Stephen Pidliskey 09/15/07 P1 Park ISOPOD BEHAVIOR LAB REPORT Background Information: In our lab we were working with isopods‚ also known as pill bugs or rollie pollies. The isopods that we worked with were land isopods. They like to live in moist places under untouched objects such as boards‚ bricks‚ rotting logs and or rocks. Basically‚ they will live anywhere! If you are lucky enough‚ you can even find them next to buildings where it is moist and if there is food. All living organisms like
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can be seen in Table 5. Next‚ four random pills were obtained and weights were taken of each. Each of the pills were grinded up using a separate mortar and pestle. The grinded up pills were then weighed. The grinded up pills were placed in separate beakers each containing 10 ml of Acetone. Once the pills had dissolved in the acetone‚ a vacuum filtration‚ using a hirsch funnel‚ was performed in order to separate out the insoluble components of the pill. The solids were
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1. Discuss the way Oliver’s nature poems can be read as political- questioning the hierarchies and dualisms underpinning Western cultures. Mary Oliver’s poems that explore nature can also be read as political as they question the dualisms and hierarchies that form strong foundations in Western cultures. Through the emergence of the patriarchy (a Western ideology) over 5000 years ago‚ traditional epistemological paradigms of Western society have been based on dualisms. Through patriarchal ideology
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themselves. They now spend much of that time caring for a demanding newborn. The physical and emotional demands of caring for a newborn exhausting for parents. Also in the second stanza the speaker writes‚ “Sweet death‚ small son‚ our instrument of immortality” there are two origins of irony here. “Sweet death” to most people does not seem like fitting words for a newborn. Death is not sweet. Death is sad and cold. However‚ when thinking about the amount of energy parents spend on their infants‚ and how
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peaceful and the speaker appears passive and is co-operative with his decision. Dickinson uses symbolism to depict the journey of death. This is apparent when she uses a carriage in line 3 to transport the speaker‚ Death and Immortality to the graveyard. Line 4 shows that “Immortality” is also on the carriage‚
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Tithonus’s obsession with death. The poetic voice is Tithonus’s confusion coming to the fore: “ay me! ay me!... The woods decay‚ the woods decay” the unexplained repetition of certain words suggests Tithonus’s mindset to be confused and befuddled; his immortality has rendered his mind trapped at times‚ trying to keep up with time at the same rate as his body does. The dramatic monologue form is essential in successfully conveying how time and age has wreaked havoc on Tithonus’s sanity. ‘Tithonus’ is a poem
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NONETHELESS‚ I SPEND MUCH TIME TO TAKE A DECISION SINCE A PILLS TREATMENT WOULD HELP ME TO OVERCOME THIS ILLNESS AS WELL AS PILLS TREATMENT. ARE YOU IN THE SAME SITUATION? BEFORE TAKE A DECISION IS BETTER TO KNOW SOME DIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIES I FOUND WHILE I TRY THIS TWO OPTIONS. ONE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BOTH TREATMENT IS THE TIME ANY OF THEM INVOLVE. BECAUSE OF FOLLOWING THE PILLS TREATMENT IS EASY TO CONSUME BECAUSE YOU JUST HAD TO TAKE A PILL OF LEVOTIROXIN EVERY MORNING AND DO NOT DO ANYMORE;
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By the end of the epic‚ Gilgamesh has hardly changed from the ravenous man he was in the beginning of the poem. In the beginning of the epic‚ Gilgamesh is portrayed as a man who is selfish; someone will stop at nothing to satisfy his desires‚ however irrational his desires are. One of Gilgamesh’s many desires is to win fame and glory for himself and his descendants. To accomplish this‚ he decides to venture into the Cedar Forest to seek and destroy Huwawa. When Enkidu advises against this perilous
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According to multiple scholars‚ sonnet 55 is a poem about time and immortalization. The speaker claims that his poem will immortalize the beloved‚ in this case the young man. According to Alison Scott‚ the speaker is seeking to “give” the gift of immortality to the young man through his poetry‚ adhering to a larger theme of giving and possessing that runs through many of Shakespeare’s sonnets.[1] David Kaula‚ however‚ emphasizes the concept of time slightly differently. He argues that the sonnet traces
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Sonnet 18 One of the Greatest Love Poems of all Times or a Poet’s Self Glorification Praise Name: Gal Ashkenazi Elkana Id: 028009876 Course: English Poetry and Literature Teacher: Dr. Natanela Elias Date: 23.1.15 Elkana Sonnet 18 One of the Greatest Love Poems of all Times or a Poet’s Self Glorification Praise Sonnet 18 is a beautiful love poem that conveys the themes of human beauty and the effect of time on it through a variety of metaphors and poetic techniques. On the surface‚ the
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