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2 kirjaa tekijältä Mandy Jay

Earn It

Earn It

Mandy Jay

Independently Published
2019
nidottu
Delilah Watson never thought that she would be the object of desire for men. Growing up, she was the wallflower, the quintessential nerd. But as her confidence grew with age, she stopped being the joke and started being the fantasy. Now, as a professor at Ramis University, she has young studs ready to prove their worth off the football field. Her reputation proceeds her as a young journalist, Madison Brantley, attempts to uncover the truth behind the rumors. But her biggest obstacle is the new dean of Ramis, Reed Turner.Reed Turner has never been mistaken as an intellectual. When you look as good as he does, asking what books you've read is not what's running through a woman's mind. He came to Ramis University to change the culture from football obsessed to academic obsession. But the main problem with that is his own obsession with Professor Delilah Watson. It's not just her voluptuous body that he's obsessed with, or getting to the bottom of the rumors swirling around her regarding the star athletes on the football team. It's her clever wit and impish grin that he can't get out of his head, and has him conflicted about his duties as dean of the university.
The Archaeology of Hinkley Point C Nuclear Power Station, Somerset. Excavations in 2012-16

The Archaeology of Hinkley Point C Nuclear Power Station, Somerset. Excavations in 2012-16

Andrew Mudd; Sharon Clough; Frances Healy; Mandy Jay; Linus Girdland Flink

Cotswold Archaeology
2024
sidottu
The cemetery was excavated in its entirety and contained the remains of around 300 individuals. Its form is shown to have many characteristics in common with other cemeteries of this period in the western British Isles, including the extended, supine posture of the deceased in simple earth-cut graves largely aligned in a west/east orientation. There were a limited number and range of grave accompaniments. Peculiarities included a concentration of intercutting burials within a small central rectangle, with the later re-use of this space for the deposition of fragments of carved stone, followed by the construction here of a wooden building. The deposition of seashells with a number of the burials appears to be a rite so far unique to this community. The stratigraphic sequence allied to radiocarbon dates on 51 individuals has enabled an unusually refined chronology, showing that the cemetery was used from the early 5th to the later 7th centuries. Measurements of the isotopes of strontium, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen and sulphur in various combinations from a selection of individuals provides insights into aspects of origin, movement and diet. Mitochondrial DNA has provided information on the maternal lineage of 44 individuals, some of whom were buried in the same grave as others of the same lineage. Material remains were sparse but provide insights into the burial practices at this time.