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Even the most cursory survey of the chemical literature reveals
that modern NMR spectroscopy has indeed fulfilled its potential as
a powerful and indispensable tool for probing molecular structure,
providing detail that is comparable to, and sometimes surpasses
that, of X-ray crystallography. As NMR spectroscopy's 70th
anniversary approaches, the diversity of chemical problems to which
this technique can be applied continues to grow across many
scientific fields. Beyond the laboratory setting, the technology
underlying NMR is now a widely used and critical medical diagnostic
technique, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). Unfortunately, the
number of applications of NMR spectroscopy across so many
STEM-related fields presents significant challenges in how best to
introduce this powerful technique in meaningful ways at the
undergraduate level. Inspired by the development of the field, and
building upon the work of previous symposia and an ACS symposium
series book on this topic (3), a symposium was developed, entitled
"NMR Spectroscopy in the Undergraduate Curriculum," for the 239th
American Chemical Society National Meeting in San Francisco. This
book brings together all of the presenters who have been successful
in developing and successfully integrating NMR spectroscopy
pedagogy across their undergraduate curriculums. Their knowledge
and experiences will aid readers who are interested in expanding
and invigorating their own curriculum.
This third volume of NMR Spectroscopy in the Undergraduate
Curriculum continues the work we started with the first and second
volumes in providing effective approaches for using nuclear
magnetic resonance spectrometers as powerful tools for
investigating a wide variety of phenomena at the undergraduate
level. This volume focuses on upper-level courses and NMR
spectroscopy across the curriculum. The applications and strategies
in this volume will be helpful to those who are looking to
transform their curriculum by integrating more NMR spectroscopy, to
those who might not have considered NMR spectroscopy as a tool for
solving certain types of problems, or for those seeking funding for
a new or replacement NMR spectrometer.
This is a study of the phenomenon of cannibalism in those animals
known to prey upon and eat their own kind. The book is structured
in accordance with conventional taxonomy and ranges from microbes
to mammals. Where such information is available, the reasons for
cannibalistic behaviour are presented for some 2000 species. These
show that eating your own kind is very largely a result of the
natural struggle for survival or procreation, and not an 'evil'
aberration. The behaviours - unpleasant though it may appear - must
be far more common in nature than might be imagined, and therefore,
has probably evolved as an advantageous adaptation in many species.
The book is unusual in its wide survey of cannibalism in nature and
may be of use to animal breeders, conservationists, and those who
study animal behaviour. Other readers with an interest in natural
history, for whatever reason, may find useful information and some
surprises in these pages. Even some very familiar household pets
are included!
Coming of age in north London in the decade labelled the Swinging
Sixties, four friends, each with their own distinct views and
outlook on life but drawn tightly together by their mutually
exuberant love of rock 'n' roll and the cultural influences of the
time, form a strong bond that nurtures their dreams, hopes and
aspirations for a brighter, better world free from fighting,
hatred, inequality and hypocrisy. But the dark, corrosive side of
the Sixties - the assassinations of President John F Kennedy and
his brother Robert, the brutal slaying of Martin Luther King, the
trauma and shocking events of the Vietnam War and the destructive
surge in drugs use - loom large, leaving the foursome with scars
that slowly erode their youthful innocence, confidence and naive
swagger. A dramatic helter-skelter journey sees the friends go
through an array of human emotions, from humour to pathos, elation
to sadness, excitement to disappointment, life-affirming highs to
tear-stained lows and, ultimately, heartbreak and disillusionment.
Set in the closing stages of the decade, the earlier years are
recalled vividly in flashbacks that capture the exhilarating but
often painful process of growing up in rapidly-changing, turbulent
times.
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