of 2-8 individuals, but live alone during the oviposition season in the spring and summer. When living in groups spiders share large webs and are tolerant of each other, although they appear to forage individually. We also report on the relationships between different ecological factors and the social structure of L. hesperus, including the interaction of these spiders with two co-occurring species of introduced spiders (Tegenaria agrestis (Walckenaer, 1802) and Tegenaria duellica Simon, 1875). Our findings suggest that L. hesperus is a good model system with which to explore the mechanisms involved in the evolution of sociality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Factors affecting the availability of thick epiphyte mats and other potential nest platforms for Marbled Murrelets in British Columbia
- Author(s)
- Alan E. Burger (author), Robert A. Ronconi (author), Michael P. Silvergieter (author), Catherine Conroy (author), Volker Bahn (author), Irene A. Manley (author), Alvin Cober (author), David B. Lank (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- Nest platforms (mossy pads, limbs, and deformities >15 cm in diameter) are key requirements in the forest nesting habitat of the threatened Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus (J.F. Gmelin, 1789)). Little is known about factors that affect the availability of platforms or the growth of canopy epiphytes that provide platforms. We examined variables affecting these parameters in coastal trees in British Columbia using data from 29 763 trees at 1412 sites in 170 watersheds. Tree diameter (diameter at breast height (DBH)) was the most important predictor of platform availability in the pooled data and within each of six regions. In most regions, platforms become available at DBH > 60 cm, but on East Vancouver Island, DBH needs to be >96 cm and possibly on the Central Coast >82 cm. Other regional predictors of platforms included tree height, tree species, and to a lesser extent elevation, slope, and latitude. Most (72%) trees providing platforms had epiphytes (mainly moss) covering one third or more of branch surfaces and 81% had intermediate or thick epiphyte mats. Mistletoe deformities provided <7% of platforms. Our model predictions help to define and manage suitable habitat for nesting Marbled Murrelets and also contribute to understanding forest canopy ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Department
- Biology
- Title
- Early psychosis and aggression: predictors and prevalence of violent behaviour amongst individuals with early onset psychosis
- Author(s)
- Alicia Spidel (author), Tania Lecomte (author), Caroline Greaves (author), Kimberly Sahlstrom (author), John C. Yuille (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- Studies in the area of psychosis and violence to date suggest that those who suffer from psychosis are at higher risk for perpetration of such aggressive behaviours. In fact, it has been suggested that variables such as substance use and personality may mediate this relationship. Other variables, such as childhood physical abuse, might also be implicated in the etiology. In the current study, a sample of one hundred and eighteen participants with a primary diagnosis of psychosis were interviewed and prevalence rates for aggressive experiences were as follows: history of trouble with the law (45%), history of emotional abuse (9.6%), physical abuse (38.8%), and sexual abuse (60.2%). With regard to perpetration, 69.6% reported verbal or physical aggression (69.6%), and further, 61% reported problems with substances. Logistic regression procedures were used with a number of the variables under study and relationships were evidenced between psychopathy scores, history of abuse, and regular drug use. History of child abuse was related to violence history, with those who were victims of child abuse being more likely to be violent in later life. In addition higher scores on the psychopathy measure were linked with violence history. This study was a first step towards identifying persons suffering from a mental illness who may be at risk for violence by identifying who, among first episode clients, may be more likely to perpetrate violent behaviours. Targeted interventions and strategies may be further refined so that individuals receiving mental health services may be better served.
- Subject(s)
- Violence--Research, Psychoses, Aggressiveness, Antisocial personality disorders, Psychopaths, Mentally ill, Substance abuse--Psychological aspects, Child sexual abuse--Psychological aspects, Family violence--Psychological aspects
- Department
- Criminology, Humanities and Social Sciences
- Title
- Stigmatized, marginalized, celebrated: Developments in Lawn Tennis coaching, 1870-1939
- Author(s)
- Robert J. Lake (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- This paper examines the numerous changes to the role, influence, professional standards and general social status of coaches and the vocation of coaching in lawn tennis, focusing predominantly on the inter-war years. It was during this time, generally, when lawn tennis clubs became more open and democratic in their memberships, and when elite-level tennis came to embrace more profoundly the ethos of professionalism. As such, the recognized value and esteem of coaches at both levels increased, which led to advances in the vocation of coaching practices across the sport. These developments are analysed in the light of wider social processes, most notably the widespread and influential class struggles of the twentieth century, which characterized taken-for-granted assumptions about how sport should be played and who should play it. The debate between amateurs and professionals is at the heart of developments in coaching, and forms the central issue in this paper. This article commences with an investigation of lawn tennis from the 1870s until the First World War, and then goes on to consider areas of progress with regard to coaching and areas of continuing inequality. The period after the Second World War is discussed briefly, when attitudes toward professionalism softened further in all areas, despite the considerable delay in not initiating 'open tennis' until 1968. Testimony from players throughout these eras reveals the fundamental importance of coaching to achieving success amid the continued hypocrisy of adopting professional standards under the veil of being an amateur, or in some cases 'shamateur'.
- Subject(s)
- Tennis coaches, Athletic clubs--History, Athletes--Social aspects, Tennis--History
- Department
- Sport Science
- Title
- Social processes of health and physical education teachers' identity formation: Reproducing and changing culture
- Author(s)
- Karen Sirna (author), Richard Tinning (author), Tony Rossi (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- This paper examines Initial Teacher Education students' experiences of participation in health and physical education (HPE) subject department offices and the impact on their understandings and identity formation. Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of habitus, field, and practice along with Wenger's communities of practice form the theoretical frame used in the paper. Data were collected using surveys and interviews with student-teachers following their teaching practicum and analysed using coding and constant comparison. Emergent themes revealed students' participation in masculine-dominated sports, gendered body constructions, and repertoires of masculine domination. Findings are discussed in relation to their impact on student-teachers' learning, identity formation, and marginalizing practices in the department offices. Implications for teacher education and HPE are explored.
- Department
- Sport Science
- Title
- Sub Rosa
- Author(s)
- Amber Dawn (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- In this stunning debut novel, Amber Dawn subverts and transgresses the classic hero's quest adventure to create a dark post-feminist vision not for the faint of heart. Sub Rosa's reluctant heroine is known as "Little," a teenaged runaway unable to remember her real name; in her struggle to get by in the world, she stumbles upon an underground society of ghosts and magicians, missing girls and would-be johns: a place called Sub Rosa. Not long after she is initiated into this family of magical prostitutes, Little is called upon to lead Sub Rosa through a maze of feral darkness, both real and imagined--a calling burdened with grotesque enemies, strange allies, and memories from a foggy past. Written with a kind of gasping urgency, Sub Rosa is a beautiful and gutsy allegory of our times, a fairy-tale-like fantasia imbued with a grave, unapologetic realness. From publisher description.
- Department
- Creative Writing, Language, Literature and Performing Arts
- Title
- Displacing religion, disarming law: Situating quaker spirituality in the “Trident Three” case
- Author(s)
- Lisa A. Smith (author), Lori G. Beaman (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- The authors focus on the case of the “Trident Three”, who boarded a Trident submarine control station on barge on a Scottish loch and, using their bare hands and small hammers, disabled much of the computer equipment in the station, temporarily disarming one third of Britain’s nuclear weapons system. Drawing primarily on a discourse analysis of the case, the authors identify a profound disjuncture between the ways in which the law and religious discourse framed the actions of the Trident Three. They explore the ways in which religious claims are reshaped by legal discourse as isolated actions rather than as actions set in a broader moral context with transcendental implications. Their project is to conduct a socio-legal analysis of competing discourses, paying particular attention to the ways in which power relations are worked out. They also acknowledge the contribution of social movements literature to an understanding of the ways in which groups deploy notions of “the good society” or “the public good” in order to ground their justification of choice of action. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Department
- Sociology
- Title
- From 'garden city precursors' to 'cemeteries for the living': contemporary discourse on Krupp housing and "Besucherpolitik" in Wilhelmine Germany
- Author(s)
- Cedric Bolz (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- In the Wilhelmine era (1871-1918) the Krupp steel company developed into Germany's largest industrial establishment and most famous armaments manufacturer. While the firm further cultivated its reputation as 'Cannon Kings', it claimed to be a leader in an entirely different area: the provision of housing. Extensively marketed through company publications, displays at international exhibitions and its Besucherpolitik (visitor policy), Krupp's housing developments in Essen generated considerable domestic and international interest. During a period when the housing question increasingly entered the political realm, high-profile individuals such as Kurt Eisner, Hannes Meyer and Alfred von Tirpitz all passionately expressed their views on Krupp's housing developments. This article assesses their historically neglected first-hand observations against the quantitative and qualitative housing achievements of the steel giant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Department
- History
- Title
- Identification of host material from crops and whole bodies of Protophormia terraenovae (R-D) (Diptera) larvae, pupae, and adults, and the implications for forensic studies
- Author(s)
- Margaret Stuyt (author), Raul Ursic-Bedoya (author), Dawn Cooper (author), Niki Huitson (author), Gail Anderson (author), Carl Lowenberger (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- Larvae of Diptera are used routinely in forensic entomology to estimate accurately the post mortem interval. These applications require a detailed understanding of insect growth rates and insect succession profiles under different climactic conditions and geographical locations. There may be times when larvae may have been removed from a single food source or the corpse has been moved from one location to another, confounding the interpretation of the entomological data. We report here a study that evaluates the time period during which a food source can be detected in larvae of Protophormia terraenovae. We could detect the food source (pork or chicken liver) that larvae had ingested from early second instar to late third instar larvae. No detection was possible in pupae or adults. When larvae were transferred from one food source to another, the primary source was detectable for only 8–12 hours after transfer, whereas it was detectable for 12 hours in starved larvae. In most studies that use insects to estimate PMI, investigators collect larvae directly from the corpse. In cases where there have been significant disturbances, investigators must understand the changes in insect dieting and development that may take place.
- Subject(s)
- Forensic entomology, Dipterology, Diptera--Larvae--Food, Diptera--Life cycles, Flies--Larvae--Food, Flies--Life cycles
- Department
- Criminology, Humanities and Social Sciences
- Title
- Time-and temperature-dependent conduit wall porosity: A key control on degassing and explosivity at Tarawera volcano, New Zealand
- Author(s)
- B.M. Kennedy (author), A.M. Jellinek (author), J.K. Russell (author), A.R.L. Nichols (author), Nathalie Vigouroux (author)
- Date
- 2010
- Abstract
- The permeability of volcanic conduit walls and overlying plug can govern the degassing and explosivity of eruptions. At volcanoes characterized by a protracted history of episodic volcanism, conduit walls are commonly constructed of quenched magma. During each successive eruptive phase, reheating by ascending magma can modify the porosity, permeability and H 2O content of the conduit wall rocks and overlying plug. We investigate whether the unusual explosivity of the 1886 basaltic eruption at Tarawera volcano is related to the heating and degassing of the AD1314 Kaharoa rhyolitic rocks, through which it erupted. We heat cores of perlitic Tarawera dome rhyolite to 300 °C–1200 °C for 30 min to 3 days at atmospheric pressure. We characterize time ( t)- and temperature ( T)-dependent variations in porosity, volatile content and texture through SEM image analyses. We also directly measure pre- and post-experimental connected and isolated porosity and water content. We identify four textural/outgassing regimes: Regime 1 ( T ≤ 800 °C, t ≤ 2 h), with negligible textural changes and a significant loss of meteoric water (1.4–0.72 wt.% H 2O); Regime 2 (800 ≤ T ≤ 1100 °C, t ≤ 6 h), with cracking and vesicle growth and a 5–10% increase in connected porosity; Regime 3 (800 ≤ T ≤ 1200 °C, t ≥ 30 min), with healed cracks, coalesced and collapsed vesicles, and overall reduced porosity; and Regime 4 ( T ≥ 1200 °C, t > 30 min), with a collapse of all connected porosity. These regimes are governed by the temperature of the event ( T) relative to the glass transition temperature ( T g ) and the time scale of the event ( t) relative to a critical relaxation time for structural failure of the melt (τ r ) . We identify a quantitative transition from predominantly brittle behavior such as cracking, which enhances connected porosity and permeability, to viscous processes including crack healing and vesicle collapse, which act to reduce connected porosity. Applied to the 1886 basalt eruption at Tarawera, we show that progressive heat transfer ultimately reduced the open porosity and permeability of the conduit walls, thereby partially sealing the conduit and reducing volatile loss. We argue that this mechanism was an underlying reason for the exceptional explosivity of the 1886 eruption. We further suggest that textural changes associated with reheating could explain some of the cyclic deformation and degassing observed at many lava domes preceding explosive eruptions.
- Department
- Earth and Environmental Sciences