47,535 research outputs found

    Liang tiao lu.

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    姐姐 -- 鹽 -- 兩條路 -- 夜戲 -- 山芋 -- 邂逅 -- 酒船 -- 旁聽 -- 風塵 -- 天壤.聶紺弩著.Nie Gannu zhu.Jie jie -- Yan -- Liang tiao lu -- Ye xi -- Shan yu -- Xie hou -- Jiu chuan -- Pang ting -- Feng chen -- Tian Jang

    Nan Han cong lu

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    梁廷枏撰.框15.2 x 11.8公分, 8行17字, 白口, 單魚尾, 四單雙邊.綫裝, 一函.Liang Tingnan zhuan.Kuang 15.2 x 11.8 gong fen, 8 hang 17 zi, bai kou, dan yu wei, si dan shuang bian.Xian zhuang, yi han

    Dataset in support of the University of Southampton Doctoral Thesis 'Microstructural engineering for enhanced fatigue performance using laser powder bed fusion' by Anqi Liang.

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    Dataset in support of the University of Southampton Doctoral Thesis &#39;Microstructural engineering for enhanced fatigue performance using laser powder bed fusion&#39; by Anqi Liang. This dataset contains the original data of plots in PhD thesis. Related projects: Microstructural engineering for enhanced fatigue performance using laser powder bed fusion </span

    Proparholaspulus ishikawai Liang & Hu 1993

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    Proparholaspulus ishikawai Liang & Hu, 1993 Proparholaspulus ishikawai Liang & Hu, 1993: 63. Proparholaspulus ishikawaii (sic).— Bhattacharyya & Kheto, 2016: 636. Proparholaspulus ishikawai.— Quintero-Gutierrez & Halliday, 2021: 437. Description (Male) Idiosoma length 427–460 μm, width 216–240 μm, well-sclerotised, yellow-brown-coloured, narrow and oval.Published as part of Liu, Kai, Xie, Lixia, Lu, Wenzhi & Yan, Yi, 2022, Taxonomic notes on the predatory mite genus Proparholaspulus Ishikawa, 1980 and the first description of the male of Proparholaspulus ishikawai Liang & Hu 1993 (Acari: Parholaspididae), pp. 387-395 in Zootaxa 5092 (3) on page 387, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5092.3.9, http://zenodo.org/record/588144

    Kwangtung 1:50,000 [cartographic material] /

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    Various eds. Relief shown by contours and spot heights.; Sheets individually titled at top margin, e.g. Tang Cun = Tang-tsun.; Sheets individually numbered at top margin, e.g. Sheet 7621-II.; Original published: Beijing? : Jun shi wei yuan hui jun ling bu lu di ce liang zong ju, surveyed in 1927, published 1938.; Includes index map to adjoining sheets.; Some of National Library of Australia's copies mounted on linen.Alternate title: Guangdong 1:50,000Title on index map: Guangdong wu wan fen yi di xing tuAlternate title: Series L78

    Systolederus choui Liang & Jia 2012

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    7. Systolederus choui Liang & Jia, 2012 Systolederus choui Liang, 2012, Entomotaxonomia, 34(2): 142. Specimens examined: P. R. CHINA: 2&male;, 4&female;, Jiangxi: Jinggangshan, 2011-VII-03. Distribution: P. R. CHINA: Jiangxi.Published as part of Deng, Wei-An, Lu, Xiang-Yi, Zhao, Cong-Lin & Wu, Fei-Peng, 2019, A review of the genus Systolederus Bolivar (Orthoptera: Metrodorinae) from China, pp. 489-500 in Zootaxa 4585 (3) on page 496, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4585.3.5, http://zenodo.org/record/264021

    Arachniodes libingii Liang Zhang, N. T. Lu, sp. nov.

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    Arachniodes libingii Liang Zhang, N.T.Lu & T.T.Thanh, sp. nov., Fig. 1. Type: — CHINA. Hainan Province: Wuzhishan, elev. 1050 m, 18°54′5.69”N, 109°41′23.87”E, in broad-leaved evergreen forests, 14 December 2012, Liang Zhang 1621 (holotype CDBI!, isotype CDBI!). Diagnosis: This species is most similar to Arachniodes chinensis (Fig. 3: A, D) in having short creeping rhizomes, scales on basal stipes blackish brown, scales on fronds dense, black, appressed, and subulate, laminae 2-pinnate, and indusia entire, but the former has deltoid-oblong laminae and longer (up to 18 cm) caudate apices (vs. deltoid-ovate laminae and shorter caudate apices in the latter), and up to 8 pairs of pinnae (vs. often 2–4 pairs in the latter). Plant 57–67 cm high. Roots 7–9, 1– 9 cm × 0.2–0.5 mm. Rhizome short-creeping, 6.0 × 0.9 cm; densely scaly, brown when young, dark brown when mature, narrow filiform-lanceolate, 4–7 × 0.2–0.5 mm, entire. Stipes stramineous to brown, 27–30 cm × 2.5 mm; base densely scaly, dark brown, subulate, lanceolate, 4–11 × 0.1–0.9 mm, entire, apex shortly tortuous; upward densely scaly, scales appressed, black, subulate, 1.3–2.8 × 0.2 mm. Lamina 2- pinnatepinnatifid, dull green when dried, deltoid-oblong, papery, base acute or broad obtuse, apex abruptly acuminate to long caudate, up to 18 cm long; rachis 1.2–1.8 mm in diam., rachises and axes with dense scales abaxially and adaxially, scales appressed, subulate, similar to scales on distal stipes but smaller; pinnae 6 to 8 pairs, lowest pinnae deltoid, basal basiscopic ones slightly longer or elongated, upper pinnae lanceolate, 5.5–20 × 1.3–3.6 cm, base acute or obtuse, apex long, narrowly acuminate; pinnules 7–22 pairs, alternate, shortly stalked to sessile, oblong, 0.7–2.6 × 0.3–0.7 cm, with brown microscales abaxially, scales 0.2–0.5 mm, glabrous adaxially, base auricle, acute, apex acute or obtuse, aristate. Sori small, 0.7–1.5 mm, terminal on veinlets, 1–13 pairs per ultimate segment, medial between margins and mid-veins, fugacious; sporangia dark brown; indusia ca. 0.5 mm in diam., brown, membranous or thickly membranous, entire; spores unseen. Etymology:— The specific epithet, libingii, is in honor of Dr. Li-Bing Zhang, a botanist based at Missouri Botanical Garden, USA, for his great contributions to pteridology of China and worldwide. He was also one of the thesis advisors of both N.T.L. and L.Z. Geographical distribution:— The new species currently occurs in Hainan and Guangdong, the two southernmost provinces of China. It is possible that Arachniodes libingii also occurs in other provinces of southern China. Additional material examined:— CHINA. Guangdong Province: Lianzhou, elev. 255 m, 25°2′37.39"N, 112°25′12.65"E, 27 September 2010, Liang Zhang 1199 (CDBI!); Hainan Province: Qiongzhong, Tiedingling, elev. 1100 m, 18°56′N, 109°43′E, 26 May 2002, Dong S . Y. 647 (PE!); Wuzhishan, elev. 1400 m, 18°53′N, 109°41′E, 17 December 2004, Wuzhishan Fern Survey 116 (PE!); Wuzhishan, elev. 960 m, 18°52′N, 109°40′E, 22 December 2004, Wuzhishan Fern Survey 243 (PE!). Notes:— Arachniodes libingii could be confused with A. chinensis and A. yaoshanensis due to their morphological similarities. Comparing to the two species, A. libingii differs from A. chinensis in having more pairs of pinnae and lamina apices abruptly acuminate to long caudate (Fig. 3: A, B), and differs from A. yaoshanensis in having ovate-oblong laminae, rhombic-oblong pinnules, and densely black scales on rachis and petioles. Our previously phylogenetic analysis found somewhat distant relationships among the three species, with A. libingii being resolved in the Vietnamensis Group of the Arachniodes Clade, A. chinensis in the SC (Simplicior - Chinensis) Group of the Arachniodes Clade, and A. yaoshanensis in the Assamicae Clade (Lu et al. 2019a). The most closely related species to A. libingii is an unknown species from Japan and Taiwan Island. They together formed a lineage resolved as sister to A. vietnamensis.Published as part of Lu, Ngan Thi, Nguyen, Linh Phuong, Le, Chi Toan, Nguyen, Thanh Trung & Zhang, Liang, 2021, Arachniodes libingii sp. nov. and A. vietnamensis sp. nov. (Dryopteridaceae), two new ferns from southern China and central Vietnam, pp. 256-262 in Phytotaxa 522 (3) on pages 257-259, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.522.3.9, http://zenodo.org/record/556048

    Erratum: Osteopontin Deficiency Alters Biliary Homeostasis and Protects against Gallstone Formation

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    Scientific Reports 6: Article number: 30215; published online: 03 August 2016; updated: 22 March 2017. The original version of this Article contained an error in the order of author names, which were incorrectly given as ‘Jing Lin, Wei-qing Shao, Zong-you Chen, Wen-wei Zhu, Lu Lu, Duan Cai, Lun-xiu Qin, Hu-liang Jia, Ming Lu &amp; Jin-hong Chen’.</jats:p

    Ksavers Andermanis – LU Akadēmiskās nozīmītes meta autors

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    Raksts tapis kā turpinājums 2024. gada septembra mēneša priekšmetam par Latvijas Universitātes (LU) Akadēmisko nozīmīti, kur uzmanība pievērsta LU Akadēmiskās nozīmītes meta autoram, LU Arhitektūras fakultātes studentam un novadpētniekam, vācbaltietim Ksaveram Andermanim. K. Andermanis ne tikai ir sniedzis ieguldījumu Latvijas etnogrāfijas pētniecībā, bet arī LU simbolu izgatavošanā, kas mūsdienās saglabā savu unikalitāti un vērtību. Meta autora piederība pie LU saimes sakņojusies jau viņa ģimenē, jo viņa tēvs ir absolvējis Rīgas Politehnisko institūtu, LU priekšteci starpkaru periodā, un strādājis LU Saimniecības padomē par inspektoru.The article is a continuation of the September 2024 Museum Object on the Academic Badge of the University of Latvia (UL), which focuses on the author of the UL Academic Badge design, the student of the Faculty of Architecture and local historian, the Baltic German Ksavers Andermanis. K. Andermanis has not only contributed to the research of Latvian ethnography, but also to the production of symbols of the UL, which today retain their uniqueness and value. The author's belonging to the UL family is rooted in his family, as his father graduated from the Riga Polytechnic Institute, the predecessor of UL during the interwar period, and worked as an inspector at the UL Economical council
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