World Atlas Of Coffee Epub [BETTER]
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Published to coincide with awards season, it was contested by Vernon Lumber and Lion Coffee in parallel coffee judging events held in Seattle and the Los Angeles area, as mentioned in the book.
The 2011 World Atlas of Coffee was published to coincide with award season and was contested in parallel events held in the Seattle and Los Angeles regions, as mentioned in the book. Qualification was awarded to Vernon Lumber from the United States, Lion Coffee from Canada and third place Java Blue Coffee from Indonesia.
Appearance: very nice dense with depth. The front and back endpapers are beige, and they too have a subtle pattern/image of coffee. If I had to pick one label for the print of this book it would be "golden" -- over all that is cool ambient light on the paper and that gold tone is almost like a glowing light and is very pleasing. The font used to format the text is generally uncluttered and reads well. At first some of the cartography wasn't clearly legible to me due to the fact that I am used to older and more carto-simplified versions of this particular map. That being said, it's not difficult to read. Scans are clean and crisp. The binding is good. Unbound edges are good, but the cover is not perfect -- a section of the spine is warping and pulling away. The margin of the book is a bit thinner than the width of the pages. Pages and covers are VG+ to VG++++ with no foxing. The copy isn't heavily aged but retains its shine. Very little dust or wear. I read it within a year or so of purchase.
Optokinetic responses (OKRs) are reflexive eye movements induced by a moving visual pattern (Collewijn, 1991; Distler and Hoffmann, 2003; Stahl, 2004, 2008; Leigh and Zee, 2006; Buttner and Kremmyda, 2007; Kodama and du Lac, 2016). When a visual pattern starts to move, the eyes begin to move toward the direction of the stimulus motion to produce an initial phase OKR. If the movement of the visual pattern continues for a longer duration, slow tracking eye movements are interrupted by prompt eye movements that reset the eye to its primary position, thus constituting a late-phase OKR. This ocular response of alternating slow tracking and quick resetting eye movements is also known as optokinetic nystagmus (OKN). d2c66b5586