118,854 research outputs found
#Farestoria. Una discussione intorno al mestiere di storico
Il volume raccoglie alcuni contributi dedicati al mestiere di storico in età contemporanea, tra ricerca, didattica e valorizzazione del patrimonio culturale, ed è dedicato alla memoria di Raffaele Licinio. Il volume è pubblicato nell’ambito del programma di ricerca dell’Associazione del Centro Studi Normanno-Svevi “Storia della città – 2022-2024” (coordinatore e responsabile scientifco V. Rivera Magos), in collaborazione con il Comune di Barletta, realizzato grazie al contributo concesso dalla Direzione generale Educazione, Ricerca e Istituti Cultural
An interview with Mayra Rivera: Postcolonial women's writing and material religion
In this interview, Mayra Rivera talks about her own journey with literature and theology and what this relationship means to her. She talks about the distinct role that literature plays in a postcolonial context, and its ability to articulate painful losses, histories, as well as economic and environmental realities, with a particular focus on the Caribbean and South America, and the work of Sylvia Wynter, Edwidge Danticat, Mayra Santos Febres, Édouard Glissant, amongst others. This storytelling is often deeply theological and material. The nature of this entanglement, between storytelling, theology, materiality, and post/neo/de-colonialism, is explored in heartfelt detail
Anyphaena franciscoi Rivera-Quiroz & Álvarez-Padilla 2023, sp. nov.
Anyphaena franciscoi sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: D00F2524-98DA-4755-82FE-FC064FCD1CCD Figs 17, 18E–F, 52 Differential diagnosis The female of A. franciscoi sp. nov. is differentiated from all those of species of the pectorosa and pacifica groups by the following features: atrium trapezoidal, hood broad and posteriorly curved at the center (Figs 17E–F, 18E–F). The female of A. rebecae sp. nov. also has a similar trapezoidal atrium, and copulatory duct paths (Fig. 28E–F), but it differs from that of A. franciscoi sp. nov. by the notched hood and smaller size (7.23 ±1.1). Anyphaena sofiae sp. nov. shares similar copulatory duct paths and spermathecal proportions with both species, but differs by the oval atrium and copulatory ducts extending beyond the hood (Fig. 36E–F). Etymology The species epithet is dedicated to Francisco Rivera, father of the first author. Material examined Holotype MEXICO • ♀; San Luis Potosi, Xilitla City, Las Pozas; 21.39722° N, 98.99388° W; alt. 662 m; 26–30 Mar. 2012; Arcanolab team leg.; tropical wet forest fragment; LUP; CNAN-T01527. Description Female Total length 9.6. Carapace light yellow, with two faint darker bands delineating cephalic area and around fovea (Fig. 17A, D). Sternum surface white, intercoxal triangles present on all legs. Labium brown, white at tip, longer than wide. Endites yellow, rectangular, broader at tip (Fig. 17C). Chelicerae brown without dorsal pattern (Fig. 17B, D), promargin with five teeth, retromargin with nine to ten denticles. Legs femora base yellow, orange-brown distally and from patella to tarsi (Fig. 17A–C). Abdomen dorsal surface white and delineated by two light brown parallel longitudinal lines, lateral surfaces white and dorsally delineated by light brown longitudinal lines, ventral surface center with faint light brown longitudinal band from epigastric furrow to spinneret bases, tracheal spiracle closer to epigastric furrow (Fig. 17A–C). Anterior area of epigynal plate delineated laterally by two faint triangular pits. Genital openings at both sides of anterior edge of atrium under hood. Copulatory duct slightly curved and entering surface of anterior spermathecae. Seminal receptacles oval in anterior third of copulatory ducts. Fertilization ducts short, cylindrical, and entering lateral surface of spermathecae (Figs 17E–F, 18E–F). Cephalothorax length 4.37, thoracic width 2.73, cephalic width 1.55. Clypeus height 0.13. Eye diameters: AME 0.11, ALE 0.15, PME 0.16, PLE 0.16. Eye interdistances: AME–AME 0.07, AME– ALE 0.04, ALE–PLE 0.07, PME–PME 0.15, PME–PLE 0.13. Femur lengths: I 4.24, II 3.71, III 2.98, IV 4.29. Leg spination: femur I d1-1-1, p0-1-1, r0-1-1. Tibia I v2-2-0, p1-1-1, r1-1-1. Metatarsus I v2-2-0, p1-1-1, r1-1-1. Femur II d1-1-1, p0-1-1, r0-1-1. Tibia II v2-2-0, p1-1-1, r1-1-1. Metatarsus II v2-2-0, p1-1-1, r1-1-1. Femur III d1-1-1, p0-1-1, r0-1-1. Tibia III v2-2-2, p1-1-0, p1-1-0. Metatarsus III v2-2-2, p1-1-2, r1-1-2. Femur IV d1-1-1, p0-0-1, r0-0-1. Tibia IV v2-2-2, p1-1-1, r1-1-1. Metatarsus IV v2-2-2, p1-1-2, r1-1-2. Male Unknown. Variation Only type specimen known. Distribution Only known from the type locality (Fig. 52). Natural history Collected at night by direct searching over vegetation.Published as part of Rivera-Quiroz, F. Andrés & Álvarez-Padilla, Fernando, 2023, Integration or minimalism: twenty-one new species of ghost spiders (Anyphaenidae: Anyphaena) from Mexico, pp. 1-94 in European Journal of Taxonomy 865 on pages 31-33, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2023.865.2097, http://zenodo.org/record/786744
Lógica de la libertad; principios de la doctrina del derecho.
At head of title: F. Rivera y Pastor.Mode of access: Internet
eDNA metabarcoding from aquatic biofilms allows studying spatial and temporal fluctuations of fish communities from Lake Geneva
Supplementary tables of the article“eDNA metabarcoding from aquatic biofilms allows studying spatial and temporal fluctuations of fish communities from Lake Geneva” Rivera, S.F., Vasselon, V., Bouchez. A. & Rimet, F
Ana Rivera
Ana Rivera is a senior program integration manager in the Program Business Office of NASA’s Launch Services Program (LSP) at the John F. Kennedy Space Center in Florida. As Program Integration Manager, she serves as a key member of the mission integration team. She is responsible for participating in the initiation, planning, and execution of all matters associated with launch service contracts and associated mission budgets.
Ana began her career with NASA in 2005 with the Shuttle Processing Directorate as an electrical engineer. In this role, she served as a Remote Manipulator System (RMS) engineer and was responsible for processing, integration, and testing of the Space Shuttle RMS, also known as the Canada arm, and the inspection boom assembly. During her tenure with the Shuttle Program, Ana also served on a Source Evaluation Board in support of the Constellation Program. In 2010, she began serving as a business integration engineer in the LSP Business Office and moved into her current role in 2013.
Ana was born and raised on Florida’s Space Coast. She graduated with a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Electrical Engineering and a Master’s of Science degree in Industrial Engineering from the University of Florida in Gainesville.
Ana currently resides in Merritt Island, FL with her husband and their young daughter.https://commons.erau.edu/space-congress-bios-2019/1070/thumbnail.jp
I Mozzi di Firenze e gli Arcivescovi di Trani. Nuove acquisizioni sul fallimento della compagnia di Tommaso di Spigliato e Francesco di Vanni
Anyphaena fernandae Rivera-Quiroz & Álvarez-Padilla 2023, sp. nov.
Anyphaena fernandae sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 350499A4-08EA-4C45-8265-F55302FE61A3 Figs 9, 18A–B, 52 Differential diagnosis Females of A. fernandae sp. nov. are differentiated from those of A. autumna Platnick, 1974 (Platnick 1974: figs 39, 45) and the other species of the celer group by the following features: ellipsoid hood, wider than long, midpiece rhomboidal and tapering posteriorly, spermathecae wider than long, and short copulatory ducts (Figs 9E–F, 18A–B). Etymology The species epithet is dedicated to Fernanda Lia Rivera, sister of the first author. Material examined Holotype MEXICO • ♀; Veracruz, Calcahualco, Atotonilco, Plot I; 19.12569° N, 97.06756° W; alt. 2300 m; 4–14 Oct. 2012; Arcanolab team leg.; oak forest fragment; BEAT; CNAN-T01526. Description Female Total length 5.5. Carapace yellow, more sclerotized over ocular area, pattern with brown longitudinal bands around cephalic area extending to thoracic area and clypeus (Fig. 9A, D). Sternum surface yellow, margins darker, intercoxal triangles present on all legs. Labium brown, white at tip, longer than wide. Endites yellow, rectangular, slightly broader at tip (Fig. 9C). Chelicerae slightly dark yellow, paturon dorsal surface covered with two darker lines (Fig. 9B, D), promargin with four teeth, retromargin with eight to nine denticles. Leg coloration: yellow with scattered brown patches irregularly distributed from femora to tarsi (Fig. 9A–C). Abdomen dark brown, dorsal surface with four central darker chevrons, lateral and ventral surfaces yellow, covered with reticulated dark lines, ventral surface with clear rectangle and dark longitudinal midline cut by tracheal spiracle at center of abdomen (Fig. 9A–C). Epigynum atrium wider than long, delineated by curved sclerotized lateral borders. Copulatory openings inside posterior margins of atrium (Fig. 9E–F). Copulatory ducts short and comma-shaped, entering spermathecae ventrally. Fertilization ducts entering spermathecae dorsally. Seminal receptacles not visible (Fig. 18A–B). Cephalothorax length 2.26, thoracic width 1.61, cephalic width 1.05. Clypeus height 0.09. Eye diameters: AME 0.07, ALE 0.13, PME 0.11, PLE 0.13. Eye interdistances: AME– AME 0.05, AME–ALE 0.02, ALE–PLE 0.06, PME–PME 0.15, PME–PLE 0.11. Femur lengths: I 1.95, II 1.76, III 1.46, IV 2.05. Leg spination: femur I d1-1-1, p0-0-2, r0-0-0. Tibia I v2-1-1, p1-1-1, r0-0-1. Metatarsus I v2-2-0, p1-1-0, r1-1-0. Femur II d1-1-1, p0-0-2, r0-0-0. Tibia II v2-1-1, p1-1-1, r0-0-1. Metatarsus II v2-2-0, p1-1-0, r1-1-0. Femur III d1-1-1, p0-0-1, r0-0-1. Tibia III v2-2-2, p1-1-0, r1-1-0. Metatarsus III v2-2-2, p1-1-2, r1-1-2. Femur IV d1-1-1, p0-0-1, r0-0-1. Tibia IV v2-2-2, p1-1-0, r1-1-0. Metatarsus IV v2-2-2, p1-1-2, r1-1-2. Male Unknown. Variation Only type specimen known. Distribution Only known from the type locality (Fig. 52). Natural history Collected by beating vegetation.Published as part of Rivera-Quiroz, F. Andrés & Álvarez-Padilla, Fernando, 2023, Integration or minimalism: twenty-one new species of ghost spiders (Anyphaenidae: Anyphaena) from Mexico, pp. 1-94 in European Journal of Taxonomy 865 on pages 17-19, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2023.865.2097, http://zenodo.org/record/786744
- …
