- Geophysical Methods and Applications
- Archaeological Research and Protection
- Themes in Literature Analysis
- Scottish History and National Identity
- Image Processing and 3D Reconstruction
- Irish and British Studies
- Historical and Literary Studies
- Dermatologic Treatments and Research
- Islamic Studies and History
- Australian History and Society
- Linguistic Variation and Morphology
- Linguistics and language evolution
- Philosophy, History, and Historiography
- Geotechnical Engineering and Underground Structures
- Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
- Advanced Frequency and Time Standards
- Poetry Analysis and Criticism
- Archaeology and ancient environmental studies
- Shakespeare, Adaptation, and Literary Criticism
- African history and culture analysis
- Reformation and Early Modern Christianity
- Folklore, Mythology, and Literature Studies
- Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
- Paleopathology and ancient diseases
- Earthquake Detection and Analysis
University of Birmingham
2018-2022
Queen's University Belfast
2010-2019
Keele University
2015-2018
Universidad de Oviedo
2018
University College Birmingham
2018
Abstract This ongoing monitoring study provides forensic search teams with systematic geophysical data over simulated clandestine graves for comparison to active cases. Simulated “wrapped,” “naked,” and “control” burials were created. Multiple surveys collected 6 years, here showing from 4 years after burial. Electrical resistivity (twin electrode ERI ), multifrequency GPR , grave background soil water collected. Resistivity revealed that the naked burial had low‐resistivity anomalies up...
The extraordinary performance offered by cold atom-based clocks and sensors has the opportunity to profoundly affect a range of applications, for example in gravity surveys, enabling long term monitoring applications through low drift measurements. While ground-based devices are already starting enter commercial market, significant improvements robustness reductions size, weight, power required such be deployed Unstaffed Aerial Vehicle systems (UAV). In this article, we realise first step...
Just before WWII, the British government prepared for an aerial onslaught that was predicted to raze cities and cause mass casualties. By 1938, Air Raid Precautions Act officially stated population protection would be through dispersal, meaning evacuation small-scale protection, local authority responsibility often devolving householders. Archaeological records of remaining air-raid shelters are relatively rare under threat. This paper reports on geophysical surveys three sites in...
A Man Darkly Wonderful - Coleridgean reorientations in De Quncey criticism Like the Ghost Hamlet radical politics and revisionary interpretation revolutionary joy Quincey's discovery of Lyrical Ballads pains growth language cultural power knowledge English nationalism mediation Kant England Quincey as critic style representation Wordsworth visions revisions new directions studies three uncollected marginalia from lessons French Revolution To William Tait, Esquire.
Buried infrastructure forms the backbone for economic stability, growth, competitiveness and productivity in modern society is a critical element of urban environments. The pressures on buried will only increase as population increases, which drive demand require changes. This means that maintenance existing infrastructure, well building new capacity, vital to meet demands. Currently, there lack available technology locate detect accurately condition relatively shallow (up 1 m deep) plastic...
Book Review| March 01 2010 Review: Wordsworth's Philosophic Song, by Simon Jarvis JarvisWordsworth's Song. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. Pp. x + 267. $85. Daniel Sanjiv Roberts Queen's Belfast Search for other works this author on: This Site PubMed Google Scholar Nineteenth-Century Literature (2010) 64 (4): 524–527. https://doi.org/10.1525/ncl.2010.64.4.524 Views Icon Article contents Figures & tables Video Audio Supplementary Data Peer Review Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn...
Just before WW2, the British government prepared for an aerial onslaught that was predicted to raze cities and cause mass casualties. By 1938, Air Raid Precautions Act officially stated population protection would be through dispersal, meaning evacuation small-scale protection, local authority responsibility often devolving householders. Archaeological records of remaining air-raid shelters are relatively rare under threat. This paper reports on geophysical surveys three sites in...