123,532 research outputs found
Parapinnanema Inglis 1969
Genus Parapinnanema Inglis, 1969 Emended diagnosis (Gourbault & Vincx, 1994): Thick cuticle on the pharyngeal region; amphids with surrounding fringe of cuticle; buccal cavity conical with one dorsal and two subventral plates; one large pointed tooth on the dorsal plate and three denticles plus a ventral tooth on each subventral plate; tail conico-cylindrical; raised precloacal and caudal modifications of the cuticle in males; elongated vulva, vagina opening wide, an internal double sphincter around the uterine chamber. Number of species: 11 Type species: Parapinnanema wilsoni Inglis, 1969 List of valid species: The present list of valid species is in accordance with Gourbault & Vincx (1994). For each species taxonomical notes and geographical distribution are provided. P. alii (Murphy, 1965); Murphy, 1965: 154, Fig. 155 a–b [Nygmatonchus alii]; Inglis, 1969: p 187 (Austranema alii n. comb.), 195–197, Figs 38–40; Warwick & Coles, 1975: p 405 (Parapinnanema alii n. comb.); Gourbault & Vincx, 1994: 153–155, Figs 8,9; Tchesunov (2014): 377 (erroneously reported as valid Austranema alii); Maldives, New Caledonia, Australia, Chile. P. bableti Gourbault & Vincx, 1994; Gourbault & Vincx, 1994: 142 –147, Figs. 1 –4; Polynesia. P. c o l e s i (Inglis, 1968); Inglis, 1968: 36–37, Figs 6–13 [Euchromadora colesi]; Inglis, 1969: p 187 (Austranema colesi n. comb.); Warwick & Coles, 1975: p 405 (Parapinnanema colesi n. comb.); Tchesunov (2014): 377 (erroneously reported as valid Austranema colesi); New Caledonia. P. harveyi Warwick & Coles, 1975; Warwick & Coles, 1975: 409 –411, Fig. 3 a–f; Isles of Scilly. P. imbricata Belogurov, Belogurova & Smolyanko, 1985; Belogurov et al., 1985: 50 –54, Fig. 1; Sea of Japan. P. mexicanum (Jensen, 1986); Jensen, 1986: Fig. 4 [Austranema mexicanum]; Gourbault & Vincx, 1994: p 155 (Parapinnanema mexicanum n. comb.); Tchesunov (2014): 377 (erroneously reported as valid Austranema mexicanum); Gulf of Mexico. P. pectinatum (Wieser & Hopper, 1967); Wieser & Hopper, 1967: 286, Figs 53 a–d [Euchromadora pectinatum]; Inglis, 1969: p 187 (Austranema pectinatum n. comb.); Warwick & Coles, 1975: p 405 (Parapinnanema pectinatum n. comb.); Tchesunov (2014): 377 (erroneously reported as valid Austranema pectinatum); Florida. P. rhipsoides Gourbault & Vincx, 1994; Gourbault & Vincx, 1994: 150 –152, Fig. 7–8; Guadeloupe. P. r i t a e Gourbault & Vincx, 1994; Gourbault & Vincx, 1994: 147–149, Fig. 5–6; Guadeloupe. P. shirleyae (Coles, 1965); Coles, 1965: 182–184 fig 2, 8, 19 –21, 34 [Euchromadora shirleyae]; Inglis, 1969: p 187 (Austranema shirleyae n. comb.), 172 Figs 44 - 4 –6, 85– 90; Grimaldi-De Zio, 1968 p 347; Warwick & Coles, 1975: p 405 (Parapinnanema shirleyae n. comb.); Tchesunov (2014): 377 (erroneously reported as valid Austranema shirleyae); South Africa, Mediterranean Sea. P. wilsoni Inglis, 1969; Inglis, 1969: 194, Figs 51 –55, 66–75, 97– 98; Australia.Published as part of Semprucci, Federica & Sørensen, Martin V., 2014, A new species of Parapinnanema (Nematoda, Chromadoridae) from Dr Theodor Mortensen's Pacific Expedition 1914 – 16 with an identification key to the genus, pp. 501-512 in Zootaxa 3881 (6) on pages 503-504, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3881.6.1, http://zenodo.org/record/22770
Map of Persia
Relief shown by hachures.Scale approximately 1:5,632,000 (E 40°--E 74°/N 46°--N 22°)The firm Gall & Inglis was formed in 1847; map likely dates to the mid-19th century.Upper right margin: "XXXIX"
La politique des partis en Grande-Bretagne pendant la Révolution française. Essai de parcours bibliographique
M.A. Inglis James. La politique des partis en Grande-Bretagne pendant la Révolution française. Essai de parcours bibliographique. In: Annales historiques de la Révolution française, n°343, 2006. pp. 185-198
Data for: A long-term, high-latitude record of Eocene hydrological change in the Greenland region
The following supplementary information includes additional figures (Figure S1-S3) and datasets. Dataset S1, which is uploaded separately, contains 8 tables:Table 1: Temperature and precipitation data obtained via HadCM3LTable 2: Plant-derived n-alkane distributions at ODP Site 913 during EoceneTable 3: Plant-derived di- and triterpenoids at ODP Site 913 during the EoceneTable 4: Hopanoid thermal maturity parameters at ODP Site 913 during the EoceneTable 5: GDGT distributions and temperature estimates at ODP Site 913 during the EoceneTable 6: Hydrogen isotopic composition of leaf wax biomarkers at ODP Site 913 during the EoceneTable 7: Apparent fractionations between leaf wax and source water compared between major taxanomic categories in modern plantsTable 8: Estimates of modern-day precipitation δ2Hprecip for locations on the Greenland coast. Estimates are derived from the Online Isotopes in Precipitation Calculator (Bowen, 2016
Inglis (K.S.) Churches and the Working Classes in Victorian England
Séguy Jean. Inglis (K.S.) Churches and the Working Classes in Victorian England. In: Archives de sociologie des religions, n°17, 1964. p. 184
Development of a freehand three-dimensional radial endoscopic ultrasonography system
Oesophageal cancer is an aggressive malignancy with an overall five-year survival of 5-10% and
two-thirds of patients have irresectable disease at diagnosis. Accurate staging of oesophageal cancer is
important as survival closely correlates with the stage of the tumour, nodal involvement and presence
of metastases (TNM staging). Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) is currently the most reliable
modality for providing accurate T and N staging. Depending on findings of the staging, various
treatment options including endoscopic, oncological, and surgical treatments may be performed.
It was theorised that the development of three-dimensional radial endoscopic ultrasonography would
reduce the operator dependence of EUS and provide accurate dimensional and volume measurements
to aid planning and monitoring of treatment. This thesis investigates the development of a three
dimensional endoscopic ultrasound technique that can be used with the radial echoendoscopes.
Various agar-based tissue mimicking material (TMM) recipes were characterised using a scanning
acoustic macroscope to obtain the acoustic properties of attenuation, backscatter and speed of sound.
Using these results, a number of endoscopic ultrasound phantoms were developed for the in-vitro
investigation and evaluation of 3D-EUS techniques.
To increase my understanding of EUS equipment, the imaging and acoustic properties of the EUS
endoscopes were characterised using a pipe phantom and a hydrophone. The dual ‘single element’
mechanical and ‘multi-element’ electronic echoendoscopes were investigated. Measured imaging
properties included dead space, low contrast penetration, and pipe length. The measured acoustic
properties included transmitted beam plots, active working frequency and peak pressures.
Three-dimensional ultrasound techniques were developed for specific application to EUS. This
included the study of positional monitoring systems, reconstruction algorithms and measurement
techniques. A 3D-EUS system was developed using a Microscribe positional arm and frame grabber
card, to acquire the 3D dataset. A Matlab 3D-EUS toolbox was written to reconstruct and analyse the
volumes. The 3D-EUS systems were evaluated on the EUS phantom and in clinical cases.
The usefulness of the 3D-EUS systems was evaluated in a cohort of patients, who were routinely
investigated by conventional EUS for a variety of upper gastrointestinal pathology. 3D-EUS
accurately staged early tumours and provided the necessary anatomical information to facilitate
treatment. With regards to more advanced tumours, 3D-EUS was more accurate than EUS in T and N
staging. 3D-EUS gave useful anatomical details in a variety of benign conditions such as varicies and
GISTs
Inglis (K.S.) Churches and the Working Classes in Victorian England
Séguy Jean. Inglis (K.S.) Churches and the Working Classes in Victorian England. In: Archives de sociologie des religions, n°17, 1964. p. 184
Andrew Inglis Clark, letter from N. Jones clerk of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 14 Sept 1900
Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark from N. Jones, Clerk of the American Academy of Political and Social Science regarding his membership of the Academy and subscription to the Annals of the Academy - C4/C14
The temperature of the deep ocean is a robust proxy for global mean surface temperature during the Cenozoic
Reconstructing global mean surface temperature (GMST) is one of the key contributions that paleoclimate science can make in addressing societally relevant questions and is required to determine equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS). GMST has been derived from the temperature of the deep ocean (Td), with previous work suggesting a simple Td-GMST scaling factor of 1 prior to the Pliocene. However, this factor lacks a robust mechanistic basis, and indeed, is intuitively difficult to envisage given that polar amplification is a ubiquitous feature of past warm climate states and deep water overwhelmingly forms at high latitudes. Here, we interrogate whether and crucially, why, this relationship exists using a suite of curated data compilations and two sets of paleoclimate model simulations. We show that models and data are in full agreement that a 1:1 relationship is a good approximation. Taken together, the two sets of climate models suggest that (a) a lower sensitivity of SST in the season of deep water formation than high latitude mean annual SST in response to climate forcing, and moreover (b) a greater degree of land versus ocean surface warming are the two processes that act to counterbalance a possible polar amplification-derived bias on Td-derived GMST. Using this knowledge, we provide a new Cenozoic record of GMST. Our estimates are substantially warmer than similar previous efforts for much of the Paleogene and are thus consistent with a substantially higher-than-modern ECS during deep-time high CO2 climate states
H. Assu with J. Inglis, Assu of Cape Mudge. Recollections of a Coastal Indian Chief
Mauzé Marie. H. Assu with J. Inglis, Assu of Cape Mudge. Recollections of a Coastal Indian Chief. In: L'Homme, 1991, tome 31 n°119. p. 148
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