17,997 research outputs found
Daniel C. Bach et Anthony A. Kirk-Greene (dir.). Etats et sociétés en Afrique francophone
Dumas Marie-Lucy. Daniel C. Bach et Anthony A. Kirk-Greene (dir.). Etats et sociétés en Afrique francophone. In: Politique étrangère, n°2 - 1994 - 59ᵉannée. p. 584
Daniel C. Bach et Anthony A. Kirk-Greene (dir.), États et sociétés en Afrique francophone
Sindzingre Alice. Daniel C. Bach et Anthony A. Kirk-Greene (dir.), États et sociétés en Afrique francophone. In: Tiers-Monde, tome 35, n°140, 1994. pp. 949-951
Bach, Daniel C. & Kirk-Greene, Anthony A. (sous la direction de). - États et sociétés en Afrique francophone
Copans Jean. Bach, Daniel C. & Kirk-Greene, Anthony A. (sous la direction de). - États et sociétés en Afrique francophone. In: Cahiers d'études africaines, vol. 35, n°137, 1995. La démocratie déclinée. pp. 257-259
Data used for the paper Daniel Malko, Yanjun Guo, Pip Jones, George Britovsek, and Anthony Kucernak, "Heterogeneous iron containing carbon catalyst (Fe-N/C) for epoxidation with molecular oxygen|", Journal of Catalysis, 2019, DOI:10.1016/j.jcat.2019.01.008
The data in this spreadsheet was used to produce the figures in the paper
Daniel Malko, Yanjun Guo, Pip Jones, George Britovsek, and Anthony Kucernak
Heterogeneous iron containing carbon catalyst (Fe-N/C) for epoxidation with molecular oxygen
Journal of Catalysis
DOI:10.1016/j.jcat.2019.01.008
Please cite the above reference if you wish to use this data
DOI of this data file is: 10.5281/zenodo.2539183</p
Anthony Lord, Hand Forged Iron, Asheville, N. C.
This small leaflet served as a business card for blacksmith or iron worker Anthony Lord and was probably produced during the 1930s. The front is illustrated with an example of his iron work and the back shows his logo. A brief note inside explains that Lord is currently "too busy to accept commissions" but hopes that in the new year "he will be happy to receive your orders for grilles, lanterns, knockers, handles, hinges." Lord worked with blacksmiths Lawrence Boone and Daniel Boone VI. Lord worked primarily as an architect in the Asheville, N.C. area
Corrections to a recently published area taxonomy of Australia
Ebach, Malte C., Gill, Anthony C., Kwan, Alan, Ahyong, Shane T., Murphy, Daniel J., Cassis, Gerasimos (2013): Corrections to a recently published area taxonomy of Australia. Zootaxa 3652 (2): 299-300, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3652.2.
Letter from Anthony Brummelkamp to Mrs. G. Groen van Prinsterer
In a letter to Mrs. G. Groen van Prinsterer from Rev. Anthony Brummelkamp, the author is clearing up some statements of Rev. Budding and chiding Rev. Hendrik Scholte for having an arrogant and sharp tone. A foonote to the letter mentions the school operated by Rev. Brummelkamp and Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte in Arnhem.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1840s/1193/thumbnail.jp
The Book of Daniel and manticism: a critical assessment of the view that the Book of Daniel derives from a mantic tradition
This dissertation examines the consensus view that is based on Hans-Peter
Müller's 1969 and 1972 articles: Daniel was a mantic wise man in the Mesopotamian
ASA
court, and this was the self-understanding or aspiration of the maskilim of Dan 11:33, 35,
12:3, 10, who wrote the book. Chapter 1 reviews the arguments that make the mantic connection and Chapter 2 concludes that a direct connection with the Danes of Aqht, Ezek, and Jub, and with the angel in 1 Enoch should be rejected. There is evidence that the
tradition of a priest in Ezra 8: 2 and Neh 10: 7, and found also in the superscription to
the Old Greek of Bel, and 4 Ezra 12:10-11, and suggested the name.
Chapter 3 concludes that the portrayal of the court diviners in Dan 1-6 is wholly
negative and includes both the diviners, and the essence of the professions, i. e., the
ability to interpret a divine revelation. The critique is conveyed through the story line,
explicit criticisms, irony, and humour. Chapter 4 concludes that Daniel, the interpreter
of dreams and the writing on the wall, is distinguished from every other character and role. In the final form of Dan, Daniel as the divinely assisted each time he interprets, just as when he receives help from an interpreting angel in Dan 7-12.
Chapter 5 demonstrates that the portrayal of Daniel as the divinely assisted
interpreter makes sense of the reinterpretation of old prophecies against the Assyrians
as prophecies against Antiochus IV Epiphanes. Hab 2:2-4 and Isa 52-53 were also
understood as predictions about the maskilim themselves. Comparisons are then made
with the Teacher of Righteousness, the writers of the Hodayot, and with three Essenes
portrayed by Josephus. These too were portrayed as divinely assisted interpreters
FIGURE 6 in Towards an Australian Bioregionalisation Atlas: A provisional area taxonomy of Australia's biogeographical regions
FIGURE 6. Marine regions of Australia.Published as part of Ebach, Malte C., Gill, Anthony C., Kwan, Alan, Ahyong, Shane T., Murphy, Daniel J. & Cassis, Gerasimos, 2013, Towards an Australian Bioregionalisation Atlas: A provisional area taxonomy of Australia's biogeographical regions, pp. 315-342 in Zootaxa 3619 (3) on page 336, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3619.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record/21968
The therapeutic potential of CXC chemokine blockade in acute inflammation in the brain.
Mammalian neurones of the central nervous system (CNS) are terminally differentiated, and there is little endogenous capacity of the CNS to repair itself. Peripheral tissue injury, disease or infection results in a stereotypical inflammatory response to protect the host from pathogens and to promote tissue repair. However, collateral or 'bystander' damage is characteristic of any inflammatory response. Thus, it is apparent that the CNS has evolved mechanisms to regulate tightly the acute inflammatory response, and in particular to restrict the recruitment of neutrophils, in an attempt to protect itself from the potentially damaging consequences of inflammation in the brain. However, neutrophils are not always excluded from the brain. Indeed, they are found in large numbers in the brain parenchyma following traumatic lesions, stroke lesions, and in rodents, during the 'window of susceptibility'. Therapy targeted at blocking excitotoxic cell death has not successfully transferred from rodent models of stroke to human stroke patients. Restricting leukocyte entry to the brain, thereby inhibiting the inflammatory response, may prove to be a more practical therapeutic approach. The evidence presented in this review suggests that antagonising the effects of CXC chemokines may represent one route to achieve this goal
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