1,361,957 research outputs found
Correction to: A Novel Case of IFNAR1 Deficiency Identified a Common Canonical Splice Site Variant in DOCK8 in Western Polynesia: The Importance of Validating Variants of Unknown Significance in Under-Represented Ancestries
In this article, Alberto Pinzon-Charry, Cindy S Ma and Stuart G. Tangye should have been denoted as equally contributing authors. The original version has been corrected
Charry vuelve a Bogotá
Antología personal. Fernando Charry Lara. Universidad Externado de Colombia, Bogotá, 2004, 71 págs
Charry vuelve a Bogotá
Antología personal. Fernando Charry Lara. Universidad Externado de Colombia, Bogotá, 2004, 71 págs
Charry vuelve a Bogotá
Antología personal. Fernando Charry Lara. Universidad Externado de Colombia, Bogotá, 2004, 71 págs
Fernando Charry Lara o el temperamento poético
Entrevista de Edgar O\u27Hara a Fernando Charry Lara
Fernando Charry Lara o el temperamento poético
Entrevista de Edgar O\u27Hara a Fernando Charry Lara
Fernando Charry Lara o el temperamento poético
Entrevista de Edgar O\u27Hara a Fernando Charry Lara
Reconstructing the Art of Happiness
Christian reclamation of the art of happiness will chart a mediating path between an inordinately eschatological Christian treatment that has difficulty embracing happiness in this life and an inordinately political treatment of happiness that has difficulty embracing the spiritual dimensions of happiness. Happiness is the by-product of wisdom and skills for adroit self-use garnered from the habit of knowing, loving, and enj oying God. Dr. Charry joined the Princeton Theological Seminary faculty in 1997, having been an assistant professor of theology in the Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University. Her most recent books are Inquiring After God: Classic and Contemporary Readings (2000) and By the Renewing of Your Minds: Pastoral Function of Christian Doctrine (1997). Dr. Charry is also the author of many scholarly and popular articles and is editor of Theology Today and editor at large for The Ch ristian Century. More info & listen with RealAudio at: www.calvin.edu/publications/stob/speakers/charry.ht
Lapsias quimbaya Muñoz-Charry & Galvis & Martínez 2022, sp. nov.
Lapsias quimbaya sp. nov. Figs 8–11, 57 Type material. Holotype: ♂ from Granja Bengala, Filandia, Quindío, Colombia, 2015 m, [4.68ºN, 75.61ºW], 17.II.2017, V. Muñoz-Charry (ICN-Ar 9217). Paratypes: 1♂ from Risaralda, Santa Rosa de Cabal, Vereda Campo Alegrito, Finca La Albania, Parque Natural Municipal Campo Alegre, 2490 m, [4.8675°, 72.546667°], 22-24.II.2004, A. Pulido, Y. Martínez, E. Henao (IAvH-I-521); 1♂ from Caldas, Marulanda, Vereda El Páramo, Sector El Vergel, 3416-3436 m, [5.244803°, 75.351336°], 30.V. 2014, J. Moreno (IAvH-I-522). Etymology. The epithet honors an extinct indigenous civilization from the Andean region of Colombia, which inhabited the Caldas, north of Valle del Cauca, Quindío and Risaralda departments. Noun in apposition. Diagnosis. Males of L. quimbaya sp. nov. can be recognized from those of the remaining species in the genus by their rounded bulb, the long embolus (e) that is projected prolaterally and dorsally, with the final portion returning ventrally in front of the cymbium tip, the long and slender median apophysis (ma) that extends over the embolus base, the tibia with a large dorsal apophysis (dTa) and the retrolateral apophysis (RTA), both projected dorsally (Figs 9–11). This is also one of the smallest Lapsias species known. Description. Male (holotype). Total length: 2.90. Carapace light brown, 1.49 long, 1.23 wide, 0.95 high (Fig. 8). OC dark brown, 0.80 long. Anterior eye row 1.26 wide and posterior 1.21 wide. Sternum yellowish, 0.61 long, 0.57 wide. Labium yellowish, 0.23 long, 0.22 wide. Chelicerae brown, with two retromarginal and two promarginal teeth. Palp brown, rounded bulb with a long embolus (e) projected dorsally, membranous and slender median apophysis (ma), tibia with a long dorsal apophysis (dTa) and a retrolateral apophysis (RTA), both projected dorsally (Figs 9–11). Leg formula: 4132, all dark brown with yellow marks. Leg macrosetae: femur, I d 1 di; II d 2 di; III p 1 di; patella, III–IV p 1 me, r 1 me; tibia, I v 2-2-2; II v 1-1-1, p 0-1-1; III v 1-1-2, r 1-1; IV v 1-0-2, p 1-1, r 1-1; metatarsus, I v 2-2; II p 1-1-2, r 1-0-2; III v 1 di, p 2-0-2, r 2-0-2; IV v 1-0-2, p 1-0-2, r 1-0-2. Abdomen light yellow with dark brown spots and posteromedial chevron marks (Fig. 8). Female. Unknown. Distribution and Comments. Known only from its type locality in the Colombian Andes (Fig. 57). The holotype male was collected in a well-conserved Andean moist forest, beating low vegetation during the day.Published as part of Muñoz-Charry, Valentina, Galvis, William & Martínez, Leonel, 2022, Jumping spiders of the tribe Lapsiini Maddison (Salticidae: Spartaeinae) from Colombia: new species and records, pp. 356-373 in Zootaxa 5129 (3) on page 360, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5129.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/650112
Biografía de la autora Camila Charry Noriega
Camila Charry Noriega. Bogotá, Colombia. Es profesional en Estudios literarios y aspirante a maestra en Estética e Historia del arte.#AudiotecaDePoesí
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