Books by "Roy T. Sorensen"

5 books found

The Removal of Iron from Aluminum Chloride Leach Liquor by Solvent Extraction

The Removal of Iron from Aluminum Chloride Leach Liquor by Solvent Extraction

by Roy T. Sorenson, Earle B. Amey, Dwight L. Sawyer

1981

Benefication of Western Mesabi Range Oxidized Taconites

Benefication of Western Mesabi Range Oxidized Taconites

by B. W. Jong, Brent W. Madsen, David Clifford Dahlin, Donald E. Shanks, Edward George Davis, Eugene D. Calvert, Harold L. Rhodes, Howard D. Jacobs, J. F. McIlwain, Jalna R. Zatko, John F. Papp, Kenneth L. Cashdollar, Noel N. Moebs, Roger A. Bloomfield, Roy Ernest Peterson, Roy T. Sorenson, W. E. Anable, William C. McBee, Albert R. Rule, Bill Stewart, Charles P. Lazzara, G. V. Sullivan, H. Heystek, Israel Liebman, Jack I. Paige, Judith A. Eisele, L. A. Neumeier, Milton E. Wadsworth, Thomas A. Sullivan, Danton L. Paulson, Donald J. Bauer, Dwight L. Sawyer, Joan C. Biordi, Lawrence L. Brown, Ronald S. Conti

1980

Chemical Process Equipment

Chemical Process Equipment

by James R. Couper, W. Roy Penney

2012 · Butterworth-Heinemann

First published: Chemical process equipment / Stanley M. Walas. 1988.

Head and Neck Cancer

Head and Neck Cancer

by Louis B. Harrison, Roy B. Sessions, Merrill S. Kies

2013 · Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

–Comprehensive, multi-disciplinary text addressing all aspects of head and neck cancer and crosses a wide spectrum of specialists, including surgical, radiation and medical oncologists, dentists, pathologists, radiologists, and nurses. –8 new chapters – 9 with new authors –Revisions highlight new techniques and imaging –New imaging emphasizes diagnostics, image guided therapies, follow-up imaging, and novel imaging approaches –Less basic science and more clinical diagnostics and management –25% new illustrations, along with more color images to assist in diagnostics and therapeutics

Obesity: A Kinesiology Perspective

Obesity: A Kinesiology Perspective

by Roy Shephard

2018 · Routledge

There have been many books written on the subject of obesity, but most have approached the topic from the standpoint of the nutritionist, concluding from the somewhat fallacious evidence of changes in body mass that exercise has little place in the prevention or the treatment of obesity. This new volume, written by an exercise physiologist, approaches the topic through a thoughtful lens, suggesting that regular physical activity plays an important role in preventing the development of obesity, is a valuable adjunct therapy in the treatment of the established condition, and makes a solid contribution to the maintenance of weight loss once target weights have been achieved. In addition to detailing evidence that supports such a conclusion, the text offers a unique perspective on obesity over the ages. It evaluates methods of determining body fat content that are appropriate to field and epidemiological studies, and it looks at the timing and aetiology of the recent obesity epidemic. It also considers the diseases associated with obesity and the resultant medical costs, attempting to disentangle the respective contributions of a sedentary lifestyle and the resultant accumulation of fat to the observed patterns of ill-health. Other sections of the text suggest that adipose tissue has important functions beyond the passive storage of energy, and looks critically at the excuse of "bad genes" that some people plead to explain their excessive body weight. Obesity: A Kinesiologist’s Perspective should thus provide helpful information and be a key resource for students and researchers alike in bariatrics, kinesiology and nutrition as well as the related disciplines.