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Prince Albert

This book contains a selection of chapter topics based on papers given at the 12th conference of the Commission on Charge, Spin and Momentum Density of the International Union for Crystallography, held in Waskiesiu, Prince Albert National Park, SK, Canada, July 27-August 1, 1997. The choice of topics represents some of the latest advances in the field of electron, spin, and momemtum densities and the analysis of these densities with respect to their roles in determining chemical reactivity. [Pg.10]

Susceptible plants Apple, pear, hawthorn, and poplar. Some apples, such as Cox s Orange Pippin, Elstar and Gala, are particularly susceptible. More resistant apples include Bramley s Seedling, Lane s Prince Albert and Newton Wonder. Canker is a particular problem on wet, poorly drained soil. [Pg.332]

I 9 Albert MA, Danielson E, Rifai N, et al, Effect of statin therapy on C-reactive protein levels the pravastatin inflammation/CRP evaluation (PRINCE). A randomized trial and cohort study, JAMA 2001 286 64-70. [Pg.192]

Prince Albert died in 1861 at the age of 42, because the doctors at that time did not know how to treat typhoid fever (antibiotics had not then been invented). Albert was comparatively old when he died, as the average life expectancy in the early nineteenth century was between 40 and 50, and infant mortality was almost 20 %. [Pg.161]

Michael Faraday lecturing at the Royal Institution before Prince Albert and others (1855). [Pg.472]

In December 1872 the British ship HMS Challenger began a four-year journey, which lasted until May of 1876. This was the first major study done from a purely scientific viewpoint, and since that time significant strides have been made. The advent of submersible vehicles allowed for first-hand study of the ocean floor and the water above it. In 1900, Prince Albert of Monaco established two institutes to study oceanography. [Pg.640]

Antonini, P., Picirillo, E., Petrini, R., Civette, L., D Antonio, M. Orsi, G. 1999. Enriched mantle - Dupal signature in the genesis of the Jurassic Ferrar tholeiites from Prince Albert Mountains, Victoria Land, Antarctica. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 136, 1-19. [Pg.119]

Solvay S.A. Benelux, me du Prince Albert 44, B-1050 Biuxelles, Belgium... [Pg.911]

Corporate Communications SOTVAYS.A. Headquarters 33, Rue du Prince Albert B-1050 Brussels Belgium... [Pg.326]

Mawson Allan Hills Coombs Hills Prince Albert Mtns., in southern Victoria Land... [Pg.375]

Mesa Rmge, Monument Nunataks, LiteU Rocks, and related nunateiks in northern Victoria Land Prince Albert Mountains, Brimstone Peak, Allan Hills, and Carapace Nunatak in southern Victoria Land Westhaven Nunatak at the head of Hatherton Glacier in the Britemnia Remge... [Pg.380]

The Prince Albert Mountains in the northern part of southern Victoria Land consist of a large number of nunataks located on the polar plateau at the heads of Mawson, Harbord, and David glaciers aU of which flow into the Ross Sea. Several of these nunataks are composed of siUs of Ferrar Dolerite although flows of Kirkpatrick Basalt occur on Brimstone Peak (75°48 S, 158°33 E). Molzahn et al. (1996) reported isotope ratios of strontium, neodymium, and osmium as well as trace-element concentrations of five dolerite samples from the nunataks of the Prince Albert Mountains and two basalt samples from Brimstone Peak, including rubidium, strontium, samarium, neodymium, rhenium (Re) and osmium (Os). They also measured isotope ratios of strontium, neodymium, and lead in clinopyroxene and plagioclase of these rocks. [Pg.392]

Elliot DH (2000) Stratigraphy of Jurassic pyroclastic rocks in the Transantarctic Mountains. J African Earth Sd 31 77-89 Elliot DH (2002) Paleovolcanological setting of the Mawson Formation Evidence from the Prince Albert Mountains, Victoria Land. In Gamble JA, Skinner DNB, Henrys S (eds) Antarctica at the close of the Millennium. The Royal Society of New Zealand Bulletin, vol. 35. Wellington, New Zealand, pp 185-192... [Pg.410]


See other pages where Prince Albert is mentioned: [Pg.144]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.478]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.864]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.1173]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.1735]    [Pg.375]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.412]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.17 ]




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