201,797 research outputs found
JRSE-CSI-Manning
Data files in support of article in Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, entitled "A novel clear-sky index for color imagery used in short-term irradiance forecasting" by Jeff Manning and Ross Baldick.</p
Preface
Preface. In L. Jennings, P. T. Jewitt, M. Souto-Manning & J. Wilson (Eds.). Sites of Possibility: Critical Dialogue In and Out of School. Provides chapter outlines and discussions of definitions, relevance and history of critical literacy
Hesperantha secunda Goldblatt & J. C. Manning
<i> 4.1. <i>H. secunda</i> Goldblatt & J.C. Manning in Bothalia 43: 150 (2013)</i> <p> Described in 2013 from a single collection made in 1980 on the northern Roggeveld Escarpment west of Middelpos, <i>H. secunda</i> is recognized by the secund spike of relatively small, nodding flowers with unusually short style branches, ± 4 mm long reaching to the base or lower fourth of the anthers in the closed flower (Goldblatt and Manning, 2013). The slightly succulent foliage leaves are sparsely hairy and have thickened margins and main veins. We discovered a second population of the species in September 2013 on southern slopes of the Keiskie Mtns SE of Calvinia (Fig. 2). Flowers in plants maintained in water opened ±19:00 and produced a strong, somewhat acrid scent. We confirmed this phenology in a second population close to the type locality, Farm Knechtsbank, in a wet meadow at the top of Perdekloof. <i>H. secunda</i> was common at the site and grew together with <i>H. pseudopilosa</i> Goldblatt, then in fruit. The population included at least 150 mature plants in flower or early fruit. A short distance away but in drier, well drained places the closely related, pink-flowered <i>H. pilosa</i> subsp. <i>bracteata</i> (R.C. Foster) Goldblatt & J.C. Manning was in flower.</p> <p> South Africa. NORTHERN CAPE. <b>3119 (Calvinia)</b>: Keiskie Mtns, gentle S-trending rocky slope in shale, 1 258 m, (<i>−</i> DB), 25 Sept. 2013, <i>Goldblatt & Porter 13906</i> (K, MO, NBG, PRE). <b>3120 (Williston)</b>: northern Roggeveld Escarpment, Farm Knechtsbank, wet sandy meadow, 1 470 m, (<i>−</i> CC), 26 Sept. 2014, <i>Goldblatt & Porter 14027</i> (MO, NBG, PRE).</p>Published as part of <i>Goldblatt, P., Manning, J. C. & van Wyk, P. C. V., 2015, New species, combinations and range extensions in Hesperantha Ker Gawl. (Iridaceae: Crocoideae) from western South Africa *, pp. 114-121 in South African Journal of Botany 98</i> on page 120, DOI: 10.1016/j.sajb.2015.02.007, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10496999">http://zenodo.org/record/10496999</a>
Manning, P, 218853
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/401332Surname: MANNING. Given Name(s) or Initials: P. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 218853. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-5088.220978
Item: [2016.0049.33625] "Manning, P, 218853
Ledebouriopsis J. C. Manning & Goldblatt 2018
2. Sect. Ledebouriopsis <i>(Baker) J.C.Manning & Goldblatt</i> in Strelitzia 40: 24 (2018). <p> <i>Ornithogalum</i> subg. <i>Ledebouriopsis</i> Baker in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 13: 284 (1873).</p> <p> Type: <i>Drimia anomala</i> (Baker) Baker, lecto., designated by Manning & Goldblatt (2018: 24).</p> <p> <i>Geschollia</i> Speta in Stapfia 75: 169 (2001); Martínez-Azorín et al. in Phytotaxa 427: 88 (2019c). Type: <i>Geschollia anomala</i> (Baker) Speta = <i>Drimia anomala</i> (Baker) Baker</p>Published as part of <i>Manning, John, 2022, New combinations in Drimia Jacq. ex Wild. (Hyacinthaceae: Urgineoideae) and an updated key to the southern African species, pp. 1-7 in Bothalia (a 2) (a 2) 52 (1)</i> on page 3, DOI: 10.38201/btha.abc.v52.i1.2, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10515175">http://zenodo.org/record/10515175</a>
Massonia (sect. Whiteheadia) J. C. Manning
Massonia sect. Whiteheadia <i>(Harv.) J.C.Manning</i>, stat. et comb. nov. <p> <i>Whiteheadia</i> Harv., The Genera of South African Plants, edn. 2: 396 (1868).</p>Published as part of <i>Manning, John, 2020, Validation of Massonia sect. Whiteheadia (Hyacinthaceae: Scilloideae) in Bothalia (a 5) (a 5) 50 (1)</i>, DOI: 10.38201/btha.abc.v50.i1.5, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10528115">http://zenodo.org/record/10528115</a>
Manning, Utah p.1
Boarding house for railroad employees at Manning, Utah. Manning was a mining town settled in the 1880s. The town blended east into Mercur
Sindheres KAZMI & MANNING 2003, gen. nov.
<i>Sindheres</i> gen. nov. <p> <i>Diagnosis.</i> Size small, carapace 3.25 mm long, 5.0 mm wide in a unique holotype. Carapace sub-hexagonal, narrowing anteriorly, width greater than length, width greatest posterior to mid-length; regions poorly defined. Front very slightly projecting. MXP3 exopod with flagellum; ischium and merus indistinguishably fused, elongate; inner margin convex; palp three-segmented; propodus spatulate, longer than carpus, dactylus styliform, inserted below mid-length of ventral margin of propodus. Walking legs equal right and left; WL2 longest of walking legs, WL1–3 dactyli similar, subequal, falcate, strongly curved to sharp apex; WL4 dactylus slightly shorter than dactyli of WL1–3. Female abdomen of seven free somites, abdomen extended beyond bases of legs. Male unknown.</p> <p> <i>Type species. Sindheres karachiensis</i> new species, by present designation and monotypy.</p> <p> <i>Etymology.</i> An arbitrary combination of the name of the Pakistan province of Sindh and the ending - <i>eres</i>. The gender is musculine.</p> <p> <i>Remarks.</i> Members of <i>Sindheres</i> can be distinguished at once from members of <i>Pinnotheres</i> Bosc, 1802, in having the dactylus of MXP3 inserted near the midlength of the ventral margin of the propodus (Manning, 1993: figure 1 (c)), rather than at its base (Manning, 1993: figure 1 (b)). In this feature <i>Sindheres</i> resembles the eastern Atlantic <i>Nepinnotheres</i> Manning, 1993, but in members of <i>Nepinnotheres</i> the carapace is sub-circular, with the length and width subequal, rather than subhexagonal, with the length much shorter than the width. In <i>Sindheres</i>, the mesial margin of the MXP3 ischium-merus is convex, whereas in <i>N. pinnotheres</i> the mesial margin of MXP3 is slightly concave proximally with an obtuse projection subdistally.</p>Published as part of <i>KAZMI, Q. B. & MANNING, R. B., 2003, A new genus and species of pinnotherid crab from Karachi, northern Arabian Sea (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura), pp. 1085-1089 in Journal of Natural History 37 (9)</i> on page 1086, DOI: 10.1080/00222930110108353, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/4675206">http://zenodo.org/record/4675206</a>
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