90,179 research outputs found
Haase, E F, NX38804
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/389544Surname: HAASE. Given Name(s) or Initials: E F. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX38804. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 19869.213429
Item: [2016.0049.21837] "Haase, E F, NX38804
Derivation of robust predictor variables for modelling urban shrinkage and its effects at different scales
Currently, we observe diverging processes of growth and shrinkage in European Cities. Whereas in the 80ies and 90ies partially accelerated through the crash of the socialist system mostly urban growth and suburban development occurred in European Cities, today we find a general decline of population as well as an increase of aged people (as results of the demographic change in Europe and worldwide, Cloet 2003, Lutz 2001). These processes influence land use pattern (state of the environment) and land use changes in urban areas enormously. Land use pattern reflect the current socio-economic development of an urban area and give an idea of how the urban ecosystem is influenced by man. In doing so, for instance, surface sealing reduces the filtering and remediation capacity of soils and the water retention in general as well as minimises habitat quality for wetland species. At the same time, the ecosystem(s) provide so-called ecosystem services, benefits people obtain from ecosystems: water availability, drinking water, remediation and filtering of waste, places to settle, recreation facilities in nature and others. Their quantification enables to bring the change (availability/loss) of ecosystem services into relation with effective costs (economic sphere, Farber 2002, De Groot et al. 2002). The above mentioned population decline and related shrinkage processes will have enormous consequences on the demand and availability of ecosystem services needed to sustain a high and even increasing status of quality of life for European citizens in the next future. Therefore, the predictor variables describing on the one hand shrinkage-related land use changes and on the other its effects are most important but at the same time it is still a challenge; to extract such predictor variables from a huge catalogue of urban socio-economic and environmental indicators elaborated by many studies for different landscape types and scales; to derive relevant digital and spatially explicit data as model input to calculate the effects of land use (change) and; to validate the model results at the city and the quarter level (scale) as well as to prove the response of the (gained/released) ecosystem service (environmental quality) at the city and at quarter level (closing the circle). Here, the author will give some expressive examples showing the derivation of predictor variables for modelling peri-urban growth and inner city shrinkage as well as its effects on water balance, habitat quality (urban green network) and recreational space. Of major interest is the approach of how to tackle the problem of urban shrinkage in spatially explicit land use (change) modelling (Haase et al. 2004).
Opacuincola gretathunbergae Verhaegen & Haase 2021, sp. nov.
Opacuincola gretathunbergae sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: FCAB414F-A55A-4819-AFE1-CE2AF78D6B2F Figs 4 E–F, 5 D–E, 6 D, 8 C, 11 B, 12; Tables 1–2 Diagnosis The new species is most similar to Op. ngatapuna in terms of shape and epidermal pigmentation. It differs from the latter in 11 diagnostic DNA positions, in being much larger and in penial morphology. The penis and penial lobe of Op. gretathunbergae sp. nov. are considerably more delicate. Etymology The dedicatee of this new species is the Swedish teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg. Starting with a single-person school strike and demonstration to save our climate she has sparked the global movement “Fridays for Future” supported primarily by young people and managed to finally get momentum in global politics toward action against climate change after warnings of scientists have been largely ignored for more than 30 years. We wish her and the movement the endurance necessary to keep the pressure up! Material examined Holotype (Fig. 4E) NEW ZEALAND • Kahurangi National Park, W of Motueka, Cobb Dam Road; 41°04ʹ25.0ʺ S, 172°45ʹ18.5ʺ E; 1 Mar. 2016; G. Verhaegen and M. Haase leg.; on leaves, stones, woody debris in trickle along road; NMNZ.M.330191. Paratypes (Figs. 4F; 5 D–E) NEW ZEALAND • 21 specs; same collection data as for holotype; NMNZ.M.330192. Description SHELL (Figs 4 E–F, 5D–E). Blunt-conical to pupiform, about 1.65 times as high as than wide, whitetranslucent with brown periostracum; protoconch almost smooth with fine pits comprising ca 0.75 whorl (Fig. 6D); entire shell with 3.5 to 4.25 whorls, teleoconch initially with fine longitudinal ridges, then without structure apart from growth lines; umbilicus narrow; aperture orthocline, slightly higher than wide. OPERCULUM. Orange, paucispiral; nucleus submarginal, without peg. EXTERNAL FEATURES (Figs 4 E–F). Epidermis with irregular, large pigment blotches; eyes well developed and entirely pigmented; tentacles without particular ciliation. MANTLE CAVITY (n = 3). 10–12 ctenidial filaments; osphradium ovate-elongate, behind middle of gill. DIGESTIVE SYSTEM. Radula has formula R 5-6 1 5–6/3–4 3–4, L 5–6 1 6, M1 22–26, M2 31–32 (Fig. 8C); stomach without caecum; rectal loop pointing left in roof of mantle cavity, in males more distinct than in females. FEMALE GENITALIA (n = 2; Fig. 12). Ovary small, simple sac starting> 1.5 whorls below apex, comprising 0.25 whorl and not reaching stomach; renal oviduct first coiling 180° clockwise, then 270° counterclockwise; one distal, large receptaculum seminis lying against anterior area of bursa copulatrix; bursa copulatrix large, globular, extending behind much smaller albumen gland, bursal duct entering anteriorly; ovoviviparous, brooding at least three embryos in pallial oviduct, pallial oviduct as brood pouch with very short albumen gland and large capsule gland, the latter histologically uniform in CT scans. MALE GENITALIA (n = 4). Testis lobate sac, starting ca 0.75 whorl below apex, comprising up to 1 whorl, may reach stomach; vesicula seminalis coils along anterior half of testis; proximal vas deferens inserts close to middle of kidney-shaped prostate, distal vas deferens leaving anteriorly; penis long, slender, continuously tapering, pointed; distinct lobe on right side pointing forward (Fig. 11B). Remarks The sister relationship of Op. gretathunbergae sp. nov. to Op. ngatapuna was fairly well supported (Fig. 2). The average COI p-distance was 0.014 and there were eight type 1 characters in COI and three in 16S (Table 2). Morphologically, the new species is larger. Univariate tests comparing shell dimensions could not be conducted, though, because of the small sample size available for Op. ngatapuna. But the PCA (Fig. 3) and the data in Haase (2008) are clear regarding the size difference. Anatomically, only the male genitalia could be compared because this information is lacking for Op. ngatapuna (Haase 2008). The well-developed eyes indicate that the new species is a true crenobiont.Published as part of Verhaegen, Gerlien & Haase, Martin, 2021, All-inclusive descriptions of new freshwater snail taxa of the hyperdiverse family Tateidae (Gastropoda, Caenogastropoda) from the South Island of New Zealand, pp. 71-96 in European Journal of Taxonomy 731 on pages 86-87, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2021.731.1205, http://zenodo.org/record/444691
Funeral March
80.7568.370 – “Funeral March”: Haase, F.: Oliver Ditson & Co.: Boston: March, Funeral, Abraham Lincoln: 1865: Solo Piano
Gedenkschrift zum 150 jaehrigen Bestehen der Lederfabrik F. Haase in Rybnik.
History of the leather factory F. Haase in the town of Rybnik in Silesia from its beginning in 1766 to 1916
Diplocirrus Haase 1915
Diplocirrus Haase, 1915 (key: Salazar-Vallejo & Buzhinskaja 2011) erythroporus Gallardo, 1968: Nha Trang, Vietnam. LACM 306 (redescr. Salazar-Vallejo & Buzhinskaja 2011)Published as part of Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I., Carrera-Parra, Luis F., Muir, Alexander I., León-González, Jesús Angel De, Piotrowski, Christina & Sato, Masanori, 2014, Polychaete species (Annelida) described from the Philippine and China Seas, pp. 1-68 in Zootaxa 3842 (1) on page 16, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3842.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/492848
Towards Portable Natural Language Interfaces to Knowledge Bases - The Case of the ORAKEL System -
Cimiano P, Haase P, Heizmann J, Mantel M, Studer R. Towards Portable Natural Language Interfaces to Knowledge Bases - The Case of the ORAKEL System -. Data & Knowledge Engineering (DKE). 2008;65(2):325-354
Allothereua simplex Haase 1887
Allothereua simplex (Haase, 1887) Scutigera simplex Haase, 1887: 26, Taf. 1, 29. Type localities: Australia: Sydney (holotype), Adelaide (paratype). Type: female, holotype, No 14455, ZMH; paratype in Göttingen Museum? Material examined: 5 ad. MM, subad. F, Australia, Victoria (Coll. François) H. Brölemann det. General distributiuon: Australia. Remarks: The taxonomic status of this species is still uncertain. Both Pocock (1901) and Chamberlin (1920) considered it as identical with the common Australian species Allothereua maculata (Newport, 1844), though the synonymy has never been established formally. Only a reexamination of the type together with a study of additional material from Australia will resolve this question.Published as part of Stoev, Pavel & Geoffroy, Jean-Jacques, 2004, An annotated catalogue of the scutigeromorph centipedes in the collection of the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris (France) (Chilopoda: Scutigeromorpha), pp. 1-12 in Zootaxa 635 on page 8, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.15801
Optimizing the configuration of a façade module for office buildings by means of integrated thermal and lighting simulations in a total energy perspective
The building enclosure plays a relevant role in the management of the energy flows in buildings and in the exploitation of solar energy at a building scale. An optimized configuration of the façade can contribute to reduce the total energy demand of the building. Traditionally, the search for the optimal façade configuration is obtained by analyzing the heating demand and/or the cooling demand only, while the implication of the façade configuration on artificial lighting energy demand is often not addressed. A comprehensive approach (i.e. including heating, cooling and artificial lighting energy demand) is instead necessary to reduce the total energy need of the building and the optimization of the façade configuration becomes no longer straightforward, because non-linear relationships are often disclosed. The paper presents a methodology and the results of the search for the optimal transparent percentage in a façade module for low energy office buildings. The investigation is carried out in a temperate oceanic climate, on the four main orientations, on three versions of the office building and with different HVAC system's efficiency. The results show that, regardless of the orientations and of the façade area of the building, the optimal configuration is achieved when the transparent percentage is between 35% and 45% of the total façade module area. The highest difference between the optimal configuration and the worst one occurs in the north-exposed façade, while the south-exposed façade is the one that shows the smallest difference between the optimal and the worst configuratio
LexOnto: A Model for Ontology Lexicons for Ontology-based NLP
Cimiano P, Haase P, Herold M, Mantel M, Buitelaar P. LexOnto: A Model for Ontology Lexicons for Ontology-based NLP. In: Proceedings of the OntoLex07 Workshop held in conjunction with ISWC’07. 2007
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