372,343 research outputs found

    Triphora scylla Fernandes & Pimenta 2015

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    Triphora scylla Fernandes & Pimenta, 2015 Triphora scylla Fernandes & Pimenta, 2015: 509, fig. 8. Material examined BRAZIL – Rio Grande do Norte • 1 spec.; 04º33′17″ S, 36º56′35″ W; depth 130–160 m; 21 May 2011; MNRJ 35179 *. – Sergipe • 2 specs; Petro/UFS st. E5-A1; with soft part preservation; UFS • 1 spec.; Petro/UFS st. E6-A4; with soft part preservation; UFS • 7 specs; Petro/UFS st. 15.3; UFS • 1 spec.; Petro/UFS st. 18.1; UFS. – Espírito Santo • 1 spec.; 19º40′26″ S, 39º36′19″ W; depth 40 m; 2 Dec. 2011; OC. Ship Seward Johnson leg.; MNRJ 34827 *.Published as part of Fernandes, Maurício Romulo & Pimenta, Alexandre Dias, 2020, Unraveling one of the ' Big Five': update of the taxonomy of Triphoridae (Gastropoda, Triphoroidea) from Brazil, pp. 1-170 in European Journal of Taxonomy 665 on page 170, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.665, http://zenodo.org/record/389904

    Coralliophila occidentale Kosuge et Fernandes, 1988

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    Catálogo do Museo de Historia Natural USC. n. inventario 10014

    Triphora charybdis M. R. Fernandes & Pimenta 2015

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    Triphora charybdis M.R. Fernandes & Pimenta, 2015 Triphora charybdis M.R. Fernandes & Pimenta, 2015b: 507, fig. 7c–k. Type locality. Brazil, 23º10’01”S, 41º03’13”W, 107 m deep, Rio de Janeiro state. Type material. MNRJ 18620, holotype. For a list of paratypes see Fernandes & Pimenta (2015). Distribution. Brazil (Fernandes & Pimenta 2015b; Fernandes & Pimenta 2020), Colombia (Fernandes & Pimenta 2020), Guyana (Fernandes & Pimenta 2020).Published as part of Bakker, Piet A. J. & Albano, Paolo G., 2022, Nomenclator, geographic and stratigraphic distribution of the family Triphoridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda), pp. 1-216 in Zootaxa 5088 (1) on page 45, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5088.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/583653

    Isotriphora tigrina Fernandes, Pimenta & Leal 2013

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    tigrina, Isotriphora Fernandes, Pimenta & Leal, 2013 Isotriphora tigrina Fernandes, Pimenta & Leal, 2013: 8–9 (figs 7–8, 39–44). Gastropoda, Triphoridae Paratypes (3 spc): MZSP 105154. Locality: Brazil, Trindade Island, Vitória-Trindade Chain, 20°30' S, 29°19' W, MD55 sta. DC59, 52– 60 m depth (type locality). Collectors: P. Bouchet, J.H. Leal and B. Métivier. Preservation: Dry.Published as part of Cavallari, Daniel C., Dornellas, Ana Paula S. & Simone, Luiz Ricardo L., 2016, Second annotated list of type specimens of molluscs deposited in the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil, pp. 1-59 in European Journal of Taxonomy 213 on page 50, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2016.213, http://zenodo.org/record/384012

    Isotriphora onca Fernandes, Pimenta & Leal 2013

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    onca, Isotriphora Fernandes, Pimenta & Leal, 2013 Isotriphora onca Fernandes, Pimenta & Leal, 2013: 10–11 (figs 9–10, 45–50). Gastropoda, Triphoridae Paratypes (2 spc): MZSP 112068. Locality: Brazil, Vitória-Trindade Chain, Trindade Island, REVIZEE sta. C5-41F, 20°30' S, 29°16' W, 360 m depth (type locality). Collector: REVIZEE-Central. Preservation: Dry.Published as part of Cavallari, Daniel C., Dornellas, Ana Paula S. & Simone, Luiz Ricardo L., 2016, Second annotated list of type specimens of molluscs deposited in the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil, pp. 1-59 in European Journal of Taxonomy 213 on page 40, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2016.213, http://zenodo.org/record/384012

    Dependent capitalism and the challenges of pedagogical self-empowerment in the 1980’s, in Florestan Fernandes

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    The objective of this research is to analyze one of the pedagogic priorities listed by Florestan Fernandes in educational discussions around the Constituent National Assembly in the 1980’s. According to this author and constituent legislator, there would be three sets of priorities: 1) to guarantee effective equality in educational opportunities; 2) the appreciation of human agents that compose the school;and 3) the pedagogical self-empowerment.This work focuses on this third item, in which Fernandes (1989) refers to the search for an autonomy in the production of knowledges that are bound to the real needs of the country's population, as well as the process in which the autonomy of research and the whole educational system articulate with the process of democratization of the society, on the fronts of struggle in the 1980’s.Thus, this paper is divided into two parts, according to the analytical objectives laid down: first is dealt with the relationship between the question of the dependence of the external hegemonic centers and the conditioning cultural processes and consequent to heteronomy.This historic moment corresponds to the monopolistic capitalism, well evidenced from the 1950’s, Florestan Fernandes defines as the time of "total imperialism", when the hegemonic centers do not know borders or brakes to its performance, operating from inside in all directions, fitting on the economies and cultures of the host societies. It is intended in this first part of the work discuss the main features of the absolute imperialism in Brazil and their expressions in the educational field through the educational policy of the military dictatorship established in 1964 strongly inspired in the MEC-USAID agreements and its consequences on the reiteration of the external cultural dependence and in maintaining educational inequalities.In the second part of the text, we'll discuss the challenges relating to pedagogical self-empowerment in Brazil in the period of the "democratization" of the country, at a time of debate on the new Constitution, from the legacy of the military dictatorship. The sources used are the Florestan Fernandes’ works that deal with the subject of addiction, especially: The Bourgeois Revolution in Brazil and Dependent Capitalism and social classes in Latin America; as well as the writings of the course of the 1980’s, published in collections and files in the archives of the Federal Senate written in the Constituent period, when this author chaired the Subcommittee that dealt with educational affairs in the formulation of the Constitution promulgated in 1988

    Professor Florestan Fernandes and us

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    O artigo trata da importância do legado intelectual e político do Professor Florestan Fernandes, presente em seus sucessores no Departamento de Sociologia da Universidade de São Paulo.The article deals with the importance of Professor Florestan Fernandes\u27 intellectual and political legacy which can be perceived until nowadays in his successor´s works at the Sociology Departament at the University of São Paulo

    Meniscium maxonianum R. S. Fernandes & Salino, comb. nov.

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    Meniscium maxonianum (A.R.Sm.) R.S.Fernandes & Salino, comb. nov. Thelypteris maxoniana Smith (1992: 72). Type:— PERU. Maynas: Quistococha, vicinity of Iquitos, 18 Nov 1977, A. Gentry 20751 (holotype MO, isotype UC). Dryopteris desvauxii f. glandulosa Maxon & Morton (1938: 372) , Thelypteris longifolia f. glandulosa (Maxon & Morton 1938: 372) Morton (1967: 52) . Type:— BRASIL. São Paulo: Morro das Pedras, A.C. Brade 5753 (holotype NY). Selected specimens examined: — COLOMBIA. Comisaría Del Caquetá: Florencia, 400 m, 29 March 1940, J . Cuatrecasas 8855 (US).— VENEZUELA. Aragua: Tovar, A. Fendler 232 (K). Bolivar: Raul Leoni, 06°34’N, 66°23’W, 800 m, June 1989, A. Fernandez 5637 (MO).— PERU. Loreto: Mishuyacu, 100 m, April 1930, G . Klung 1255 (F, NY).— BRAZIL. Distrito Federal: Parque Municipal do Gama, 700–1000 m, 3 September 1964, H. S . Irwin & T. R. Soderstrom 5880 (F, K, NY); Goiás: A . Glaziou 22632 (F, P, US). Mato Grosso: Serra do Roncador, 550 m, H. S . Irwin et al. 16304 (F); Paraná: Paranaguá, Ilha do Mel, 25°30’44’’S, 48°19’08’’W, 3 m, 15 February 2004, P. H . Labiak et al. 3133 (UPCB). Pará: Parauapebas, 06°06’06’’S, 50°11’07’’W, 720 m, 20 April 2012, A. J . Arruda et al. 963 (BHCB). Santa Catarina: Brusque, 27°06’03’’S, 48°53’48’’W, 112 m, 05 June 2009, A. L . Gasper & E. Brogni 2173 (FURB).— BOLIVIA. 22 September 1901, R. S . Williams 1281 (NY, US). Distribution and habitat:— Meniscium maxonianum is distributed in Venezuela, Colombia, Peru to Bolivia and Brazil. It grows in forest formations of Amazonian forest, Atlantic rain forest, and Cerrado domains, where it can grow in shaded and sunny areas at 1– 720 m. Notes:— The most notable character of M. maxonianum is the dense cover of sessile to stalked glands on the abaxial surface of the laminae, and having the sporangial stalks glabrous or with inconspicuous filamentous, septate structures. In these characters it differs from the similar M. longifolium, which shares the same shape of lamina and pinnae, but is characterized by having glands and trichomes (sometimes only trichomes) on the abaxial surface of the lamina and sporangial stalks with long, acicular trichomes. Another species that also has glandular trichomes on the abaxial surface of the lamina is M. falcatum Liebmann (1849: 183). However, it differs from M. maxonianum by having longer pinna stalks and acicular and erect trichomes on the costae.Published as part of Fernandes, Rozijane Santos, Yesilyurt, Jovita Cislinski & Salino, Alexandre, 2014, New species and combinations in Meniscium (Thelypteridaceae), pp. 1-11 in Phytotaxa 184 (1) on page 9, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.184.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/515317
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