Sentences with phrase «as an archive because»

The Temagami Banded Iron Formation, which was formed 2.7 billion years ago during the Neoarchean period, can be used as an archive because the isotopic composition of many chemical elements such as Hafnium and Neodymium directly mirrors the composition of Neoarchean seawater.

Not exact matches

Because I take accusations of spiritual abuse seriously (as, I'm sure, do all the people named in Julie's email), in recent days I've gone back in my email archives and reread the many emails Julie sent or forwarded to me during and since 2008.
First Things has always stood out because the articles are of such a high caliber that they are worth archiving on the shelf as reference material.
The BGC, in particular, is special because it holds Billy Graham's personal archives as well as other archives pertaining to evangelism.
Because of his expertise and this ambition, Annese was chosen by a group of researchers to cut, archive, and curate the most famous brain in neuroscience, that of Henry Molaison — better known to students and researchers worldwide as the legendary amnesiac patient «H. M.»
The scientists not only showed the feasibility of constructing large archives and their basic utility for run - of - the - mill peptide identification, they developed new applications now possible because a diverse collection of datasets can be analyzed as a whole.
I've been scrolling the archives quite a bit as of lately because of this reminder — so much inspiration and so many brilliant ideas live on those pages.
Arcade Archives VS. Super Mario Bros. was also popular, most likely because it's the first release of Super Mario Bros. on Nintendo Switch, and because it's not quite the same game as the NES version.
She also warns that online content has a long shelf life because sites such as the Internet Archive preserve old Web pages for posterity.
Because EPUB is mostly ZIP and XHTML, there's little reason not to distribute documentation bundles as EPUB archives rather than as simple.
According to the Internet archive, the hope is that other libraries will follow their lead in creating what they refer to as «Last Twenty Collections», so - called because the law allows libraries to make available books which are in the last 20 years of their copyright.
Because, as Grigely told me, «no archive is disinterested» and in an extension of Joseph Albers» articulations of color theory, «you can't put one document beside another without changing both.»
2007 LA CASA ENCENDIDA, CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS screening - retrospective various works, every Tuesday in September 2007, Madrid CINEMATEXAS, Austin, Texas Return of the Black Tower THE HORSE HOSPITAL, Bloomsbury, London Return of the Black Tower screened at the Book Launch of Subversion — the definitive history of underground Cinema CUBE CINEMA Double Dummy & Return of the Black Tower screened as part of OMSK IMAGES 20TH INTERNATIONAL MEDIA FESTIVAL TORONTO, Because of the War NEW YORK UNDERGROUND FILM FESTIVAL, Anthology Film Archives, The Truth and the Pleasure ANN ARBOUR 23RD INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL screens Because of the War and Sharony!
The archive of these relationships will result in a future - archeological artifact named as such because it documents a building process that will never become a built body.
As Okwui Enwezor maintains, Graziani is tackling an indisputable fact «because the camera is literally an archiving machine, every photograph... is a priori an archival object.»
The next stages are easy to predict as well — the issues of «process» will be lost in the noise, the fake overreaction will dominate the wider conversation and become an alternative fact to be regurgitated in twitter threads and blog comments for years, the originators of the issue may or may not walk back the many mis - statements they and others made but will lose credibility in any case, mainstream scientists will just see it as hyper - partisan noise and ignore it, no papers will be redacted, no science will change, and the actual point (one presumes) of the «process» complaint (to encourage better archiving practices) gets set back because it's associated with such obvious nonsense.
So with the understanding that I sure as hell know what pervasive influence peddling can do to the process of peer review — because the pharma companies do actively recruit their «key opinion leaders» on the basis of things like editorial clout and that prominence within their specialty which gives them to hold responsibilities in peer review for «high impact» medical journals — you might appreciate why, when I got to read those e-mails in the FOI2009.zip archive last November, my immediate desire was for something brutally Sicilian to happen immediately and with spatter marks on the surrounding walls to the C.R.U. correspondents who had been concerting to infest and pervert the peer review process throughout the physical sciences wherever anything critical of the AGW hypothesis might be brought into publication.
Because they did not archive versions as they went (like GISS also does not) and their methods keep changing, it would not come out the same as when generated in Jan 2009.
But the 2013 Desmog piece didn't explain what led them to link to Greenpeace's scans; not one word on why Greenpeace didn't reveal the scans as a major news item back in 2007 when they were archived, not one word explaining why those scans were at Greenpeace when it was reported that the Sierra Club had them more than sixteen years earlier,... and not a word of why those scans have a cover page from some outfit called Ozone Action (lest anyone forget, when the Union of Concerned Scientists breathlessly «revealed» those old scans in 2015, the reason their collection is only 49 pages vs Greenpeace's 50 is because they simply erased the problem of the Ozone Action cover page).
Because of issues with data based on the SSMIS sensor aboard DMSP satellites, I mainly focus on higher - resolution AMSR2 data from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), as reported on the Arctic Data archive System website.
Some of these photo's exist, however, as single photos they are useless, because what is measured are changes in average temperature, anomalies, not absolute temperatures, so what is needed is an historical archive of photos, e.g. a continuing series that shows changes at the sites.
Dr Carter's own website (archived here on 4 July 2013) still carries his university affiliation (as a side note, I refer to Dr Carter as a «Dr» because the title «Professor» is only generally used when an academic has such an affiliation with a university, either paid or unpaid).
As things stand we can find out more easily what went on in the 1920s, 30s, 40s and 50s than we can about what happened in the early years of this century because our key documents from that time were on paper and archived — unlike our more recent work which is buried on servers, outdated formats, or just lost.
Because of this, the world's first «space detective agency», Air and Space Evidence, was recently established in the UK, specialising in sourcing archived data that could assist as evidence in legal cases, criminal investigations or insurance claims.
At issue was a letter now housed in Library and Archives Canada written by then - Justice (later Chief Justice) Lyman Poore Duff in 1924 to the British judge Lord Haldane, known in some circles as the «wicked stepfather of the Canadian constitution» because of his role in neutering federal economic regulatory authority in division of powers cases.
Never understood what this is for because as soon as the person (from the conversation) writes a new message, all the «archived» threads are moved back to the inbox...:» -LRB-
Be sure you have enough space in your storage to accommodate any songs you want to use as your alarm because currently Apple Music can't start streaming from the online archive directly unless the song is on the phone first.
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