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English Wikipedia references for Nsf.gov 301-350 of 611
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Ice Runway
The Ice Runway is the principal runway for the US Antarctic Program during the summer Antarctic field season due to its proximity to McMurdo Station. The other two runways in the area are the snow runway at Williams Field (ICAOwhite ice runway at Pegasus Field (ICAO
Ice_Runway
Global warming/Archive 15
Talk:Global_warming/Archive_15
Nalini Nadkarni
Nalini Nadkarni is an American ecologist who became a pioneer in the study of Costa Rican rain forest canopies. Nalini Nadkarni took an inventory of the canopy in 1981, and two inventories in 1984. She was one of the first people to explore the ecology of rain forest canopies, and did so by using mountain climbing equipment so that she could safely make the ascent to study the canopies.
Nalini_Nadkarni
Marigold Linton
Marigold Linton (born 1936) is a cognitive psychologist and member of the Cahuilla-Cupeno tribe of Native Americans. In 1974 co–founded the National Indian Education Association. Her research in long term memory is widely cited in psychology. She is director for mathematics and science initiatives in the University of Texas system, where she is responsible bringing minority students into those two fields.
Marigold_Linton
John D. Bransford
Dr. John D. Bransford holds the Shauna C. LarsonUniversity Professor of Education and Psychology at the University of Washington in Seattle. Dr. Bransford is also Co-Principal Investigator and Director of The Learning in Informal and Formal Environments (LIFE) Center, an National Science Foundation (NSF) Science of Learning Center.The University of Washington, Stanford University, and SRI International received funding from the NSF for a five-year research center on the science of learning.
John_D._Bransford
Featured picture candidates/Image:Emperor penguins.jpg delist
Wikipedia:Featured_picture_candidates/Image:Emperor_penguins.jpg_delist
Interspecific competition
Interspecific competition, in ecology, is a form of competition in which individuals of different species vie for the same resource in an ecosystem (e.g. food or living space). The other form of competition is intraspecific competition, which involves organisms of the same species.If a tree in a dense forest grows taller than surrounding trees, it is able to absorb more of the incoming sunlight.
Interspecific_competition
AgentSheets
AgentSheets is an educational Cyberlearning tool to create Web-based simulation games. AgentSheets is used worldwide to teach students programming and related information technology skills through game design. The built in drag and drop language is accessible enough that students without programming background can make their own simple Frogger-like game, and publish it on the Web, in their first session.
AgentSheets
History of Ohio Wesleyan University
The history of Ohio Wesleyan University began with discussions of a college in Ohio in 1821 when the Ohio Methodist Conference in connection with the Kentucky Conference had established Augusta, the first Methodist institution of higher learning in the United States. But Augusta was an obscure village, quite inaccessible and especially because it was on the “wrong” side of the Ohio River to suit the growing anti-slavery sentiments of the people of Ohio.
History_of_Ohio_Wesleyan_University
Philip Rubin
Philip E. Rubin (born May 22 1949, in Newark, New Jersey) is an American cognitive scientist who since 2003 has been the Chief Executive Officer and a Senior Scientist at Haskins Laboratories in New Haven, Connecticut. He is also a Professor Adjunct in the Department of Surgery, Otolaryngology at the Yale University School of Medicine and a Research Affiliate in the Department of Psychology at Yale University.
Philip_Rubin
Bradley Efron
Bradley Efron (born May 1938) is a statistician best known for proposing the bootstrap resampling technique, which has had a major impact in the field of statistics and virtually every area of statistical application. The bootstrap was one of the first computer-intensive statistical techniques, replacing traditional algebraic derivations with data-based computer simulations.
Bradley_Efron
Richard A. Jorgensen
Richard "Rich" A. Jorgensen is an American molecular geneticist and an early pioneer in the study of post transcriptional gene silencing.His and Dr. Carolyn Napoli's observations of pigment gene 'cosuppression' in Petunia flowers are examples of post transcriptional gene silencing that predated the discovery of RNAi and contribute to the current understanding of the commonality of RNA-mediated gene silencing in eukaryotes.
Richard_A._Jorgensen
Juris Doctor/Archive 2
Talk:Juris_Doctor/Archive_2
Articles for deletion/Log/2006 October 9
Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Log/2006_October_9
John Henry Morgan
Graduate Theological Foundation where he has also been President since 1982. Since 1998, he has been teaching in the international summer program of Oxford University where he was appointed to the program’s Board of Studies in 1995. He has held postdoctoral appointments at Harvard University, Yale University and Princeton University and has been a National Science Foundation science faculty fellow at the University of Notre Dame.
John_Henry_Morgan
Articles for deletion/Marshall Van Alstyne
Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Marshall_Van_Alstyne
AreJay/Purdue
User:AreJay/Purdue
Williams Field
Talk:Williams_Field
Global Competitiveness Report
Talk:Global_Competitiveness_Report
Data library
Talk:Data_library
Elliot McGucken
Dr. Elliot McGucken is a physicist, author and inventor.McGucken received a B.A. in physics from Princeton and a Ph.D. in physics from UNC Chapel Hill where his dissertation on an artificial retina chip for the blind received a Merrill Lynch Innovations Award.
Elliot_McGucken
John Yen
John Yen is University Professor and Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Programs in the College of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. He is also the Director of the Intelligent Agents Laboratory there.Yen's long-term research interest is the capturing and modeling of knowledge in software agents for supporting decision making, for improving the adaptibility of a system of systems.
John_Yen
William A. Stein
William Arthur Stein (born February 21, 1974 in Santa Barbara, California) is an associate professor of mathematics at the University of Washington.He is best known as the lead developer of Sage. Stein is currently doing computational and theoretical research into the problem of computing with modular forms and the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture.
William_A._Stein
Cornell University
Cornell_University
Productive capacity
Productive capacity is a term used to define maximum possible output of an economy. According to UNCTAD, no agreed-upon definition exists. UNCTAD itself proposesresources, entrepreneurial capabilities and production linkages which together determine the capacity of a country to produce goods and services." The term ‘productive capacity’ is also used in binary economics to mean income-generating capacity be it of a factory, land, patent or the labour skills of an individual.
Productive_capacity
National Center for Engineering and Technology Education
National Center for Engineering and Technology Education is a partnership of four land-grant research universities (Utah State University, the University of Minnesota, the University of Illinois and the University of Georgia), five technology teacher education universities (Brigham Young University, California State University at Los Angeles, University of Wisconsin - Stout, Illinois State University and North Carolina A&T State University) and fifteen K-12 school districts.
National_Center_for_Engineering_and_Technology_Education
List of Florida Atlantic University people
This list of Florida Atlantic University people includes graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Florida Atlantic University and its graduate programs. Since its opening in 1964, Florida Atlantic has awarded over 100,000 degrees to more than 95,000 alumni worldwide.
List_of_Florida_Atlantic_University_people
Articles for deletion/Log/2006 November 28
Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Log/2006_November_28
Articles for deletion/David A. Bader
Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/David_A._Bader
Douglas Whalen
Douglas_Whalen
WikiProject Dinosaurs/Image review/Archive June 2006 - October 2006
Wikipedia:WikiProject_Dinosaurs/Image_review/Archive_June_2006_-_October_2006
Edison Welding Institute
Edison Welding Institute or EWI is a nonprofit, Ohio state-chartered engineering and technology organization dedicated to welding and materials joining. EWI staff provide materials joining assistance, contract research, consulting services and training to member companies in the aerospace, automotive, defense, energy, government, heavy manufacturing, medical and electronics industries. Approximately 150 employees staff the Institute. EWI holds numerous patents for various materials joining technologies.
Edison_Welding_Institute
Sense About Science
Sense About Science is a charity in the United Kingdom that promotes the public understanding of science. SAS was founded in 2002 by Lord Taverne, Bridget Ogilvie and others to promote respect for scientific evidence and good science. Sense About Science is a charitable trust with 14 trustees, an advisory council and a small office staff. As of 2009, the managing director is Tracey Brown.
Sense_About_Science
Asif Azam Siddiqi
Asif Azam Siddiqi is a Bangladeshi American space historian. He currently serves as an assistant professor of history at Fordham University. He specializes in the history of science and technology and modern Russian history. He has written several books on the space race between the U.S.
Asif_Azam_Siddiqi
Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
University of Florida’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is a federal-state-county partnership dedicated to developing knowledge in agriculture, human and natural resources, and the life sciences, and enhancing and sustaining the quality of human life by making that information accessible.
Institute_of_Food_and_Agricultural_Sciences
Monell Chemical Senses Center
The Monell Chemical Senses Center is an independent scientific institute, established in 1968, dedicated to basic research on the senses of taste, smell, and chemesthesis (chemically-mediated skin senses). It is currently headed by Dr. Gary Beauchamp. The institute is operated as a non-profit and receives funding from government grants, primarily from the National Institutes of Health through the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, and the National Science Foundation, as well as from foundations and corporate sponsorships.
Monell_Chemical_Senses_Center
Rodney Marks (astrophysicist)
Rodney Marks (1968–2000) was an Australian astrophysicist who died from methanol poisoning while working in Antarctica.
Rodney_Marks_(astrophysicist)
LaSaltarella/DoctoralOrigins
User:LaSaltarella/DoctoralOrigins
Evolution/supportdraft
Talk:Evolution/supportdraft
Babak Hassibi
Babak Hassibi (born in Tehran, Iran) is an Iranian-American electrical engineer who is currently a professor of Electrical Engineering at California Institute of Technology (Caltech).He received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Tehran University in 1989, and the M.S.
Babak_Hassibi
Level of support for evolution
The level of support for evolution among scientists, the public and other groups is a topic that frequently arises in the creation-evolution controversy and touches on educational, religious, philosophical, scientific and political issues. The subject is primarily contentious in the United States.
Level_of_support_for_evolution
Evolution/supportdraft2
Talk:Evolution/supportdraft2
COIN-OR
COIN-OR stands for the Computational Infrastructure for Operations Research. The stated goal of the COIN-OR project is "to create for mathematical software what the open literature is for mathematical theory." The open literature (e.g., a research journal) provides the OR community with a peer-review process and an archive.
COIN-OR
Filll/Archive 4
User_talk:Filll/Archive_4
Ddp224/IS group
User:Ddp224/IS_group
Marble Point
Marble Point, Antarctica, is a rocky promontory on the coast of Victoria Land located at 77° 26' S latitude and 163° 50' E longitude. The United States operates a station at the point. The outpost is used as a helicopter refueling station supporting scientific research in the nearby continental interior such as the McMurdo Dry Valleys. Weather permitting, helicopters are able to fly in and out of the station 24 hours a day during the summer research season.
Marble_Point
Fairfield University - Fellows and Scholars
Fairfield University students and graduates have been the recipients of the following nationally acclaimed fellowships and scholarships in recent years
Fairfield_University_-_Fellows_and_Scholars
Leaf Sensor
Leaf_Sensor
Ceid
User_talk:Ceid
Hurricane engineering
Hurricane engineering is a specialist sub-discipline of civil engineering that encompasses planning, analysis, design, response, and recovery of civil engineering systems and infrastructure for hurricane hazards. Hurricane engineering is a relatively new and emerging discipline within the field of civil engineering.
Hurricane_engineering