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On the first fortnight of June 2010, experiments were carried out at a millet field in Niger to address the electrification of soil particles under natural conditions. The experiments were conducted during a period of high wind erosion, resulting from the passage of mesoscale convective systems (MCSs) which generate “walls” of dust passing through the Sahel. Soil particles are lifted from the ground by the stress exerted by the wind, with a threshold for emission that is particle size...
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Abstract Following the southward shift of rainfall isolines in the Sahel at the end of the 1960s, Gerbillus nigeriae appeared in northern Senegal in the mid-1990s, and two resident Gerbillidae ( Taterillus pygargus and Taterillus gracilis ) subsequently declined. We investigated the causal role of the capacity to conserve water in such climate-related shifts in the distribution of these Gerbillidae by comparing the effects of a water-poor diet on the water-efflux rate (W −out ) of freshly...
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This is the first study to compare health status and access to health care services between disabled and non-disabled men and women in urban and peri-urban areas of Sierra Leone. It pays particular attention to access to reproductive health care services and maternal health care for disabled women. A cross-sectional study was conducted in 2009 in 5 districts of Sierra Leone, randomly selecting 17 clusters for a total sample of 425 households. All adults who were identified as being disabled,...
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This is the first study to compare health status and access to health care services between disabled and non-disabled men and women in urban and peri-urban areas of Sierra Leone. It pays particular attention to access to reproductive health care services and maternal health care for disabled women. A cross-sectional study was conducted in 2009 in 5 districts of Sierra Leone, randomly selecting 17 clusters for a total sample of 425 households. All adults who were identified as being disabled,...
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This is the first study to compare health status and access to health care services between disabled and non-disabled men and women in urban and peri-urban areas of Sierra Leone. It pays particular attention to access to reproductive health care services and maternal health care for disabled women. A cross-sectional study was conducted in 2009 in 5 districts of Sierra Leone, randomly selecting 17 clusters for a total sample of 425 households. All adults who were identified as being disabled,...
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This is the first study to compare health status and access to health care services between disabled and non-disabled men and women in urban and peri-urban areas of Sierra Leone. It pays particular attention to access to reproductive health care services and maternal health care for disabled women. A cross-sectional study was conducted in 2009 in 5 districts of Sierra Leone, randomly selecting 17 clusters for a total sample of 425 households. All adults who were identified as being disabled,...
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Background and aim: More than 50% of African children are anemic. There is limited data on the prevalence of anaemia in Nigeria. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of moderate and severe anaemia in children under 5. Methods: This cross-sectional study involved under 5 children seen in University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital. Standard questionnaire was used to collect data on demographic characteristics of the respondents, child's age, gender, anthropometric...
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In Nigeria, as more secondary schools and tertiary institutions contemplate developing educational materials and programs for delivery via the internet in order to complement traditional classroom teaching, there is the need to assess the effectiveness of the internet as a medium for delivering educational packages. This paper describes an exploratory study that investigated the possibility of integrating e-learning with traditional methods of teaching at an American styled university in...
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Climate change is no longer an academic conjecture; there is now overwhelming scientific consensus that it is happening and many agree that it may be one of the greatest threats facing the planet.
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This article presents the findings of a qualitative study on the Bang jomariek, a women's group in West Reru in Western Kenya who engage in the production of indigenous arts and crafts (pots, baskets, and architecture) to generate income and explore politics, medicine, and other matters that affect them and their community. The women shared their motivations for engaging in the production of these art forms and the characteristics of these educational processes and their environment. I...
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University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. November 2011. Major: Educational Policy and Administration. Advisors: Dr. David W. Chapman, Dr. Joan G. DeJaeghere,. 1 computer file (PDF); iii, 117 pages, appendices A-B.