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Alex PritchardAquilopsArtCeratopsiansConferencesSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week
Auteur Matt Wedel

Very nice photo of Alex Pritchard’s Aquilops skeleton from DinosaurSkeletons.co.uk. I am often so far down the rabbit holes of my own work (and given that I work mostly on pneumaticity and weird stuff in neural canals, they are literally holes) that I do a very poor job of keeping up with what’s going on in the broader dinosphere.

Appalachian HistoryLetcher County KYHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series The mine and the men Scotia sat on the Poor Fork of the Cumberland in the Oven Fork community of Letcher County. Blue Diamond Coal opened the mine in 1962 in the Imboden seam. By early 1976 the operation employed roughly 300 workers with about 275 underground, producing near 2,500 tons per day on six active sections.

Appalachian HistoryKanawha County WVHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series A Strike That Shook the Kanawha In April 1912, union miners along Paint Creek asked for the same wage scale paid in nearby union mines. Operators said no. The walkout spread to Cabin Creek, and by summer the fight had grown into a valley-wide struggle over organizing, company guards, and life in company towns.

Sciences socialesAnglais
Publié in Væl Space

Following on from my post about darkmode in ggplot2 4.0, I wanted to also mess around with the new stat_manual() that’s available. And folks, it’s good! source(here::here("_defaults.R")) library(tidyverse) library(tidynorm) library(scales) The announcement blog post says Let’s put it to the test! Plotting sine waves I’m teaching Phonetics this semester, so I’ve got sine waves on the mind.

Appalachian HistoryLogan County WVHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series On the morning of February 26, 1972, the coal refuse dam system above the Middle Fork of Buffalo Creek failed near Saunders in Logan County, West Virginia. Within hours a black wall of water and slurry swept down the hollow, tearing through more than a dozen coal camp communities and leaving a scar that Appalachia still carries.

Appalachian HistorySullivan County TNHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series On a frigid morning in mid December 1864, Major General George Stoneman’s mounted command reached the Holston at Kingsport with a clear purpose, to open the road into southwest Virginia and wreck the Confederate lifeline there. Before the columns struck railroad bridges, lead mines, and the salt works, they first had to force a crossing at Kingsport.

Repurposed AppalachiaHarlan County KYHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Repurposed Appalachia A mountain camp that belongs to Harlan County Tucked against Pine Mountain near the head of Watts Creek, Camp Blanton began life in 1933 and 1934 when Grover and Oxie Blanton, with relatives, set aside about 13 wooded acres for a Boy Scout camp and a public playground for Harlan Countians.

Appalachian HistoryFloyd County KYHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series A Lake for Floods and for Folks Where Johns Creek bends through the hills above Prestonsburg, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers raised an earth dam in the mid twentieth century and impounded an 1,100 acre reservoir that locals still call Dewey Lake.

Appalachian HistoryGarrard County KYHistoire et archéologieAnglais
Publié in Appalachianhistorian.org
Auteur Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Herrington Lake began as an idea on paper and ended as a reservoir that changed work, water, and recreation across central Kentucky. Kentucky Utilities planned the project in the early 1920s to produce hydroelectric power on the Dix River and to steady flows on the Kentucky River. Construction started in late 1923, the gates closed in March 1925, and commercial power followed in 1927.