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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    La Vergne :Monkfish Book Publishing,
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Essays and calls-to-action to create a deeper sense of community whose mission is the preservation of the earth.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (160 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781939681874
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- FOREWORD -- INTRODUCTION -- PART I -- THE ORDER OF THE SACRED EARTH -- Why OSE? -- About Vows -- Who is Welcome in this Order? -- Nourishing Mystic-Warriors -- A Learning Community: Learning as a Spiritual Practice -- OSE and the Movement from Failing Education to Learning -- Lessons Positive and Negative from Past Religious Orders for a Spiritual Order to Heed -- Elders and Young Together -- Training -- Why Join the OSE? -- Practices Important to an OSE Community Commitment -- What is Needed Today? -- What is Creation Spirituality? -- Lessons from Traditional Vows and Religious Orders -- Conclusion: Responses to the Idea of OSE -- An Historical Reflection from Pere Chenu and a Contemporary Challenge from Naomi Klein -- THE ORDER OF THE SACRED EARTH -- What Dreams May Come -- The Vision -- Goals, Purpose, and Principles -- Intergenerational Healing -- Sharing Our Stories -- Community and Eco-Justice -- Embodying Wholeness Through Cosmology -- Community Rituals -- Emptying and Embracing Death -- Reinventing Education -- Rites of Passage -- Uncovering the Sacred Wound -- A Global Shift in Consciousness -- Grounding Medicine Ceremonies -- Commitment, Participation, and Flexibility -- Co-Creativity and Practicing the Healing Arts -- Re-Wilding and Reconnecting with Ancestry -- Indigenous and Mystical Perspective -- Thoughts on Sexuality -- Thoughts on Religion -- Gathering the Tribes -- THE ORDER OF THE SACRED EARTH -- The Order of the Sacred Earth -- PART II -- IGNITING OUR CREATIVITY -- THE LUMINOUS DARKNESS THAT CONNECTS US -- A NEW ENLIGHTENMENT -- TEMPLE OF THE HOLY EARTH -- THE CASE FOR A NEW MYTHOLOGY -- EARTHHEAVEN -- A NEW STORY -- EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP FOR THE 21ST CENTURY: THE MYSTIC WARRIOR -- SHIFTING THE TIDE OF OUR FUTURE -- A New Story -- The Order of the Sacred Earth. , EARTH CENTERING -- FINDING THE CENTER OF HEAVEN AND EARTH -- I HEAR THE EARTH BREATHING -- TREE PLANTER -- THE ITALIAN CHALLENGE: SOWING THE SEEDS OF OSE -- ZEITGEIST NOW -- POSTMODERN NEW MONASTIC FRIARS AND DEFENDERS OF THE SACRED -- TO DEFEND MOTHER EARTH -- CALLING US INTO COMMUNION -- GOD IN DRAG: DOING ECO-JUSTICE FROM THE EARTH'S POINT OF VIEW -- IMAGINING THE EARTH'S GUIDANCE FOR BUILDING A SACRED COMMUNITY -- Shared Identity -- Community -- Personal Responsibility -- Spiritual Practice -- Inherent Holiness and Limitation -- Diversity-in-Unity -- Joint Activity -- Authentic Encounter -- Effort and Grace -- Experiencing and Interpreting the Sacred -- Re-envisioning Conflict -- Cross-Fertilization -- REBELLION, DIVINE GRACE AND ENDURING LOVE -- MOVING FORWARD -- CONTRIBUTOR BIOGRAPHIES - (In Order of Appearance).
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-10-26
    Description: Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans 124(8), (2019): 6388-6413, doi: 10.1029/2018JC014881.
    Description: For ice concentrations less than 85%, internal ice stresses in the sea ice pack are small and sea ice is said to be in free drift. The sea ice drift is then the result of a balance between Coriolis acceleration and stresses from the ocean and atmosphere. We investigate sea ice drift using data from individual drifting buoys as well as Arctic‐wide gridded fields of wind, sea ice, and ocean velocity. We perform probabilistic inverse modeling of the momentum balance of free‐drifting sea ice, implemented to retrieve the Nansen number, scaled Rossby number, and stress turning angles. Since this problem involves a nonlinear, underconstrained system, we used a Monte Carlo guided search scheme—the Neighborhood Algorithm—to seek optimal parameter values for multiple observation points. We retrieve optimal drag coefficients of CA=1.2×10−3 and CO=2.4×10−3 from 10‐day averaged Arctic‐wide data from July 2014 that agree with the AIDJEX standard, with clear temporal and spatial variations. Inverting daily averaged buoy data give parameters that, while more accurately resolved, suggest that the forward model oversimplifies the physical system at these spatial and temporal scales. Our results show the importance of the correct representation of geostrophic currents. Both atmospheric and oceanic drag coefficients are found to decrease with shorter temporal averaging period, informing the selection of drag coefficient for short timescale climate models.
    Description: The scripts developed for this publication are available at the GitHub (https://github.com/hheorton/Freedrift_inverse_submit). The Neighborhood Algorithm was developed and kindly supplied by M. Sambridge (http://www.iearth.org.au/codes/NA/). Ice‐Tethered Profiler data are available via the Ice‐Tethered Profiler program website (http://whoi.edu/itp). Buoy data were collected as part of the Marginal Ice Zone program (www.apl.washington.edu/miz) funded by the U.S. Office of Naval Research. The ice drift data were kindly supplied by N. Kimura. H. H. was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (Grants NE/I029439/1 and NE/R000263/1). M. T. was partially funded by the SKIM Mission Science Study (SKIM‐SciSoc) Project ESA RFP 3‐15456/18/NL/CT/gp. T. A. was supported at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. M. T. and H. H. thank Dr. Nicolas Brantut for early discussions on the implementation of inverse modeling techniques.
    Description: 2020-02-14
    Keywords: Sea ice drift ; Observations ; Inverse modeling ; Drag coefficients
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2017-01-14
    Description: Multi-component groundwater tracer tests were conducted in a well-characterized field site in Altona, NY using inert carbon-cored nanoparticles and a thermally degrading phenolic compound. Experiments were conducted in a meso-scale reservoir consisting of a single sub-horizontal bedding plane fracture located 7.6 m below ground surface contained between two wells separated by 14.1 m. The reservoir rock, initially at 11.7°C, was heated using 74°C water. During the heating process, a series of tracer tests using thermally degrading tracers were used to characterize the progressive in-situ heating of the fracture. Fiber-Optic Distributed Temperature Sensing (FODTS) was used to measure temperature rise orthogonal to the fracture surface at ten locations. Recovery of the thermally degrading tracer's product was increased as the reservoir was progressively heated indicating that the advancement of the thermal front was proportional to the mass fraction of the thermally degrading tracer recovered. Both GPR imaging and FODTS measurements reveal that flow was reduced to a narrow channel which directly connected the two wells and led to rapid thermal breakthrough. Computational modeling of inert tracer and heat transport in a two-dimensional discrete fracture demonstrate that subsurface characterization using inert tracers alone could not uniquely characterize the Altona field site. However, the inclusion of a thermally degrading tracer may permit accurate subsurface temperature monitoring. At the Altona field site, however, fluid-rock interactions appear to have increased reaction rates relative to lab-based measurements made in the absence of rock surfaces. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
    Print ISSN: 0043-1397
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-7973
    Topics: Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying , Geography
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2013-07-24
    Description: Analytical Chemistry DOI: 10.1021/ac4012655
    Print ISSN: 0003-2700
    Electronic ISSN: 1520-6882
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
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