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Burn, Walter

Burn, Walter P., Associates. County Character Dominance of Employment in Industry,... [Pg.105]

Colorless, oily liquid with a faint ammonia-like odor and burning taste. Gradually becomes yellow to reddish-brown on exposure to air or light. The lower and upper odor thresholds are 2 and 128 ppm, respectively (quoted, Keith and Walters, 1992). An odor threshold of 1.0 ppmv was reported by Leonardos et al. (1969). [Pg.104]

Kessler RC, Sonnega A, Bromet E, Hughes M, Nelson CB (1995) Posttraumaticstress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey. Arch Gen Psychiatry 52 1048-1060 Kessler RC, Stang PE, Wittchen HU, Ustun TB, Roy-Burne PP, Walters EE (1998) Lifetime panic-depression comorbidity in the National Comorbidity Survey. Arch Gen Psychiatry 55 801-808... [Pg.498]

Berns W, Dahlman A, Johnson FM, Burns R, Sperling D, Guiltinan M, Siemens A, Walter R, Wright W, Hammer-Wilson M, Wile A (1982) Cancer Res 42 2326... [Pg.271]

Hahn, G.S. Strontium is a selective and potent inhibitor of sensory irritation (itch, burn and sting) and neurogenic inflammation. In Perspectives in Percutaneous Penetration Brain, K.R., Walters, K.A., Eds. STS Publishing Cardiff, 2000 Vol. 7a, 10. [Pg.1324]

In 1941, astronomer Walter S. Adams (1876-1956) discovered another new chemical species in interstellar space. Herzberg generated the same species in the laboratory by burning methane. Comparison of experiment and theory confirmed that it was CH. In 1942, Herzberg investigated a set of emission bands observed earlier in a comet (comet 1940c) and centered... [Pg.149]

Reviews and discussions of the technique have been made by Murray [89], Wolstenholme [90], and Walter [91]. The technique was first applied by Burns and Haring [92] to interpret the action of pigments and primers, and later by Haring and Gibney [93] to compare with the results from outdoor exposure on a set of 50 different paints. For painted steel immersed in artificial seawater. Worm well and Brasher [94] observed three sections in the potential-time curve (Fig. 10) an initial drop in potential, followed by a rise and finally a gradual decline. [Pg.517]

Ronald E Bellamy and Russ Zajtchuk, eds.. Textbook of Military Medicine, Part I, Vol. 5, Conventional Warfare Ballistic, Blast and Burn Injuries (Washington, DC Walter Reed Army Medical Center 1990) p. 49. Copper sulfate is no longer recommended for treating wounds contaminated with white phosphorus. Ibid, p. 340. [Pg.275]


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