1,668 research outputs found
Paper Illustrations with Author Lindsay Ward
Meet Lindsay Ward, author and illustratior of When Blue Met Egg . Lindsay will talk about her children\u27s book and then show kids in grades 3-5, how to create illustrations out of cut paper and mixed media. Bring her book if you would like an autograph
Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell 1885
Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885 (Figs 3–4, 6, 12, 14, 16, 20, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44) Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885: 19, figs 12–14 Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Neumann 1899: 128. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Neumann 1904: 451. Ixodes (Ixodes) eudyptidis eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Neumann 1911: 21. Ixodes neumanni Nuttall & Warburton, 1911: 217, figs 213–214. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Nuttall 1916: 294, 320. Ixodes neumanni Nuttall & Warburton, 1911; Nuttall 1916: 294, 320 [as junior synonym]. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Cooley & Kohls, 1945: 223 [as junior synonym of I. uriae White, 1852]. Ixodes neumanni Nuttall & Warburton, 1911; Zumpt 1952: 18. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Dumbleton 1953: 11, pl. 3, figs 1–4. In part: female & nymph. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Arthur 1955: 18, fig. 1. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Arthur 1956: 281, 296. Ixodes neumanni Nuttall & Warburton, 1911; Arthur 1956: 296, 301, fig. 69. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Roberts 1960: 399, fig. 1. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Dumbleton 1961: 761, figs 1–7. In part. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Dumbleton 1963: 74, 76, figs 14, 18. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Roberts 1964: 3. In part. Ixodes (Ixodes) eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Senevet & Ripert 1967: 94, 118. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Roberts 1969: 43, fig. 3. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Roberts 1970: 20, fig. 5. In part: male only. Ixodes (Multidentatus) eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Clifford et al. 1973: 496. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Heath 1977: 30, figs 1–2. In part. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Bishop & Heath 1998: 30. In part. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Heath 2010: 16. In part. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Heath et al. 2011: 59. In part. Ixodes eudyptidis Maskell, 1885; Guglielmone et al. 2014: 75. Type host: “In the gape of the penguin” (Maskell 1885: 20) = Eudyptes pachyrhynchus G.R. Gray, 1845 Remarks. Dumbleton (1953: 24) lists Eudyptes pachyrhynchus as the host of the ticks described by Maskell and collected by A. Reischek at Dusky Sound, Fiordland. However, Reischek (1885: 194) only mentions “… an insect similar to the Membranacea inside the edges of the bill, …”. The taxon “Membranaceae” is listed by Stark (1828: 320) as a “Tribe” within the Hemiptera containing the bedbug genus Cimex Linnaeus, 1758 only. Although ticks and bedbugs are very different animals, their broad morphological and feeding similarities would justify Reischek’s (1885) identification. Although we have not been able to examine any tick from E. pachyrhynchus, other than the types, we accept the designation of this penguin species as the type host. Interestingly, Reischek (1885: 194) also records Eudyptula minor (J.R. Forster, 1781) from Dusky Sound, the type locality of I. eudyptidis, but without mentioning any external parasite. Material examined. Type specimens: Three syntype females (Reg. 2015.162.10; 2015.162.12–13) and six syntype nymphs (Reg. 2015.162.11; 2015.162.14–18), from Eudyptes pachyrhynchus (see above), held in the collection of the Canterbury Museum, Christchurch, New Zealand [CMNZ]. Although Dumbleton (1953: 12) wrote: “Maskell's type material (2 females and 7 nymphs) is in the Canterbury Museum, as is one female co-type and a nymph determined by Nuttall.”, i.e. 11 specimens in total, we have located only nine specimens (3 females and 6 nymphs) and we do not know the whereabouts of the two missing nymphs. Designation of a lectotype: Considering that we have identified and described a species morphologically close to I. eudyptidis, with the type series of the latter composed of syntype females and nymphs, we deemed it advisable to designate a lectotype to make the identification of I. eudyptidis unequivocal. Therefore, we hereby designate one female syntype, with Registration Number 2015.162.10 as the lectotype of I. eudyptidis. All other syntypes: two females and six nymphs with Registration Numbers 2015.162.11–18 become paralectotypes. All types are held in the collection of the CMNZ. Non-type material from New Zealand. Ex Eudyptula minor: 1♀, Little Barrier Island, Hauraki Gulf, Feb. 1958, J.S. Watson; 1♀, 2N, Motunau Island, Pegasus Bay, 5 Dec. 1961, C.J. Lindsay; 20L, Titahi Bay, Wellington, 17 Dec. 1964, no collector (DM 111B68/1); 10N, Puponga, near Cape Farewell, 6 Oct. 1969, F.C. Kinsky; 1♀, Palmerston, Otago, 21 Oct. 1969, no collector; 82N, 13 L, Pakawai Beach, Collingwood, Golden Bay, 23 Jun. 1970, E.M. Gillespie; 2♀, 6N, N. side Croiselles Harbour, 3 Dec. 1973, J.I. Townsend; 1N, Hokio Beach, Horowhenua, 8 Feb. 1975, no collector; 8L, Southland, 1975, no collector; 7N, 5L, Cook Strait area, Oct. 1977, no collector; 5N, 100L, Mason Bay, Stewart Island, 1 Jan. 1980, H. Howarth; 6♀, 4N, 141L, Raumati Beach, Paraparaumu, Kapiti Coast, 22 Jan. 1980, P. McKenzie; 1♀, 6N, Somes Island, Wellington Harbour, 3 Dec. 1981, A.C.G. Heath; 1♀, 1N,>100L, Little Totara River, West Coast, 26 Dec. 1981, D. Onley; 10♀, 2 N, 1 L Taiaroa Heads, Otago, 30 Dec. 1982 – 10 Jan. 1983, R. Gales; 2♀, Taiaroa Heads, Otago, 8 Jan. 1983, R. Gales; 4N, Ward Beach, Marlborough, 4 Jan. 1986, no collector; 1♂, 3♀, 2N, Somes Island, Wellington Harbour, 5 Dec. 1987, J. Grehan; 19♀, 7N, Pukehina Beach, Bay of Plenty, 7 Jan. 1996, R. Tully; numerous N & L, Muriwai Beach, Auckland, 6 Aug. 2000, E.H. Kuschel; 6♀, 2♂, 10N, 2L North End Pipikaretu Beach, Otago Peninsula, 26–29 Nov. 2004, H. Ratz; 1♀, Tiritiri Matangi Island, Hauraki Gulf, 30 Oct. 2005, J. Geurts; 1♀, Tiritiri Matangi I., Hauraki Gulf, 30 Oct. 2005, J. Geurts; 1 N, Tiritiri Matangi I., Hauraki Gulf, 30 May 2006, J. Geurts; 1♀ (ex nest), Tiritiri Matangi I., Hauraki Gulf, no date, J. Geurts. 2♀, 6N, Tiritiri Matangi Island, Hauraki Gulf, 15 Nov. 2005, no collector; 1N, Tiritiri Matangi Island, Hauraki Gulf, 30 Apr. 2006, J. Geurts; 1♀, Tiritiri Matangi Island, Hauraki Gulf, no date, J. Geurts; 1♀, 1♂, 1N, 1L, Pilot's Beach, Taiaroa Heads, Otago, 28 Aug. 2006, R.P. Cane, A.E. Snell & G. Mackereth; 1♀, Ohope Beach, Bay of Plenty, 9 Nov. 2006, R. Tully; 2♀, 8N, Takaka, Nelson, 13 Dec. 2007, E. Schoener; 6♀ (one with malformed scutum), Matata Beach, Bay of Plenty, 18 Jan. 2008, R. Tully; 3♀, Somes Island, Wellington Harbour, 15 Dec. 2009, R. Cotter; 2♀, Ohope Beach, Bay of Plenty, 1 Feb. 2011, R. Tully; 5♀, 4N,1L, Buckland Beach, Auckland, 23 Oct. 2013, M. Robertson; 1♀, Motuara Island, 23 Mar. 2015, no collector; 1♀, Motuara Island, 22 Sep. 2015, no collector; 1♀, Motuara Island, 8 Oct. 2015, no collector. \ Ex Megadyptes antipodes (Hombron & Jacquinot, 1841): 1♀, Sandfly Bay, Otago, 20 Nov. 2000, D. Nelson. Ex "penguin": 1♀, 1N, Auckland, 29 Jan. 1987, G. Parkin; 1♀, Taylor's Mistake, 9 Feb. 1998, J.R. Kucera & R.L.C. Pilgrim. Non-type material from Australia. Ex Eudyptula minor: 1♀, Little Green Island, Furneaux Group, Tasmania, Jan. 1952, J.H. Calaby (ANIC 2090); 1♀, Port Davey, Tasmania, 20 Feb. 1959, R.H. Green (ANIC); 4♀, Deal Island, East Cove, Tasmania, 22 Dec. 1971, J. Whinray (ANIC); 4N, Tasmania, Jan. 1985, no collector (ANIC 2075); 1♀, Diamond Island, Tasmania, Feb. 1985, R. Gales (ANIC 2078); 6 ♀, Phillip Island, Victoria, Aug. 1993, R. Norman (ANIC 2093); 2♀, 1N, Phillip Island, Victoria, 25 Aug. 2010, K. O'Sullivan (ANIC 2095); 3♀, 2♂, Phillip Island, Bass Strait, Victoria, 18–20 Nov. 2014, K. Moon (ANIC); 1♀, Marian Beach, Tasmania, no date, no collector (ANIC 2074).Published as part of Palma, Ricardo L., 2017, A new species of tick (Acari: Ixodidae) from seabirds in New Zealand and Australia, previously misidentified as Ixodes eudyptidis, pp. 285-314 in Zootaxa 4324 (2) on pages 294-299, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4324.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/99774
Longitudinal patterns of behavioral, emotional, and social difficulties and self-concept in adolescents with a history of specific language impairment
Purpose: This study explored the prevalence and stability of behavioral difficulties and self-concepts between 8 and 17 years in a sample of children with a history of specific language impairment (SLI). We investigated whether earlier behavioral, emotional and social difficulties (BESD), self-concepts, language, and literacy abilities predicted behavioral difficulties and self-concepts at 16/17 years.
Method: In this prospective longitudinal study, 65 students were followed up with teacher behavior ratings and individual assessments of language, literacy, and self-concepts at 8, 10, 12, 16, and 17 years.
Results: The students had consistently higher levels of five domains of BESD, which had different trajectories over time, and poorer scholastic competence, whose trajectory also varied over time. Earlier language ability did not predict later behavioral difficulties or self-concepts but the prediction of academic self-concept at 16 by literacy at 10 years approached significance.
Conclusions: We demonstrate the importance of distinguishing domains of behavioral difficulties and self-concept. Language, when measured at 8 or 10 years, was not a predictor of behavior or self-concepts at 16 years, or of self-concepts at 17 years. The study stresses the importance of practitioners addressing academic abilities and different social-behavioral domains in delivering support for adolescents with SLI
Dr. Katherine Lindsay
Photograph of Dr. Katherine "Kate" Lindsay standing next to a rose bush. According to a verso note, this photograph was taken at a Sanitarium in Boulder, Colorado.
Katharine “Kate” Lindsay was the first female Seventh-day Adventist physician and medical missionary. An educator, professor, and author, Lindsay was a leader in the development of the first Seventh-day Adventist school of nursing.
At the age of eighteen, she enrolled in an institution in New Jersey that provided training to nurses. She graduated two years later and went on to the University of Michigan where she graduated with a medical degree around 1875. Lindsay went on an overseas mission to South Africa, where she assisted medical and nursing staff. When she returned to the United States in 1900, Lindsay was called to serve at the Colorado Sanitarium in Boulder, Colorado. For twenty years, she was an active member
of the sanitarium medical staff and faculty. Lindsay was eighty years old when she died in her home on March 31, 1923.
In 1936, the College of Medical Evangelists (now Loma Linda University) Board of Trustees, upon recommendation by their School of Nursing faculty, named the original 1910 Loma Linda “girls’ dormitory,” Kate Lindsay Hall.9 x 14 c
Malaysian author Kemala talks with famous Australian poet Professor A.D. Hope during his visit to the Australian National Playwrights Conference in Canberra, 1973 [picture] /
Condition: Good, glued to card.; Inscriptions: "Joint writing venture brings Malaysian author to Australia. Malaysian author Ahmad Kamal Abdulla arrived in Canberra, Australia's national capital, on March 6 as part of a three-week visit to Australia to obtain Australian Government assistance for joint works between Australian and Malaysian writers. During his visit the author, who writes under the name Kamala, held talks with the Australian Council for the Arts and the Australian Commonwealth Literary Fund and met several Australian playwrights and poets who appeared in favour of the idea. In Canberra he attended the Australian National Playwrights Conference at the Australian National University and visited the Canberra College of Advanced Education. Kemala, who is secretary of Gapena, the Malaysian National Writers Federation, also visited Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth."--Printed on label on reverse.; News and Information Bureau biographical note attached to record vn3664293.; Title devised by cataloguer from inscription on reverse.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3664392
Dr. Katherine Lindsay
Katharine “Kate” Lindsay was the first female Seventh-day Adventist physician and medical missionary. An educator, professor, and author, Lindsay was a leader in the development of the first Seventh-day Adventist school of nursing.
At the age of eighteen, she enrolled in an institution in New Jersey that provided training to nurses. She graduated two years later and went on to the University of Michigan where she graduated with a medical degree around 1875. Lindsay went on an overseas mission to South Africa, where she assisted medical and nursing staff. When she returned to the United States in 1900, Lindsay was called to serve at the Colorado Sanitarium in Boulder, Colorado. For twenty years, she was an active member of the sanitarium medical staff and faculty. Lindsay was eighty years old when she died in her home on March 31, 1923.
In 1936, the College of Medical Evangelists (now Loma Linda University) Board of Trustees, upon recommendation by their School of Nursing faculty, named the original 1910 Loma Linda “girls’ dormitory,” Kate Lindsay Hall.10.5 x 15 c
Dr. Katherine Lindsay
Katharine “Kate” Lindsay was the first female Seventh-day Adventist physician and medical missionary. An educator, professor, and author, Lindsay was a leader in the development of the first Seventh-day Adventist school of nursing.
At the age of eighteen, she enrolled in an institution in New Jersey that provided training to nurses. She graduated two years later and went on to the University of Michigan where she graduated with a medical degree around 1875. Lindsay went on an overseas mission to South Africa, where she assisted medical and nursing staff. When she returned to the United States in 1900, Lindsay was called to serve at the Colorado Sanitarium in Boulder, Colorado. For twenty years, she was an active member
of the sanitarium medical staff and faculty. Lindsay was eighty years old when she died in her home on March 31, 1923.
In 1936, the College of Medical Evangelists (now Loma Linda University) Board of Trustees, upon recommendation by their School of Nursing faculty, named the original 1910 Loma Linda “girls’ dormitory,” Kate Lindsay Hall.13 x 18 c
Dr. Katherine Lindsay
Katharine “Kate” Lindsay was the first female Seventh-day Adventist physician and medical missionary. An educator, professor, and author, Lindsay was a leader in the development of the first Seventh-day Adventist school of nursing.
At the age of eighteen, she enrolled in an institution in New Jersey that provided training to nurses. She graduated two years later and went on to the University of Michigan where she graduated with a medical degree around 1875. Lindsay went on an overseas mission to South Africa, where she assisted medical and nursing staff. When she returned to the United States in 1900, Lindsay was called to serve at the Colorado Sanitarium in Boulder, Colorado. For twenty years, she was an active member
of the sanitarium medical staff and faculty. Lindsay was eighty years old when she died in her home on March 31, 1923.
In 1936, the College of Medical Evangelists (now Loma Linda University) Board of Trustees, upon recommendation by their School of Nursing faculty, named the original 1910 Loma Linda “girls’ dormitory,” Kate Lindsay Hall.6 x 10.5 c
Alexis Lindsay Interview, October 30, 2013
SUMMARY OF INTERVIEW: In this interview, Claire Davis talks with Alexis Lindsay, the Special Events and Communications Manager at Covenant House Washington. Ms. Lindsay talks about why youth come to Covenant House and the demographics of the homeless youth population in Washington, DC. Ms. Lindsay also reflects on how to end youth homelessness and the types of services that Covenant House Washington provides for youth. PROJECT’S OBJECTIVES: The interviews conducted as part of the DC Oral History and Social Justice Project record how unhoused residents of the greater DC area view the history of homelessness – how did homelessness become such an entrenched part of the city. The interviews will be used to create critical dialogue among people who are currently unhoused in Washington, DC, and then they may be used to assist future advocacy efforts
Dr. Katherine Lindsay
Katharine “Kate” Lindsay was the first female Seventh-day Adventist physician and medical missionary. An educator, professor, and author, Lindsay was a leader in the development of the first Seventh-day Adventist school of nursing.
At the age of eighteen, she enrolled in an institution in New Jersey that provided training to nurses. She graduated two years later and went on to the University of Michigan where she graduated with a medical degree around 1875. Lindsay went on an overseas mission to South Africa, where she assisted medical and nursing staff. When she returned to the United States in 1900, Lindsay was called to serve at the Colorado Sanitarium in Boulder, Colorado. For twenty years, she was an active member
of the sanitarium medical staff and faculty. Lindsay was eighty years old when she died in her home on March 31, 1923.
In 1936, the College of Medical Evangelists (now Loma Linda University) Board of Trustees, upon recommendation by their School of Nursing faculty, named the original 1910 Loma Linda “girls’ dormitory,” Kate Lindsay Hall.11 x 16 c
- …
