1973
DOI: 10.2307/4199961
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The Historical Inscriptions of Adad-Nirari III

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Cited by 44 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Pressure-dependent boundary conditions always result in an exponential increase of pressure (feed section) or force (tire brake, winch). The increase of pressure in the feed section of extruders causes the boundary condition to change from slip [T = T(P)] to stick [ T = ~(du/dy)] since local melting takes place (19)(20)(21). (The heat generated is proportional to the local pressure.)…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pressure-dependent boundary conditions always result in an exponential increase of pressure (feed section) or force (tire brake, winch). The increase of pressure in the feed section of extruders causes the boundary condition to change from slip [T = T(P)] to stick [ T = ~(du/dy)] since local melting takes place (19)(20)(21). (The heat generated is proportional to the local pressure.)…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adad-Nirari showed a heightened interest in the region between the rivers Tigris and Khabur, as we know from several other stone stelae of his at Tell Rimah (Page, 1968), Dūr Katlimmu and in the Sinjar mountains (Tadmor, 1973). The Rimah stela closely parallels the structure of the Saba'a one, and also mentions military interventions in regions further west (Weippert, 1992).…”
Section: Assyria: the Case Of The Wadi Ajijmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Besides this, the two Damascus Museum stelae present an additional rosette of eight petals in the circular space produced by the horns. The three previously known stelae were dated to the eighth to seventh centuries BC, based on iconographic criteria and comparison with similar motifs in other monuments, mainly with the Assyrian stela of Adad-Nirari III which came from the heart of Assyria and dated between 810 BC and 783 BC (Tadmor 1973;Krebernik & Seidl 1997: 109). These motifs (the pole topped with a bull's head, the rosette, etc.)…”
Section: S Celestino Pérez and C López-ruizmentioning
confidence: 99%