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Paul Ryan

Researcher at National University of Ireland, Galway

Publications -  116
Citations -  37081

Paul Ryan is an academic researcher from National University of Ireland, Galway. The author has contributed to research in topics: Apprenticeship & Ordovician. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 107 publications receiving 33947 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Ryan include National University of Ireland & University of London.

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Book ChapterDOI

Arc–Continent Collision in the Ordovician of Western Ireland: Stratigraphic, Structural and Metamorphic Evolution

TL;DR: The geology of western Ireland preserves a record of the collision of the Lough Nafooey arc with the Laurentian margin which caused the mid-Ordovician Grampian Orogeny as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The South Mayo Trough: a possible Ordovician Gulf of California-type marginal basin in the west of Ireland

TL;DR: The South Mayo Trough, an early Ordovician sedimentary basin, was developed at the southern margin of the Laurentian plate as discussed by the authors, which controlled deposition of 12.8 km of sediment.
Journal Article

SPECT bone scintigraphy of anterior cruciate ligament injury.

TL;DR: Knee SPECT may be a valuable examination in suspected ACL injury, particularly if MRI is not available, is equivocal or where clinical signs are absent, and is a sensitive technique.

Towards a history of vocational education and training (VET) in Europe in a comparative perspective : proceedings of the First International Conference October 2002, Florence

Paul Ryan
TL;DR: This volume gathers the contributions of the first day of the First international conference on the history of VET in Europe in a comparative perspective, held in Florence 11-12 October 2002, to promote better understanding of present-day VET by making reference to the historical development at national and intra-national levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

The South Connemara Group reinterpreted: a subduction-accretion complex in the Caledonides of Galway Bay, western Ireland

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present new field evidence that the South Connemara Group is tectonically disrupted by bedding parallel shear zones and that contacts previously interpreted as conformable are marked by units of tectonic melange.