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Patterson Gimlin Film
Patterson may refer to: People * Patterson (surname) Places ;Canada *Pattersons Corners, Ontario *Patterson Township, Ontario *Patterson, Calgary a neighbourhood in Calgary, Alberta. ;United States of America * Patterson, Arkansas *Patterson, California *Patterson, California, former name of Trigo, Madera County, California *Patterson, California, former name of Cherokee, Nevada County, California * Patterson, Georgia * Patterson, Idaho * Patterson, Iowa *Patterson, Louisiana * Patterson, Missouri * Patterson, New Mexico *Patterson, New York * Patterson, Ohio *Lake Patterson, a lake in Minnesota *Patterson Springs, North Carolina * Patterson Heights, Pennsylvania * Patterson Tract, California Other uses * ''Bob Patterson'' (TV series), American sitcom * C.R. Patterson and Sons, American car manufacturer from 1915 until 1939. * ''Patterson'' (radio series), British radio series by Malcolm Bradbury * Patterson Companies, a medical supplies conglomerate based in Minnesota * Patter ...
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Patterson (surname)
Patterson is a surname originating in Scotland, Ireland, and Northern England meaning "son of Patrick". There are other spellings, including Pattison (surname), Pattison and Pattinson. Notable people with the surname Patterson include: A *Ahmet Patterson (fl. 2010s), English boxer of Turkish Cypriot and Jamaican origin *Alan Patterson (field hockey), Alan Patterson (born 1941), New Zealand field hockey player *Alan Patterson (athlete), Alan Patterson (1886–1916), British athlete *Albert Patterson (1894–1954), American politician and assassination victim *Alexander Bell Patterson (1911–1993), Canadian politician *Alvin "Seeco" Patterson (1930–2021), Jamaican percussionist *Ambrose McCarthy Patterson (1877–1967), Australian artist *Andre Patterson (born 1983), American basketball player *Andrew Patterson (cricketer) (born 1975), Irish cricketer *Andrew Patterson (architect) (born 1960) New Zealand architect *Andrew Patterson (Patterson), Andrew Patterson (''Patterson''), ...
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Patterson Springs, North Carolina
Patterson Springs is a town in Cleveland County, North Carolina, United States. The population was 622 at the 2010 census. History Patterson Springs was originally a small farming community called "Swangs", with only a train depot and a post office. William George Patterson bought the land that held three springs from the "Epps" family. Patterson hoped that the supposed healing powers of these springs would help heal his son, Billy, who had poor health. Eventually, news of the supposed healing powers of these springs spread, and Patterson created a thirty to forty room resort to house travelers and merchants. The resort, which was one of several in the area, mainly attracted people from North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. When the attendees of the resort were not at the springs, Patterson offered lawn bowling and a dance every Saturday night. In 1885, the name "Swangs confused the railroad people so they convinced the post office to change it to Patterson Springs and the ...
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Patterson Plantation
The Patterson Plantation, also known as Holly Rock Farm, is a historic Federal style plantation house located on the edge of Durham in Orange County, North Carolina. The home was once the center of a 2,200-acre plantation dating back to the 18th-century. History The Patterson Plantation was first listed in a 1770 Collet Map as "I. Paterson", at the time it was owned by a planter named John Patterson, who built a cabin on the site. The family also operated a mill, known as Patterson's Mill, along New Hope Creek in what is now Duke Forest. The land later passed to Patterson's son, John Tapley Patterson. Upon his death, it passed to his son, Mann Patterson. Construction on the large Federal-style house began in 1834, shortly before the death of Patterson. His second wife Mary Cabe Patterson, who had inherited the 2,200-acre plantation, later completed the building. It was built at the intersection of Erwin and Whitfield Roads, less than a mile from Mt. Moriah Baptist Church. The ...
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Patterson–Gimlin Film
The Patterson–Gimlin film (also known as the Patterson film or the PGF) is an American short motion picture of an unidentified subject that the filmmakers have said was a Bigfoot. The footage was shot in 1967 in Northern California, and has since been subjected to many attempts to authenticate or debunk it. The footage was filmed alongside Bluff Creek, a tributary of the Klamath River, about northwest of Orleans, California, in Del Norte County on the Six Rivers National Forest. The film site is roughly south of Oregon and east of the Pacific Ocean. For decades, the exact location of the site was lost, primarily because of re-growth of foliage in the streambed after the flood of 1964. It was rediscovered in 2011. It is just south of a north-running segment of the creek informally known as "the bowling alley". The filmmakers were Roger Patterson (1933–1972) and Robert "Bob" Gimlin (born 1931). Patterson died of cancer in 1972 and "maintained right to the end that the ...
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Patterson Viaduct
The Patterson Viaduct was built by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) as part of its Old Main Line during May to December 1829. The viaduct spanned the Patapsco River at Ilchester, Maryland. It was heavily damaged by a flood in 1866 and subsequently replaced with other structures. History and design Original bridge The viaduct was constructed during the first building phase of the railroad, which extended from Baltimore, Maryland, to Ellicott's Mills (today's Ellicott City). The Patterson span at Ilchester, the third initial stone bridge built for the B&O, was similar in construction to the company's first bridge, the nearby Carrollton Viaduct further east spanning the Gwynns Falls and was named for B&O director and well known civic leader and merchant William Patterson who also donated land for Patterson Park in east Baltimore. It was designed by Caspar Wever and built under the supervision of John McCartney, one of Wever's assistants. McCartney's good work on the Patte ...
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Patterson-UTI
Patterson-UTI Energy provides land drilling and pressure pumping services, directional drilling, rental equipment and technology to clients in the United States and western Canada. Patterson-UTI Companies include: * Patterson-UTI Drilling * Universal Pressure Pumping * MS Directional * Great Plains Oilfield Rental * Warrior Rig Technologies * Current Power Solutions * Superior QC History Patterson Drilling Company was founded in 1978 by Cloyce Talbott and Glenn Patterson. In 2001, Patterson Drilling acquired UTI Energy and renamed the company Patterson-UTI Energy. In September 2014, the company acquired Texas-based pressure pumping assets. In September 2016, the company acquired Warrior Rig. In April 2017, the company acquired Seventy Seven Energy. The deal included Seventy Seven's affiliates: Great Plains Oilfield Rental, Nomac Drilling (now part of Patterson-UTI Drilling), and Performance Technologies (now part of Universal Pressure Pumping). In October 2017, the company ...
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Patterson Syndrome
Patterson syndrome, also called pseudoleprechaunism, is an extremely rare syndrome, first mistaken as Donohue Syndrome (also known as Leprechaunism). It is named for Dr. Joseph Hanan Patterson. It was described by Patterson and Watkins in 1962. The pathogenesis and cause of the Patterson syndrome was unknown until 1981. Signs and symptoms Patterson syndrome is characterized by the patient's having an unusual facial look, similar to that caused by Leprechaunism. It primarily affects the connective tissue and the neuroendocrine system, giving rise to bronzed hyperpigmentation, cutis laxa of the hands and feet, bodily disproportion, intellectual disability, and major bony deformities. Radiographs reveal a characteristic generalised skeletal dysplasia. It comprises endocrine abnormality, hyperadrenocorticism, cushingoid features, and diabetes mellitus. One other case has shown premature adrenarche Adrenarche is an early stage in sexual maturation that happens in some higher prima ...
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Patterson & Sullivan
Patterson & Sullivan (P&S) was an art service based in San Francisco in the 1920s and 1930s. In addition to their illustration services, P&S employed a staff of graphic and packaging designers as well as typographers, calligraphic artists and photographers. History J.E. Patterson and Ray Sullivan founded the San Francisco based art service Patterson & Sullivan in 1921. They provided illustration services for the local advertising agencies such as Lord & Thomas, McCann Erickson, BBD&O, Young & Rubicam and J. Walter Thompson. By the mid-1920s, P&S was attracting many of the country's leading illustrators including John Atherton, Stan Galli, Paul Carey, Jack Painter, Haines Hall, Gib Darling and Amado Gonzalez. These artists were able to supply a wide range of illustration styles evidenced in their campaigns for clients such as Southern Pacific Railroad, Dole Food Company, Del Monte Corporation, Levi Strauss & Co., Stanford University, Standard Oil, Matson Lines and Dollar Steamsh ...
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Patterson School Of Diplomacy And International Commerce
Patterson may refer to: People * Patterson (surname) Places ;Canada *Pattersons Corners, Ontario *Patterson Township, Ontario *Patterson, Calgary a neighbourhood in Calgary, Alberta. ;United States of America * Patterson, Arkansas *Patterson, California *Patterson, California, former name of Trigo, Madera County, California *Patterson, California, former name of Cherokee, Nevada County, California *Patterson, Georgia * Patterson, Idaho *Patterson, Iowa *Patterson, Louisiana * Patterson, Missouri * Patterson, New Mexico *Patterson, New York * Patterson, Ohio *Lake Patterson, a lake in Minnesota *Patterson Springs, North Carolina * Patterson Heights, Pennsylvania * Patterson Tract, California Other uses * ''Bob Patterson'' (TV series), American sitcom * C.R. Patterson and Sons, American car manufacturer from 1915 until 1939. * ''Patterson'' (radio series), British radio series by Malcolm Bradbury * Patterson Companies, a medical supplies conglomerate based in Minnesota * Patterso ...
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Patterson Function
The Patterson function is used to solve the phase problem in X-ray crystallography. It was introduced in 1935 by Arthur Lindo Patterson while he was a visiting researcher in the laboratory of Bertram Eugene Warren at MIT. The Patterson function is defined as :P(u,v,w) = \sum\limits_ \left, F_\^2 \;e^. It is essentially the Fourier transform of the intensities rather than the structure factors. The Patterson function is also equivalent to the electron density convolved with its inverse: :P\left(\vec\right) = \rho\left(\vec\right) * \rho\left(-\vec\right). Furthermore, a Patterson map of ''N'' points will have peaks, excluding the central (origin) peak and any overlap. The peaks' positions in the Patterson function are the interatomic distance vectors and the peak heights are proportional to the product of the number of electrons in the atoms concerned. Because for each vector between atoms ''i'' and ''j'' there is an oppositely oriented vector of the same length (between atoms ...
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Patterson Companies
Patterson Companies Inc is a medical supplies conglomerate primarily in the business of veterinary and dental products (ranging from xray equipment to consumable products, dental consumables make up the biggest part of the dental industry). Traditionally a dental company, it diversified its business at the turn of the millennium when it acquired 55-year-old company, JA Webster Inc, a distributor of veterinary products. That business segment (now known as Patterson Veterinary) currently distributes equipment (diagnostic and surgical) and medicine (anaesthetics, vaccines). The company operates directly in only the US and Canada (in Canada through subsidiary Patterson Dental Canada). In 2008 it was noted as having one of the lowest debt ratios among companies in the health care sector. Patterson was also a member of the Nasdaq-100 until December 10, 2010 when it and six other companies were replaced. The Nasdaq-100 is composed of the 100 largest non financial stocks traded on th ...
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Patterson (radio Series)
''Patterson'' is a BBC Radio sitcom about a hapless university lecturer. It was billed as a comedy series in eight parts, written by Malcolm Bradbury and Christopher Bigsby but strictly speaking, it is a serial. The show was produced by Geoffrey Perkins and tells the tale of Doctor Andrew Patterson (Lewis Fiander) who is cajoled by his wife Jane (Judy Parfitt) into accepting a job in the dysfunctional English department of a provincial red-brick university. This is the catalyst for a catalogue of unfortunate events, which sees his life rapidly crumble around him, bit by bit. ''Patterson'' is unusual amongst BBC Radio sitcoms in that it was originally broadcast on BBC Radio 3, and it appears to be the first ever sitcom broadcast on that station. Later examples include ''Broomhouse Reach'' (1984), ''Blood and Bruises'' (1988) and ''Such Rotten Luck'' (1989). The series was repeated on the BBC World Service in 1986 and on BBC Radio 4 Extra in 2020. Characters Main characters ...
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