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IJE Advance Access published online on July 23, 2007

International Journal of Epidemiology, doi:10.1093/ije/dym140
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© The Author 2007; all rights reserved.
The online version of this article has been published under an open access model. Users are entitled to use, reproduce, disseminate, or display the open access version of this article for non-commercial purposes provided that: the original authorship is properly and fully attributed; the Journal and Oxford University Press are attributed as the original place of publication with the correct citation details given; if an article is subsequently reproduced or disseminated not in its entirety but only in part or as a derivative work this must be clearly indicated. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association

Commentary: Sibling trials in Banbridge, County Down

Alun Evans

Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, The Queen's University of Belfast, UK.

*Corresponding author: Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, The Queen's University of Belfast, UK. E-mail: a.evans@qub.ac.uk

Accepted 7 June 2007

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

The market town of Banbridge in County Down, Northern Ireland, is built astride a drumlin (‘little back’ or hill). It was dumped during the last Ice Age as boulder clay when the great ice sheet scraped rocks from the Ulster hills on its inexorable push south. Along with tens of thousands of other drumlins it forms the celebrated landscape, which Estyn Evans compared to "... a necklace of beads some thirty miles wide suspended between Donegal Bay (in the west) and Strangford Lough (in the east)."1 It was near Banbridge town that the balladeer in an old song "first set eyes" on the object of his amorous aspirations: "She's young Rosie McCann from the banks of the Bann, She's the Star of the County Down."2

Banbridge has a curious, walled cutting in the main street, which was completed in 1834 to ease the gradient of the drumlin.3 It was excavated . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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