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Middleton, V C (Valentine Charles Gasper), NX55227
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/404927Surname: MIDDLETON. Given Name(s) or Initials: V C (VALENTINE CHARLES GASPER). Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX55227. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 12290.242192
Item: [2016.0049.37208] "Middleton, V C (Valentine Charles Gasper), NX55227
Cranfillia bakeri Bauret & Vázquez & Molino & Gaudeul & Rakotondrainibe & Gasper & Rouhan 2020, comb. nov.
Cranfillia bakeri (C.Chr.) Vázquez Ferreira & S.Molino, comb. nov. Blechnum bakeri C.Chr., Index Filicum: 151 (1905), nom. nov. for Lomaria pubescens Baker; Journal of the Linnean Society, Botany 15: 415 (1876), non Kunze (1843); nec Blechnum pubescens Desv. (1827), nec Hooker (1837). — Austroblechnum bakeri (C.Chr.) Gasper & V.A.O.Dittrich, Phytotaxa 275 (3): 191-227 (2016). — Type: Madagascar, Antananarivo, W. Pool s.n. p.p. (lecto-,K[K000424012]!, first-step designated bySchelpe [1967: 348], second-step designated here; isolecto-, K[K000424011]! excl. specim.: fronds annotated as G and H). Blechnum polypodioides (Sw.) Kuhn var. holstii Hieron., Pflanzenwelt Ost-Afrikas und der Nachbargebiete 1, C: 81 (1895). — Type: “usb., Mbaramu”, C . Holst 2479 (lecto-, B200031479!, designated by Parris (2006: 4); isolecto-, P [P00113566]!). Blechnum bakeri C.Chr. var. glabrum Bonap., Notes ptéridologiques 7: 210 (1918) (as “glabra”). — Type: Madagascar. Mandraka, C. d’Alleizette 82 in Herb. Bonaparte (holo-, P [P00483198]!). Blechnum ivohibense C.Chr., Archives de Botanique (Caen), Bulletin mensuel 2: 211-212 (1928). — Type: Madagascar. Pic d’Ivohibe, Bara, H. Humbert 3300 p.p. in Herb. C. Christensen (holo-, BM[BM001066246 photo]!; iso-, B[B200031506 photo]! p.p., excl. specim: two small individuals on the right and left; excl. specim. P01625371!). SeeRakotondrainibe et al. (2013) for details. Blechnum umbrosum Peter, Repertorium specierum novarum regni vegetabilis, Beiheft 40 (1), Lieferung 1: 82; Descriptiones: 9, t. 3: 5-8 (1929). — Type: Tanzania. West Usambara, Kisimba above Mazumbai, IV.1916, A. Peter 16489 (lecto-, B[B200034334 photo!], designated by Parris (2006: 4); isolecto-, BM[BM000585222 photo]!, BR[BR0000008054487 photo!], GOET007151 photo!, K[K001092775 photo!], K[K001092776 photo!], P[P00483201]!, US00135471 photo!). Blechnum ivohibense C.Chr. var. hirsutum C.Chr., Dansk Botanisk Arkiv 7: 106 (1932). — Type: Madagascar. Pic d’Ivohibe, H. Humbert 3299 (lecto-, BM[BM001066247 photo!]; designated by Rakotondrainibe et al. (2013: 151-193); isolecto-, P[P01625808]!); remaining syntypes: Analamazaotra, H. Perrier de la Bâthie 7550 (syn-, P[P00835613!, P01625804!]); H. Perrier de la Bâthie 7625 (syn-, P[P01625802!, P01625803!]). NOMENCLATURAL COMMENTS Schelpe (1967) cited two sheets at K as the lectotype of Blechnum bakeri, and only conducted the valid first-step lectotypification of the name (Art. 9.17 of ICN; Turland et al. 2018). Since those two sheets at K are not clearly labeled as being part of a single specimen (Art. 8.3 of ICN; Turland et al. 2018), we here conducted the second-step lectotypification, selecting the sheet with two isolated sterile fronds (annotated E, F). From the same sheet K000424012, the two fertile fronds (annotated G, H) are excluded from the lectotype, as they must be following the first-step lectotypification (Schelpe 1967); we however ascribed the fertile frond H to Cranfillia bakeri Vázquez Ferreira & S.Molino, comb. nov., while frond G was ascribed to Lomaridium biforme (Baker) Gasper & V.A.O.Dittrich. In the protologue of Blechnum bakeri var. glabrum, Bonaparte (1918) cited C. d’Alleizette 82 (in the Bonaparte’s Herbarium) as the type. This gathering is represented by a single sheet at P, which is the holotype; Rakotondrainibe et al. (2013) erroneously cited P00483199 as an isotype, as this latter sheet in fact belongs to the distinct gathering C. d’Alleizette 82m (i.e. including “m” as a suffix).Published as part of Bauret, Lucie, Vázquez, Rubén, Molino, Sonia, Gaudeul, Myriam, Rakotondrainibe, France, Gasper, André Luís de & Rouhan, Germinal, 2020, New molecular and morphological evidences favor a combination of Blechnum bakeri C. Chr. in Cranfillia Gasper & V. A. O. Dittrich (Blechnaceae, Polypodiopsida), thus extending the distribution of Cranfillia to Madagascar and East Africa, pp. 279-289 in Adansonia (3) (3) 42 (18) on page 286, DOI: 10.5252/adansonia2020v42a18, http://zenodo.org/record/444802
Neutral Affect Independence and Co-Occurrence
Data from:
Gasper, K, Danube, C., Hu, D (2021). Making room for neutral affect: Evidence indicating that neutral affect is independent of and co-occurs with eight affective states. Motivation and Emotion, Online, doi: 10.1007/s11031-020-09861-3
View only link: https://rdcu.be/cekS
An Indefinite Bibasic Summation Formula and Some Quadratic, Cubic and Quartic Summation and Transformation Formulas
Let denote the q-shifted factorial, and set Recently, Gasper [7] showed that some bibasic summation formulas derived by Carlitz [5], Al-Salam and Verma [1], and Wm. Gosper could be extended to the indefinite bibasic summation formula where p and q are independent bases and a, b, c are arbitrary parameters.</jats:p
Cranfillia BAKERI, COMB. NOV.
IDENTIFICATION KEY TO THE SPECIES CLOSELY RELATED TO CRANFILLIA BAKERI (C.CHR.) VÁZQUEZ FERREIRA & S.MOLINO, COMB. NOV. 1. Sterile laminae with fully adnate pinnae in distal half, and with partially free pinnae in proximal half (sometimes only in 1/3 proximal of its length) [Lord Howe Island] ...... C. fullagari (F. Muell.) Gasper & V.A.O.Dittrich — Sterile laminae with fully adnate pinnae all along the length, except for the first 1-2 (-3) most basal pinnae pairs, which are partially free at least basiscopically............................................................................................... 2 2. Scales from nigrescent to light brown; perine ornamentation with curly thin muri, which do not give the spore a polyhedral shape [N. Zealand]............................................... C. nigra (Colenso) Gasper & V.A.O.Dittrich — Scales notably atropurpureous; perine ornamentation with straight thick muri which give the spore a polyhedral shape........................................................................................................................................................... 3 3. Trichomes remarkably opaque and atropurpureous, from dense to scattered but always present at least on the abaxial surfaces [New Caledonia, Fiji, Vanuatu]........................... C. opaca (Mett.) Gasper & V.A.O.Dittrich — Trichomes when present, light brown (never atropurpureous); often completely glabrous individuals......... 4 4. Sterile blade triangular-ovate; basal segments lanceolate to linear-elliptic; apical segments obtuse, sometimes slightly acute [Brazil] ................................................................ C. mucronata (Fée) V.A.O.Dittrich & Gasper — Sterile blade lanceolate-ovate; basal segments semicircular, sometimes ovate; apical segments acute to acuminate [East Africa, Madagascar]................................. C. bakeri (C.Chr.) Vázquez Ferreira & S.Molino, comb. nov.Published as part of Bauret, Lucie, Vázquez, Rubén, Molino, Sonia, Gaudeul, Myriam, Rakotondrainibe, France, Gasper, André Luís de & Rouhan, Germinal, 2020, New molecular and morphological evidences favor a combination of Blechnum bakeri C. Chr. in Cranfillia Gasper & V. A. O. Dittrich (Blechnaceae, Polypodiopsida), thus extending the distribution of Cranfillia to Madagascar and East Africa, pp. 279-289 in Adansonia (3) (3) 42 (18) on page 285, DOI: 10.5252/adansonia2020v42a18, http://zenodo.org/record/444802
Nussbaum's capabilities approach in perspective : purposes, methods and sources for an ethics of human development
methodology;ethics;comparative analysis;human development
Archaeological Investigations at the Abbey of Saint-Evroult-Notre-Dame-des-Bois by Anne-Sophie Vigot
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
A Middle English Grosseteste: The Seven Liberal Arts
The Middle English treatise The Seven Liberal Arts incorporates a significant portion of Grosseteste’s treatises On the Liberal Arts and On the Generation of Sounds. It was composed in two phases with its initial version possibly in the first two decades of the fifteenth century; the later treatise survives, with additions to the original, in a single manuscript from the late 1450s and 1460s. While the current volume does not offer a comprehensive or considered history of the reception of Grosseteste’s thought, a consideration of The Seven Liberal Arts adds fascinating layers to the interpretation both of Grosseteste’s treatises on their own terms, and also to the exploration of his ideas in later years. In philological terms the Middle English translator seems to be using a Latin copy of Grosseteste’s works which no longer survives. This helped in the establishment of difficult readings in On the Liberal Arts in particular. In intellectual terms the ways in which the Middle English translator extracts and situates Grosseteste’s texts provides additional grounds for the elucidation of his thought
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