A total of 170 ceramic specimens from 16 archaeological sites representing 16 well determined ages from 4000 BC to 150 AD were investigated using the Thellier method. These paleointensities were compared with data from countries near Egypt after reduction to a common latitude to determine a secular variation curve of the geomagnetic field for the time period from 4000 BC to 150 AD. The field intensity increases from about 30 pT around 3500 BC to a maximum of 70 µT at about 400 BC when it starts to decrease until 150 AD. The Thellier double heating method was used together with the following additional test measurements: a) during the Thellier experiments the laboratory field FLsb. pointed in the direction of stable NRM, b) magnetic susceptibility was measured after each double heating step to check for chemical alteration, c) a TRM check was made, by repeating the pTRM induction at a lower temperature, d) recent samples which were fired in a known field were used to test the reliability of our experimental setup and method. Based on rock magnetic measurements magnetite was identified as the predominant carrier of magnetization in the ceramics and bricks.
The well-anticipated and well-documented demographic shift attributed to ageing of the baby boomer generation will place significant demands upon the health-care industry in the future. Significant resources such as the nurse workforce, will be needed to provide health-care services to this cohort. There is a looming shortage of professional and paraprofessional nurses. This paper evaluates strategies that can be utilized to decrease the rate of the nursing shortage, while retaining the current supply of nurses. Recommendations for solving the nursing shortage problem include enhancing the work environment through fostering open communication, improving technology, nurse empowerment, building long-lasting and fulfilling partnerships, and efficient workplace organization.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.