Browsing by Title
Now showing items 27468-27487 of 38383
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Pangaea 2022 Front Matter
(Dalhousie University Department of History, 2022) -
Pannaria lurida in Atlantic Canada
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1986)The cyanophilic lichen Pannaria lurida has been collected from seventeen localities in southern Nova Scotia and two in southern New Brunswick. Previous reports of this lichen from Quebec are based on ill-identified or ... -
The Panther's Cache
(1969) -
Papa's Dance
(2003) -
Paper by Wm. Gossip, Esq.
(William Gossip, 1885) -
Paper Crafts and Paper Cuts
(Dalhousie University. School of Information Management, 2010) -
Paper Punch Holes
(2010) -
Paper Wasp/ Deliquesce
(2019) -
Para el Mundo: Challenges and opportunities in Mancora, Peru
(Medical Students' Society, Dalhousie University, 2007) -
Paraconsistent Logic: The View from the Right
(The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Philosophy of Science Association, 1992)"The best known approaches to "reasoning with inconsistent data" require a logical framework which is decidedly non-classical. An alternative is presented here, beginning with some motivation which has been surprised ... -
The Parade Square
(1975) -
The Paradise
(1976) -
A Paradise for the Insane
(1964) -
The Paradox of Public Discourse: Designing Vancouver Library Square
(The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada, 2000) -
Paradoxes of Happiness
(2005) -
Parallax and Mikey
(2017) -
Parallax in Ulysses
(1979) -
The Parallel and the Perpendicular: Reconnecting Calgarians to the Bow River
(2015)The rapid population growth in Calgary since the oil drilling boom of the 1970s has led to a diversification of Calgarians in terms of ethnicity. socio-economic status, and age. Without any unifying public spaces, the city ... -
A parallel collocation method for two dimensional linear parabolic separable partial differential equations.
(Dalhousie University, 1994) -
The Parallel Encoding of Actions Within a Sequential Grasping Task: Strategic, Motor, or Perceptual Interference Effects
(2022-11-18)Every day we are constantly performing consecutive grasping actions to complete our desired goals. Although we have a good scientific understanding about how the brain programs one grasping action towards a single object, ...