10,846 research outputs found
Austin Papers: Series II, Part II, 1818-1847
Copy of transcript for a permit granting Moses Austin the right to sell merchandise in Missouri Territory, signed by clerk Sam Woodson and Sheriff Andrew Scott
Humboldt Holding Up: Austin Allison
In this weeks episode of Humboldt Holding Up (May 23, 2020) Andrew Goff and Stephanie McGeary host Austin Allison. Austin Allison is a Eureka city council member and works in St. Joseph hospital. Topics discusses are Austin new hair cut that raised over $3,000 for a non profit organization, the resignation of Eureka City Manager, Allison\u27s personal life, and his time working in the hospital: the amount of visitors they have a day, the no visitor allowed, the conspiracy theories some of the public have toward COVID making it political, etc
Interview with Jonathan Obert and Andrew Poe, eds. (with Austin Sarat), The Lives of Guns
What if guns “are not merely carriers of action, but also actors themselves?” That’s the question that animates and unites Jonathan Obert‘s and Andrew Poe‘s, and Austin Sarat‘s unique collection of essays, The Lives of Guns (Oxford University Press, 2018). In it, contributors discuss the political, social and personal “lives” of guns from a variety of perspectives. Join us to hear editors Obert and Poe help us consider new ways of thinking about American narratives of ballistic weapons
Glyptapanteles albigena Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin 2022
Glyptapanteles albigena species group The G. albigena species group is easily separated from the other species of Glyptapanteles in Australasia by the gena having a pale spot. This pale spot varies from barely visible (e.g., G. harveyi sp. nov.), to a large area covering at least a third of the gena height (e.g., G. albigena sp. nov.). This species group contains nine species: G. albigena Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov., G. andamookaensis Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov., G. aspersus Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov., G. austrinus Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov. sp. nov., G. ferrugineus Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov., G. harveyi Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov., G. kittelae Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov., G. mnesampela Austin, 2000 and G. sanniopolus Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov. The species group, as currently known, has a broad distribution across the southern half of Australia (Fig. 4A).Published as part of Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P., McCLELLAND, Alana R., Bird, Andrew J., Giannotta, Madalene M., Bradford, Tessa M. & Austin, Andrew D., 2022, Systematic revision of the parasitoid wasp genus Glyptapanteles Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Microgastrinae) for Australia results in a ten-fold increase in species, pp. 1-116 in European Journal of Taxonomy 792 (1) on page 17, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2022.792.1647, http://zenodo.org/record/603705
Glyptapanteles mnesampela Austin 2000
Glyptapanteles mnesampela Austin, 2000 Figs 6A, 44 Diagnosis Glyptapanteles mnesampela is in the G. albigena species group and can be separated from the other members of the species group by having a pale T2, whilst all other described species with a pale spot on the gena have T2 dark in colouration. Material examined Holotype AUSTRALIA • ♀; Australian Capital Territory, Lyneham Ridge; 30 Feb. 1993; ex Mnesampela privata; 22 Jun. 1993; ANIC 32-141445. (Only images examined). Remarks Reared from Mnesampela privata Guenée, 1858 (Geometridae). Distribution Known from Australia, currently only from the ACT.Published as part of Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P., McCLELLAND, Alana R., Bird, Andrew J., Giannotta, Madalene M., Bradford, Tessa M. & Austin, Andrew D., 2022, Systematic revision of the parasitoid wasp genus Glyptapanteles Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Microgastrinae) for Australia results in a ten-fold increase in species, pp. 1-116 in European Journal of Taxonomy 792 (1) on page 89, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2022.792.1647, http://zenodo.org/record/603705
Cotesia geometricae Austin 2000
Cotesia geometricae Austin, 2000 Fig. 16B Cotesia geometricae Austin, 2000 in Schumacher et al. 2000: 11 (holotype, ♀, ANIC). Diagnosis Cotesia geometricae can be separated from all other species of Cotesia currently described from Australia and Papua New Guinea by the following combination of characters: anteromesoscutum punctulate, much smoother than most other species; T3 only sparsley setose, mostly in posterior third; T1 parallel sided; fore wing vein 2RS not extending past junction with r, not creating a ‘stub’, hypopygium not emarginate. Material examined Paratypes AUSTRALIA • 2 ♀♀; Victoria, Alona, Dow Chemical Plant; 8 Jul. 1994; ex. Mnesampela privata (Guenée, 1857) larvae (Lept: Geometridae); WINC. Distribution Currently known from Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory (from examined material and original description). Host Mnesampela privata (Geometridae), gregarious (from original description). Remarks As this species is only recently described and we feel that the description is relatively complete, we provide only new characters or measurements relevant to its diagnosis, and refer otherwise to the description in Schumacher et al. (2000).Published as part of Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P. & Austin, Andrew D., 2020, Synopsis of the parasitoid wasp genus Cotesia Cameron, 1891 (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Microgastrinae) in Australia, with the description of seven new species, pp. 1-70 in European Journal of Taxonomy 667 on pages 23-25, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.667, http://zenodo.org/record/389932
Glyptapanteles eburneus Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin 2022
Glyptapanteles eburneus species group The G. eburneus species group currently contains only two closely related species, G. eburneus Fagan- Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov. and G. foraminous Fagan-Jeffries, Bird & Austin sp. nov. which are differentiated from all other species of Glyptapanteles in Australia by having the gena without a pale spot, T1 completely pale, hind coxa pale, deep punctures on the anteromesoscutum and a clear median carina on the propodeum. This species group is known from two single localities on the east coast of Australia, in QLD and NSW (Fig. 4D).Published as part of Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P., McCLELLAND, Alana R., Bird, Andrew J., Giannotta, Madalene M., Bradford, Tessa M. & Austin, Andrew D., 2022, Systematic revision of the parasitoid wasp genus Glyptapanteles Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Microgastrinae) for Australia results in a ten-fold increase in species, pp. 1-116 in European Journal of Taxonomy 792 (1) on page 18, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2022.792.1647, http://zenodo.org/record/603705
Aulacus flindersbaudini Jennings, Austin & Stevens 2004
Aulacus flindersbaudini Jennings, Austin & Stevens, 2004 Aulacus flindersbaudini Jennings et al. 2004b: 18; Jennings 2010 [on-line checklist]. This species was described recently from a single male from Kangaroo Island, South Australia (Jennings et al. 2004b). The mesoscutum in lateral view is rounded antero-dorsally and the metasoma clavate. Aulacus flindersbaudini is largely reddish brown (described as red in the original description) except metasomal T1 is dark brown dorsally.Published as part of Jennings, John T., Parslow, Ben A. & Austin, Andrew D., 2018, Systematics of the parasitoid wasp genus Aulacus Jurine (Hymenoptera: Evanioidea: Aulacidae) from Australia, pp. 1-113 in Zootaxa 4538 (1) on page 43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4538.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/377136
Cotesia urabae Austin & Allen 1989
Cotesia urabae Austin & Allen, 1989 Fig. 31 A–B Cotesia urabae Austin & Allen, 1989: 171 (holotype, ♀, ANIC). Cotesia urabae – Austin & Dangerfield 1992: 22. Diagnosis Cotesia urabae can be separated from all other species of Cotesia currently described from Australia and Papua New Guinea by the following combination of characters: T1 broadening consistently posteriorly, almost wedge shaped; scutellar disk smooth with small punctures associated with setae; mesosoma not dorsoventrally flattened; hind coxa and metasoma as dark; ocelli normal sized, ocular-ocellar line/ posterior ocellus diameter <2.4; fore wing vein r normally longer than, occasionally of similar length to 2RS; hind tibia with only a very small darkened patch, mainly in dorsal view. Material examined Paratype AUSTRALIA • ♀; South Australia, Waite Agricultural Research Institute lab colony; Jan. 1986; G.R. Allen leg.; ex. Uraba lugens; WINC. Distribution SA (record from original description), Tas (record from Muirhead et al. 2006; Rowbottom et al. 2013), New Zealand (introduced, see Avila et al. 2015). Host Uraba lugens Walker, 1866 (Noctuidae), solitary (record from original description). Remarks As this species is only recently described and the description is relatively complete, here we provide only new characters or measurements relevant to the diagnosis, and refer otherwise to the description in Austin & Allen (1989).Published as part of Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P. & Austin, Andrew D., 2020, Synopsis of the parasitoid wasp genus Cotesia Cameron, 1891 (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Microgastrinae) in Australia, with the description of seven new species, pp. 1-70 in European Journal of Taxonomy 667 on pages 56-58, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.667, http://zenodo.org/record/389932
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Entrepreneurial city : race, the environment, and growth in Austin, Texas, 1945-2011
textThe primary concern of this dissertation is to give historical perspective to the idea of the creative city and the creative, or "new," "knowledge," or "postindustrial" economy that has produced this new form of urban space. Austin, Texas, one of the developed world's premiere creative cities, is used as a test case. Like many urban scholars, I focus on the manifestation of the city as a unique material expression of the capitalist order, and also on the city as a symbolic discourse that has helped to generate its material conditions, including consistent socioeconomic unevenness. In broad outline I am interested in the forces of capitalism that cause cities and regions to grow. I begin with a basic question asked by geographer Allen J. Scott: "How do competitive advantages (including capacities for creativity) of cities emerge, and how might they be enhanced by public action?" In the case of Austin, I argue that the city's competitive advantage was engendered by an ethos that valued free market competition and a focus on the dual economic engines of technology and leisure which city and university leaders identified during World War Two. Austin's economic ideology, which consciously eschewed fordist modes of production in favor of knowledge-based growth associated with the University of Texas, was poised to blossom when macroeconomic ruptures forced massive restructuring associated with globalization during and after the 1970s. The city's inherent advantage as a site of surplus knowledge production for Texas and the Southwest created a highly paid, educated labor market that business people and politicians viewed as the core element of a non-industrial city. Even before the 1970s Austin was well on its way to economic growth through technological accumulation and modes of production that took advantage of skilled labor markets. The creative city thus has a history that must be understood before policy is adopted based on non-transferable conditions of growth.American Studie
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