865 resultados para Trailer Parks
Resumo:
This chapter explores the history of active citizenship education in English schools in relation to the more established tradition of service learning in the US.
Resumo:
Mycobacteria are associated with a number of well-characterized diseases, yet we know little about their stress-biology in natural ecosystems. This study focuses on the isolation and characterization of strains from Yellowstone-(YNP) and Glacier-National-Parks (GNP; USA), the majority of those identified were Mycobacterium parascrofulaceum, Mycobacterium avium (YNP) or Mycobacterium gordonae (GNP). Generally, their temperature windows for growth were >60°C; selected isolates grew at super-saturated concentrations of hydrophobic stressors and at levels of osmotic stress and chaotropic activity (up to 13.4 kJkg-1) similar to, or exceeding, those for the xerophilic fungus Aspergillus wentii and solvent-tolerant bacterium Pseudomonas putida. For example, mycobacteria grew down to 0.800 water-activity indicating that they are, with the sole exception of halophiles, more xerotolerant than other bacteria (or any Archaea). Furthermore, the fatty-acid composition of Mycobacterium cells grown over a range of salt concentrations changed less than that of other bacteria, indicating a high level of resilience, regardless of the stress load. Cells of M. parascrofulaceum, M. smegmatis and M. avium resisted the acute, potentially lethal challenges from extremes of pH (<1; >13), and saturated MgCl2-solutions (5 M; 212 kJ kg-1 chaotropicity). Collectively, these findings challenge the paradigm that bacteria have solute tolerances inferior to those of eukaryotes.
Resumo:
A conventional way to identify bridge frequencies is utilizing vibration data measured directly from the bridge. A drawback with this approach is that the deployment and maintenance of the vibration sensors are generally costly and time-consuming. One way to cope with the drawback is an indirect approach utilizing vehicle vibrations while the vehicle passes over the bridge. In the indirect approach, however, the vehicle vibration includes the effect of road surface roughness, which makes it difficult to extract the bridge modal properties. One solution may be subtracting signals of two trailers towed by a vehicle to reduce the effect of road surface roughness. A simplified vehicle-bridge interaction model is used in the numerical simulation; the vehicle - trailer and bridge system are modeled as a coupled model. In addition, a laboratory experiment is carried out to verify results of the simulation and examine feasibility of the damage detection by the indirect method.
Resumo:
The emission from young stellar objects (YSOs) in the mid-infrared (mid-IR) is dominated by the inner rim of their circumstellar disks. We present IR data from the Young Stellar Object VARiability (YSOVAR) survey of ~800 objects in the direction of the Lynds 1688 (L1688) star-forming region over four visibility windows spanning 1.6 yr using the Spitzer Space Telescope in its warm mission phase. Among all light curves, 57 sources are cluster members identified based on their spectral energy distribution and X-ray emission. Almost all cluster members show significant variability. The amplitude of the variability is larger in more embedded YSOs. Ten out of 57 cluster members have periodic variations in the light curves with periods typically between three and seven days, but even for those sources, significant variability in addition to the periodic signal can be seen. No period is stable over 1.6 yr. Nonperiodic light curves often still show a preferred timescale of variability that is longer for more embedded sources. About half of all sources exhibit redder colors in a fainter state. This is compatible with time-variable absorption toward the YSO. The other half becomes bluer when fainter. These colors can only be explained with significant changes in the structure of the inner disk. No relation between mid-IR variability and stellar effective temperature or X-ray spectrum is found.
Resumo:
They’re cheap. They’re in every settlement of significance in Britain, Ireland and elsewhere. We all use them but perhaps do not always admit to it. Especially, if we are architects.
Over the past decades Aldi/Lidl low cost supermarkets have escaped from middle Europe to take over large tracts of the English speaking world remaking them according to a formula of mass-produced sheds, buff-coloured cobble-lock car parks, logos in primary colours, bare-shelves and eclectic special offers. Response within architectural discourse to this phenomenon has been largely one of indifference and such places remain, perhaps reiterating Pevsner’s controversial insights into the bicycle shed, on the peripheries of what we might term architecture. This paper seeks to explore the spatial complexities of the discount supermarket and in doing so open up a discussion on the architecture of cheapness. As a road-map, it takes former managing director Dieter Brandes’ treatise on the Aldi formula, Bare Essentials: the Aldi Way to Retailing, and investigates the strategies through which economic exigencies manifest themselves in a series of spatial tactics which involve building. Central to this is the idea of architecture as system rather than form and, in Aldi/Lidl’s case, the result of a spatial network of flows. To understand the architecture of the supermarket, then, it is necessary to measure the times and spaces of supply across the scales of intersection between global and local.
Evaluating the energy, economy and precision of such systems challenges the liminal position of the commercial, the placeless and especially the cheap within architectural discourse. As is well known, architectures of mass-production and prefabrication and their origins exercised modernist thinkers such as Sigfried Giedion and Walter Gropius in the early twentieth century and has undergone a resurgence in recent times. Meanwhile, the mapping of the hitherto overlooked forms and iconography of commerce in Learning from Las Vegas (1971) was extended by Rem Koolhaas et al into an investigation of the technologies, systems and precedents of retail in the Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping, thirty years later in 2001. While obviously always a criteria for building, to find writings on architecture which explicitly celebrate cheapness as a design virtue or, indeed, even iterate the word cheap is more difficult. Walter Gropius’ essay ‘How can we build cheaper, better, more attractive houses?’ (1927), however, situates the cheap within the discussions – articulated, amongst others, by Karl Teige and Bruno Taut – surrounding the minimal dwelling and the moral benefits of absence of the 1920s and 30s.
In our contemporary age of heightened consumption, it is perhaps fitting that an architecture of bare essentials is defined in retail rather than in housing, a commercial existenzminimum where the Miesian paradox of ‘less is more’ is resold as a paradigm of ‘more for less’ in the ubiquitous yet overlooked architectures of the discount supermarket.
Resumo:
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is a new observatory for very high-energy (VHE) gamma rays. CTA has ambitions science goals, for which it is necessary to achieve full-sky coverage, to improve the sensitivity by about an order of magnitude, to span about four decades of energy, from a few tens of GeV to above 100 TeV with enhanced angular and energy resolutions over existing VHE gamma-ray observatories. An international collaboration has formed with more than 1000 members from 27 countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and North and South America. In 2010 the CTA Consortium completed a Design Study and started a three-year Preparatory Phase which leads to production readiness of CTA in 2014. In this paper we introduce the science goals and the concept of CTA, and provide an overview of the project. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Introduction: Abundant evidence shows that regular physical activity (PA) is an effective strategy for preventing obesity in people of diverse socioeconomic status (SES) and racial groups. The proportion of PA performed in parks and how this differs by proximate neighborhood SES has not been thoroughly investigated. The present project analyzes online public web data feeds to assess differences in outdoor PA by neighborhood SES in St. Louis, MO, USA.
Methods: First, running and walking routes submitted by users of the website MapMyRun.com were downloaded. The website enables participants to plan, map, record, and share their exercise routes and outdoor activities like runs, walks, and hikes in an online database. Next, the routes were visually illustrated using geographic information systems. Thereafter, using park data and 2010 Missouri census poverty data, the odds of running and walking routes traversing a low-SES neighborhood, and traversing a park in a low-SES neighborhood were examined in comparison to the odds of routes traversing higher-SES neighborhoods and higher-SES parks.
Results: Results show that a majority of running and walking routes occur in or at least traverse through a park. However, this finding does not hold when comparing low-SES neighborhoods to higher-SES neighborhoods in St. Louis. The odds of running in a park in a low-SES neighborhood were 54% lower than running in a park in a higher-SES neighborhood (OR = 0.46, CI = 0.17-1.23). The odds of walking in a park in a low-SES neighborhood were 17% lower than walking in a park in a higher-SES neighborhood (OR = 0.83, CI = 0.26-2.61).
Conclusion: The novel methods of this study include the use of inexpensive, unobtrusive, and publicly available web data feeds to examine PA in parks and differences by neighborhood SES. Emerging technologies like MapMyRun.com present significant advantages to enhance tracking of user-defined PA across large geographic and temporal settings.
Resumo:
Evidence correlates physical activity, psychological restoration, and social health to proximity to parks and sites of recreation. The purpose of this study was to identify perceived constraints to park use in low-income communities facing significant health disparities, with access to underutilized parks. We used a series of focus groups with families, teens, and older adults in neighborhoods with similar demographic distribution and access to parks over 125 acres in size. Constraints to park use varied across age groups as well as across social ecological levels, with perceived constraints to individuals, user groups, communities, and society. Policies and interventions aimed at increasing park use must specifically address barriers across social ecological levels to be successful.
Resumo:
A presente tese situa-se no campo dos Estudos Culturais, constituindo uma construção interdisciplinar, situada nas vertentes da teoria cultural, com foco no estudo das identidade. Tem, como fenômeno empírico, o cenário de Barreirinhas-Ma/Brasil, em seus processos de transformação, decorrentes dos circuitos turísticos do Parque Nacional dos Lençóis Maranhenses/ Brasil. O objeto de estudo incide na análise de reconstrução de identidades de segmentos sociais que constituíram o público-alvo do processo investigativo: Artesãs, Prestadores de Serviços Turísticos (Condutores Turísticos, Toyoteiros, Pilotos de Lancha), Pescadores/as Artesanais e Marisqueiras. Desenvolve, como eixo teórico fundante, a questão das identidades, concebidas como processos descentrados, descontínuos constituídos nas hibridações, a partir de vertentes teóricas contemporâneas, com destaque para os pensamentos de Stuart Hall e Homi Bhabha. O trabalho consubstancia um processo de investigação, de natureza qualitativa, em Barreirinhas-Ma, através da observação participativa, entrevistas e grupos focais com os segmentos sociais do sistema da vida cotidiana, com atores institucionais e dirigentes de entidades associativas e de classe a constituir um amplo e significativo material que proporcionou adentrar nos processos de construções identitárias em curso em um cenário de intensas transformações que se revelam contraditórias e desafiantes.
Resumo:
Esta Tese insere-se no âmbito das Ciências e Engenharia do Ambiente e aborda as temáticas do Turismo Sustentável, Educação Ambiental e Áreas Protegidas. Na atualidade o turismo é considerado como um dos fenómenos sociais e económicos mais importantes e um instrumento com grande importância para o desenvolvimento dos países e regiões. A discussão em torno do conceito de turismo sustentável, embora nem sempre coincidentes, orienta para uma conceção onde a componente ambiental, social e económica constituem as principais dimensões que devem ser consideradas no seu desenvolvimento. As áreas protegidas são territórios cuja principal função é conservação do ambiente. Estes espaços protegidos possuem um conjunto de recursos que os potenciam para o desenvolvimento do turismo sustentável e educação ambiental contribuindo, desta forma, para o desenvolvimento sustentado das regiões. Atualmente o turismo sustentável e a educação ambiental são uma realidade cada vez mais presente nas áreas protegidas contribuindo com benefícios sociais, económicos e para o desenvolvimento sustentável das regiões. Pretendeu-se com este trabalho analisar as opiniões e perceções dos visitantes, dos responsáveis dos empreendimentos turísticos, das associações locais e os dirigentes políticos, sobre o turismo sustentável e educação ambiental nos Parques Naturais de Montesinho e Douro Internacional com vista à apresentação de iniciativas para o seu desenvolvimento.Para a concretização deste desiderato geral foi selecionada uma metodologia que englobou, por um lado, uma análise empírica, através da implementação de inquérito por questionários aos visitantes dos Parques Naturais de Montesinho e Douro Internacional. A recolha de informação junto dos empreendimentos turísticos e associações locais, inseridos nos territórios dos parques naturais. Por outro lado, o inquérito por entrevista foi o instrumento de recolha de informação utilizado junto dos responsáveis políticos dos Concelhos que integram os Parques Naturais de Montesinho e Douro Internacional. Dos resultados obtidos, destaca-se que os visitantes, na maioria, são pessoas que visitaram estes parques pela primeira ou segunda vez, não ficam alojados na área e visitaram o parque acompanhados. Salienta-se a opinião favorável, destes, sobre a existência de áreas protegidas em Portugal e sobre a contribuição que estas podem dar para a conservação do ambiente, representando um recurso importante para as gerações futuras. Destaca-se, também, a opinião positiva sobre a visita aos parques e a consideração de que é importante o desenvolvimento do turismo e da educação ambiental. Em relação aos empreendimentos turísticos que participaram no estudo verificou-se que são, principalmente da tipologia de espaço rural. Além da oferta de alojamento, alguns empreendimentos turísticos disponibilizam atividades turísticas nos parques. Os responsáveis são da opinião que os parques são uma mais-valia para a região e tem uma opinião favorável sobre o desenvolvimento do turismo sustentável nas áreas em estudo. No que concerne às associações, verificou-se que as atividades que desenvolvem não estão vocacionadas para o turismo e educação ambiental. No entanto, estas associações também consideram importante a existência dos parques na região e que o turismo sustentável e a educação ambiental são duas componentes complementares que podem contribuir para o desenvolvimento sustentável das áreas dos parques. A opinião dos dirigentes dos municípios que integram os parques naturais de Montesinho e Douro Internacional orienta-se no mesmo sentido. Estes são de opinião que é necessário desenvolver uma estratégia e implementar medidas para o desenvolvimento do turismo sustentável nos parques naturais. Esperamos que os resultados desta investigação possam, de alguma forma, contribuir para orientar as iniciativas e ações de desenvolvimento do turismo sustentável e educação ambiental dos diversos agentes que atuam nos Parques Naturais de Montesinho e Douro Internacional.
Resumo:
Habitat conversion and environmental degradation have reached alarming levels in the Pantanal, endangering all its biodiversity. This scenario is complicated by the fact that the biome relies on only a few protected areas, which combined do not exceed 10% of the territory. Felids, as predators, play a vital role in the maintenance of this ecosystem, but require large areas, have low population densities and, typically, are very sensitive to environmental disturbances. Amolar Mountain Ridge is considered an area of extreme importance and high priority for conservation within the biome. There are four species of felids in this region: the jaguar (Panthera onca), the puma (Puma concolor), the ocelot (Leopardus pardalis), and jaguarundi (Puma yagouaroundi). However, little is known about the ecology of these species in this region or the magnitude of interaction between the communities living around the protected areas and the animals. The goal of this study was to increase our knowledge about these felids and understand how people interact with them in order to contribute to their conservation in the network of parks within Amolar. Camera trapping surveys were carried out in two areas of the network, covering approximately 83,000 hectares, in order to identify the species of mammals occurring in the region, those that may be potential prey for the felids, and to obtain basic ecological data about both felids and prey. In addition, we conducted surveys in three riverside schools in order to assess the knowledge, perceptions and attitudes of schoolchildren regarding the four focal felids, and surveys among the adult population to assess their perceptions and attitudes towards the jaguar. We recorded a total of 33 species of mammals from both study areas. The large cats were cathemeral, reflecting the temporal activity of larger prey, whereas the ocelot was nocturnal, mirroring the activity of smaller prey. Jaguar occupancy was influenced by prey abundance, while puma occupancy was influenced by patch density in drier dense forest. Jaguars and pumas may be competitors over temporal and spatial scales, while no resource overlap was found for ocelots. Overall, both adults and children tended to have negative perceptions about the cats, which were related to the fear of being attacked. To increase awareness about the species and to maximize the effectiveness of protective measures in the network of reserves, it is recommended to develop and implement an Environmental Educational Program in the medium- to long-term in order to minimize the fear of these felids and to counsel locals on the role of felids in the maintenance of the Pantanal’s biodiversity.
Resumo:
This brochure from the South Carolina State Park Department about Croft State Natural Area gives helpful information such as history, description, admission fee, driving directions, GPS coordinates, photographs, and park facilities & activities.