138,339 research outputs found
Attitudes to age in Britain 2010/11
DWP In-House Research No 7. Note - the report reported findings from ONS Survey designed by Abrams et al, and members of Eurage also guided the report
Abrams, Theodore, Death Certificate, 1919
Death certificate for Theodore Abrams.
Age: 10 years
Death Date: April 19, 1919
Cause: Spanish influenza
Burial Date: April 21, 1919
Location: Evergreen Cemetery, St. Petersburg, Pinellas County, Florida
Father: J. A. Abrams of South Carolina
Mother: Jordan of South Carolina
Undertaker: S. D. Harri
Group on steps of Moritz D.Cohn residence, San Diego, Texas, 1920s
Photograph shows group seated on steps of Moritz D. Cohn house in San Diego. L. to r." Raymond Wolf, Pauline Cohn Wolf, Albert Wolf, Rae Wolf, Max Abrams, Hattie Cohn Abrams, Moritz Daniel Cohn, Julius Cohn, Jerry Nast, M.D., Julia Cohn Nast, and Maurice Nast
B. Rider, D. Chaikin, Ch. Abrams, Guide to the Financial Services Act l986
B. Rider, D. Chaikin, Ch. Abrams, Guide to the Financial Services Act l986. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 39 N°3, Juillet-septembre 1987. p. 758
B. Rider, D. Chaikin, Ch. Abrams, Guide to the Financial Services Act l986
B. Rider, D. Chaikin, Ch. Abrams, Guide to the Financial Services Act l986. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 39 N°3, Juillet-septembre 1987. p. 758
Draculoides belalugosii Abrams and Harvey 2020, n. sp.
Draculoides belalugosii Abrams and Harvey, n. sp. (Figs. 1–8, 13–15) Zoobank Code: http://zoobank.org/NomenclaturalActs/ A199BE76-0028-4AD8-AE10-0C75FE3705CC Paradraculoides SCH 077: Abrams et al. 2019 MPE 106532: 8, fig. 2. Material examined. Holotype male. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: Buckland Hills, 45.4 km SSE. of Pannawonica, 22°00’21.19”S, 116°30’52.52”E, 27 October 2014, troglofauna scrape, J. Alexander, J. King (Biota Environmental Sciences, BHDD004-20141027 -SC01) (WAM T135952) (DNA: COI, 18S, 28S, ITS2). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: 1 ♀, Buckland Hills; 47.6 km SSE. of Pannawonica, 22°08’24”S, 116°14’06”E, 26 October–16 December 2014, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander, J. King (Biota Environmental Sciences, BHRC120-20141216 - T1-02) (WAM T135954) (DNA: 12S, COI, 18S, 28S, ITS2). Diagnosis. The shape of the male flagellum is distinctive as it is short, broad, and rounded. It most closely resembles Draculoides confusus in lateral profile but differs in the distal position of dm 4 in D. belalugosii (sub-distal in D. confusus) and the close proximity of dl 3 in relation to vl1 (dl3 is distally placed and widely separated from vl 1 in D. confusus). Females differ from all other species of Draculoides by the comparatively short, rounded, unconnected spermathecae of the female genitalia. Draculoides belalugosii can be diagnosed from all other Draculoides species that were sequenced at COI and 12S by the 50bp mini-barcodes shown in Figures 3 and 5. Draculoides belalugosii can be diagnosed from all other Draculoides species that were sequenced at ITS2 (Fig. 7) except for D. anachoretus, D. bythius, D. eremius, D. gnophicola, D. kryptus, D. mckechnieorum, D. warramboo, D. immortalis, D. christopherleei, D. piscivultus and D. akashae, which are not distinguishable using the ITS2 mini-barcode. Description (adults). Colour. Yellow-brown; propeltidium somewhat darker. Cephalothorax. Propeltidium with 2 +1 apical setae in a triangular formation on anterior process and 2+1+2 setae; eye spots absent. Mesopeltidia widely separated. Metapeltidium partially divided. Anterior sternum with 13 (♂), 14 (♀) setae (including 2 sternapophysial setae); posterior sternum triangular with 6 setae. Chelicera. Fixed finger with 2 large teeth plus 5 (♂)(♀) smaller teeth between these; membranous area between fixed and movable fingers with 3 large, lanceolate, terminally pilose setae (G1); G2 composed of 5 (♂), 4 (♀) setae; G3 composed of 5 (♂),4 (♀) setae; internal face of chelicera with 4 (♂) (♀) short whip-like setae (G4); brush at base of fixed finger composed of 6 (♂), 5 (♀) setae (G5A), each densely pilose in distal half and G5B composed of 10 (♂), 9 (♀) setae; G6 with one seta; G7 composed of 5 (♂)(♀) setae. Movable finger serrula composed of 16 (♂), 17 (♀) long lamellae, blunt guard tooth present subdistally; 1 large accessory tooth present at two-thirds from base of serrula (♂), 1 large and 1 slightly smaller accessory tooth present (♀). Pedipalp. Without apophyses; trochanter with sharply produced ventro-distal extension, ventral margin with ca. 8 stout setae, without mesal spur; tarsus and tibia without spines; tarsal spur present; claw 0.42 (♂), 0.55 (♀) × length of tarsus. Legs. Tarsus I with 6 segments; baso-dorsal margin of femur IV produced at about a 90° angle. Abdomen. Chaetotaxy of tergite I: 2 macrosetae + 4 microsetae (microsetae diagonal), tergite II: 3 macrosetae + 6 microsetae (microsetae in column), tergites III–IX: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2; segment XII with small dorsal process (♂ only). Female genitalia. Two pairs of spermathecae with short circular, equal-sized lobes, each pair not connected basally before connection with bursa (Fig. 15G), distally round and smooth; sparsely covered with small pores and numerous tiny folds; gonopod short, roughly rectangular. Flagellum. Male: Dorsoventrally compressed (Figs. 13 D–F, 15A–C); 1.86 × longer than broad; seta dm1 situated dorso-medially; seta dm4 situated close to posterior margin; paired setae dl3 ‘staggered’ with left lower than right; dl3 on posterior margin, level with dm4; vm2 situated slightly posterior to vm1; vm5 situated slightly anterior to vl1, midway between vm3 and vl2; at least 4 pairs of microsetae between vl1 and dl3. Female: 4.25 × longer than broad; seta dm1 situated towards posterior end of flagellomere II, level with vm2; setae dl1 small, situated anterior to dm4, dm4 situated at four fifth length of flagellomere III; dl3 situated almost at posterior margin slightly more posterior than vl2, vm1 situated level with vm2, vm3 situated closer to vm1 than to vm5, vm5 closer to vm3 than vl2, vl1 situated posterior to vm3 and anterior to dl1; 1 pair of microsetae posterior to flagellomere III annulus, 1 pair of microsetae posterior to dl1, 1 pair of microsetae laterally between dl3 and vl2. Dimensions (mm). Holotype male (WAM T135952): Body length 2.90. Propeltidium 0.96/0.50. Chelicera 0.6. Flagellum 0.38/0.20. Pedipalp: trochanter 0.35, femur 0.40, patella 0.44, tibia 0.52, tarsus 0.23, claw 0.10, total excluding claw 2.04. Paratype female (WAM T135954): Body length 3.65. Propeltidium 1.00/0.58. Chelicera 0.75. Flagellum 0.16/0.04. Pedipalp: trochanter 0.46, femur 0.67, patella 0.48, tibia 0.40, tarsus 0.21, claw 0.12, total excluding claw 2.35. Remarks. Draculoides belalugosii is known from several locations within an area known as Buckland Hills, situated in the eastern part of the Hamersley Range, Western Australia (Fig. 1E). Draculoides christopherleei also inhabits this area as well as two distinctive lineages (SCH100 and SCH101) which may represent new species but for which we do not have sufficient data to describe at this time. Other names. WAM SCH077 (Abrams et al., 2019), Helix sp. SAL. Etymology. This species is named for actor Bela Lugosi (1882–1956) who played the role of Dracula in the 1931 movie of the same name.Published as part of Abrams, Kym M., Huey, Joel A., Hillyer, Mia J., Didham, Raphael K. & Harvey, Mark S., 2020, A systematic revision of Draculoides (Schizomida: Hubbardiidae) of the Pilbara, Western Australia, Part I: the Western Pilbara, pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4864 (1) on pages 31-35, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4864.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/441684
Draculoides christopherleei Abrams and Harvey 2020, n. sp.
Draculoides christopherleei Abrams and Harvey, n. sp. (Figs. 1–8, 18–19) Zoobank Code: http://zoobank.org/NomenclaturalActs/ 5AADC536-FD7C-4792-B6B6-CB6BED0D9176 Paradraculoides SCH 080: Abrams et al. 2019 MPE 106532: 8, fig. 2. Material examined. Holotype male. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: West Pit, ca. 45 km S. of Pannawonica, 21°59’56.5”S, 116°30’35.7”E, 9 October 2012, scrape, 37 m, G.B. Pearson, J.W. Quartermaine (WAM T129676) (DNA: COI from Harms et al., 2018: MH 620848). Other material. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: sex indeterminate, partial specimen, cephalothorax only, “West Pit”, ca. 40 km SSE. of Pannawonica, 21°59’30.5”S, 116°30’27.1”E, 20 July–11 September 2012, troglofauna trap, J.W. Quartermaine, G.B. Pearson (Bennelongia, BH045) (WAM T142837) (DNA: COI from Harms et al., 2018: MH 620857); 1 sex indeterminate, partial specimen, cephalothorax only, “East Pit”, ca. 45 km S. of Pannawonica, 22°00’48.0”S, 116°31’52.5”E, 22 June 2012, Scrape, metres, G.B. Pearson, S. R. Bennett (WAM T129677) (DNA: COI, 18S, ITS2); 1 ♂, “East Pit”, ca. 42 km SSE. of Pannawonica, 22°00’34”S, 116°31’10”E, 7 October 2012, troglofauna scrape, - 16m, J.W. Quartermaine, G.B. Pearson (WAM T142838) (DNA: COI from Harms et al., 2018: MH 620858); 1 sex indeterminate, partial specimen, cephalothorax only, “ East Pit ”, ca. 42 km SSE. of Panna- wonica, 22°00’44.5”S, 116°31’23.8”E, 22 June 2012, troglofauna scrape, - 8m, S. R. Bennett, G.B. Pearson (WAM T142839) (DNA: COI from Harms et al., 2018: MH 620859). Diagnosis. Females are unknown. The shape of the male flagellum of Draculoides christopherleei is distinctive due to its small lateral lobes, very broad stalk and the absence of dl1. Draculoides vinei is the only other Draculoides species lacking dl1 but clearly differs from Draculoides christopherleei in the shape of the male flagellum, which is dorsolaterally compressed in Draculoides vinei and dorsoventrally compressed in Draculoides christopherleei. Draculoides christopherleei can be diagnosed from all other Draculoides species that were sequenced at COI and ITS2 by the 50bp mini-barcodes shown in Figures 3 and 5. Draculoides christopherleei can be diagnosed from all other Draculoides species that were sequenced at ITS2 (Fig. 7) except for D. anachoretus, D. bythius, D. eremius, D. gnophicola, D. kryptus, D. mckechnieorum, D. warramboo, D. immortalis, D. belalugosii, D. piscivultus and D. akashae, which are not distinguishable using the ITS2 mini-barcode. Description (adults). Colour. Pale yellow-brown; propeltidium, pedipalps and flagellum somewhat darker. Cephalothorax. Propeltidium with 2+1 apical setae in a triangular formation on anterior process and 2+2+2 setae; eye spots absent. Mesopeltidia separated. Metapeltidium divided. Anterior sternum with 12 (♂) setae (including 2 sternapophysial setae); posterior sternum triangular with 6 setae. Chelicera. Fixed finger with 2 large teeth plus 4 smaller teeth between these; membranous area between fixed and movable fingers with 3 large, lanceolate, terminally pilose setae (G1); G2 composed of 5 setae; G3 composed of 6 setae; internal face of chelicera with 5 short whip-like setae (G4); brush at base of fixed finger composed of 8 setae (G5A), each densely pilose in distal half and G5B composed of 10 setae; G6 with one seta; G7 composed of 3 setae. movable finger serrula composed of ~16 long lamellae, blunt guard tooth present subdistally; 1 large accessory tooth present. Pedipalp. Without apophyses; trochanter with sharply produced ventro-distal extension, ventral margin with ca. 7 stout setae, without mesal spur; tarsus and tibia without spines; tarsal spur present; claw 0.27 × length of tarsus. Legs. Tarsus I with 6 segments; baso-dorsal margin of femur IV produced at about a 90° angle. Abdomen. Chaetotaxy of tergites I: 2 macrosetae + 4 microsetae (microsetae diagonal), tergite II: 3 macrosetae + 6 microsetae (microsetae in column), tergites III–IX: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 3; segment XII with small dorsal process (♂ only). Flagellum. Moderately dorsoventrally compressed (Figs. 18 D–F, 19A–C), with small lateral lobes, very broad stalk; in lateral view, dorsal margin very slightly concave with very slight dorsal concavity above vl1 terminating in small distal triangular tip; ventral margin evenly convex with shallow concavity between vm3 and vl2; 2.13 × longer than broad; seta dm1 situated dorso-medially, slightly closer to anterior margin; seta dm4 anterior to dl3; dl1 absent; dl3 on posterior margin; vm2 situated slightly anterior to vm1; paired vm3 staggered, with right seta below left; vm5 situated slightly posterior to dl1, closer to vm3 than vl2; 6 pairs of microsetae near anterior end, and three pairs between vl1 and vl2. Dimensions (mm). Holotype male (WAM T129676): Body length 3.13. Propeltidium 0.88/0.58. Chelicera 0.48. Flagellum 0.33/0.15. Pedipalp: trochanter 0.46, femur 0.44, patella 0.50, tibia 0.42, tarsus 0.25, claw 0.07, total excluding claw 2.14. Remarks. Draculoides christopherleei is known from several locations within the Buckland Hills area, situated in the eastern Hamersley Range, Western Australia (Fig. 1E). The partial specimens listed above are associated with this species by locality and, in some cases, by sequence data (Fig. 1E). Other names. WAM SCH080 (Abrams et al., 2019), Bennelongia B40. Etymology. This species is named for actor Christopher Lee (1922–2015) who played the role of Dracula in the 1958 movie “Horror of Dracula” and the 1970 movie “Count Dracula.”Published as part of Abrams, Kym M., Huey, Joel A., Hillyer, Mia J., Didham, Raphael K. & Harvey, Mark S., 2020, A systematic revision of Draculoides (Schizomida: Hubbardiidae) of the Pilbara, Western Australia, Part I: the Western Pilbara, pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4864 (1) on pages 39-41, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4864.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/441684
Draculoides warramboo Abrams and Harvey 2020, n. sp.
Draculoides warramboo Abrams and Harvey, n. sp. (Figs. 1–8, 41–43) Zoobank Code: http://zoobank.org/NomenclaturalActs/ 0F78A790-1ECF-48A6-A182-66A885A5DE45 Paradraculoides SCH 057: Abrams et al. 2019 MPE 106532: 8, fig. 2. Material examined. Holotype male. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: Warramboo Robe Valley ca. 50 km W. of Pannawonica, 21°38’54.88”S, 115°50’18.10”E, 6 June 2015, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3790.20150606 - 01 scD) (WAM T139912). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: 1 ♀, Warramboo, Robe Valley, ca. 50km W Pannawon- ica, 21°39’7.92”S 115°50’22.01”E, 6 June –7 August 2015, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3811-20150807 - T1-01) (WAM T138501); 1 ♂, Warramboo, ca. 50km W Pannawonica, 21°38’54.88”S 115°50’18.1”E, 06 June –07 August 2015, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3790-20150807 - T1-01) (WAM T138499). Other material. AUSTRALIA: Western Australia: 1 juvenile, Warramboo, 51.4 km WSW Pannawonica, 21°39’45”S 115°49’33”E, 25 July–08 September 2005, troglofauna trap, G. Humphreys (WAM T 66234) (DNA: 12S, COI: Harvey et al., 2008); 1 juvenile, Warramboo, 50 km W Pannawonica, 21°38’54.88”S 115°50’18.1”E, 6 June 2015, troglofauna scrape, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3790.20150606 - 01 sc) (WAM T138500); 1 juvenile, Warramboo, 50 km W Pannawonica, 21°40’37.46”S 115°50’19.34”E, 06 June –07 August 2015, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC4400-20150807 - T1-02) (WAM T138503); 1 juvenile, Warramboo, 50 km W Pannawonica, 21°38’54.88”S 115°50’18.1”E, 06 June –30 September 2015, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3790-20150930 - T1-01) (WAM T138553) (DNA: COI, 28S, 18S, ITS2); 1 juvenile, Tod Bore, 59 km W Pannawonica, 21°41’59.11”S 115°50’0.96”E, 06 August–01 October 2015, troglofauna trap, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, TO- BRC0023-20151001 - T1-01) (WAM T138571) (DNA: COI, 28S, 18S, ITS2); 1 juvenile, Warramboo, 50 km W Pannawonica, 21°38’54.88”S 115°50’18.10”E, 06 June 2015, troglofauna scrape, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3790.20150606 - 01 scB) (WAM T139910); 1 juvenile, Warramboo, 50 km W Pannawonica, 21°38’54.88”S 115°50’18.10”E, 06 June 2015, troglofauna scrape, J. Alexander (Biota Environmental Sciences, MEARC3790.20150606 - 01 scC) (WAM T139911). Diagnosis. The shape of the male flagellum of Draculoides warramboo most closely resembles D. affinis, D. anachoretus, D. bythius, D. cochranus, D. gnophicola, D. eremius, D. kryptus and D. mckechnieorum especially in the presence of a broad base. It differs from D. affinis, D. eremius, D. gnophicola and D. kryptus by the sub-distal placement of dm4 (close to distal margin in D. affinis, D. eremius, D. gnophicola and D. kryptus), from D. anachoretus and D. bythius by the close proximity of dl1 and vl1 (far apart in D. anachoretus a nd D. bythius), from D. cochranus by the anterior position of vm3, close to vm1 and vm2 (vm3 is situated in the middle of the flagellum of D. cochranus, midway between vm5 and vm1) and from D. mckechnieorum by the more anterior position of dm4 which is not level with dl3 as in D. mckechnieorum. Female flagellum is unknown. Draculoides warramboo can be diagnosed from all other Draculoides species that were sequenced at COI by the 50bp mini-barcode shown in Figure 3. Draculoides warramboo can be diagnosed from all other Draculoides species that were sequenced at ITS2 (Fig. 7) except for D.anachoretus, D. bythius, D. eremius, D. gnophicola, D. kryptus, D. mckechnieorum,, D. immortalis, D. belalugosii, D. christopherleei, D. piscivultus and D. akashae, which are not distinguishable using the ITS2 mini-barcode. Description (adults). Colour. Yellow-brown; propeltidium and pedipalps somewhat darker. Cephalothorax. Propeltidium with 2 +1 apical setae in a triangular formation on anterior process and 2 + 2 + 2 setae; eye spots absent. Mesopeltidia separated. Metapeltidium divided. Anterior sternum with 12 (♂) (♀) setae (including 2 sternapophysial setae); posterior sternum triangular with 6 (♂), 7 (♀) setae. Chelicera. Fixed finger with 2 large teeth plus 4 (♂), 4 (♀) smaller teeth between these and 1 lateral tooth on proximal large tooth; membranous area between fixed and movable fingers with 3 large, lanceolate, terminally pilose setae (G1); G2 composed of 6 (♂), 8 (♀) setae; G3 composed of 5 (♂) (♀) setae; internal face of chelicera with 3 (♂), 5 (♀) short whip-like setae (G4); brush at base of fixed finger composed of 8 setae (G5A) each densely pilose in distal half and G5B composed of 10 (♂), 9 (♀) setae; G6 with one seta; G7 composed of 4 (♂) (♀) setae. Pedipalp. Without apophyses; trochanter with sharply produced ventro-distal extension, ventral margin with ca. 8 (♂), 7 (♀) stout setae, without mesal spur; tarsus and tibia without spines; tarsal spur present; claw 0.7 (♂) × length of tarsus. Legs. Tarsus I with 6 segments; baso-dorsal margin of femur IV produced at about a 90° angle. Abdomen. Chaetotaxy of tergites I–IX: 2 macrosetae + 4 microsetae: 3 macrosetae + 6 microsetae (microsetae in column): 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 2 (♂), 2: 2: 2: 2: 2: 4: 4 (♀); segment XII without small dorsal process. Female genitalia. Two pairs of spermathecae with outer lobe sub-equal to inner lobe, each pair connected basally before connection with bursa (Fig. 43D), distally round and smooth; sparsely covered with small pores; gonopod short, distally bifurcate. Flagellum. Male: Dorsoventrally compressed 2 × longer than broad (Figs. 41 D–F, 43A–C); seta dm1 situated dorso-medially, slightly closer to anterior margin; seta dm4 situated close to posterior margin; dl1 between dl3 and vl1 but much closer to vl1; dl3 on posterior margin; vm2 situated slightly above vm1; vm5 situated on approximately same level as dl1, closer to vl2 than to vm5; at least three pairs of microsetae between vl1 and dl3. Female flagellum unknown, specimen collected without flagellum. Dimensions (mm). Holotype male (WAM T139912): Body length 3.51. Propeltidium 1.10/0.42. Chelicera 0.69. Flagellum 0.38/0.19. Pedipalp: trochanter 0.54, femur 0.48, patella 0.48, tibia 0.42, tarsus 0.19, claw 0.13, total excluding claw 2.25. Paratype female (WAM T138501): Body length 4.76. Propeltidium 1.56/0.83. Chelicera 0.96. Flagellum missing. Pedipalp: trochanter 0.75, femur 0.52, patella 0.67, tibia 0.65, tarsus 0.35, claw 0.10, total excluding claw 2.94. Variation. Body length (males) 3.46–3.51 (n = 2). Remarks. Draculoides warramboo is known from several locations within two areas known as Warramboo and Tod Bore (Fig. 1A). Warramboo is not a discrete mesa but appears to be the western extension of pisolitic geology from Mesa A (Harvey et al., 2008), despite this, molecular data suggest no gene flow occurring between Warramboo and Mesa A (Fig. 2). Juveniles were sequenced by Harvey et al. (2008) but not named due to a lack of adult specimens. The specimens listed above are associated with this species by locality and, in two cases, by sequence data (Fig. 1A). Other names. WAM SCH057 (Abrams et al., 2019). Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the type locality, Warramboo. It is to be treated as a noun in apposition.Published as part of Abrams, Kym M., Huey, Joel A., Hillyer, Mia J., Didham, Raphael K. & Harvey, Mark S., 2020, A systematic revision of Draculoides (Schizomida: Hubbardiidae) of the Pilbara, Western Australia, Part I: the Western Pilbara, pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4864 (1) on pages 70-73, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4864.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/441684
Experimental Study of Frame-Wall Interaction in Reinforced Concrete Structures Subjected to Strong Earthquake Motions
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Previous issue date: 1979-05Changed D.P. Abrams to Daniel P. Abrams.
Metadata cleaned/updated by [email protected] 2015-5-5.National Science Foundation Research Grant PFR 78-1631
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