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Institution

Open University

EducationMilton Keynes, United Kingdom
About: Open University is a education organization based out in Milton Keynes, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Population. The organization has 11702 authors who have published 35020 publications receiving 1110835 citations. The organization is also known as: Open University, The & Open University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2009-Geoforum
TL;DR: In this paper, a post-colonization analysis of international students is proposed to consider what forms of pedagogic responsibility are called forth through this framework, and the authors show that routing care and responsibility through postcolonial geographies incites a more demanding political praxis.

206 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review surface uplift associated with five continent-based magmatic provinces: Emeishan Traps (260 million years ago: Ma), Siberian Traps (251 Ma), Deccan Traps(65 Ma), North Atlantic (phase 1, 61 Ma and Phase 2, 55 Ma), and Yellowstone (16 Ma to recent).

206 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the role of gabbro fractionation in the formation of the Mahabaleshwar and Panhala basalt basalt formations, and found that the high TiO2 content of Kolhapur unit flows is the result of shallow-level gabbroid fractionation, rather than the presence of a primitive high-Ti magma.
Abstract: The basalt stratigraphy of the Deccan Trap between Mahabaleshwar Ghat and Belgaum over-steps the basement from north to south. Sr-isotope and Zr/Nb ratios, and Sr, Rb, and Ba concentrations correlate portions of the post-Poladpur stratigraphy over 250 km along the Western Ghats, thereby confirming a southerly component of dip of 0·06°. At the southwestern margin, the stratigraphy extends upwards from the compositionally uniform Ambenali Formation (Cox & Hawkesworth, 1984) into a sequence of grossly heterogeneous flow units which have been allocated to the Mahabaleshwar and Panhala Formations (Lightfoot & Hawkesworth, 1988). The Mahabaleshwar Formation is represented only by a sequence of highly fractionated flows (termed the Kolhapur unit) with similar 87Sr/86Sr0 to the Mahabaleshwar (0·7045), but with Sr 2·25%. Succeeding the Kolhapur unit are a series of flows with high 87Sr/86Sr0 (0·7045-0·705), Zr/Nb > 13, and low Sr ( 230), but trace element concentrations similar to the Mahabaleshwar Formation; these have been allocated to the Desur unit of the Panhala. Geochemical variations in flows overlying the Ambenali define two distinct trends: one is attributed to gabbro fractionation, and the other to variations in the compositions of the parental magmas, and arguably their source regions. There is little evidence for significant crustal contamination in these flows, and the degree of fractionation and the composition of the phase extract are shown to vary along strike within the Mahabaleshwar Formation. The high TiO2 content of Kolhapur unit flows is shown to be the result of shallow-level gabbro fractionation, rather than the presence of a primitive high-Ti magma. Mahabaleshwar Formation basalts exhibit a broad negative correlation between the degree of fractionation and Sr-isotopic composition. The endmember with lower 87Sr/86Sr0 has different Zr/Y from the Ambenali basalts, and would appear to have been generated by lower degrees of melting of a similar source. The other endmember has more radiogenic Sr, lower Zr/Nb, similar Zr/Y, but higher mg-number. The simplest interpretation is that these magmas were more primitive and hence hotter and more able to interact with the lithosphere en route to the surface, and that they then mixed to produce the Mahabaleshwar array. The Panhala Formation basalts plot on the Sr-Nd array defined by the Mahabaleshwar Formation, and the Desur unit basalts plot on an extension of this array; this suggests that the source characteristics are also lithospheric. The absolute elemental abundances may then be a function of melting and fractionation. We are impressed by the apparent switch from crustal lithospheric contributions to mantle lithospheric contributions through the stratigraphy, and suggest that this, together with the more protracted fractionation of the magma, reflects a change in the availability of the lithospheric components accompanying the southerly migration of the volcanic edifice.

206 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
George Stiny1
TL;DR: In this article, the conventions used to construct traditional Chinese ice-ray lattice designs are investigated, and Parametric shape grammars are defined for the recursive generation of these patterns.
Abstract: The conventions used to construct traditional Chinese ice-ray lattice designs are investigated. Parametric shape grammars are defined for the recursive generation of these patterns.

205 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report findings of an exploratory study that sought to identify what characterises possibility thinking in young children's learning experiences and how teachers' pedagogical practice fosters this critical aspect of creativity.

205 citations


Authors

Showing all 11915 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Simon Baron-Cohen172773118071
Rob Ivison1661161102314
David W. Johnson1602714140778
David Scott124156182554
R. Santonico12077767421
Eva K. Grebel11886383915
Chris J. Hawkesworth11236038666
Johannes Brug10962044832
Mark J. Nieuwenhuijsen10764749080
M. Santosh103134449846
Andrew J. King10288246038
Wim H. M. Saris9950634967
Peter Nijkamp97240750826
John Dixon9654336929
Timothy Clark95113753665
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023103
2022395
20211,994
20201,928
20191,810
20181,629