16,167 research outputs found
Als der Hochwohlehrwürdige und Hochwohlgelahrte Herr, Herr J. C. Fuchs, Wohlverdienter Lehrer des Evangelii bey der Gemeine Jesu Christi zu Grossen-Germersleben, Sich nach göttlicher Fügung mit der Wohledlen, Viel- Ehr und Tugendbegabten Frau, Frau E. C. Wefern, geb. Posin, ehelich verband, sollten, nachdem diese Vebindung am 4ten August dieses Jahrs durch priesterlichen Segen versiegelt wurde ... ihre kindliche Ergebenheit bezeugen, Dero gehorsamste Söhne J. C. Fuchs, der G. G. Beflissener, J. L. Fuchs, B. R. Befl. C. F. Fuchs, der G. G. Beflissener
Hochzeitsgedicht auf J. L. Fuchs, Pfarrer zu Grossen-Germersleben und E. L. Wefer, geb. Pose, 4. Aug. 1748Vorlageform der Veröffentlichungsangabe: "Halle, gedruckt bey Johann Justinus Gebauer. 1748.
Histoire Du Coucou D'Europe : Ouvrage divisé en trois parties ... / Par M. A. J. Lottinger, Médecin pensionné de la ville de Saarbourg ...
Autopsie nach dem Ex. der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltVorlage des Erscheinungsvermerks: A Strasbourg, Chez F. G. Levrault, Imprimeur-Libraire, Rue des Droits de hommes, No. 33; Et se trouve á Paris, chez Fuchs, quai des Augustins, No. 28, L'An
Egidius Tschudi's von Glarus Leben und Schriften nach dessen eigenen Handschriften diplomatisch verfasst und mit Urkunden belegt
von Ildephons Fuchs ...Bindungsfehler Theil 1: S. 15/16 ist zwischen S. 2 und 3 eingebundenTitelvignette.Exlibrisetikette: "Leih-Bibliothek, von F. M. Lutiger, Buchbinder in Zug. 004212479_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BIB, Rar 27473Exlibrisstempel: "Eidgenössische Zentralbibliothek" 004055914_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BIB, Rar 2747
Egidius Tschudi's von Glarus Leben und Schriften nach dessen eigenen Handschriften diplomatisch verfasst und mit Urkunden belegt
von Ildephons Fuchs ...Bindungsfehler Theil 1: S. 15/16 ist zwischen S. 2 und 3 eingebundenTitelvignette.Exlibrisetikette: "Leih-Bibliothek, von F. M. Lutiger, Buchbinder in Zug. 004212479_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BIB, Rar 27473Exlibrisstempel: "Eidgenössische Zentralbibliothek" 004055914_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BIB, Rar 2747
Larval responses to turbulence and temperature in a tidal inlet: Habitat selection by dispersing gastropods?
Author Posting. © Sears Foundation for Marine Research, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of Sears Foundation for Marine Research for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Marine Research 68 (2010): 153-188, doi:10.1357/002224010793079013.Marine larval dispersal is affected by hydrodynamic transport and larval behavior, but little is known about how behavior affects large-scale patterns of dispersal and recruitment. Intertidal habitats are characterized by strong and variable turbulence relative to shelf and pelagic waters, so larval responses to turbulence may affect both dispersal and habitat selection. This study combined observations and theoretical approaches to model gastropod larval responses to multiple physical variables in a well-mixed tidal inlet. Physical measurements and larvae were collected in July 2004 in Barnstable Harbor, Massachusetts (USA). Physical measurements were incorporated in an advection-diffusion model where larval vertical velocity is a function of turbulence dissipation rate, temperature, and the temperature gradient. Modeled larval distributions were fitted to observed concentration profiles by maximum likelihood to estimate larval behavioral velocity (swimming or sinking) as a function of environmental conditions. These quantitative behavior estimates were used to test hypotheses about behavioral differences among groups and to assess the relative impact of different cues on overall larval behavior. Larvae of five common gastropod species from different coastal habitats reacted most strongly to turbulence but had genus-specific responses to environmental cues. Larvae of a species from tidal inlets (the mud snail Nassarius obsoletus) had near-zero velocities under calmer conditions and sank in strong turbulence. In contrast, larvae from exposed beach habitats (Crepidula spp. and Anachis spp.) sank in weak turbulence and swam up in strong turbulence, with additional responses to temperature and temperature gradient. Larval responses also differed between small and large size classes and between flood and ebb tides. Behavior of mud snail larvae would contribute to retention inside the inlet and near adult habitats, whereas behavior of beach snail larvae would contribute to rapid export from muddy inlets lacking suitable adult habitats.This work was funded by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) Coastal Ocean
Institute, the WHOI Rinehart Coastal Research Center, the National Science Foundation (NSF OCE-
0326734), NSF and US Office of Naval Research grants to S. Elgar and B. Raubenheimer, and the
WHOI Sea Grant (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Grant No. NA16RG2273,
project no. R/O-38-PD). Analyses were completed while HLF was a postdoctoral scholar at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography (SIO), supported by the California Current Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological
Research program (NSF OCE-0417616) and by SIO funding to P. Franks
Mussel larval responses to turbulence are unaltered by larvalage or light condition
Larval responses to hydromechanical cues potentially have important effects on larval dispersal and settlement. This study examined the behavior of mussel larvae (Mytilus edulis) in laboratory-generated turbulence representative of nearshore currents. We video recorded the behavior of early- and late-stage veligers in a grid-stirred tank at five turbulence levels under light and dark conditions. Water velocities and kinetic energy dissipation rates were measured using particle image velocimetry and acoustic Doppler velocimetry. We characterized the vertical velocity distributions for sinking, hovering, and swimming modes in still water and calculated the average larval behavioral velocity in turbulence. In still water, young larvae had more positive (upward) velocities than old larvae, and both stages had more positive velocities in light than in dark. In turbulence, the mean larval vertical velocity varied from positive at low dissipation rates to negative at dissipation rates above a threshold of 8.3 £ 1022 cm2 s23. At this threshold, the Kolmogorov length scale (h ¼ 590mm) was two to three times the mean larval shell lengths (171–256mm), implying that turbulence is detectable even by larvae that are smaller than the smallest eddies. Responses to turbulence were unaffected by larval age or light conditions and contributed substantial behavioral variation. By sinking in strong turbulence, mussel larvae could increase their flux to the bed in energetic coastal flows, particularly over rough substrates like mussel beds. The response to turbulence by early-stage larvae will also affect their dispersal and may help larvae remain near coastal populations.Peer reviewedOriginally published in Limnology and Oceanography: Fluids & Environments (2011) and available via this link: http://lofe.dukejournals.org/content/1/120.full.pdfCopyright 2011 by the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc
Ralph F. Fuchs letter to Professor Garland Ethel concerning a special report from the American Association of University Professors, January 20, 1956
In his letter Ralph F. Fuchs, General Secretary of the American Association of University Professors, writes to Professor Garland Ethel about the investigation of the association into the Un-American Activities Committee (Canwell Committee) and the committee’s attack on academic free that the AAUP condemns. Fuchs asks Ethel to “[correct] any errors that may appear, as well as your sending me any comments you may care to make upon the committee’s treatment.” Fuchs also states that “the purpose of the report are, first, to bring the Association’s influence to bear in counteracting harmful tendencies in relation to academic freedom and tenure, which are pertinent to your case; second, to express a judgment regarding the incident, to whatever extent may be practicable now; and third, to stimulate constructive forces in the academic community and among the public, in relation to freedom and tenure.”Garland Ethel was born in Okanogan County, Washington in 1899. He was educated at the University of Washington where he later taught in the English department from 1924-1969. His principle research interest was Samuel Taylor Coleridge. He was one of the professors persecuted for his communist affiliations during Washington State’s Joint Legislative Fact-Finding Committee on Un-American Activities. He was brought before the Faculty Tenure Committee at the end of 1948 with charges of neglect of duty, immorality, dishonesty and intellectual incompetence and the demand for his dismissal; he was put on academic probation for two years in 1949. Ethel would later become secretary of the American Federation of Teachers, Local 401. He died in 1980.
Ralph F. Fuchs became a law professor at Indiana University in 1946; he was an important contributor to the Administrative Procedure Act in the same year. Fuchs was active in the NAACP and was a faculty advisor to the Indiana University chapter. He worked with the Association of University Professors, most significantly as the national president from 1960 to 1962 but also as General Secretary from 1955 to 1957 during the association’s investigation into the Un-American Activities Committee and their attack on academic freedom, especially at the University of Washington.
The Interim Committee on Un-American Activities (Canwell Committee) operated from 1947-1949. It was a special exploratory committee of the Washington State Legislature which investigated the influence of the Communist Party in Washington State, most notably at the University of Washington. During the years the committee was active it subpoenaed and took to trial 12 of the University’s professors, 3 of whom were dismissed from the university for having Communist affiliations and 3 of whom were put on probation for years after the incident occurred
Frieda Fuchs Collection 1907-1957
The collection contains materials representing the academic career of Frieda Fuchs, from her early school years, through her doctoral studies and research into psychology in Germany, to her career in the United States. The following material is from her earlier years in Germany: grade certificates from the Grossherzogliche Seminar für Volksschullehrerinnen in Darmstadt indicating good marks (1907-1914); her teaching contract for the Israelitische Volksschule (1916), certificates confirming satisfactory studies and a diploma granting a doctoral degree from the Universtät Frankfurt am Main, in recognition of her dissertation "Experimentelle Studien über das Bewegungsnachbild" (1927-1928). The following material is from either shortly before or after her emigration to the United States: editions of her curriculum vitae (1940-1941); letters of recommendation, job correspondence and offers (1939-1942), report entitled "Von Nachbildern und ihrer Bedeutung," undated. Also included is an offprint, signed by the author, Dr. S. Hirsch, entitled "Die letzten Millimeter der arteriellen Strombahn," and two photographs of Frieda Fuchs approximately ages 30 and 50.Frieda Fuchs was born in Dieburg in 1893. She studied at the teacher's college in Darmstadt and the University in Frankfurt, receiving her doctoral degree in in 1928. From 1914 through 1940 she taught at the Israelitische Volksschule in Frankfurt am Main. She also gave classes at the Heim des Juedischen Frauenbundes in Neu-Isenburg. She immigrated to the United States in 1940 and found employment with the congregation of Rabbi Dr. Breuer in New York. At the same time she enlisted the support of the American Psychological Association Committee on Displayed Foreign Psychologists. She died in New York in 1974.Processed for digitizationdigitized2007110
S. Abraham et F. Kiefer, A theory of structural semantics
Fuchs C. S. Abraham et F. Kiefer, A theory of structural semantics. In: L'Homme, 1968, tome 8 n°1. pp. 98-101
Catherine Fuchs, La Paraphrase, P.U. F. 1982, (Collection : Linguistique nouvelle)
L'Hermitte René. Catherine Fuchs, La Paraphrase, P.U. F. 1982, (Collection : Linguistique nouvelle). In: L'Information Grammaticale, N. 21, 1984. pp. 38-40
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