4,246 research outputs found

    Molecular and morphological circumscription of Brachythecium coruscum as a separate taxon from Brachythecium albicans (Brachytheciaceae, Bryophyta)

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    Draper, Isabel, Mazimpaka, Vicente, Hedenäs, Lars (2014): Molecular and morphological circumscription of Brachythecium coruscum as a separate taxon from Brachythecium albicans (Brachytheciaceae, Bryophyta). Phytotaxa 158 (2): 182-194, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.158.2.5, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.158.2.

    FIGURE 1 in Molecular and morphological circumscription of Brachythecium coruscum as a separate taxon from Brachythecium albicans (Brachytheciaceae, Bryophyta)

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    FIGURE 1. Bayesian strict consensus tree obtained from the analysis of the combined data matrix, partitioned according to the gene regions (ITS1+2, rpl16, trnG) indicated on table 1, and gaps treated as missing information. Numbers close to the nodes indicate posterior probabilities above 0.95. The discontinuous line (original length 1.5) was artificially shortened.Published as part of Draper, Isabel, Mazimpaka, Vicente & Hedenäs, Lars, 2014, Molecular and morphological circumscription of Brachythecium coruscum as a separate taxon from Brachythecium albicans (Brachytheciaceae, Bryophyta), pp. 182-194 in Phytotaxa 158 (2) on page 185, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.158.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/512826

    A Discussion About Writing Fiction and Creative Prose with Isabel Huggan

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    Award-winning Canadian author Isabel Huggan talks to students about writing, with a focus on fiction and creative non-fiction.Presentation for English 2905 (Introduction to Creative Writing), taught by Dr. Stepanie McKenzie

    Humanismo y Reforma en la corte renacentista de Isabel de Vilamarí : Escipión Capece y sus lectoras

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    Durante la primera mitad del siglo XVI y en la corte salernitana del último príncipe de la casa Sanseverino y de su esposa, Isabel de Vilamarí (noble señora de origen catalán) se desarrolló un intenso clima intelectual. Allí se congregaron artistas y humanistas italianos y españoles. En este ambiente de intercambio cultural, atento en participar en las ideas de la Reforma que se difundió en Nápoles gracias a B. Ochino y a Valdés, nace el poema De principiis rerum del último académico pontaniano: Escipión Capece. En esta obra no sólo se rastrean motivos lucrecianos y virgilianos sino también el influjo de los tratados cosmológicos de Pontano. En este estudio, la autora propone el análisis de la figura y de la obra de Capece a través de sus lectoras: Isabel de Vilamarí y las mujeres cultas de su corte.During the first half of sixteenth century and in the Salernitan court of the last prince Sanseverino and his wife Isabel de Vilamarí (a lady coming from a noble Catalan family) an intense intellectual climate developed. Italian and Spanish artists and humanists met there. In this environment of cultural exchange, that shared in the Reform ideas divulged in Naples by B. Ochino and Valdés, Scipione Capece (the last member of the Pontanian Academy) writes his poem De principiis rerum. In his book Capece uses Latin literature (Vergil and Lucretius mainly) and Pontano's treatises on cosmology. The author of this paper studies Scipione Capece through his female readership: Isabel de Vilamarí and the learned women from her court

    Humanismo y Reforma en la corte renacentista de Isabel de Vilamarí : Escipión Capece y sus lectoras

    No full text
    Durante la primera mitad del siglo XVI y en la corte salernitana del último príncipe de la casa Sanseverino y de su esposa, Isabel de Vilamarí (noble señora de origen catalán) se desarrolló un intenso clima intelectual. Allí se congregaron artistas y humanistas italianos y españoles. En este ambiente de intercambio cultural, atento en participar en las ideas de la Reforma que se difundió en Nápoles gracias a B. Ochino y a Valdés, nace el poema De principiis rerum del último académico pontaniano: Escipión Capece. En esta obra no sólo se rastrean motivos lucrecianos y virgilianos sino también el influjo de los tratados cosmológicos de Pontano. En este estudio, la autora propone el análisis de la figura y de la obra de Capece a través de sus lectoras: Isabel de Vilamarí y las mujeres cultas de su corte.During the first half of sixteenth century and in the Salernitan court of the last prince Sanseverino and his wife Isabel de Vilamarí (a lady coming from a noble Catalan family) an intense intellectual climate developed. Italian and Spanish artists and humanists met there. In this environment of cultural exchange, that shared in the Reform ideas divulged in Naples by B. Ochino and Valdés, Scipione Capece (the last member of the Pontanian Academy) writes his poem De principiis rerum. In his book Capece uses Latin literature (Vergil and Lucretius mainly) and Pontano's treatises on cosmology. The author of this paper studies Scipione Capece through his female readership: Isabel de Vilamarí and the learned women from her court

    El Tlacuache Núm. 144 (2004). 144 Año 4 (2004) octubre. El Tlacuache

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    -De cantares, refranes, cementerios y epitafios por Isabel Garza Gómez. - El Yauhtli por Margarita Avilés y Macrina Fuentes. - De ofrendas y cosechas por Isabel Garza Gómez

    Biochemical investigation of Orai1 mutants affecting Ca2+ selectivity of Orai1

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    Author: Isabel Simmer, BScMasterarbeit Johannes Kepler Universität Linz 2025Arbeit gesperr
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