993 resultados para Hughes, Brandun
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Référence bibliographique : Rol, 59815
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This article looks at how Ted Hughes' poetry for children developed over more than 30 years of publication. It traces the movement from his earlier, more conventional rhyming poems, such as Meet My Folks! (1961) and Nessie the Mannerless Monster (1964), to the mature, free verse "animal poems" for older readers of Season Songs (1976c), Under the North Star (1981) and the "farmyard fable" What is the Truth? (1984). The article argues that the later lyrical poems for younger readers where Hughes returned to rhyme, The Cat and the Cuckoo (1987) and The Mermaid's Purse (1993), represent an undervalued final phase of Hughes' work for children which is rarely discussed by critics. The discussion considers Hughes' changing attitude to the concept of the "children's poet" at different periods of his career. Reference is made throughout to Hughes' own writing about children and poetry, such as Poetry in the Making (1967), and to parallel developments in his poetry for adults.
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In 'Tales from Ovid' and 'War Music' respectively, Ted Hughes and Christopher Logue turned to classical epic as source material and a model for contemporary poetry. In this essay I consider the different ways in which they work with the original epic poems and how they rework them both textually and generically. In the process, I suggest, Hughes gives his readers an Ovid modeled on his own, vatic conception of Homer, while Logue reworks Homer in a manner that is essentially Ovidian.
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Baccaconularia Hughes, Gunderson et Weedon, 2000, from the Furongian Series (Cambrian System) of the north-central USA, has been interpreted as a conulariid cnidarian, based on a suite of gross morphological similarities shared only with other post-Cambrian genera currently assigned to this group. Closely spaced, squarish to subrectangular facial nodes of Baccaconularia are aligned in distinct longitudinal files. Nodes also display a subtler, more or less rectilinear transverse alignment, though this pattern commonly is disrupted by offset parallel to the longitudinal files. In their shape and pattern of arrangement, the nodes of Baccaconularia are most similar to the squarish to elongate nodes of Pseudoconularia Bouček, 1939. Longitudinal node files of Baccaconularia may also be compared with the longitudinal facial ridges of Conularia cambria Walcott, 1890 from the Furongian of Wisconsin. Apical angles of Baccaconularia range from approximately 13° to 14.5°. Scanning electron imaging of B. cf. robinsoni shows that its thin, phosphatic skeleton is finely lamellar, with the thickness of individual lamellae measuring approximately 1 μm. The skeleton also exhibits microscopic circular pores and crater-like pits that range from approximately 5 to 10 μm in diameter. These pores and pits are similar in size, geometry, areal density and pattern of arrangement to those of many post-Cambrian conulariids. Microscopic circular pores are documented here for the first time in the genus Archaeoconularia Bouček, 1939 from the Upper Ordovician of the Czech Republic. Although the origin of the pores and pits is open to alternative interpretations, the discovery of these features and fine lamination in Baccaconularia strengthens the argument that this genus is a Cambrian conulariid. © 2006 Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS.
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Na maioria dos métodos de exploração geofísica, a interpretação é feita assumindo-se um modelo da Terra uniformemente estratificado. Todos os métodos de inversão, inclusive o de dados eletromagnéticos, exigem técnica de modelamento teórico de modo a auxiliar a interpretação. Na literatura os dados são geralmente interpretados em termos de uma estrutura condutiva unidimensional; comumente a Terra é assumida ser horizontalmente uniforme de modo que a condutividade é função somente da profundidade. Neste trabalho uma técnica semi-analítica de modelagem desenvolvida por Hughes (1973) foi usada para modelar a resposta magnética de duas camadas na qual a interface separando as camadas pode ser representada por uma expansão em série de Fourier. A técnica envolve um método de perturbação para encontrar o efeito de um contorno senoidal com pequenas ondulações. Como a perturbação é de primeira ordem a solução obtida é linear, podemos então usar o princípio da superposição e combinar soluções para várias senoides de forma a obter a solução para qualquer dupla camada expandida em série de Fourier. Da comparação com a técnica de elementos finitos, as seguintes conclusões podem ser tiradas: • Para um modelo de dupla camada da Terra, as camadas separadas por uma interface cuja profundidade varia senoidalmente em uma direção, as respostas eletromagnética são muito mais fortes quando a espessura da primeira camada é da ordem do skin depth da onda eletromagnética no meio, e será tanto maior quanto maior for o contraste de condutividade entre as camadas; • Por outro lado, a resistividade aparente para este modelo não é afetada pela mudança na frequência espacial (v) do contorno; • Em caso do uso da solução geral para qualquer dupla camada na Terra cuja interface possa ser desenvolvida em série de Fourier, esta técnica produziu bons resultados quando comparado com a técnica de elementos finitos. A linerização restringe a aplicação da técnica para pequenas estruturas, apesar disso, uma grande quantidade de estruturas pode ser modelada de modo simples e com tempo computacional bastante rápido; • Quando a dimensão da primeira camada possui a mesma ordem de grandeza da estrutura, esta técnica não é recomendada, porque para algumas posições de sondagem, as curvas de resistividade aparente obtidas mostram um pequeno deslocamento quando comparadas com as curvas obtidas por elementos finitos.
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Taking up the thesis of Dipesh Chakrabarty (2009) that human history (including cultural history) on the one hand and natural history on the other must be brought into conversation more than has been done so in the past, this presentation will focus more closely on the significance and the impact of global climatic conditions and pests on the negotiations that Australian Prime Minister William Morris Hughes carried on with the British government between March and November 1916. Whereas Australia had been able to sell most of its produce in 1914 and 1915 the situation looked more serious in 1916, not least due to the growing shortage in shipping. It was therefore imperative for the Australian government to find a way to solve this problem, not least because it wanted to keep up its own war effort at the pace it had been going so far. In this context intentions to make or press ahead with a contribution to a war perceived to be more total those of the past interacted with natural phenomena such as the declining harvest in many parts of the world in 1916 as a consequence of climatic conditions as well as pests in many parts of the world.