Inglewood Organic birds
grow at natures pace, taking almost twice as long as conventional chickens to grow to maturity.
Not exact matches
«Uranus and Neptune never had the time to
grow into gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn,» Imke de Pater, an astronomer
at the University of California Berkeley who wasn't involved in the study, wrote in an accompanying article in
Nature Astronomy.
While some details will be relevant only for the in - house counsel
at larger corporations, any manager of a
growing company could benefit from the video's discussion of the critical
nature of cash flow and how best to calculate it.
He never lost his sense of wonder
at the magic of
nature's phenomena - magnetic fields, gravity, inertia, acceleration, light beams - which
grown - ups find so commonplace.»
Such a view would not be quite so absurd as might
at first appear: the divine temporal evaluations would seem to be no more arbitrary than those of the constitution of the primordial
nature in Whitehead's view; and the divine subjective aim toward the maximum of value intensity, together with the property of everlastingness and the Categoreal Obligations (constituted by the primordial
nature) of Subjective Unity and Subjective Harmony, would seem sufficient to insure the mutual coherence of the
growing series of divine temporal evaluations.
At first he had a simple contrast between the «flux» of temporal occasions and the «permanence» of nontemporality, but then it
grew into a double problem requiring a consequent temporal
nature for God as its solution.
Everywhere, as we are well aware, the lines of active phyletic development
grow warm with consciousness as they approach the summit; but in one clearly - marked region
at the centre of the kingdom of mammals, where the most powerful brains ever fashioned by
nature are to be found, the lines glow red - hot; and already
at the heart of this region there burns a point of incandescence.
And this
at once gave assurance of a wholly rational interpretation of its processes and the
growing conviction that mechanism and materialism as a final reading of the
nature of reality were indisputable.
God created Adam — and Eve — an adult, he was a fully
grown man
at one - day - old, and gave him the human
nature (passed on to us) of
growing fully over nine months in the womb and 18 - 21 years or so after birth.
Nature, including both its materials and its laws, will be more
at our command; men will make their situation in this world abundantly more easy and comfortable, they will prolong their existence in it and
grow daily more happy... the end will be glorious and paradisiacal beyond that our imaginations can now conceive.
He was a fully
grown man
at one - day - old and gave him the human
nature (passed on to us) of
growing fully over nine months in the womb and 18 - 21 years after birth!
a set of cosmological and anthropological views that owed not a little to the vast mélange of Hellenism and Orientalism flooding the world where he
grew up, and providing him with the unique setting for still other ideas, of sin, Satan, death, of the sinful and therefore mortal
nature of man — as «flesh» — of the «spiritual» forces arrayed against God and his Messiah and all the faithful, of the victory to be won by the Messiah when he should
at last appear — all these ideas were shaped to the mold of certain half - Jewish, half - pagan ideas which Paul seems to have derived from the world about him.
At the same time as the
growing population, by creating demands for more of
nature's products, gives impetus to industry and commerce, it creates the problem of shortages and throws into clear relief the limitations of the earth.
Thus to the extent that an environmental ethic would have to
grow out of
at least some appreciation and reverence for the mystery of
nature, modern ideals of clear and exhaustive explanation can easily prove deleterious if they overrun their legitimate epistemological margins.
Only
at particular times and places would it seem that, as a matter of fact, the veil of
nature can
grow thin and rupturable enough for such effects to occur.
Fox tells the story from beginning to end: childhood in the German - American parsonage; nine grades of school followed by three years in a denominational «college» that was not yet a college and three year's in Eden Seminary, with graduation
at 21; a five - month pastorate due to his father's death; Yale Divinity School, where despite academic probation because he had no accredited degree, he earned the B.D. and M.A.; the Detroit pastorate (1915 - 1918) in which he encountered industrial America and the race problem; his
growing reputation as lecturer and writer (especially for The Christian Century); the teaching career
at Union Theological Seminary (1928 - 1960); marriage and family; the landmark books Moral Man and Immoral Society and The
Nature and Destiny of Man; the founding of the Fellowship of Socialist Christians and its journal Radical Religion; the gradual move from Socialist to liberal Democratic politics, and from leader of the Fellowship of Reconciliation to critic of pacifism; the break with Charles Clayton Morrison's Christian Century and the inauguration of Christianity and Crisis; the founding of the Union for Democratic Action, then later of Americans for Democratic Action; participation in the ecumenical movement, especially the Oxford Conference and the Amsterdam Assembly; increasing friendship with government officials and service with George Kennan's policy - planning group in the State Department; the first stroke in 1952 and the subsequent struggles with ill health; retirement from Union in 1960, followed by short appointments
at Harvard,
at the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, and
at Columbia's Institute of War and Peace Studies; intense suffering from ill health; and death in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, in 1971.
A few years later, Bernard established PT Tripper
Nature in Indonesia, where he
grew up, to serve as a company
at origin to source, process, pack and export sweet spices.
Cauliflower may be
grown, harvested, and sold year - round, but it is by
nature a cool weather crop and
at its best in fall and winter and into early spring.
I confess that I have become somewhat blasé about the range of exciting — I think revolutionary is probably more accurate — technologies that we are rolling out today: our work in genomics and its translation into varieties that are reaching poor farmers today; our innovative integration of long — term and multilocation trials with crop models and modern IT and communications technology to reach farmers in ways we never even imagined five years ago; our vision to create a C4 rice and see to it that Golden Rice reaches poor and hungry children; maintaining productivity gains in the face of dynamic pests and pathogens; understanding the
nature of the rice grain and what makes for good quality; our many efforts to change the way rice is
grown to meet the challenges of changing rural economies, changing societies, and a changing climate; and, our extraordinary array of partnerships that has placed us
at the forefront of the CGIAR change process through the Global Rice Science Partnership.
Sometimes I wish I had
grown up in a town like that, where you have
nature at your fingertips.
As I embark on
growing my own garden for the first time this year, I'm thankful for my friends like Julie of Chez Artz and Green Artz, Melissa
at Nature Deva, Heather
at A Mama's Blog, and Woman With A Hatchet, who all have more gardening experience than me (and will hopefully help me out if I need it — hint, hint).
At issue, then, is not
nature or nurture but how nurture becomes
nature: the environment in which children play and
grow can encourage a range of aptitudes or foreclose them.
Good to know: Hidden Oaks is home to three beehives and the locally
grown honey is available for sale
at the front desk of the
nature center.
«When we work
at giving our children the emotional rest they need by providing strong caring relationships to hold onto, then they are free to
grow into the people that
nature intended them to be.»
But with increasing dissatisfaction over the high - stakes testing currently consuming mainstream education; the
growing recognition of the many benefits a child receives through experiences with art, movement, and
nature; a concern over a reliance on technology by younger and younger students; and the news that leaders in the high - tech industry are touting the lifelong benefits of low - tech Waldorf schools in educating their own children, more and more parents and educators are taking a closer look
at the Waldorf approach and what it has to offer.
Alligator snapping turtle gets a new home on Chicago's North Side - Fox 32 Chicago - January 19, 2017 An unusual - looking turtle that needs some room to
grow moved into some new digs Thursday
at the Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum on Chicago's North Side.
Nature intended for babies to be with their mothers, especially
at a time when their brains will
grow more than any other time in their lives.
At Moose Hill Camp, we believe it's important that children learn and
grow through their interactions with
nature as well as with each other.
There is a forest of food in Boston and it is
growing at Mass Audubon's Boston
Nature Center (BNC), thanks to a partnership with the Boston Food Forest Coalition (BFFC).
Daniel Lieberman
at Harvard University and colleagues compared the gait of endurance runners in the US and Kenya and found that more than two - thirds of those who
grew up running barefoot or had trained themselves to do so as adults ran on their tiptoes, landing on the balls of the feet first (
Nature, DOI: 10.1038 /
nature08723).
Yang
grew up in Sichuan province in southwestern China,
at the base of a mountain that inspired a fascination with
nature.
Researchers
at Tufts University have created a genetically modified yeast that can more efficiently consume a novel nutrient, xylose, enabling the yeast to
grow faster and to higher cell densities, raising the prospect of a significantly faster path toward the design of new synthetic organisms for industrial applications, according to a study published today in
Nature Communications.
But the underlying cryptographic technology, a
growing chain of time - stamped records or «blocks» that is shared between many computers, forming a «blockchain,» could also be used to help save the environment, according to a commentary published today in
Nature by Guillaume Chapron, an ecologist
at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Riddarhyttan.
In most plants, the enzyme works very slowly, but the algal version made the plant more efficient
at photosynthesis and made it
grow faster, researchers report in
Nature.
Complete fossils range from 16.7 to 68.3 millimeters long, but fragments hint the animal may have
grown to
at least 120 mm, the researchers report today in
Nature.
While the overuse of antibiotics is undeniably
at the heart of the
growing global crisis, new research published online April 11 in
Nature Microbiology suggests differential birth and death rates and not DNA donation are to blame.
Plants in
nature and agriculture that are stressed by drought, diseases or insects will mount defensive responses, and
at the same time will typically stop
growing or
grow more slowly.
Such factors get
at the
nature of terroir, a word that ascribes a wine's uniqueness to the physical environment where grapes
grow.
The team
at EMBL, headed by Ernst Stelzer, is part of a
growing effort to study cells, tissues and even small multicellular organisms in conditions that more closely mimic
nature, enabling longer viewing times and less adulterated results.
Comparing violet populations,
at two isolated sites, the research team noted that when the plants
grew in a sunny, open, limestone glade (Shaw
Nature Reserve) the concolors outnumbered the bicolors by 40 to one.
Toxins from mold found
growing on nuts or corn can weaken the airways» self - clearing mechanisms and immunity, opening the door for respiratory diseases and exacerbating existing ones, suggests a study in
Nature Scientific Reports published this month from otolaryngology researchers
at the Perelman School of Medicine
at the University of Pennsylvania.
But in opening the door to the plant's cultivation, far more scrutiny is needed as to how eucalyptus will behave when
grown in bulk, said Doria Gordon, a senior ecologist
at the
Nature Conservancy.
«This analysis comes
at a time when following the transfer of scientific knowledge into industry and the economy is a
growing priority for governments and research funding agencies, said David Swinbanks, founder of the
Nature Index.
MEDFORD / SOMERVILLE, Mass. (March 26, 2018)-- Researchers
at Tufts University have created a genetically modified yeast that can more efficiently consume a novel nutrient, xylose, enabling the yeast to
grow faster and to higher cell densities, raising the prospect of a significantly faster path toward the design of new synthetic organisms for industrial applications, according to a study published today in
Nature Communications.
PHILADELPHIA — Toxins from mold found
growing on nuts or corn can weaken the airways» self - clearing mechanisms and immunity, opening the door for respiratory diseases and exacerbating existing ones, suggests a study in
Nature Scientific Reports published this month from otolaryngology researchers
at the Perelman School of Medicine
at the University of Pennsylvania.
Growing up
at the Sundance Resort in Utah, run by actor Robert Redford, Steven Nyman was constantly influenced by
nature and the arts.
The exact
nature of its colouring depends upon how much light it has been exposed to when
growing - if none
at all, the contrast between the white ribs and the deep red leaves will be very strong.
Preschool Enrichment Programs: • Peter Cottontail Preschool & Daycare, Dover, NH • Joy of Learning Preschool, Berwick, ME • Bright Horizons
at Timberland, Stratham, NH •
Growing Places
at Woodside, Dover, NH • Nurture &
Nature Children's Center, Newfields, NH • The Shooting Stars Program, Scarborough, ME • Country Lane Nursery School, Arundel, ME • Stay & Play Early Learning Center, Dover, NH Private Group Classes
at the Studio Private group classes can be scheduled as a one time event or as a series
at our home studio in Dover, NH.
Dr. Paisley practiced here in Portland
at Nature Cures Clinic for 10 years, where she «
grew up» as a ND, working as a family practice physician.
I'm a city girl
at heart and New Zealand is FAR from a bustling city such as Tokyo (a favorite of mine) or New York City but the lifestyle in New Zealand is similar, if not exactly, like the lifestyle in Hawaii: super chill and
nature - oriented which is something I have
grown accustomed to while living in Hawaii.