1,056 research outputs found

    Mogera robusta Nehring 1891

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    Mogera robusta Nehring, 1891. Sitzb. Ges. Naturf. Fr. Berlin, 6:95. TYPE LOCALITY: Russia, Vladivostok. DISTRIBUTION: Korea to NE China and adjacent Siberia. SYNONYMS: coreana. COMMENTS: Includes coreana; see Corbet (1978c). European authors often include kobeae and tokudae; however, Japanese authors (Imaizumi 1970b; Yoshiyuki 1988b) treat these as separate species. Formerly included in Talpa; but see Imaizumi (1970b), Gureev (1979), and Gromov and Baranova (1981).Published as part of Rainer Hutterer, 1993, Order Insectivora, pp. 69-130 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 126, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735308

    Mogera robusta Nehring 1891

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    <i>Mogera robusta</i> Nehring, 1891 <p> Nehring, A. (1891) Ü ber <i>Mogera robusta</i> n.sp. und über <i>Meles</i> sp. von Wladiwostock in Ost-Sibirien. Sitzungsberichte der Gesellschaft Naturforschender Freunde zu Berlin, 6: 95 [95–108].</p> <p> Valid name: <i>Mogera wogura</i> (Temminck, 1842)</p> <p>Holotype: ZMB 15084 (skin) and 15085 (skull, skeleton) from the same individual. Collected by Dattan from Vladivistok, Russia in 1889.</p> <p>Comments: Even though an additional specimen in the ZMB collection (6867) is identified as a type, Nehring described this species based only on a single specimen from Dattan, Vladivostok. ZMB 6867 was collected by “Rex und Co.” from “Jezzo” [presumably northeastern Asia].</p>Published as part of <i>Turni, Hendrik, Hutterer, Rainer & Asher, Robert, 2007, Type specimens of " insectivoran " mammals at the Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, pp. 1-33 in Zootaxa 1470</i> on page 30, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/273750">10.5281/zenodo.273750</a&gt

    Amphiphilic diblock copolymers for molecular recognition

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    In this thesis, the synthesis and the characterization of poly(butadiene)-blockpoly( ethylene oxide) copolymers with terminal Me2+-NTA groups (copper or nickel) is described for the first time. A convenient “one-pot” procedure that allows control over the individual block lengths of the copolymer and the end-group functionalization was successfully established. The formation of the metal-polymer complex has been confirmed by EPR and UV/VIS spectroscopy. Mixing of the Ni2+-NTA polymers with the corresponding non functionalized block copolymers at a concentration of 10 mol% does not affect the self-assembly behavior of the mixtures, i.e., in dilute aqueous solutions the polymer mixtures aggregate to vesicular structures (metal-doped vesicles) with identical size distribution as the non functionalized block copolymer vesicles. Vesicles were characterized by dynamic light scattering, static light scattering, small angle X-ray scattering and zeta potential. All measurements led to the conclusion that hollow spheres, i.e. vesicles, with a narrow size distribution and a negative surface potential were generated. Moreover different vesicle shapes as “necklace pearls”, “wormlike micelles” and “spermasomes” can be attributed to different salt solutions or buffers of defined concentrations which suggests a control of morphology. The accessibility of the metal sites at the surface of such vesicles has been tested using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. The model proteins His10-MBP-FITC and His6-EGFP bind selectively to the Me2+-NTA groups exposed at the surface of the vesicles. While the choice of the buffer significantly influenced the fractions of protein-vesicle conjugates, the interactions of Cu2+- and Ni2+-NTA groups with both His-tagged proteins showed similar values. It should be noted that the experimentally determined dissociation constants of the Me2+-His-Tag complexes were found to be in good agreement with literature data on Ni- NTA functionalized liposomes14, indicating that the polymer brushes at the polymer vesicle surface only slightly interfere with the binding of the proteins. Fluorescence Microscopy was used to visualize the binding of the fluorescent proteins to the functionalized vesicles and images of vesicles with a fluorescent corona were taken. Additionally, atomic force microscopy clearly demonstrated that the polymer adsorbs in an oriented manner on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite surfaces and is able to induce a 2D protein crystallization when Ni-NTA functionalized polymer was used. We believe that these metal-functionalized polymeric membranes have a large potential for the selective immobilization and alignment of proteins at vesicle/planar membrane surfaces. In particular, the high flexibility and compressibility of block copolymer membranes and monolayers could open new possibilities for inducing a 2D protein crystallization. The high cohesion and robustness of block copolymer membranes make them rather insensitive toward mechanical shear or the presence of detergents, increasing their potential utility. In this context, it should also be noted that the pendant double bonds of the poly(butadiene) blocks can be covalently cross-linked, thus freezing the self-assembled structures and providing additional stabilization

    Coat Cooke & Joe Poole | Coat Cooke & Rainer Wiens: Reviews

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    Coat Cooke album reviews by Randy Raine-Reusch. Coat Cooke (sax); Joe Poole (drums); Rainer Wiens (guitar)

    Robert Rainer and Claud Garner

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    Author Claud Garner, right, autographed copies of his second novel while discussing a tour of other Southwest cities with Robert Rainer, representing his publisher, Creative Age Press. Published in the Fort Worth Star - Telegram morning edition, September 29, 1950.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/6596/thumbnail.jp

    Quantum chemistry of 2D-nanomaterials : investigation of graphene, hBN and α-borophene on SiO2 (001)

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    Author: Felix Rainer Serafin Purtscher, BScMasterarbeit University of Innsbruck 202

    Quantum chemistry of 2D-nanomaterials : investigation of graphene, hBN and α-borophene on SiO2 (001)

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    Author: Felix Rainer Serafin Purtscher, BScMasterarbeit University of Innsbruck 202

    Die politische Religion : Eine Untersuchung über den Ursprung des Verfalls in der Geschichte (1935). Herausgegeben und eingeleitet von Rainer Hering

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    Der vierte Band der "Hamburger Historischen Forschungen" umfasst in erster Linie die Edition eines unveröffentlichten Textes. Autor ist der Theologe Prof. Dr. Dr. Paul Schütz (1891–1985), der von 1940 bis 1952 Hauptpastor an der Hamburger Hauptkirche St. Nikolai war und zugleich als hauptamtlicher Dozent und später als Professor der Theologie an der Kirchlichen Hochschule Hamburg lehrte. Er gehört zu den ersten, die ein Konzept der politischen Religion entwickelten. Sein 1935 verfasster Beitrag konnte damals nicht publiziert werden. Heute ist eine Edition dieses Beitrages zum einen wichtig für die Theologie- und Kirchengeschichte. Zum anderen gibt es seit einigen Jahren in der historischen Forschung eine intensive Diskussion über die in den Dreißigerjahren des 20. Jahrhunderts entwickelte Interpretation des „Dritten Reiches“ als „politische Religion“. Dieses Modell, das Diktaturen, insbesondere den Nationalsozialismus, als „politische Religion“ versteht, wird im Allgemeinen Eric Voegelin und Raymond Aron zugeschrieben, die ihre Ansätze 1938 bzw. 1939 publizierten. Dass Paul Schütz schon drei bzw. vier Jahre zuvor eine solche Konzeption entwickelt hatte, war bis vor Kurzem nicht bekannt. Die vorliegende Edition kann daher neue Impulse für die Debatte über die Geschichte und Tragfähigkeit dieses Ansatzes geben und sie inhaltlich bereichern.The fourth volume of the series "Hamburger Historische Forschungen" comprises primarily the edition of an unpublished text. The author is the theologian Prof. Dr. Dr. Dr. Paul Schütz (1891-1985) who was the main pastor at the Hamburg Main Church St. Nikolai from 1940 to 1952. At the same time he taught as a full-time lecturer and later as professor of theology at the Church University of Hamburg. Schütz was one of the first to develop a concept of political religion. His contribution, written in 1935, could not be published at that time. Today, an edition of this article is important for the history of theology and church history. On the other hand, for some years now there has been an intensive discussion in historical research on the interpretation of the "Third Reich" as a "political religion" developed in the 1930s. This model, which sees dictatorships, especially National Socialism, as a "political religion", is generally attributed to Eric Voegelin and Raymond Aron, who published their approaches in 1938 and 1939 respectively. It was not known until recently that Paul Schütz had already developed such a concept three or four years earlier. The present edition can therefore provide new impetus for the debate on the history and viability of this approach and enrich its content
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