957 resultados para Fox Indians.


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Mode of access: Internet.

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One plate is printed and numbered on both sides.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Chiefly tables.

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pt.1. Utah. February 15, 1954. 87 p. --pt.2. Texas. February, 16, 1954. pp. 89-131. --pt.3. Western Oregon. February 17, 1954. pp.133-194. --pt.4. Klamath Indians, Oregon. February 23, 24, 1954. pp.195-349. --pt.4-A. Klamath Indians, Oregon. April 19, 1954. 112 p. --pt.5. California Indians. March 4, 5, 1954. pp. 351-577. --pt.6. Menoninee Indians, Wisconsin. March 10-12, 1954. pp. 579-772. --pt.7. Flathead Indians, Montana. February 25-27, 1954. pp. 773-1025. --pt.8. Seminole Indians, Florida. March 1-2, 1954. pp. 1027-1150. --pt.9. Makah Tribe, Washington. February 24, 1954. pp. 1151-1203. --pt.10. Indians of Nevada. Held at Reno, Nevada. April 16, 1954. pp. 1207-1311. --pt.11. Sac and Fox, Kickapoo and Potawatomi tribes. February 18, 1954. pp.1313-1419. --pt.12. Turtle Mountain Indians, North Dakota. March 2-3, 1954. pp. 1421-1604.

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A narrative of the adventures of Thomas Fox, and Pitamakan, a Blackfoot Indian boy, in the mountains of western Montana.

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This project investigates the current borders around and within, what I have in this exegesis termed, "the Down Syndrome novel", using a close reading analysis of literary texts containing characters with Down syndrome and contextualised by theoretical works drawn from both disability and literary theory. This practice-led thesis introduces and discusses select fictional characters with Down syndrome from numerous genres, revealing them as highly contained, or "boundaried", spoken for, and generally used for narrative conflict rather than included as individuals with agency and a legitimate, autonomous voice and narrative point of view. In reframing the Australian landscape as "disabled" this exegesis illustrates that the Australian Gothic novel can shift, and sometimes even remove, the boundary around characters with intellectual disabilities, allowing a space where the stories of characters with Down syndrome can emerge.

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The newly emerging Australian bat lyssavirus causes rabies like disease in bats and humans. A captive juvenile black flying fox exhibited progressive neurologic signs, including sudden aggression, vocalization, dysphagia, and paresis over 9 days and then died. At necropsy, lyssavirus infection was diagnosed by fluorescent antibody test, immunoperoxidase staining, polymerase chain reaction, and virus isolation. Eight human contacts received postexposure vaccination.

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1. The European red fox Vulpes vulpes represents a continuing threat to both livestock and native vertebrates in Australia, and is commonly managed by setting ground-level baits impregnated with 1080 (sodium fluoroacetate) poison. However, the long-term effectiveness of such control campaigns is likely to be limited due to the ability of foxes to disperse over considerable distances and to swiftly recolonize areas from where they had been removed. 2. To investigate the effectiveness of fox baiting in a production landscape, we assessed the potential for foxes to reinvade baited farm property areas within the jurisdiction of the Molong Rural Lands Protection Board (RLPB), an area of 815 000 ha on the central tablelands of New South Wales, Australia. The spatial distribution and timing of fox baiting campaigns between 1998 and 2002 was estimated from RLPB records and mapped using Geographical Information System software. The effectiveness of the control campaign was assessed on the basis of the likely immigration of foxes from non-baited farms using immigration distances calculated from published relationships between dispersal distance and home range size. 3. Few landholders undertook baiting campaigns in any given year, and the area baited was always so small that no baited property would have been sufficiently far from an unbaited property to have been immune from immigrating individuals. It is likely, therefore, that immigration onto farms negated any long-term effects of baiting operations. This study highlights some of the key deficiencies in current baiting practices in south-eastern Australia and suggests that pest management programmes should be monitored using such methods to ensure they achieve their goals.