|
Showing 1 - 16 of
16 matches in All Departments
Electrical Spectroscopy of Earth Materials provides detailed
coverage of theoretical and experimental methods of electrical
spectroscopy of Earth materials, based on first-hand research and
extensive data. The book includes actual data sets and specific
explanations for the methods used in obtaining and analyzing the
data, including graphical displays of results. It describes the
electrical properties of various soil samples and offers both
theory and techniques for researchers to apply to their own
research. Including examination of the practical aspects of
electrical spectroscopy measurements and extensive
computer-readable data, Electrical Spectroscopy of Earth Materials
is a unique resource for geophysicists to save both time and effort
in understanding and analyzing Earth materials and soil properties.
Clearing the Project System (PS) Certification will not
automatically lead you to a job. However a Certification with some
project experience will certainly open a lot of doors for you. The
consultants who will benefit the most from a certification are the
ones with typically less than 3 year's project experience. This is
not to say that consultants with higher experience will not
benefit, but at that level, having a certification matters much
less. So if you have little or no SAP- PS experience, you should
get yourself certified, get some project experience, and then the
whole of the SAP World open for you to explore. Helping you with
the first step on you ladder to success is this book. Some UNIQUE
features of this book; - There is NO Other book in the market for
the SAP Project System (PS) with ERP 6.0 Certification exam. - The
authors have themselves cleared the exam. - All questions are
multiple choice format, similar the questions you will get in the
actual exam. - Over 150 authentic questions, testing the exact same
concepts that will be tested in Your exam
It was the "late days of the Depression", times were hard and money
scarce, and Ben Green "had about used up all the hard ways to make
a living a-horseback". So when he heard talk of the wild mustangs
free for the taking in the Big Bend country of West Texas, he
saddled a road horse, put his camp on a pack horse, and headed west
from Weatherford, Texas. Ben recounts his tale at an easy lope,
through hot days and cold nights, with dashes of danger along the
way.
From the same corral that produced the widely loved "Horse
Tradin'," Ben K. Green has rounded up fifteen new yarns filled with
the ornery yet irresistible style that has earned his books a place
in classic Western Americana.
"Some More Horse Tradin'" recounts the dealings of a whole slew
of craggy old-timers and rangy characters. See them match wits as
they trade well-bred mares, snorty-like range colts, and
used-to-be-bad horses from the tumbleweed plains. Admire the
old-time knavery, skill, and salesmanship in such tales as "Gittin'
Even," "Brethren Horse Traders," "Mule Schoolin'," and "Water
Treatment and the Sore-Tailed Bronc." Ride along with Green, and
he'll tell you what he knows about horseflesh--but keep your wits
about you, and hang on to your wallet.
Ben K. Green takes us back to the deep Southwest and the
never-a-dull-moment years he spent as a practicing horse doctor
along the Pecos and the Rio Grande. With precious little formal
schooling but a perfect corralside manner and plenty of natural
wit, Green became the first to hang up a shingle in the trans-Pecos
territory. Hear him tell the tales of his struggles with mean
stockmen, yellowweed fever, banditos, poison hay, and "drouth". His
canny mix of science and horse sense when treating animals "that
ain't house pets" is 100-proof old time pleasure.
A veterinarian in the far Southwest for much of his life, Ben K.
Green retired to ranch in Texas until his death in 1974.
In thirteen stories full of rope burns and brush scratches, the
author of the classic Horse Tradin' tells of the days when he made
a specialty of catching wild cows.
Ben K. Green calls himself a "stove-up old cowboy", and readers
of this book will learn soon enough where the broken bones came
from. Green tells of his adventures with wild steers, sharing with
readers the years he worked in thorny brush and canyon country
delivering those animals that were too wily or too wild for the
normal roundup. Finding them was hard, even dangerous, work. Few
cowboys looked for such chores. Green declares, "I got real good at
it, but of course in those days I didn't know any better".
|
You may like...
Back Together
Michael Ball & Alfie Boe
CD
(1)
R48
Discovery Miles 480
Gloria
Sam Smith
CD
R187
R167
Discovery Miles 1 670
|