62 research outputs found
Hircinia vallata Dendy 1887
<i>Hircinia vallata</i> Dendy, 1887 <p> <i>Hircinia vallata</i> Dendy, 1887: 163 (no illustration).</p> <p> <i>Hircinia (Psammocinia) vallata</i>; Von Lendenfeld 1889: 581 (no illustration, not mentioned in Hooper & Wiedenmayer 1994). <i>Psammocinia vesiculifera</i>; Cook & Bergquist 1998: 400.</p> <p> This species described by Dendy from Madras (= Chennai), approximate coordinates 13.0806°N 80.3°E, India (lectotype) and Ceylon (= Sri Lanka), approximate coordinates 9°N 79°E (paralectotype) (the dry Madras lectotype is listed in the BMNH collections as ‘holotype’ BMNH 1887.8.24.1, coll. E. Thurston). The species was prematurely described and named by Dendy, as he referred to Von Lendenfeld’s manuscript name <i>vallata</i> for it, to which he apparently had access. Von Lendenfeld (1889: 581) redescribed the species as <i>Hircinia (Psammocinia) vallata</i>, claiming it as his own species without citing Dendy’s name or reference, but listing Dendy’s material from BMNH in addition to material collected from Port Phillip Heads, Victoria, Australia, approximate coordinates 38.1167°S 144.8667°E.</p> <p> The revision of the genus <i>Psammocinia</i> Von Lendenfeld, 1889 by Cook & Bergquist (1998: 400) mentioned only Von Lendenfeld’s name as a junior synonym of <i>Psammocinia vesiculifera</i> (Poléjaeff, 1884: 58), ignoring Dendy’s original use of the name <i>vallata</i>. It would at first glance be a case of homonymy with Dendy’s <i>vallata</i> as senior primary homonym, but Dendy’s reference to Von Lendenfeld’s monograph and the name <i>Hircinia vallata</i> R. von Lendenfeld, MS, makes it abundantly clear that at least part of the specimens is the same for both author descriptions. It remains perhaps undecided whether the South East Australian specimens are conspecific with the Indian type specimens, but if that would not be the case the Australian specimens would be a simple misapplication of the name <i>vallata</i> Dendy, 1887, not a case of homonymy. I propose to assign this species to the junior synonymy of <i>Psammocinia vesiculifera</i> (Poléjaeff, 1884).</p>Published as part of <i>Van Soest, Rob W. M., 2024, Correcting sponge names: nomenclatural update of lower taxa level Porifera, pp. 1-122 in Zootaxa 5398 (1)</i> on pages 17-18, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5398.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10494167">http://zenodo.org/record/10494167</a>
Effectiveness of Thermal Ablation and Stereotactic Radiotherapy based on Stage I Lung Cancer Histology
Comparison of Survival Rates After a Combination of Local Treatment and Systemic Therapy vs Systemic Therapy Alone for Treatment of Stage IV Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer
Painting named "Thursday" showing monks fishing, painted by Walter Dendy Sadler (1854-1923), [s.d.]
Photograph of a painting named "Thursday" showing monks fishing, painted by Walter Dendy Sadler (1854-1923), [s.d.]. Several monks watch in awe as one of the monks reel in a fish. Another monk, holding a net, kneels near the lake ready to catch the fish. More monks are seen around the lake, lounging, reading a book or walking. All the monks are wearing traditional monk robes with hoods and a rope-like belt around their waste. The arcades and towers of a Spanish-like building (possibly a mission) is visible in the background.; "Walter Dendy Sadler (1854-1923) was born in Dorking, England and brought up in Horsham, England, where he showed a precocious talent for drawing. At age 16 he decided to become a painter and enrolled for two years at Heatherly's School of Art in London, subsequently studying in Germany under W. Simmler. He exhibited at the Dudley Gallery from 1872 and at the Royal Academy from the following year through to the 1890s. He painted contemporary people in domestic and daily life pursuits, showing them with comical expressions illustrating their greed, stupidity etc. Dendy Sadler was best known for his pictures of monks - his reputation was established with a picture of monks fishing called 'Steady Brother, Steady' (1875), and his most well-known paintings are 'Thursday' (Tate Gallery, and incidentally one of the first three pictures in Henry Tate's collection) also showing monks fishing, and 'Friday' (Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool), where they are consuming their catch the next day. The monks are characterized as good-natured but foolish looking fellows." -- unknown author (part 1 of 2).; "The combination of realism with whimsicality follows an English tradition of almost slapstick humor, which seems to work better as black and white illustration in the pages of 'Punch' or in light-hearted articles by artists such as Harry Furniss. Another slightly whimsical picture is 'End of the Skein' at the Lady Lever Art Gallery. Perhaps more to modern taste are Sadler's less blatant pictures, as in 'For Fifty Years' (1894), showing an old gentleman happily offering his arm to his blank-faced bored wife - for him 50 years of domestic bliss, for her half a century of increasing dullness. In pictures like this, or 'An Offer of Marriage' of 1895, Sadler also gives some of the best studies of Victorian interiors. He was criticized for this background detail, as it detracted from the subjects of his pictures, but it seems fair to me for a whimsical painting to provide encouragement for the eye to wander around the scene rather than being pushed too hard towards the 'point'." -- unknown author (part 2 of 2)
A study of the tested differences and relationship in intelligence, personality, and academic achievement of forty-five seventh grade pupils in the Mountain View Elementary School, Landrum, South Carolina, 1951-1952, 1952
Striblings of Walnut Hill - Accession 715 no. 7
The Stribling Family of Walnut Hill and Related Families by Bruce Hodgson Stribling chronicles the genealogy and family history of the family and their home Walnut Hill in Oconee, Pickens, and Anderson Counties of South Carolina. The book includes photographs, maps, and an index. Related families surnames include Alexander, Conger, Dendy, Dillard, Kincheloe, Knox, Sloan, and Taliaferro. The book is signed by the author. Please see attached searchable index.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2339/thumbnail.jp
ANALISIS POSTUR KERJA PEMBUATAN POLA SONGKOK DENGAN METODE RULA DAN OWAS UNTUK MENGURANGI RISIKO CEDERA PEKERJA PADA UKM SONGKOK GRESIK
Jika membutuhkan abstrak atau isi jurnal silahkan menghubungi author melalui [email protected] atau [email protected] Dipublikasikan tanggal: 20 April 202
Hepatic intra-arterial injection of irinotecan drug eluting beads (DEBIRI) for patients with unresectable colorectal liver metastases: A systematic review
Predictors and prognosticators for survival with Yttrium-90 radioembolization therapy for unresectable colorectal cancer liver metastasis
ALUMNUS JAMES BUTLER GIVES UGA $1 MILLION
Georgia Law alumnus James E. Butler (J.D.\u2777) donated $1 million to establish a fellowship program at UGA\u27s Institute of Ecology to help graduate students studying environmental problems. This is his second million-dollar gift to UGA. Last year, he gave his first gift to the law school to create the James E. Butler Scholarship Fund, which pays full tuition for students studying public interest law at UGA. This release was issued by UGA News Service on 7/25/06, and the author was Larry Dendy
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