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Brown, Scott

Conference Report (1907) Report to the 1907 Hague conference. The proceedings of the Hague conferences. The conference of 1907 Vol. I. Prepared in the division of international law of the Carnegie endowment for international peace under the supervision of James Brown Scott. Oxford University Press, New York 1921... [Pg.91]

Donahue, S.M., Brown, C.W., Scott, M.J., "Analysis of Deoxyribonucleotides with Principal Component and Partial Least-Squares Regression of UV Spectra after Fourier Processing", Appl. Spec. 1990 (44) 407-413. [Pg.194]

Brown. R.W., Scott, M.A. and Toyne, C. Tram. Inst. Chem. Eng. 25 (1947) 181. An investigation of heat transfer in agitated jacketed cast iron vessels. [Pg.565]

Schiller, P., Amin, J., Ananthan, J., Brown, M.E., Scott, W.A., Voellmy, R. (1988). Cis acting elements involved in the regulated expression of human hsp70 gene. J. Mol. Biol. 203, 97-105. [Pg.459]

Bernstein EF, Lee J, Brown DB, Yu R, Van Scott E (2001) Glycolic acid treatment increases type I collagen mRNA and hyaluronic acid content of human skin. Dermatol Surg 27(5) 429-433... [Pg.21]

Jaensson, A., Scott, A.P., and Moore, A. et al. (2007). Effects of a pyrethroid pesticide on endocrine responses to female odours and reproductive behaviour in male parr of brown trout (Salmo trutta L.). Aquatic Toxicology 81, 1-9. [Pg.353]

Copper (chemical symbol Cu, from the Latin name of the metal, cuprum), the metal that in Roman times was known as the Cyprian metal (since much of the metal came from Cyprus), is reddish brown, malleable and ductile, and can be easily shaped by cold- or hot-working techniques (see Fig. 35) (Scott 2002). Native copper occurs mainly in the form of boulders, nuggets, dendrites, and laminar outgrowths. It was certainly in its native form that copper was first recognized and used for over five millennia since then, however, the bulk of copper has been derived from copper ores by a variety... [Pg.192]

B.L. Haller, K.A. Fuller, W.S. Brown, J.W. Koenig, B J. Eveland, and M.G. Scott, Two automated prolactin immunoassays evaluated with demonstration of a high-dose hook effect in one. Clin. Chem. 38,... [Pg.164]

Karickhoff, S.W., Brown, D.S., Scott, T.A. (1979) Sorption of hydrophobic pollutants on natural water sediments. Water Res. 13, 241-248. [Pg.610]

Available data indicate that phenol biodegrades in soil under both aerobic and anaerobic soil conditions. The half-life of phenol in soil is generally less than 5 days (Baker and Mayfield 1980 HSDB 1997), but acidic soils and some surface soils may have half-lives of between 20 and 25 days (HSDB 1997). Mineralization in an alkaline, para-brown soil under aerobic conditions was 45.5, 48, and 65% after 3, 7, and 70 days, respectively (Haider et al. 1974). Half-lives for degradation of low concentrations of phenol in two silt loam soils were 2.70 and 3.51 hours (Scott et al. 1983). Plants have been shown to be capable of metabolizing phenol readily (Cataldo et al. 1987). [Pg.173]


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