114,372 research outputs found

    A Collection Of Designs For Rural Retreats, As Villas, Principally In The Gothic And Castle Styles Of Architecture : With their Ichnography, or Plans, laid down to Scale; And Other Appendages / By James Malton, Architect, Author of an Essay on British Cottage Architecture, Young Painter's Maulstick, and other Works

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    Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: London: Published By J. And T. Carpenter, Booksellers, Old Bond Street; To Be Had At Taylor's Architectural Library, Holborn; Of All The Principal Booksellers; And Of The Author, No. 17, Norton Street, Portland-Place. - Erscheinungsjahr nach Copac ermittelt34 Ill. (Stahlst.

    Postcard from Bill, New York, New York, to Colonel and Mrs. William T. Carpenter, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, November 21, 1952

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    This item is from the Pauline Jones Gandrud papers. The collection contains genealogical research notes covering 1820-1880, including county data, church and marriage records, family histories, and other information created and gathered by this Alabama genealogist. The collection also contains a list of military pension and bounty land applications

    Mutations in multidomain protein MEGF8 identify a Carpenter syndrome subtype associated with defective lateralization

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    Carpenter syndrome is an autosomal-recessive multiple-congenital-malformation disorder characterized by multisuture craniosynostosis and polysyndactyly of the hands and feet; many other clinical features occur, and the most frequent include obesity, umbilical hernia, cryptorchidism, and congenital heart disease. Mutations of RAB23, encoding a small GTPase that regulates vesicular transport, are present in the majority of cases. Here, we describe a disorder caused by mutations in multiple epidermal-growth-factor-like-domains 8 (MEGF8), which exhibits substantial clinical overlap with Carpenter syndrome but is frequently associated with abnormal left-right patterning. We describe five affected individuals with similar dysmorphic facies, and three of them had either complete situs inversus, dextrocardia, or transposition of the great arteries; similar cardiac abnormalities were previously identified in a mouse mutant for the orthologous Megf8. The mutant alleles comprise one nonsense, three missense, and two splice-site mutations; we demonstrate in zebrafish that, in contrast to the wild-type protein, the proteins containing all three missense alterations provide only weak rescue of an early gastrulation phenotype induced by Megf8 knockdown. We conclude that mutations in MEGF8 cause a Carpenter syndrome subtype frequently associated with defective left-right patterning, probably through perturbation of signaling by hedgehog and nodal family members. We did not observe any subject with biallelic loss-of function mutations, suggesting that some residual MEGF8 function might be necessary for survival and might influence the phenotypes observed

    William Morris and Edward Carpenter: back to the land and the simple life, 1880-1910

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    This thesis focuses on the influence of William Morris and Edward Carpenter on aspects of the back-to-the-land and simple-life movements between the years 1880- 1910. Specifically, it seeks to define and explore the convergence and divergence of both writers' return-to-nature ideology, and considers their influence on the development of particular groups, who represented some of the multiplicity of backto- the-land ideas and experiments current during this period. The thesis is divided into three main parts; the intellectual framework for the study is broad, and takes into account the historical context, the cultural significance and the character of the material in each section. The first part of the thesis undertakes an expository evaluation of key texts from Morris's and Carpenter's political journalism, lectures and imaginative writing, examining how both writers developed an appropriate language to convey their social and political ideals. The critical method employed uses detailed textual analysis, identifying and discussing the individual qualities of Morris's and Carpenter's back-to-the-land writing, and reflecting on the differing emphases of their utopian rhetoric. The second part of the research explores the take-up of Morris's and Carpenter's ethos in four diverse and little known late-nineteenthcentury journals, concerned with simple-life issues and a return to the land, namely Seed-time, The New Order, Land and Labor and Land and People. It employs the thinking of Pierre Bourdieu and Mikhail Bakhtin to establish an appropriate balance between critical theory and empirical study. Lastly using a historical and descriptive method the thesis uses archival material to examine the nature and extent of both writers' influence on two Cotswold back-to-the-land experiments - the Whiteway Colony and the Chipping Campden Guild of Handicraft. These provide a particular opportunity to consider and compare the practical outcomes of return-to-the-land and simple-life ideologies. The study extends scholarship in this area by significantly re-appraising the relationship between Morris's and Carpenter's back-to-the-land writing, and reinstating Carpenter as a germinal influence. It also increases our understanding of the values and function of the journals in the study, and establishes an insight into the wider cultural assimilation of both writers' ideals

    Supplement for Carpenter and Marshall (2009): "An examination of religious priming and intrinsic religious motivation in the moral hypocrisy paradigm."

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    These are supplemental materials for Carpenter and Marshall (2009). Although we do not have permission to make the data public, the stimuli are commonly requested and are posted publicly here. Full citation: Carpenter, T. P., & Marshall, M. A. (2009). An examination of religious priming and intrinsic religious motivation in the moral hypocrisy paradigm. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 48, 386–393. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5906.2009.01454.x

    Supplement for Carpenter and Marshall (2009): "An examination of religious priming and intrinsic religious motivation in the moral hypocrisy paradigm."

    No full text
    These are supplemental materials for Carpenter and Marshall (2009). Although we do not have permission to make the data public, the stimuli are commonly requested and are posted publicly here. Full citation: Carpenter, T. P., & Marshall, M. A. (2009). An examination of religious priming and intrinsic religious motivation in the moral hypocrisy paradigm. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 48, 386–393. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5906.2009.01454.x

    Supplement for Carpenter and Marshall (2009): "An examination of religious priming and intrinsic religious motivation in the moral hypocrisy paradigm."

    No full text
    These are supplemental materials for Carpenter and Marshall (2009). Although we do not have permission to make the data public, the stimuli are commonly requested and are posted publicly here. Full citation: Carpenter, T. P., & Marshall, M. A. (2009). An examination of religious priming and intrinsic religious motivation in the moral hypocrisy paradigm. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 48, 386–393. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5906.2009.01454.x

    Pararrhynchium venkataramani Girish Kumar & Carpenter 2017

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    145) Pararrhynchium venkataramani Girish Kumar & Carpenter, 2017 Pararrhynchium venkataramani Girish Kumar & Carpenter, 2017c: 86. Holotype female, ZSIK. Type locality: Jenging, Upper Siang, Arunachal Pradesh, India. Distribution. India: Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Sikkim. Girish Kumar e t al. 2017c, Selis 2018).Published as part of Gawas, Sandesh M., Kumar, Girish, Pannure, Arati, Gupta, Ankita & Carpenter, James M., 2020, An annotated distributional checklist of Vespidae (Hymenoptera: Vespoidea) of India, pp. 1-87 in Zootaxa 4784 (1) on page 36, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4784.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/386231
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