119,283 research outputs found

    Phillipp Fisch 2 : Trübe Aussichten

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    Das Plankton in der Ostsee vermehrt sich plötzlich enorm, und die Ursache scheint vom Festland zu kommen. Phillipp Fisch macht sich auf die Suche nach dem Grund und lernt dabei etwas über Dünger

    Phillipp Fisch 3 : In fremden Gewässern

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    Phillipp Fisch verbringt die Ferien bei seiner Cousine Juanita vor der peruanischen Küste, wo er mit dem Nährstoffreichtum aber auch der Überfischung in den Auftriebsgebieten Bekanntschaft macht

    Phillipp Fisch 1 : Atemnot am Meeresgrund

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    Phillipp Fisch wohnt in der Ostsee. Auf einmal fällt ihm das Atmen schwer. Woran liegt das? Gibt es etwa in einigen Gebieten im Meer zuwenig Sauerstoff? Und was hat das mit Kirsch-Bananensaft zu tun? Basierend auf dem Film "Sauerstoffminimumzonen in der Ostsee - von kiffenden Schlangensternen und Orakelkraken" von Jannik Aldag, Madita Harbeck, Philipp Hoy und Phillipp Kloth. Den Film finden Sie hier: https://sfb-outreach.geomar.de/de/smzs-in-der-ostse

    E. Fisch s/m l. H. Landolt zur freundlichen Erinnerung

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    Dedikationssilhouette nach rechts von Emil Fisch, gewidmet Johann Heinrich Landolt (1831-1885)Anonyme/r Künstler/inAngaben zum Widmungsempfänger gemäss interner NotizEs handelt sich beim Dargestellten vermutlich um Emil Fisch (1830-1904), der zu dieser Zeit an der Universität Zürich als Medizinstudent immatrikuliert war, vgl. die Angaben zu Fisch in der Matrikeledition der Universität Zürich (www.matrikel.uzh.ch [Stand: 03.04.2017])Handschriftliche Widmung unterhalb des Bildes "E. Fisch s[eine]m l[ieben] H. Landolt zur freundlichen Erinnerung

    (L.) Gaertn.

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    Agropyron desertorium (Fisch) Schult. A. CristatumCrested Wheat GrassAgropyre à crêteCounty of Newel

    Edith L. Fisch, Associate Professor, 1962-1965. President, New York Women\u27s Bar Association, 1970-1971.

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    Edith L. Fisch, Associate Professor, 1962-1965. Professor Fisch served as president of the New York Women\u27s Bar Association from 1970 to 1971. She was the author of the treatise Fisch on New York Evidence and was the first female law professor in New York State when she began teaching at New York Law School in 1962. She was also the first woman to earn the J.S.D. degree at Columbia University Law School and the first person ever to earn all degrees awarded by the law school, receiving her LL.B. in 1948, her LL.M. in 1949, and her J.S.D. in 1950. Her accomplishments are all the more significant because Professor Fisch had contracted polio at the age of 12 and was confined to a wheelchair for the rest of her life.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/bar_leaders/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Edith L. Fisch, First Female Law Professor in New York State

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    Edith Fisch, author of the treatise Fisch on New York Evidence, was the first female law professor in New York State when she began teaching at New York Law School in 1962. She was also the first woman to earn the J.S.D. degree at Columbia University Law School and the first person ever to earn all degrees awarded by the law school, receiving her LL.B. in 1948, her LL.M. in 1949, and her J.S.D. in 1950. Professor Fisch served as president of the New York Women\u27s Bar Association from 1970 to 1971. Her accomplishments are all the more significant because Professor Fisch had contracted polio at the age of 12 and was confined to a wheelchair for the rest of her life.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/firsts/1007/thumbnail.jp

    Taxonomical, morphological and anatomical studies on Lallemantia fisch. & mey [Lallemantia fisch. & mey. ci·nsi· üzeri·nde taksonomi·k, morfoloji·k ve anatomi·k araştirmalar]

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    The genus Lallemantia Fisch. & Mey. belongs to Lamiaceae (Labiatae) family, is represented by 3 species in Turkey: Lallemantia peltata (L.) Fisch. & Mey, L. iberica (Bieb.) Fisch. & Mey. and L. canescens (L.) Fisch. & Mey. The taxa grow in central, north, south and east Anatolia and they are element of Irano-Turanian phytogeographic region. In this study, Turkish Lallemantia species (L. peltata, L. iberica and L. canescens) were investigated morphologically and anatomically for the first time and supported with hand drawings and photographs. Morphological and anatomical properties of species were investigated in detail and also anatomical structures of the root, stem and leaf were clarified after our surveys. According to the results, L. canescens is perennial, has grey-canessent indumentum and is the tallest; leaf, bracteol, calyx, corolla sizes are also longer than other two species. L. peltata and L. iberica are the most relative species. In all taxa root anatomy was consisted of periderma the most outer layer, undilated cork tissue and phelloderma. Stem collenchyma was grouped together at the corners characteristically. Phloem and xylem were regular cylinders. Leaves of all taxa were dorsiventral and amphistomatic. Covering hairs of the stem and leaf were uniseriate, 1-4-celled and papillate

    Kinetic Control of High-Pressure Solid-State Phase Transitions: A Case Study on l -Serine

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    This study demonstrates that the compression rate adds a new perspective to phase diagrams of solids. A particular pressure increase rate may trigger unexpected solid-state transformations, producing otherwise inaccessible phases. Our test case is l-serine, characterized by a complex high-pressure behavior with three known polymorphs. However, the critical pressure of each transition, the ranges of coexistence of polymorphs, and the existence of an elusive fourth phase remained open questions, here analyzed and solved using synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction at high pressure, under controlled pressure increase rates. Two parallel paths exist, and the composition of the system depends on the pressure increase rate and the steps during the compression. A slow and continuous compression favors phase IV, whereas phase II can be observed only with a rapid and sharp compression. No direct interconversion occurs between these phases. Moreover, phase III originates only from phase II but never from phase IV. By controlling the strategy of pressure increase, we obtained a powder of phase IV that enabled solving its unknown structure, which resulted as a distorted superstructure of phase I with a tripled <i>a</i>-axis

    Karyotype Analyses on the Genus Lallemantia Fisch & CAMey. (Lamiaceae) from Turkey

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    In this research, Lallemantia iberica (Bieb.) Fisch. & Mey., L. canescens (L.) Fisch. & Mey. and L. peltata (L.) Fisch. & Mey. belonging to the Lallemantia Fisch. & C.A.Mey. genus (Lamiaceae) which is represented by three taxa growing naturally in Turkey, were studied. The somatic chromosome numbers observed in each taxa was 2n=14. The classification of chromosomes, the length of long and short arms, haploid chromosome length, arm ratio, centromeric index and relative chromosomal length were measured by Software Image Analyses (Bs200Pro). Also their karyotype asymmetry indices (TF%, As K%, Syi, Rec, A, A1 and A2) were calculated. According to the asymmetry index, L. peltata has a more symmetrical karyotype than L. canescens. This is the first study for account of chromosome counts and karyotypes for the studied taxa
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