The Extreme History Project Announces that the Archaeological Conservancy has...Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project announces that the historic site of Fort Parker, the First Crow Agency near Livingston, Montana has been purchased and preserved the the Archaeological Conservancy. The Extreme History Project is a Bozeman, Montana-based public history non-profit which looks for ways to make history relevant for community, society and policy. www.extremehistoryproject.org
The Extreme History Project Announces that the Archaeological Conservancy has...Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project announces that the historic site of Fort Parker, the First Crow Agency near Livingston, Montana has been purchased and preserved the the Archaeological Conservancy. The Extreme History Project is a Bozeman, Montana-based public history non-profit which looks for ways to make history relevant for community, society and policy. www.extremehistoryproject.org
Bozeman, Montana City Council will review the report created to review the city's historic districts on Monday, December 14th. A concerned group of Bozeman's residents is planning to attend the meeting and speak on behalf of preserving Bozeman's historic integrity through the maintenance and expansion of Bozeman's historic areas. Lets preserve historic Bozeman for future generations!
Christopher Columbus was a dishonorable man, so why do we honor him with his own holiday? Help us change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day in Bozeman Montana!
The Montana State University Native American Studies Department and the Extreme History Project have partnered to draft a resolution to change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day in Bozeman, Montana.
Help Bozeman, Montana change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day! Download this petition and help us gather names to present to Bozeman's City Council on Jan. 17, 2016! #reindigenizeBigSky
Gallatin Heritage Consortium Event Brochure, Summmer 2015.
Through collaboration among local groups, the Gallatin Heritage Consortium engages the public in our local history through unified programs, professional development, shared resources, and communication.
Montana Archaeological Society BrochureMarsha Fulton
The Montana Archaeological Society was created to stimulate interest in and promote research into the archaeology of Montana; to encourage increased public appreciation and involvement in this fascinating process;
to develop a bond among both professionals and non-professionals interested in Montana archaeology and to direct their efforts into scientific channels
to advocate and assist in the conservation and preservation of archaeological sites and materials.
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 14 - 19. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana
One Woman, One Vote Study guide 3 ch. 10 - 14 Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 10- 14. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana
One Woman, One Vote Study guide 2, ch. 5 - 9 Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 5 - 9. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana
One Woman, One Vote Study Guide 1 Chs. 1-4Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 1 - 4. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana.
The Extreme History Project presents Adventure Through Time: Historic Walking...Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project offers a variety of historic walking tours in downtown Bozeman, Montana each week throughout the year. Meet at the Pioneer Museum Gallatin History Museum on Main St. and tour Bozeman's history. Looking for something to do in Bozeman Montana? Check out our downtown Walking tours and take a walk through history!
The Extreme History Project will begin offering walking tours of historic downtown Bozeman, Montana in 2014. Tour start May 14th and include Historic Main St, the Gracious Bon Ton District, Historic Sunset Hills Cemetery, Bozeman's historic churches and more! Tours are offered at a variety of days and times. Most will begin at Bozeman's Pioneer Museum at 317 W. Main St. or at the entrance to the Sunset Hill's Cemetery. Tours are $7 for adults, $5 for seniors and students and children under 12 are free. Come out and enjoy a lovely walk while learning about Bozeman's fascinating past. For more info or to sign up for a tour go to www.adventurethroughtime.org
The Extreme History Project will be offering walking tours of Downtown Bozeman, Montana, starting in May, 2014. Sponsors can purchase advertising space in our program through our website at www.adventurethroughtime/sponsors.
A classroom activity based on the Early Crow Reservation Oral HIstory Project produced by the Extreme History Project and presented at the Indian Ed For All Best Practices Conference in Missoula, Montana on February 25, 2015
Going to the source indian education for all resources 2014Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project presented a session on the Early Crow Reservation Oral History Project at the Indian Education For All Best Practices Conference in Missoula, Montana, February 3, 2014. The session discussed how to incorporate the oral histories into the classroom as well as how to interpret oral history.
The Montana State University Women's Center and the Diversity Awareness Office present One Woman, One History: A Conversation with Ida B. Wells on Wednesday, March 5, 6:30, at the Procrastinator Theater at Montana State University, Bozeman.
The Extreme History Project held its Annual Meeting on January 25, 2014. The goals of the meeting were to introduce our new venture "Adventure Through Time" and encourage the team to make Extreme History work for them.
Dr. Lahren will discuss the history and meaning of the Anzick site since its discovery in 1968. The second part of the presentation will present the current results of Bill McConnell's technological studies of the Anzick site artifacts.
Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intellige...University of Maribor
Slides from talk:
Aleš Zamuda: Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intelligent Systems.
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Inter-Society Networking Panel GRSS/MTT-S/CIS Panel Session: Promoting Connection and Cooperation
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Phenomics assisted breeding in crop improvementIshaGoswami9
As the population is increasing and will reach about 9 billion upto 2050. Also due to climate change, it is difficult to meet the food requirement of such a large population. Facing the challenges presented by resource shortages, climate
change, and increasing global population, crop yield and quality need to be improved in a sustainable way over the coming decades. Genetic improvement by breeding is the best way to increase crop productivity. With the rapid progression of functional
genomics, an increasing number of crop genomes have been sequenced and dozens of genes influencing key agronomic traits have been identified. However, current genome sequence information has not been adequately exploited for understanding
the complex characteristics of multiple gene, owing to a lack of crop phenotypic data. Efficient, automatic, and accurate technologies and platforms that can capture phenotypic data that can
be linked to genomics information for crop improvement at all growth stages have become as important as genotyping. Thus,
high-throughput phenotyping has become the major bottleneck restricting crop breeding. Plant phenomics has been defined as the high-throughput, accurate acquisition and analysis of multi-dimensional phenotypes
during crop growing stages at the organism level, including the cell, tissue, organ, individual plant, plot, and field levels. With the rapid development of novel sensors, imaging technology,
and analysis methods, numerous infrastructure platforms have been developed for phenotyping.
Bozeman, Montana City Council will review the report created to review the city's historic districts on Monday, December 14th. A concerned group of Bozeman's residents is planning to attend the meeting and speak on behalf of preserving Bozeman's historic integrity through the maintenance and expansion of Bozeman's historic areas. Lets preserve historic Bozeman for future generations!
Christopher Columbus was a dishonorable man, so why do we honor him with his own holiday? Help us change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day in Bozeman Montana!
The Montana State University Native American Studies Department and the Extreme History Project have partnered to draft a resolution to change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day in Bozeman, Montana.
Help Bozeman, Montana change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day! Download this petition and help us gather names to present to Bozeman's City Council on Jan. 17, 2016! #reindigenizeBigSky
Gallatin Heritage Consortium Event Brochure, Summmer 2015.
Through collaboration among local groups, the Gallatin Heritage Consortium engages the public in our local history through unified programs, professional development, shared resources, and communication.
Montana Archaeological Society BrochureMarsha Fulton
The Montana Archaeological Society was created to stimulate interest in and promote research into the archaeology of Montana; to encourage increased public appreciation and involvement in this fascinating process;
to develop a bond among both professionals and non-professionals interested in Montana archaeology and to direct their efforts into scientific channels
to advocate and assist in the conservation and preservation of archaeological sites and materials.
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 14 - 19. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana
One Woman, One Vote Study guide 3 ch. 10 - 14 Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 10- 14. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana
One Woman, One Vote Study guide 2, ch. 5 - 9 Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 5 - 9. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana
One Woman, One Vote Study Guide 1 Chs. 1-4Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project in partnership with the Museum of the Rockies, celebrates the centennial of woman's suffrage in Montana with a reading and discussion of the book One Woman, One Vote. This study guide offers questions to consider for chapters 1 - 4. The book reading will culminate on December 4th with a screening of the PBS Experience film One Woman, One Vote and a panel discussion of the past, present and future of the Woman's Movement. Join us 6 pm, December 4th at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana.
The Extreme History Project presents Adventure Through Time: Historic Walking...Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project offers a variety of historic walking tours in downtown Bozeman, Montana each week throughout the year. Meet at the Pioneer Museum Gallatin History Museum on Main St. and tour Bozeman's history. Looking for something to do in Bozeman Montana? Check out our downtown Walking tours and take a walk through history!
The Extreme History Project will begin offering walking tours of historic downtown Bozeman, Montana in 2014. Tour start May 14th and include Historic Main St, the Gracious Bon Ton District, Historic Sunset Hills Cemetery, Bozeman's historic churches and more! Tours are offered at a variety of days and times. Most will begin at Bozeman's Pioneer Museum at 317 W. Main St. or at the entrance to the Sunset Hill's Cemetery. Tours are $7 for adults, $5 for seniors and students and children under 12 are free. Come out and enjoy a lovely walk while learning about Bozeman's fascinating past. For more info or to sign up for a tour go to www.adventurethroughtime.org
The Extreme History Project will be offering walking tours of Downtown Bozeman, Montana, starting in May, 2014. Sponsors can purchase advertising space in our program through our website at www.adventurethroughtime/sponsors.
A classroom activity based on the Early Crow Reservation Oral HIstory Project produced by the Extreme History Project and presented at the Indian Ed For All Best Practices Conference in Missoula, Montana on February 25, 2015
Going to the source indian education for all resources 2014Marsha Fulton
The Extreme History Project presented a session on the Early Crow Reservation Oral History Project at the Indian Education For All Best Practices Conference in Missoula, Montana, February 3, 2014. The session discussed how to incorporate the oral histories into the classroom as well as how to interpret oral history.
The Montana State University Women's Center and the Diversity Awareness Office present One Woman, One History: A Conversation with Ida B. Wells on Wednesday, March 5, 6:30, at the Procrastinator Theater at Montana State University, Bozeman.
The Extreme History Project held its Annual Meeting on January 25, 2014. The goals of the meeting were to introduce our new venture "Adventure Through Time" and encourage the team to make Extreme History work for them.
Dr. Lahren will discuss the history and meaning of the Anzick site since its discovery in 1968. The second part of the presentation will present the current results of Bill McConnell's technological studies of the Anzick site artifacts.
Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intellige...University of Maribor
Slides from talk:
Aleš Zamuda: Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intelligent Systems.
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Inter-Society Networking Panel GRSS/MTT-S/CIS Panel Session: Promoting Connection and Cooperation
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Phenomics assisted breeding in crop improvementIshaGoswami9
As the population is increasing and will reach about 9 billion upto 2050. Also due to climate change, it is difficult to meet the food requirement of such a large population. Facing the challenges presented by resource shortages, climate
change, and increasing global population, crop yield and quality need to be improved in a sustainable way over the coming decades. Genetic improvement by breeding is the best way to increase crop productivity. With the rapid progression of functional
genomics, an increasing number of crop genomes have been sequenced and dozens of genes influencing key agronomic traits have been identified. However, current genome sequence information has not been adequately exploited for understanding
the complex characteristics of multiple gene, owing to a lack of crop phenotypic data. Efficient, automatic, and accurate technologies and platforms that can capture phenotypic data that can
be linked to genomics information for crop improvement at all growth stages have become as important as genotyping. Thus,
high-throughput phenotyping has become the major bottleneck restricting crop breeding. Plant phenomics has been defined as the high-throughput, accurate acquisition and analysis of multi-dimensional phenotypes
during crop growing stages at the organism level, including the cell, tissue, organ, individual plant, plot, and field levels. With the rapid development of novel sensors, imaging technology,
and analysis methods, numerous infrastructure platforms have been developed for phenotyping.
The ability to recreate computational results with minimal effort and actionable metrics provides a solid foundation for scientific research and software development. When people can replicate an analysis at the touch of a button using open-source software, open data, and methods to assess and compare proposals, it significantly eases verification of results, engagement with a diverse range of contributors, and progress. However, we have yet to fully achieve this; there are still many sociotechnical frictions.
Inspired by David Donoho's vision, this talk aims to revisit the three crucial pillars of frictionless reproducibility (data sharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges) with the perspective of deep software variability.
Our observation is that multiple layers — hardware, operating systems, third-party libraries, software versions, input data, compile-time options, and parameters — are subject to variability that exacerbates frictions but is also essential for achieving robust, generalizable results and fostering innovation. I will first review the literature, providing evidence of how the complex variability interactions across these layers affect qualitative and quantitative software properties, thereby complicating the reproduction and replication of scientific studies in various fields.
I will then present some software engineering and AI techniques that can support the strategic exploration of variability spaces. These include the use of abstractions and models (e.g., feature models), sampling strategies (e.g., uniform, random), cost-effective measurements (e.g., incremental build of software configurations), and dimensionality reduction methods (e.g., transfer learning, feature selection, software debloating).
I will finally argue that deep variability is both the problem and solution of frictionless reproducibility, calling the software science community to develop new methods and tools to manage variability and foster reproducibility in software systems.
Exposé invité Journées Nationales du GDR GPL 2024
Toxic effects of heavy metals : Lead and Arsenicsanjana502982
Heavy metals are naturally occuring metallic chemical elements that have relatively high density, and are toxic at even low concentrations. All toxic metals are termed as heavy metals irrespective of their atomic mass and density, eg. arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, thallium, chromium, etc.
The Evolution of Science Education PraxiLabs’ Vision- Presentation (2).pdfmediapraxi
The rise of virtual labs has been a key tool in universities and schools, enhancing active learning and student engagement.
💥 Let’s dive into the future of science and shed light on PraxiLabs’ crucial role in transforming this field!
Nucleophilic Addition of carbonyl compounds.pptxSSR02
Nucleophilic addition is the most important reaction of carbonyls. Not just aldehydes and ketones, but also carboxylic acid derivatives in general.
Carbonyls undergo addition reactions with a large range of nucleophiles.
Comparing the relative basicity of the nucleophile and the product is extremely helpful in determining how reversible the addition reaction is. Reactions with Grignards and hydrides are irreversible. Reactions with weak bases like halides and carboxylates generally don’t happen.
Electronic effects (inductive effects, electron donation) have a large impact on reactivity.
Large groups adjacent to the carbonyl will slow the rate of reaction.
Neutral nucleophiles can also add to carbonyls, although their additions are generally slower and more reversible. Acid catalysis is sometimes employed to increase the rate of addition.
This presentation explores a brief idea about the structural and functional attributes of nucleotides, the structure and function of genetic materials along with the impact of UV rays and pH upon them.
ANAMOLOUS SECONDARY GROWTH IN DICOT ROOTS.pptxRASHMI M G
Abnormal or anomalous secondary growth in plants. It defines secondary growth as an increase in plant girth due to vascular cambium or cork cambium. Anomalous secondary growth does not follow the normal pattern of a single vascular cambium producing xylem internally and phloem externally.
What is greenhouse gasses and how many gasses are there to affect the Earth.moosaasad1975
What are greenhouse gasses how they affect the earth and its environment what is the future of the environment and earth how the weather and the climate effects.
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
The use of Nauplii and metanauplii artemia in aquaculture (brine shrimp).pptxMAGOTI ERNEST
Although Artemia has been known to man for centuries, its use as a food for the culture of larval organisms apparently began only in the 1930s, when several investigators found that it made an excellent food for newly hatched fish larvae (Litvinenko et al., 2023). As aquaculture developed in the 1960s and ‘70s, the use of Artemia also became more widespread, due both to its convenience and to its nutritional value for larval organisms (Arenas-Pardo et al., 2024). The fact that Artemia dormant cysts can be stored for long periods in cans, and then used as an off-the-shelf food requiring only 24 h of incubation makes them the most convenient, least labor-intensive, live food available for aquaculture (Sorgeloos & Roubach, 2021). The nutritional value of Artemia, especially for marine organisms, is not constant, but varies both geographically and temporally. During the last decade, however, both the causes of Artemia nutritional variability and methods to improve poorquality Artemia have been identified (Loufi et al., 2024).
Brine shrimp (Artemia spp.) are used in marine aquaculture worldwide. Annually, more than 2,000 metric tons of dry cysts are used for cultivation of fish, crustacean, and shellfish larva. Brine shrimp are important to aquaculture because newly hatched brine shrimp nauplii (larvae) provide a food source for many fish fry (Mozanzadeh et al., 2021). Culture and harvesting of brine shrimp eggs represents another aspect of the aquaculture industry. Nauplii and metanauplii of Artemia, commonly known as brine shrimp, play a crucial role in aquaculture due to their nutritional value and suitability as live feed for many aquatic species, particularly in larval stages (Sorgeloos & Roubach, 2021).