Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Ireland travel

In any case, Boyle lived at his sister s house for the next four and a half months. During that time he was introduced to a lot of people, including a sister-in-law of Lady Ranelagh who happened to be married to a prominent member of the so-called Long Parliament This influential M.P. used his connections to secure Boyle s estates in England and Ireland and arranged a safe conduct that allowed Boyle to travel to one of them, at Stalbridge in the county of Dorset. [Pg.50]

Marathon Petroleum Company LLC Pilot Travel Centers LLC Speedway SuperAmerica LLC Marathon Oil Ireland, Ltd. [Pg.374]

The authors would like to thank Enterprise Ireland (formerly Forbairt) for Basic Research Grant SC/97/504 and for Strategic Research Grant ST/97/413. Acknowledgement is made to the Donors of The Petroleum Research Fund, administered by the American Chemical Society, for partial travel support to the National ACS meeting in Orlando, Florida. [Pg.78]

Indo-European Kurgan (or Barrow) people crossed into Europe above the Black Sea in about 4250BCE. They traveled on horses from the Russian Steppes west of the Ural Mountains and followed the Danube into Europe, razing relatively peaceful agrarian cultures everywhere they went. The Kurgan people finally reached Ireland from Britain in about 1700BCE. [Pg.60]

Conservative scholars suggest that Ireland is too far away from the Middle East for David to have traveled there. However, the romantics are certain that David visited this remote outpost of the empire, where Israelite peoples had settled in the days since the Exodus and which was close to Cornwall, as part of his tin trade. [Pg.169]

Simon Brach, Jeremiah s scribe or secretary, also traveled to Ireland with Jeremiah s group. Various writers give Brach s surname as... [Pg.171]

The Book of Invasions says that they originated in the Cretan city of Miletus, fled to Syria in the thirteenth century BCE, sailed to North Africa, traveled to Compostela in North West Spain and thence to Ireland. ... [Pg.175]

Grene, Nicholas (ed.), J. M. Synge Travelling Ireland Essays i8p8-ipo8 (Dublin Lilliput Press, 2009). [Pg.187]

Murphy M, McHugh B, Tighe O, Mayne P, O Neill C, Naughten E, Croke DT. Genetic basis of transferase-deficient galactosemia in Ireland and the population history of the Irish Travellers. Eur J Hum Genet 1999 7 549-554. [Pg.451]

The Puritan leader Oliver Cromwell became Infected with malaria in 1649/50, while traveling in Ireland. He refused to take the recently discovered remedy, a tree bark powder, called "Jesuits powder" (see below), and died in 1658 from a malaria-relapse in combination with a kidney disease. [419]... [Pg.442]

Boyle, Robert (1627-91) English chemist and physicist, born in Ireland. After moving to Oxford in 1654 he worked on gases, using an air pump made by Robert "Hooke. With it he proved that sound does not travel in a vacuum. In 1662 he discovered "Boyle s law. In chemistry he worked on "flame tests and acid-base "indicators. [Pg.109]

Atrocities Committed on the Indians Therein (London T. Fisher Unwin, 1912), p. 49. See my discussion in Roger Casement in the Amazon, the Congo, and Ireland , in Writing, Travel and Empire In the Margins of Anthropology, ed. Peter Hulme and Russell McDougall (London LB. Tauris, 2007), pp. 169-94. [Pg.213]

Nelly Boxall leaves (28 March). Travels to Ireland (26 April-9 May). Roger Fry dies (9 September). Meets W. B. Yeats (25 October). [Pg.288]

John P. Harrington, ed.. The English Traveller in Ireland (Dublin Wolfhound Press, 1991), p. 94. [Pg.131]

Storage, though, is all very well, but how can the information be written and retrieved An exploratory experiment, based, to be sure, on laborious biochemistry, was performed by L. M. Adleman more than a decade ago. As a first demonstration of the watery DNA computer in action he chose to solve a simple form of what mathematicians know as the Hamiltonian path, or travelling salesman problem—how, starting from city A, to travel to each of a succession of other cities, terminating at city Z, without ever retracing your path. A formal solution to this ancient mathematical teaser was worked out in the early nineteenth century by two mathematicians. Sir William Rowan Hamilton in Ireland and Thomas Kirkman in England. With their aid an answer can be easily found if the number of cities is small, but if there are many it requires an enormous amount of computer time. [Pg.221]

Walsh, J., Foley, R., Kavanagh, A., McElwain, A. (2005). Origins, destinations and catchments Mapping travel to work in Ireland in 2002. Journal of the Statistical Social Inquiry Society of Ireland, 35, 1-37. [Pg.446]


See other pages where Ireland travel is mentioned: [Pg.47]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.1062]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.970]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.563]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.2091]    [Pg.526]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.225]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.134 ]




SEARCH



Ireland

Travel

Traveling

Travelling

© 2024 chempedia.info