Newport
Saucy Tales
Posted March 13th, 2008 by LindsayThe Art and Science of Saucy Tales: Thinking Through Myth, Metaphor, Measuring and Back Again.
A synopsis of my research project for practice-led PhD can be found at the link below.
History of Copper Wire
Posted March 12th, 2008 by LindsayAs my research encompasses the making of antennae out of copper wire, I have listed some of the interesting search links that were uncovered in a google search on history of copper wire (up to pg 35).
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Greetings from a New Machine
Posted March 7th, 2008 by LindsayFrom: Lindsay
To: C & K
Date: Thursday - March 6, 2008 3:07 PM
Subject: Greetings from a New Machine
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Lemongrass Beef
Posted February 24th, 2008 by LindsayThis is another one of those comforter dishes, and was made in commiseration of the (anticipated) Scotland defeat by Ireland in the Six-nations Rugby tournament yesterday. Scotland have gloriously lost every single match so far, and are on their way to collecting 'The Wooden Spoon'. Perhaps they may redeem themselves in the Calcutta Cup, the Six-Nation match between Scotland and 'the auld enemy' England, in March.
Athenian Lamb Hotpot
Posted February 23rd, 2008 by LindsaySoul Plug
Posted February 14th, 2008 by LindsayThe Sun, Moon and ELF (1-300Hz)
Posted November 26th, 2007 by LindsayFrom Electromagnetic Man
pgs 40-41
Lieber (1979) published a collection of many studies purporting to show a reliable lunar influence on various areas of human behaviour, although Rotton and Kelly (1985), using meta-analysis, have fiercely contested this claim. However whereas studies of social behaviour can be easily criticized for neglecting a variety of contributing variables, biochemical studies, like those of Rounds (1975), who has found a lunar periodicity in the concentration of neurotransmitter-like substances from human blood, are more difficult to refute.
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Aleksandr Chizhevsky
Posted November 26th, 2007 by LindsayFrom Electromagnetic Man
Pg 39
One of the first researchers to study the effect of solar activity on mankind was a historian in Russia, Professor Aleksandr Chizhevsky (1897-1964), who is considered by many as the father of heliobiology. Chizhevsky’s main interest was sunspots, which he correlated with human activity.
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