Coulter (other)
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Coulter (other)
Coulter may refer to: People * Coulter (surname) * Coulter Osborne (1934–2023), Canadian arbitrator and former Associate Chief Justice of Ontario Places * Coulter, South Lanarkshire, Scotland, a village and civil parish * Coulter, Iowa, United States, a city * Coulter, Pennsylvania, United States, an unincorporated community * Coulter Brook, New York, United States * Mount Coulter, Queen Elizabeth Land, Antarctica * Coulter Glacier, Alexander Island, Antarctica * Coulter Heights, Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica * 18776 Coulter, an asteroid Other uses * Coulter (agriculture), a part of a plow or seed drill * Coulter Field, a public airfield in Texas * Coulter Field (Bishop's), Quebec, Canada, a Bishop's University stadium * Coulter Flats, also known as The Coulter, an apartment building in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, on the National Register of Historic Places * Coulter railway station, Coulter, South Lanarkshire, Scotland * Coulter's, a defunct Los Angeles department sto ...
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Coulter (surname)
Coulter is a surname of Scotland, Scottish and Ireland, Irish origin. Coulter most likely first originated as a toponymic surname in Scotland among people from areas around Coulter, South Lanarkshire, Coulter in South Lanarkshire or Maryculter and Peterculter in Aberdeenshire (historic), Aberdeenshire. The Etymology, etymological origins of these place names may be from Scottish Gaelic ''cùl tir'', meaning 'back land', or (at least in the case of the Lanarkshire village) from a distortion of the Scots language ''Cootyre'', meaning a safe place to store cows. After the Plantation of Ulster when people with the surname migrated from Scotland to the northernmost province of Ireland, the Irish surname ''Uí Coltarain'', meaning "descendants of Coltarain", appears to have been Anglicisation, anglicised to Coulter. The ''Uí Coltarain'' were chiefs of the Túath, petty-kingdom of Dál Coirbin (within what became the barony of Castlereagh (County Down barony), Castlereagh), in the over- ...
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Coulter Counter
A Coulter counter is an apparatus for counting and sizing particles suspended in electrolytes. The Coulter counter is the commercial term for the technique known as resistive pulse sensing or electrical zone sensing, the apparatus is based on The Coulter principle named after its inventor, Wallace H. Coulter. A typical Coulter counter has one or more microchannels that separate two chambers containing electrolyte solutions. As fluid-containing particles or cells are drawn through each microchannel, each particle causes a brief change to the electrical resistance of the liquid. The counter detects these changes in the electrical resistance. Coulter principle The ''Coulter principle'' states that particles pulled through an orifice, concurrent with an electric current, produce a change in impedance that is proportional to the volume of the particle traversing the orifice. This pulse in impedance originates from the displacement of electrolyte caused by the particle. The princi ...
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Coulter's
Coulter's was a department store that originated in Downtown Los Angeles and later moved to the Miracle Mile shopping district in that same city. History Coulter's was founded by B. F. Coulter, a minister and entrepreneur from Kentucky, who joined the partnership Coulter & Harper in 1875, selling hardware, homeware and appliances, as well as underwear, at Eighth and Spring streets, moving to 110 Main Street in 1878. On October 22, 1878, Coulter opened his own store in the Downey Block at the corner of Temple and Main streets, selling dry goods including "gentlemen's furnishings" including neckties, as well as ladies' cloaks, hosiery, and "dress goods". This first store measured and held merchandise valued at $1,000. Coulter's philosophy was to sell exceptional quality items at a fair price, but also with exceptional customer service. The store motto in ads was "the nicest store in Los Angeles". As was common with Los Angeles retailers of the time, Coulter moved the store' ...
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Coulter Railway Station
Coulter railway station served the village of Coulter, South Lanarkshire, Scotland from 1860 to 1965 on the Symington, Biggar and Broughton Railway. History The station opened on 5 November 1860 by the Symington, Biggar and Broughton Railway The Symington, Biggar and Broughton Railway was a railway company in southern Scotland. It built a line connecting Biggar, and later Peebles, to the main line railway at Symington. It was taken over by the Caledonian Railway in 1861, and was c .... The station closed to passengers on 5 June 1950 and to goods traffic on 1 March 1965. References External links Disused railway stations in South Lanarkshire Former Caledonian Railway stations Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1860 Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1950 1860 establishments in Scotland 1965 disestablishments in Scotland {{SouthLanarkshire-railstation-stub ...
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