| Calvin Mackie Calvin Mackie (born 1969 in New Orleans, Louisiana) is an award-winning mentor, motivational speaker, and successful entrepreneur. He is the older brother of actor Anthony Mackie, who has been in such movies as 8 Mile and Notorious. Calvin_Mackie
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| Pelagornithidae The Pelagornithidae or pseudo-tooth birds were a family of large seabirds from the order Pelecaniformes, which were common worldwide from the Late Paleocene to the Late Pliocene; undetermined species even occurring in Middle Eocene Antarctica. albatrosses, although they had a large bill with tooth-like projections that enabled them to pick up slippery prey like fish or squids more easily. Pelagornithidae
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| Ice pier Operation Deep Freeze personnel constructed the first floating ice pier at Antarctica’s southern-most sea port at McMurdo Station in 1973. Ice piers have been in use each summer season since, at McMurdo’s natural harbor at Winter Quarters Bay located at Ice_pier
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| Evolutionary physiology Evolutionary physiology is the study of physiological evolution, which is to say, the manner in which the functional characteristics of individuals in a population of organisms have responded to selection across multiple generations during the history of the population. It is a subdiscipline of both physiology and evolutionary biology. Practitioners in Evolutionary_physiology
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| Race and intelligence (test data) Talk:Race_and_intelligence_(test_data)
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| Elizabeth F. Neufeld Elizabeth F. Neufeld (born 1928) is an American geneticist whose research has focussed on the genetic basis of metabolic disease in humans.Neufield and her Russian Jewish family emigrated to the United States from Paris in 1940; they had left Europe as refugees to escape Nazi persecution. Elizabeth_F._Neufeld
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| RonCram/AGWControversySandbox User_talk:RonCram/AGWControversySandbox
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| Norte Chico civilization/archive1 Talk:Norte_Chico_civilization/archive1
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| Economy of metropolitan Detroit The economy of metropolitan Detroit, Michigan is a key pillar of the economy of the United States. Its ten county area has a population of over 5.4 million, a workforce of 2.6 million, and about 240,000 businesses. Metropolitan Statistical Area has a population of about 4.5 million, a workforce of about 2.1 million, and a Gross Metropolitan Product of $177.5 billion. Economy_of_metropolitan_Detroit
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| Informal education Informal education is a general term for education outside of a standard school setting. It can refer to various forms of alternative education, such as Unschooling or Homeschooling Autodidacticism (Self-teaching) Youth Work The mass media and museums, libraries, zoos, and other community-based organizations and cultural institutions also offer forms of informal education. Informal_education
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| G. Michael Purdy Graham Michael "Mike" Purdy is a British geophysicist and oceanographer who specializes in marine seismology. He is the current Director of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) of Columbia University. G._Michael_Purdy
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| Year of Science 2009 The scientific community will shine the national spotlight on science in 2009, by celebrating “How We Know What We Know” in a 12-month event 1. January - Process & Nature of Science Year_of_Science_2009
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| List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty list of Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty includes current, emeritus, former, and deceased professors, lecturers, and researchers. Faculty members who have become Institute Professors, Nobel Laureates, MacArthur Fellows, National Medal of Science recipients, or have earned other significant awards and made significant contributions are listed below. List_of_Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology_faculty
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| NEES Cyberinfrastructure Center (NEESit) The George E. Brown Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation Cyberinfrastructure Center (NEESit), based at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) is a service-focused organization funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to deliver information technology tools and infrastructure to enable earthquake engineers to remotely participate in experiments, perform hybrid simulations, organize and share data, and collaborate with colleagues. NEES_Cyberinfrastructure_Center_(NEESit)
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| Global warming/Archive 20 Talk:Global_warming/Archive_20
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| National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis is a research center for the science of ecology, located in Santa Barbara, California, USA. Better known by its acronym NCEAS (pronounced N-seece), it opened in May, 1995, funded by the US National Science Foundation, the State of California, and the University of California, Santa Barbara. National_Center_for_Ecological_Analysis_and_Synthesis
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| Computational mathematics Computational mathematics involves mathematical research in areas of science where computing plays a central and essential role, emphasizing algorithms, numerical methods, and symbolic methods. Computation in the research is prominent. Computational mathematics emerged as a distinct part of applied mathematics by early 1950s. Computational_mathematics
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| Ed Poor/data withholding User:Ed_Poor/data_withholding
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| Erich Bloch Erich Bloch (born 1925) is a German-born American electrical engineer and administrator. He served as director of National Science Foundation from 1984 to 1990.Bloch studied electrical engineering at ETH Zurich and received his bachelor of science in electrical engineering from the University of Buffalo. Bloch joined IBM in 1952. He was engineering manager of lBM's STRETCH supercomputer system and director of several research sites during his career. Erich_Bloch
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| WikiProject Mathematics/Archive 24 Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Mathematics/Archive_24
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| Dark energy/Archive 3 Talk:Dark_energy/Archive_3
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| Marshall Van Alstyne Marshall Van Alstyne (born Columbus, Ohio) is a professor at Boston University and researcher at MIT. His work focuses on the economics of information. Van Alstyne grew up in North Carolina before earning a B.A in computer science from Yale University, and M.S. Marshall_Van_Alstyne
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| Data sharing Data sharing is the practice of making data used for scholarly research available to other investigators. Many funding agencies, institutions, and publication venues have policies regarding data sharing because transparency and openness are considered by many to be part of the scientific method. Data_sharing
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| Winter Quarters Bay Winter Quarters Bay is a small cove of McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, located 2,200 miles (3,500 km) due south of New Zealand at 77°50'S. The harbor is the southern-most port in the Southern Ocean and features a floating ice pier for summer cargo operations. The bay is approximately 250m wide and long, with a maximum depth of 33m. The name Winters Quarters Bay refers to Robert Falcon Scott's National Antarctic Discovery Expedition (1901-04) which wintered at the site for two seasons. Winter_Quarters_Bay
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| Doppler spectroscopy Talk:Doppler_spectroscopy
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| Boron suboxide Boron_suboxide
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| Astrology/Archive 10 Talk:Astrology/Archive_10
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| FLAIM FLAIM (Framework for Log Anonymization and Information Management) is a modular tool designed to allow computer and network log sharing through application of complex data sanitization policies.FLAIM is aimed at 3 different user communities. First, FLAIM can be used by the security engineer who is investigating a broad incident spanning multiple organizations. FLAIM
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| Chandra little/sandbox User:Chandra_little/sandbox
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| Women in engineering Women_in_engineering
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| Earth's Critical Zone Earth's_Critical_Zone
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| OP-TEC OP-TEC is the National Center for Optics and Photonics Education. It is funded by the National Science Foundation under award #0603275.OP-TEC holds workshops at various institutions around the United States to promote the use of optics and photonics in secondary and post-secondary curriculum. OP-TEC
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| NSF-GRF National Science Foundation- Graduate Research Fellowship Program (NSF-GRFP) is a grant provided by the National Science Foundation to fund graduate research in certain areas of science, social science and engineering. The grant covers the cost of tuition and fees and provides the student with an annual $30,000 stipend over three years. The grant can be deferred or suspended for up to two years; the complete grant tenure must be finished within five years. NSF-GRF
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| WikiProject Mathematics/Archive2007 Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Mathematics/Archive2007
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| Fungal Genetics Stock Center Established in 1960, the Fungal Genetics Stock Center is the main open repository for genetically characterized fungi. The FGSC is a member of the World Federation for Culture Collections and the US Federation of Culture Collections. Fungal_Genetics_Stock_Center
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| Henry Liu (civil engineer) Henry Liu is a retired American civil engineer and the president of Freight Pipeline Company (FPC). During Liu's earlier career he was a professor of civil engineering and the director of Capsule Pipeline Research Center, a state/industry university cooperative research center at University of Missouri–Columbia. After retirement, Liu founded FPC, the company which developed fly ash brick, a new type of building brick made from a waste by-product of coal power plants. Henry_Liu_(civil_engineer)
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| Research!America Research!America
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| William R. Simpson (chemist) William_R._Simpson_(chemist)
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| Scientific peer review/Introduction to general relativity Wikipedia:Scientific_peer_review/Introduction_to_general_relativity
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| Tejal A. Desai Tejal_A._Desai
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| Monte Iberia Eleuth At just over 3/8 inches (9.6 - 9.8 mm) long, the Monte Iberia Eleuth (Eleutherodactylus iberia) is the smallest living frog in the northern hemisphere. It is the second-smallest frog (and tetrapod) in the world, following the Brazilian Gold Frog. It was first discoved in 1996 on Mount Iberia, from which the animal gets its name, and exists in only two small regions of Cuba. Much remains unknown about this small creature. Monte_Iberia_Eleuth
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| First professional degree Talk:First_professional_degree
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| Peer review/July 2007 Wikipedia:Peer_review/July_2007
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| Featured article candidates/Featured log/July 2007 Wikipedia:Featured_article_candidates/Featured_log/July_2007
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| Featured article candidates/Introduction to general relativity Wikipedia:Featured_article_candidates/Introduction_to_general_relativity
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| Bigben Bigben
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| Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory, or DUSEL is a major project under consideration by the National Science Foundation. If built, DUSEL will be a series of large laboratories, caverns, and cleanrooms serving the field of underground science. Deep_Underground_Science_and_Engineering_Laboratory
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| Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory The Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory (aka RMBL - pronounced 'rumble') is a Colorado high-altitude biological field station located near Crested Butte, in the West Elk mountains) It offers courses for undergraduate students - including National Science Foundation funded REU students and provides support for researchers from universities and colleges. Rocky_Mountain_Biological_Laboratory
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| Peter Dervan Peter B. Dervan is the Bren Professor of Chemistry at California Institute of Technology. The primary focus of his research is the development and study of small organic molecules that can sequence-specifically recognize DNA, a field in which he is an internationally recognized authority. He is married to fellow Caltech chemist Jacqueline Barton. Peter_Dervan
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| Homeopathy/Archive 14 Talk:Homeopathy/Archive_14
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