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Found 1000 results from blogs.ed.ac.uk.
Induced seismicity in the UK – Part 1: Managing event rates – Mark Naylor’s Blog
It has time running along the bottom axis and each earthquake event is shown as a black symbol to mark the magnitude (. ) of the event with a vertical stem to make
Celebrating Your Achievements – Stories from Vet School
So I can make it through what’s ahead. By making a point to mark the little milestones you’ve hit, at any point in your veterinary journey and in life
Events – Art in Translation
This special issue was guest edited by Caroline Danforth (National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, USA), features four texts about the history, manufacture, and use of parchment, and marks AIT’s ... In the art world today, any German-speaking art
November 2024 – Ivan Pavlosiuk / Films on Film (2024-2025)
In case of Mark ’s murders, they are performing both to the camera and to themselves. ... The end scene depicts Mark willingly put himself in that position.
July 2020 – Page 2 – Edinburgh Decameron: Lockdown Sociology at Work
It only marks a future struggle for the country, especially as we move through the phases of re-opening.
Birds, Bass Rock and the BBC – School of GeoSciences Blog
Fingers crossed this marks the end of the first step in achieving my new careers goals.
Project Timeline – Remediating Stevenson:
An advance screening of the project documentary film takes place at the Symposium, and at a public engagement event, held at the National Library of Scotland, to mark the opening of
Transitioning to university: academic change – Study Hub Blog
Lastly, the UK marking scheme is peculiar in that it is a positive marking scheme; you start at zero and gain marks for the work you do. ... As opposed to others (e.g. negative marking where you start with 100 and lose marks for mistakes), it is almost
Social media’s inverted layer – Dark matters
Epic sexual libertinage and self indulgence was the mark of the true aristocrat.
Asemic writing in the ECA library collection – Library Matters: news from ECA Library
Beginning in the late 1960s, the Argentinian conceptual artist Mirtha Dermisache (1940–2012) produced publications that consist of asemic writing: marks that resemble language but lack semantic content.
