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Organ | A Wisdom Archive on Organ |  | Organ A selection of articles related to Organ |  |
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organ, Organ
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Organ |  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Model organism - Important model organisms
Model organism - Viruses.
lambda phage
Model organism - Prokaryotes.
Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Bacillus subtilis
Mycoplasma genitalium - a minimal organism
Vibrio fischeri - quorum sensing, bioluminescence and animal-bacterial symbiosis with Hawaiian bobtail squid
Synechocystis, a photosynthetic cyanobacteria widely used in photosynthesis research.
Pseudomonas fluorescens, a soil bacterium that r ...
See also:Model organism, Model organism - Important model organisms, Model organism - Viruses, Model organism - Prokaryotes, Model organism - Unicellular eukaryotes, Model organism - Multicellular eukaryotes, Model organism - Model organisms used for specific research objectives, Model organism - Sexual selection and sexual conflict, Model organism - Hybrid zones Read more here: » Model organism: Encyclopedia II - Model organism - Important model organisms |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - The Organ - Discography
The Organ - Full Sketch.
Self titled CD which circulated around the local scene 2000-2001, assumably through shows and friends.
Picky
Cooler Than Clean
Steven Smith
Soundtrack
Sketchersize
Ice Fishing
The Organ - The Organ 7 Record.
Self titled single sold at shows and on the band's website prior to the release of Sinking Hearts, 2002. Probable tracklist :
It's Time to Go
We've Got to Meet
...
See also:The Organ, The Organ - Biography, The Organ - Discography, The Organ - Full Sketch, The Organ - The Organ 7 Record, The Organ - Sinking Hearts EP, The Organ - Grab that Gun LP, The Organ - Let the Bells Ring 7 Record, The Organ - Unreleased, The Organ - Sources Read more here: » The Organ: Encyclopedia II - The Organ - Discography |
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| | |  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - The Organ - BiographyThe Organ was conceived in 2000 by frontwoman Katie Sketch, born Katie Richie, in Vancouver, Canada. Sketch's musical training started at the age of three, when she began classical training on the violin. Her childhood was spent largely in ignorance of the underground sounds of The Cure, Joy Division and The Smiths, which The Organ would later be so often (and so inaccurately) compared to. "Tiffany and Bon Jo ...
See also:The Organ, The Organ - Biography, The Organ - Discography, The Organ - Full Sketch, The Organ - The Organ 7 Record, The Organ - Sinking Hearts EP, The Organ - Grab that Gun LP, The Organ - Let the Bells Ring 7 Record, The Organ - Unreleased, The Organ - Sources Read more here: » The Organ: Encyclopedia II - The Organ - Biography |
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| |  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - OverviewOrganic farming excludes the use of synthetic inputs, such as synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, and genetically modified organisms (GMOs). In many countries the use of veterinary drugs is excluded. In a number of countries, including the US, Bulgaria, Iceland, Norway, Romania, Switzerland, Turkey, Australia, India, Japan, the Philippines, Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Argentina, Costa Rica, Tunisia, and in the EU, organic farming is also defined by law, so that the commercial use of the term organic to describe farming and food product ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Overview |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - HistoryThe organic movement began as a reaction of insiders (agricultural scientists and farmers) against the industrialization of agriculture. For some time it remained below the awareness of the food buyer. As the contrasts between organics and the new conventional agriculture grew, so to did public awareness of organic farming. This led to a distinct organic market, and, eventually, a grassroots consumer cause.
Advances in biochemistry, (nitrogen fertilizer) and engineering (the internal combustion engine) in the early 20th century led to ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - History |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - The futureOrganic farming is at a crossroads. Despite the growth in the organic food market over the last decade, the future of the small, independent farmer, organic or otherwise, is as much in jeopardy now as it has been in recent decades. The local infrastructure to support small farmers is all but non-existent in most developed nations - the current food distribution system favors high-volume production, and large farming operations. What is commonly known as "organic farming" may chan ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - The future |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s
Electronic organ - The spinet organ.
Following World War II, most electronic home organs were built in a configuration usually called a spinet organ, which first appeared in 1949. These compact and relatively inexpensive instruments became the natural successors to the reed organs. They were marketed as competitors of home pianos and often aimed at would-be home organists who were already pianists (hence the name "spinet," a small upright piano). The instrument's design reflected this concept: the spinet organ ph ...
See also:Electronic organ, Electronic organ - Early history, Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s, Electronic organ - The spinet organ, Electronic organ - The chord organ, Electronic organ - The console organ, Electronic organ - Frequency divider organs, Electronic organ - The modern electronic organ Read more here: » Electronic organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s |
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| |  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - StandardsIncreasingly, organic farming is defined by formal standards regulating production methods, and in some cases, final output. Two types of standard exist, voluntary and legislated. As early as the 1970s, private associations created standards, against which organic producers could voluntarily have themselves certified. In the 1980s, governments began to produce organic production guidelines. Beginning in the 1990s, a trend toward legislation of standards began, most notably with the European Union.
An international framework for organi ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Standards |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - IssuesAll aspects of organic farming and organic food are under debate. Environmentalists, food safety advocates, various consumer protection, social justice and labor groups, small independent farmers, and a growing number of food consumers are ranged against agribusiness and current government agricultural policies.
The controversy centers on the overall value and safety of chemical agriculture, with organic farming popularly regarded as the "opposite" of modern, large-scale, chemical-based, vertically integrated, corporate food production. As public awareness increases, there are a number of obstacles ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Issues |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - ProductivityA 22-year farm trial study by Cornell University published in 2005 concluded that organic farming produces the same corn and soybean yields as conventional methods, but consumes less energy and contains no pesticide residues. However, a prominent 21-year Swiss study found an average of 20% lower organic yields over conventional, along with 50% lower expenditure on fertilizer and energy, and 97% less pesticides[3]. A major US survey published ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Productivity |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - MethodsOrganic farming involves fostering natural processes, often over extended periods of time, and a holistic approach. Chemical-based farming focuses on immediate, isolated effects and reductionist strategies, often based primarily on the desire for profits. In large commercial operations, technology is used to regulate local conditions—hybrid seed, synthetic chemicals, high-volume irrigation—while sophisticated machinery does most of the work, and operators' feet may seldom touch the ground. Beyond the st ...
See also:Organic farming, Organic farming - Overview, Organic farming - History, Organic farming - Methods, Organic farming - Organic farming systems, Organic farming - Standards, Organic farming - Productivity, Organic farming - Issues, Organic farming - Pesticides, Organic farming - Genetically modified organisms, Organic farming - The environment, Organic farming - Food contamination, Organic farming - Food quality, Organic farming - Soil conservation, Organic farming - Government subsidies, Organic farming - Rural infrastructure, Organic farming - Sustainability, Organic farming - Certification, Organic farming - The future Read more here: » Organic farming: Encyclopedia II - Organic farming - Methods |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - TechnicalAs in a traditional pipe organ, a theatre organ uses pressurized air to produce musical tones. However, this is where the similarity ends. The five most important things that separate a theatre organ from traditional church organs are unification, the electro-pneumatic action, higher wind pressures, chromatic percussions, and the horseshoe console.
Unification gave the theatre organ its unique flexibility. Ranks are extended by adding pipes above and below the original pitch, allowing the organist to play that rank at various p ...
See also:Theatre organ, Theatre organ - Background, Theatre organ - History, Theatre organ - Technical, Theatre organ - Current Status, Theatre organ - The Theatre Organ's Future Read more here: » Theatre organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - Technical |
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|  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - HistoryDuring the silent movie era and into the early 1930s, theatre organs were built in large numbers, in a variety of sizes, and filled the gap between a simple piano accompaniment and a full orchestra. Indeed, when theatre owners hired orchestras to accompany silent movies, they frequently included a pipe organ to provide relief to the orchestra, and to play for less-expensive showings.
After the development of sound movies, theatre organs remained installed in many theatres to provide live music between features. However, after the 'gol ...
See also:Theatre organ, Theatre organ - Background, Theatre organ - History, Theatre organ - Current status, Theatre organ - American Theatre Organ Society Read more here: » Theatre organ: Encyclopedia II - Theatre organ - History |
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| | | | |  |  |  | Organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - Early historyThe immediate predecessor of the electronic organ was the harmonium, or reed organ, an instrument that was very popular in homes and small churches in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In a fashion not totally unlike that of pipe organs, reed organs generated sound by forcing air over a set of reeds by means of a bellows, usually operated by constantly pumping a set of pedals. While reed organs had limited tonal quality, they were small, inexpensive, self-powered, and self-contained. The reed organ was thus able to bring an ...
See also:Electronic organ, Electronic organ - Early history, Electronic organ - The 1950s and 1960s, Electronic organ - The spinet organ, Electronic organ - The chord organ, Electronic organ - The console organ, Electronic organ - Frequency divider organs, Electronic organ - The modern electronic organ Read more here: » Electronic organ: Encyclopedia II - Electronic organ - Early history |
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