4,933 research outputs found
Barclay-Featherstone Office Entrance, Jan. 1937
J. A. Barclay, Barclay-Featherstone Office Entrance (716 Newhouse Bldg.), 1/27/37
Disposition form from Barclay to Gerhardt
Disposition form from Major Gordon Barclay, Executive Special Group G-1, to Executive to Assistant Secretary of War requesting a reply to Earl Finch's letter
Barclay, A L, VX4866
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/370099Surname: BARCLAY
Given Name(s) or Initials: A L
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: VX4866
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 1839180359
Item: [2016.0049.02426] "Barclay, A L, VX4866
Introduction
In this volume we compile and comment on a collection of some of the most important works on nascent entrepreneurship that have appeared in the last two decades. We do not go further back than that because up until1992 hardly any systematic research on the pre-operational stage of business creation was undertaken. In that year, the terms ’nascent entrepreneur’ and ’nascent venture’ appear for the first time in the research literature (Reynolds and Miller, Chapter l, 1992; Reynolds and White, 1992). This signals the emergence of a new research paradigm designed to study? business creation processes empirically at very early stages, before an operational firm has come into existence. The most central feature of this type of research is that it identifies a statistically representative sample of nascent entrepreneurs (NEs)- people engaged in ongoing but not yet operational business start-ups- via screening interviews with a very large random sample of adults. The overarching research questions pursued in this emerging research tradition are the following: 1. What proportion of individuals (in various population subgroups) are trying to start a new business at any given time? 2. What led them to engage in the creation of a new business? 3. What characteristics and behaviors associated with the founder(s), the venture, the environment and the process are associated with persistence, progress and success in trying to start a new business?Katie Barclay and Deborah Simonto
Et voilà / Eddie Barclay et son grand orchestre
Comprend : Et voilà : fox / R. Lucchesi, E. Barclay, M. Legrand - Quand je monte chez toi : fox / J. Broussolle, H. Salvador - Place Blanche : fox / B. Vitan, H. Salvador - Ne m'laissez pas comme ça : fox / F. Charpin, C. Kelman, B. Michel - Sermolette : fox / N. Adderley, Julian Adderley - Numéro 13 : fox / E. Barclay, J. P. Landreau - Avec ces yeux-là : fox / C. Aznavour, E. Barclay, M. Legrand - Tu joues avec le feu : fox / B. Michel, A. Barclay, M. Legrand - Quelque chose en toi : fox / B. Michel, E. Barclay, R. le Sénéchal - Un P'tit bout de femme : fox / R. Rodgers, L. Hart, B. Michel - Pas moi : fox / M. Pon, F. Charpin - Craven : fox / E. Barclay, J. P. LandreauBnF-Partenariats, Collection sonore - BelieveContient une table des matière
Homestead at Marrakai
Homestead at Marrakai or Humpty Doo Station, clad with bamboo. L-R: James Barclay Watts, Danny Hunt, Jack Haren, Vera Haren, ?, ?, Don Hunt, ?, ?, ?.Watts, James Barclay.Date:1938
RAAF Advanced operational base
RAAF Advanced operational base. Buildings are (L) control building, (centre front) barracks, (centre rear) married quarters, (R rear) workshop and fuel tank. Date is early 1940s.Watts, James Barclay
Ivierhipidius paradoxus Barclay & Sw 2015, sp. nov.
Ivierhipidius paradoxus sp. nov. (Figs 1–2, 9–10, 12) Type locality. Central America, Belize, Cayo District, Chiquibul Forest Reserve, Las Cuevas field station. Type material. HOLOTYPE: J, ‘ BELIZE, June 2006 / Chiquibul Forest Res. / Las Cuevas field station / 88°59’W; 16°44’N / James Kitson leg. // BMNH{E} / 2006-141 / Kitson & Gillett // Malaise Trapʼ (BMNH). PARATYPES: 1 J, same data as holotype (NMPC); 4 JJ, ‘ BELIZE, May 2010 / Chiquibul Forest Res. / Las Cuevas field station / 88°59’W; 16°44’N / Malaise Trap // Barclay, Mendel, Quicke & Broad leg.ʼ (BMNH); 1 J, ‘ BELIZE, Chiquibul Forest Res. / Las Cuevas field station / 88°59’W; 16°44’N // FIT [Flight Intercept Trap] 11 / 5.8.94.ʼ (MAIC); 1 J same data except ʻMT [Malaise trap] 12 / 16.9.94.ʼ (BMNH); 1 J, same data except ‘MT 11L / 24.9.94.ʼ (BMNH); 1 J, same data except ‘MT 12 / 14-17.v.96 / Wk 80ʼ (BMNH). 1 J, ‘ HONDURAS: Ocotepeque / R. B. [Reserva Biologica] Guisayote / 23 May 1995 / R. Turnbowʼ (RHTC). Diagnosis. Male. Length (holotype) 4.5 mm (combined length of head, pronotum and elytra measured individually), greatest width 1.5 mm across elytral shoulders. Entire beetle foxy orange-brown except antennomeres 2–11 darkened, and elytra gradually infuscated, becoming black at tip, elytral darkening may extend to whole apical half of elytra in some specimens. Carina of vertex emarginate in centre, giving a bilobed appearance when viewed frontally or posteriorly. Head, thorax and elytra coarsely and evenly punctured, puncturation becoming more wrinkled and confluent towards apices of elytra, and covered in long semirecumbent yellowish pubescence. Legs long, covered in long yellowish pubescence. Base of second ventrite, where it is overlapped by the translucent apical margin of the first ventrite, covered by dense brush of setae. Differential diagnosis. See the key below. Collection circumstances. All individuals with known collecting circumstances were collected in unbaited flight interception devices, Malaise traps and flight intercept traps (the former collecting insects that fly upwards when encountering a vertical obstacle, the latter insect that drop down). The traps were placed in tropical rainforest probably at ground level. Extensive light trapping in the Belize locality at the same time did not collect any individuals, suggesting that the flying males are not attracted to light. Specimens have been collected in May, June, August and September. Etymology. The specific name, the Latin adjective paradoxus (- a, - um), refers to the paradoxical nature of these beetles, in that only males are known, no life history is known, and they have remained undescribed for a long period of time. It is also a homage to the first-described member of Ripiphoridae, the Palaearctic Metoecus paradoxus (Linnaeus, 1761). Distribution. Most specimens of Ivierhipidius paradoxus sp. nov. are from the Chiquibul Forest of southern Belize, close to the Guatemalan border. One paratype is from Ocotepeque in western Honduras. The species probably also occurs in adjoining countries. It is the only member of the genus so far known from north of the Isthmus of Panama.Published as part of Barclay, Maxwell V. L. & Sw, London, 2015, Ivierhipidius, an enigmatic new Neotropical genus of Ripiphoridae (Coleoptera: Tenebrionoidea) with four new species, pp. 691-701 in Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 55 (2) on pages 695-696, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.530371
Emotion, ritual and power in Europe, 1200-1920: family, state and church
This volume spans the fourteenth to nineteenth centuries, across Europe and its empires, and brings together historians, art historians, literary scholars and anthropologists to rethink medieval and early modern ritual.Merridee L. Bailey and Katie Barclay, editor
Hintonelmis guianensis Polizei & Barclay 2019, sp. nov.
Hintonelmis guianensis sp. nov. (Figure 1 (a–c)) Type locality Guyana [NEW COUNTRY RECORD FOR GENUS] Male holotype. Labels: [♂], [Holotype], [GUYANA, Essequibo/Kaieteur Falls/rest house area/ October, 1991], [HOLOTYPE / Hintonelmis guianensis / Polizei & Barclay], [NHMUK010846331] (BMNH). Paratypes. Labels: 1 specimen. [♀], [BRITISH GUIANA / Ikuribisi / x.1948 – iii 1949 / D.J. Atkinson / At light], [NHMUK010583992], [PARATYPE / Hintonelmis guianensis / Polizei & Barclay]. (BMNH). 3 specimens (1♂ and 2 undetermined sex): [GUYANA, Essequibo / Kaieteur Falls /rest house area/ October, 1991], [PARATYPE / Hintonelmis guianensis / Polizei & Barclay]. (2 in MZSP, 1 in BMNH). (MZSP 35133–35134). Diagnosis Body elongate, moderately convex, yellowish with dark-brown stripes. Pronotum with one brown stripe on each side of the impression, not reaching the posterior margin, and one transverse stripe near to the anterior margin, reaching the lateral margin. Elytra with stripes. Prosternal process with a transverse carina in the median portion. Aedeagus five times as long as wide, distinctly narrowed at apical portion, with apex slightly rounded. Description Body elongate, moderately convex. Yellowish colour with dark-brown stripes. Total length 2.12 mm, greatest width (elytra) 0.67 mm. Head. Partially retractable without impressions, surface with microgranulation. Eyes black, slightly projecting laterally, separated from each other by one eye-width. Antenna filiform, reaching the base of the elytra, with 11 antennomeres, distal antennomere swollen and longer than the preceding, with an acute apex. Clypeus lightbrown, concave, granulated, with some scattered recumbent hairs. Frontoclypeal suture straight. Labrum rectangular, large and broad, with anterior margin strongly rounded and surface like the clypeus. Maxillary and labial palps short, yellowish. Maxillary palps four segmented; labial palps three segmented, yellowish in colour. Thorax. Pronotum as long as wide, anterior margin flexed upwards, moderately convex, lateral margin black, moderately sinuous, smooth, anterior angle acute, and posterior margin sinuous, strongly concave near to scutellum. Pronotal surface microgranulated, with a few golden setae on the apical anterior portion of the disc; sinuous sublateral carina present, very short, on the posterior third of pronotum; short and deep longitudinal impression on disc, with one depression on each side of posterior region, one brown stripe on each side of the impression, not reaching the posterior margin, and one transversal stripe near to the anterior margin, reaching the lateral margin. Elytra longer than wide, anterior margin sinuous, lateral margin moderately arcuate, humeral angles broadly rounded and elevated, apex moderately produced and broadly rounded. Median suture elevated. Surface punctured, punctures confluent, forming rows, separated by double rows of long light-coloured setae. Carinae on intervals 3 (on anterior 1/5), 6 (on anterior half) and 8 (on posterior half); surface with three dark-brown stripes, one on intervals 2–3 occupying anterior 1/3 of elytra, other on the median portion of the elytra on the 3–5 intervals, and another one on 2–8 intervals, on the apex of the elytra. Scutellum yellow, long and narrow, without punctures, with double rows of golden setae. Epipleura covered with tomentum. Hind wings macropterous. Prosternum covered by tomentum, forming a belt with the anterior portion of the hypomerum, surface with microgranulations. Prosternal process as long as wide, reaching the coxae, with moderately sinuous posterior margin, surface with microgranulation and a transverse carina in the median portion. Mesoventrite straight, with a shallow depression to receive the prosternal process, surface covered by tomentum. Metaventrite very broad, larger than prosternum and mesosternum combined, lateral margins covered by tomentum and metasternal disc glossy, without punctures, carinae or setae. Legs covered by tomentum. Coxae moderately globular. Femora long with the apex moderately thin. Tibiae long, very thin, with rows of fringes on the distal three quarters. Tarsi long, with a 5–5–5 tarsal formula, without setae, last tarsomere larger than the preceding tarsomeres combined. Claws long, flat, feebly dentate at base, darker than the rest of the leg. Abdomen. Five ventrites covered by tomentum, absent only in the median portion of the first segment. Margins anterior and posterior moderately arcuate. Lateral margin moderately rounded. Fifth sternite produced apically, with several gold setae and with lateral margin slightly produced posterolaterally. Genitalia. (Figure 1 (c)) Without punctures or setae. Phallobase three times as long as wide. Parameres long and narrow, reaching 4/5 of the length of the aedeagus. Aedeagus five times as long as wide, distinctly narrowed in apical part, with apex slightly rounded. Female External morphology similar to male. Etymology The specific epithet refers to the country where this species was collected. This is the first record of Hintonelmis from Guyana. Comments. In the key for species of Hintonelmis (Hinton, 1971), Hintonelmis guianensis sp. nov. will key to Hintonelmis perfectus (Grouvelle, 1908) because of the similar carinae on the elytra, tibia with tomentum, trochanters and median portion of the first ventrite without tomentum, but it can be distinguished by the following characteristics: H. guianensis is yellowish with dark-brown stripes; pronotal longitudinal stripe not reaching the posterior margin, and the transversal stripe reaching the lateral margin and reaching the anterior margins of the elytra, the pronotum only has setae in the anterior distal portion, and the tibiae are recumbent with tomentum without hairs. However, Hintonelmis perfectus is brown with dark-brown stripes; the pronotum stripes reach the posterior margin; the antennae extend beyond the anterior margin of the elytra; the pronotum surface is covered with setae, and the tibiae covered with tomentum and long golden hairs.Published as part of Polizei, Thiago T. S. & Barclay, Maxwell V. L., 2019, The genus Hintonelmis (Coleoptera: Elmidae: Elminae), new species and records, pp. 2949-2959 in Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) (J. Nat. Hist.) 52 (45 - 46) on pages 2952-2954, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2018.1560512, http://zenodo.org/record/517814
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