1,554 research outputs found
Exploration archéologique du Colorado oriental
Renaud Etienne-B., D Ph. Exploration archéologique du Colorado oriental. In: Bulletin de la Société préhistorique de France, tome 28, n°6, 1931. pp. 323-324
Reviewing the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (Part II): Priorities for Short-Term Implementation. CEPS Task Force Reports No. 57, 1 March 2006
[From the Introduction]. This report constitutes Part II of the twin reports of the CEPS Task Force on Reviewing the EU Emissions Trading Scheme. The Part I report, which was presented to the UK Presidency on 7 July 2005,1 focused on a number of short-term implementation issues including transparency requirements for the National Allocation Plans (NAPs), the definition of installations, treatment of small installations, new entrants, closure and transfer rules, allocation methodologies, the possibility of opt-ins as well as monitoring, reporting and verification. This follow-up Part II report examines deep-seated topics such as whether the EU Emission Trading System (ETS) contributes to meeting Kyoto Protocol targets, economic impacts, effects on investment and the potential inclusion of aviation. These issues lie at the interface of NAP phase II and the longterm formal 2006 review. Neither of the two reports (Part I or Part II) examines issues related to the formal review of the EU ETS, which the Directive calls for no later than June 2006. Since this formal review, which will lead to an amendment of the Directive by co-decision, is likely to trigger a fundamental and longer-term debate, it is being treated in a separate CEPS Task Force launched in early 2006. After a status report of the ETS and a reminder of some fundamentals in sections 1 and 2, the following sections cover investment incentives (3), competitiveness (4 and 5) and aviation (6). The main findings of the report are contained in the Executive Summary, including Key Messages & Recommendations and an extended Full Summary. Appendix 1 presents a list of members of the Task Force and invited guests and speakers
Prediction of rye dough behaviour and bread quality using response surface methodology
peer-reviewedBread making is a hydro-thermal process; therefore, knowing the behaviour of the
main constituents of the flour at different temperatures allows control of the quality of
the end-product. Mixing and thermal characteristics were studied using the Mixolab
system and response surface methodology was used to investigate the influence of particle
size distribution of the flour, pH and the addition of hemicellulase enzyme on the
thermo-mechanical behaviour of the whole rye flour and on bread quality. A central
composite face-centered design, with two levels of fineness modulus (1.78 and 1.26),
two levels of pH (6.5 and 3.8) and three levels of added enzyme (0, 50 and 100 mg/kg
of flour), was used. The results indicated that thermo-mechanical variables – water
absorption, development time, dough stability, protein weakening, starch gelatinization,
starch gelling and cooling setback – as well as bread quality are influenced by the
three factors investigated.
Significant correlations were found between water absorption and pH, enzyme level,
fineness modulus and their interactions. Dough stability was significantly influenced
by all the independent variables, as well as by the interaction between pH and fineness
modulus. Starch gelling and cooling setback were influenced by the interaction between
pH and enzyme level. Concerning bread quality, both porosity and specific volume were
affected by enzyme level and pH, as well as by the interaction between fineness modulus
and enzyme level
Antelucana Exundatio Birsici, Rivi Basileam Urb. Interluentis Die VI. Julii MDCCI Tempestatesque Horrendæ Passim Locorum Insecutæ Carmine Heroico Enarratae Ac publicè recitatæ ... die XVI. Sept. anni praes
Ab Abrahamo de Champ-Renaud Biennensi, & originaliter ac antiquitus Culliacensi: Dn. Abrahami de Champ-Renaud, Pastoris Ollonensis meritissimi filio, Philos. CultoreWidmung auf Titelblatt verso: Zusatz "Author." wurde in allen Exemplaren überklebt.Druckjahr nach Examensdatum im Titel ermitteltSignaturformel: )(², A⁴Dissertation Medizinische Fakultät der Universität Basel 170
Hauser (H.) et Renaud et (A.). — Les débuts de l'âge moderne (Coll. Peuples et civilisations, histoire générale publiée sous la direction de L. Halphen et Ph. Sagnac). 1929
Coornaert E. Hauser (H.) et Renaud et (A.). — Les débuts de l'âge moderne (Coll. Peuples et civilisations, histoire générale publiée sous la direction de L. Halphen et Ph. Sagnac). 1929. In: Revue du Nord, tome 16, n°61, février 1930. pp. 59-60
Hauser (H.) et Renaud et (A.). — Les débuts de l'âge moderne (Coll. Peuples et civilisations, histoire générale publiée sous la direction de L. Halphen et Ph. Sagnac). 1929
Coornaert E. Hauser (H.) et Renaud et (A.). — Les débuts de l'âge moderne (Coll. Peuples et civilisations, histoire générale publiée sous la direction de L. Halphen et Ph. Sagnac). 1929. In: Revue du Nord, tome 16, n°61, février 1930. pp. 59-60
Les Scarabaeoidea (Coléoptères) obtenus d'excréments de Propithecus diadama à Madagascar
Summary. — After discussing the attractive value of Propithecus dung on madagascan Scarabaeoidea, the author describes two new taxa : Madaphacosoma major nov. sp. and Odontochodaeus steineri nov. sp.Paulian Renaud. Les Scarabaeoidea (Coléoptères) obtenus d'excréments de Propithecus diadama à Madagascar. In: Bulletin de la Société entomologique de France, volume 96 (4), octobre 1991. pp. 355-359
Pacific-wide pH snapshots reveal that high coral cover correlates with low, but variable pH
© The Author(s), 2021. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Manzello, D. P., Enochs, I. C., Carlton, R., Bruckner, A., Kolodziej, G., Dempsey, A., & Renaud, P. Pacific-wide pH snapshots reveal that high coral cover correlates with low, but variable pH. Bulletin of Marine Science, 97(1), (2021): 239-256, https://doi.org/10.5343/bms.2019.0100.Ocean acidification (OA) is impairing the construction of coral reefs while simultaneously accelerating their breakdown. The metabolism of different reef organism assemblages alters seawater pH in different ways, possibly buffering or exacerbating OA impacts. In spite of this, field data relating benthic community structure and seawater pH are sparse. We collected pH time-series data snapshots at 10 m depth from 28 different reefs (n = 13 lagoon, n = 15 fore reef) across 22 Pacific islands, spanning 31° latitude and 90° longitude. Coincident with all deployments, we measured percent cover of the benthic community. On fore reefs, high coral cover (CC) negatively correlated with mean and minimum pH, but positively correlated with pH variability. Conversely, pH minima were positively correlated to coverage of coralline and turf algae. Benthic cover did not correlate with pH in lagoonal reefs. From 0% to 100% CC, mean pH and aragonite saturation state (Ωarag) declined −0.081 and −0.51, respectively, while declines in minimum values were greater (Δmin pH = −0.164, Δmin Ωarag = −0.96). Based upon previously published relationships, the mean pH decline from 0% to 100% CC would depress coral calcification 7.7%–18.0% and increase biologically-mediated dissolution 13.5%–27.9%, with pH minima depressing dark coral calcification 14.4%–35.2% and increasing biologically-mediated dissolution 31.0%–62.2%. This spatially expansive dataset provides evidence that coral reefs with the highest coral cover may experience the lowest and most extreme pH values with OA.We thank the Khaled bin Sultan Living Ocean’s Foundation and the crew of the M/Y Golden Shadow. B Beck, J Monteiro, and many others assisted with field work. The Khaled bin Sultan Living Ocean’s Foundation supported the Global Reef Expedition. NOAA’s Coral Reef Conservation Program and Ocean Acidification Program support DP Manzello, IC Enochs, and G Kolodziej
Subject of desire in the privative anthropology of Renaud Barbaras
In this article the author focuses on some important elements in the philosphy of the French contemporary thinker Renaud Barbaras. It is a matter of fact that Barbaras developed his concept of subjectivity in the context of his general philosophical position. Here the author presents and discusses the key aspects of this anthropology. Although rooted in the great tradition of French phenomenology, Barbaras is able to develop his own, original position in which he puts together philosophyof life, dynamic phenomenology, and above all, a new concept of anthropology rooted in negative metaphysics
- …
