1,422 research outputs found

    Crochet Camisole

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    Crochet Camisol

    Découverte d'ossements d'ours dans la grotte du Crochet, à Dorvan, commune de Torcieu (Ain)

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    La grotte du Crochet est la plus longue cavité du Bugey méridional et la seconde pour le département de l'Ain. Découverte et explorée dès 1938, elle a fait l'objet d'explorations de plusieurs groupes spéléologiques de l'Ain et du Rhône. Depuis 1981, le Groupe Ulysse Spéléo, de Lyon, a repris l'étude de la cavité, en s'appuyant sur les résultats de traçages sur le massif. Dans un nouveau réseau ont été découverts des ossements d'ours. Ils appartiennent vraisemblablement à un même animal. Par leurs caractères et leurs dimensions, ces ossements correspondent à un individu de petite taille mais entrant dans la limite de la variation observée chez l'ours des cavernes de l'Europe occidentale.Drouin Philippe, Ballesio Roland, Philippe Michel. Découverte d'ossements d'ours dans la grotte du Crochet, à Dorvan, commune de Torcieu (Ain). In: Comptes rendus d'activités annuelles. Association régionale pour le développement des recherches de paléontologie et de préhistoire et des Amis du Muséum, tome 21, 1983. pp. 31-36

    Découverte d'ossements d'ours dans la grotte du Crochet, à Dorvan, commune de Torcieu (Ain)

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    La grotte du Crochet est la plus longue cavité du Bugey méridional et la seconde pour le département de l'Ain. Découverte et explorée dès 1938, elle a fait l'objet d'explorations de plusieurs groupes spéléologiques de l'Ain et du Rhône. Depuis 1981, le Groupe Ulysse Spéléo, de Lyon, a repris l'étude de la cavité, en s'appuyant sur les résultats de traçages sur le massif. Dans un nouveau réseau ont été découverts des ossements d'ours. Ils appartiennent vraisemblablement à un même animal. Par leurs caractères et leurs dimensions, ces ossements correspondent à un individu de petite taille mais entrant dans la limite de la variation observée chez l'ours des cavernes de l'Europe occidentale.Drouin Philippe, Ballesio Roland, Philippe Michel. Découverte d'ossements d'ours dans la grotte du Crochet, à Dorvan, commune de Torcieu (Ain). In: Comptes rendus d'activités annuelles. Association régionale pour le développement des recherches de paléontologie et de préhistoire et des Amis du Muséum, tome 21, 1983. pp. 31-36

    Tan Crochet Bertha Collar

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    Tan Crochet Bertha Colla

    Brown Crochet Beret

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    Brown Crochet Bere

    Cream Crochet Hat

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    Cream Crochet Ha

    Algorithmic Form Generation for Crochet Technique

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    In architecture use of generative computation suggests a possibility of rethinking the form finding process. In order to generate form, one method could be predefining first the production technique and constraining the form by the rules of it. In this study crochet-knitting technique is chosen as a production technique. To explore various forms developed through this technique; a computational model, which the behavior of crochet-knitted surface is embedded into, is developed. This paper explains the process of decoding the behavior of a crochet-knitted surface for a computational model in order to extract the crochet-knitting patterns of complex geometrical surfaces

    Acanthodactylus busacki Tamar & Geniez & Brito & Crochet 2017

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    Acanthodactylus busacki Salvador, 1982 Acanthodactylus busacki, Salvador, 1982, A revision of the lizards of the genus Acanthodactylus (Sauria: Lacertidae), Bonner Zoologische Monographien, Nr. 16: 88. Chresonyms Acanthodactylus busacki Salvador, 1982: 88 (part.) Acanthodactylus pardalis bedriagai Arnold, 1983: 319 (part.) Acanthodactylus bedriagai Harris & Arnold 2000: 352 (part.) Acanthodactylus busacki Mellado & Dakki 1988: 175 (part.); Mellado & Olmedo 1990: 133 (part.); Bons & Geniez 1996: 162 (part.); Schleich et al. 1996: 391 (part.); Donaire et al. 2000: 10; Geniez et al. 2004: 102 (part.); Brito et al. 2008: 21 (part.); Sindaco & Jeremčenko 2008: 218 (part.); Fonseca et al. 2008: 9 (part.); Geniez et al. 2010: IUCN red list (part.); Harris el al. 2010: 22 (part.); Carretero et al. 2011: 139 (part.); Trape et al. 2012: 302 (part.); Pyron et al. 2013: 17 (part.); Crochet et al. 2015: 584; Tamar et al. 2016: 8 (part.) Name-bearing type. Natural History Museum (London) BMNH1970.250, adult male, holotype by original designation. Type locality. 30 km south-west of Goulimine (= Guelmim), Morocco. Paratypes. Among the paratypes originally listed by Salvador (1982), MNHN-RA-1938.189 (Asrifa, Morocco), BMNH 1970.249 (same locality as the holotype), and EBD 2440 (Cape Bojador, Rio de Oro) belong to this species. Other paratypes listed in Salvador (1982) are allocated to the new species (see below) or to A. cf. maculatus (Appendix II). Other material. Ten voucher specimens listed in Appendix II under A. busacki, apart from the holotype and paratypes. Photographic material of one voucher specimen from MB and of 25 individuals photographed in the wild is listed in Appendix II. Diagnosis. A species of the pardalis species-group (i.e., small flat or carinated dorsal scales; three series of scales on the fingers; three supraoculars; 12 and sometimes 14 straight longitudinal row of ventrals; slightly pectinate toes; body pattern combining longitudinal rows of light ocelli and black reticulation) characterized by the combination of the following characters: (1) maximum recorded SVL 73 mm (51–73 mm in adult males); (2) three supraoculars, the first supraocular is either entire or fragmented with usually one row of granules between the supraoculars and the superciliaries; (3) 13–27 granules around the supraoculars; (4) subocular with a distinct keel located between the fourth and fifth upper labials and not contacting the lip; (5) upper temporals small and pointed whereas the lower temporals are large and smooth; (6) 8–11 collar scales; (7) 12 longitudinal rows of ventral scales; (8) 29–34 transverse rows of ventral scales; (9) 20–26 femoral pores on each side; (10) three rows of scales on fingers with slight lateral pectination, with 16–23 lamellae underneath the fourth toe; (11) dorsal scales are pointed and smooth; (12) dorsal colour pattern of juveniles, females and sub-adult males consists of two lateral longitudinal lines of pale ocelli on each side with strong black reticulation among them (four longitudinal dorsal lines in total), adult males have intricate colouration of black reticulation that covers most of the dorsal area and the rows of pale ocelli become indistinct or may completely disappear; (13) the males exhibit a unique colouration: the neck, the posterior part of the throat, the anterior parts of the body and belly, and the forelimbs are more or less reddish; this tint becoming progressively yellowish, whitish or slightly bluish at the posterior parts and tail; (14) sub-adults have reddish or white ventral tail colour. Distribution. Acanthodactylus busacki is found in the northern Saharan Atlantic coastal desert, from around Guelmim in the north to 67 km north-east of Dakhla (Crochet et al. 2015) in the south (Fig. 1; Appendix II). Its range is bordered to the north by the southern extension of the Anti-Atlas Mountains. According to Donaire et al. (2000) and Geniez et al. (2004) the species reaches the Hammada of Tindouf in the extreme south-east of the Atlantic Sahara, entering Algeria and approaching Mauritania, but these records need to be re-examined: they belong to a taxon of the pardalis species-group, but not necessarily to A. busacki; they might instead involve a desert form of A. cf. maculatus entering from the northern Sahara into Algeria and Morocco (J.A. Mateo pers. com.; pers. obs.). Natural history. Acanthodactylus busacki is a ground-dwelling, diurnal, oviparous, medium-sized lizard, relatively large and stout-bodied. It mostly inhabits habitats with hard substratum, most often clay deposits, more rarely rocky ground, always with scattered bushes. It is widely sympatric with A. aureus which occurs on sandy substratum (pers. obs.; Geniez et al. 2004). Reddish ventral tail colouration of sub-adults is present in all populations of this species, and not only in the southern populations (contra Crochet et al. 2015).Published as part of Tamar, Karin, Geniez, Philippe, Brito, José C. & Crochet, Pierre-André, 2017, Systematic revision of Acanthodactylus busacki (Squamata: Lacertidae) with a description of a new species from Morocco, pp. 357-386 in Zootaxa 4276 (3) on pages 367-368, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4276.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/80695

    Hemidactylus boavistensis subsp. chevalieri Vasconcelos, Köhler, Geniez & Crochet, 2020, comb. nov.

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    Hemidactylus boavistensis chevalieri comb. nov. Angel, 1935 Name-bearing types. Thirteen syntypes of which 12 are still present in the MNHN collections: MNHN-RA- 1935.178, 179, 179A, 179B, 180, 180A, 181, 181A, 182, 183, 184 & 184 A. Based on the information in the MNHN catalogue, the two beforelast come from ‘ Santa Maria’ and the rest from an unkown locality on ‘ Sal’. Type locality. Santa Maria, Sal Island & unkown locality, Sal Island, Cabo Verde Archipelago. Diagnosis. Very similar to H. b. boavistensis but usually with six lamellas under the first finger according to Angel (1935). Angel (1935) also claims that head and nape colouration is generally also different as regards to the transverse bands, which are usually lacking or less clear than in the nominotypical subspecies (see Fig. 7), but we found this to be highly variable and of little use for identification. Even though dorsal colouration is highly variable, Sal individuals are usually darker than Boavista ones. Distribution. Sal Island, Cabo Verde Archipelago. Conservation status. Not Evaluated. Identical threats as referred above.Published as part of Vasconcelos, Raquel, Köhler, Gunther, Geniez, Philippe & Crochet, Pierre-André, 2020, A new endemic species of Hemidactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from São Nicolau Island, Cabo Verde, pp. 501-522 in Zootaxa 4878 (3) on page 520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4878.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record/442531

    FIGURE 2. Agama tassiliensis n in Systematics of north African Agama (Reptilia: Agamidae): a new species from the central Saharan mountains

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    FIGURE 2. Agama tassiliensis n. sp., holotype, MNHN 2010.0632, adult male from Algeria, Tassili n'Ajjer, 5.5km SSSW of Iherir [25.3500°N/8.3911°E], photo P. Geniez. A: dorsal view of the live specimen. B: ventral view of the live specimen.Published as part of Geniez, Philippe, Padial, José M. & Crochet, Pierre-André, 2011, Systematics of north African Agama (Reptilia: Agamidae): a new species from the central Saharan mountains, pp. 26-46 in Zootaxa 3098 on page 33, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.27914
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