179,223 research outputs found

    Reviewing the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (Part II): Priorities for Short-Term Implementation. CEPS Task Force Reports No. 57, 1 March 2006

    No full text
    [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

    Versions piémontaises de la chanson populaire de Renaud

    No full text
    Nigra C. Versions piémontaises de la chanson populaire de Renaud. In: Romania, tome 11 n°42-43, 1882. pp. 391-398

    Hans-Georg Gadamer, Interroger les Grecs. Etudes sur les Présocratiques, Platon et Aristote. Sous la direction de F. Renaud avec la collaboration de C. Collobert. Traduction et notes par D. Ipperciel. Révisions par F. Renaud et C. Collobert

    No full text
    Kontos Pavlos. Hans-Georg Gadamer, Interroger les Grecs. Etudes sur les Présocratiques, Platon et Aristote. Sous la direction de F. Renaud avec la collaboration de C. Collobert. Traduction et notes par D. Ipperciel. Révisions par F. Renaud et C. Collobert. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Troisième série, tome 107, n°1, 2009. pp. 143-144

    Barbara C. Bowen. Words and the Man in French Renaissance Literature

    No full text
    Renaud Michel. Barbara C. Bowen. Words and the Man in French Renaissance Literature. In: Bulletin de l'Association d'étude sur l'humanisme, la réforme et la renaissance, n°18, 1984. pp. 53-54

    La découverte de la Grande-Bretagne par un voyageur "sans bagages" : John Taylor, le poète-batelier (c. 1580-1653)

    No full text
    Renaud Emma. La découverte de la Grande-Bretagne par un voyageur "sans bagages" : John Taylor, le poète-batelier (c. 1580-1653). In: XVII-XVIII. Bulletin de la société d'études anglo-américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles. N°38, 1994. pp. 9-18

    Tanarctus Renaud-Debyser 1959

    No full text
    Genus Tanarctus Renaud-Debyser, 1959 Diagnosis (following Jørgensen & Kristensen 2001): Tanarctinids without dorso-lateral epicuticle long rodshaped pillars. All four digits with simple external claws without dorsal spurs, internal claws with microscopic spurs or without spurs. The internal digits may be fused proximal and form a pretarsus. The external digits have a basal cuticular fold. The primary clava, when present, is very long and similar to the IV leg appendages, or the IV leg appendages are strongly modified with long spines, leaf-like appendages or balloon-like ampullae. The buccal clavae may consist of fused secondary and tertiary clavae and then appear H-shaped around the mouth, or they can be located rostrally as club-shaped clavae (secondary clavae?). Finally the buccal clavae may be absent or indistinct as a dome- or lens-shaped structure. FIGURE 16. LM of Tholoarctus oleseni nov. sp. A–D. Allotypic female. A. Overview. B. Close-up of the head. C. Close-up of the buccal apparatus. D. Close-up of the fourth pair of legs. E. Overview of the holotypic male. Abbreviations: bt—buccal tube; cE—cirrus E; ec—external cirrus; ed—external digit; ic—internal cirrus; id—internal digit; oe—outer epicuticle; pb—pharyngeal bulb; pc—primary clava; pi—cuticular pillars; sc—secondary clava; se 3 —leg sense organ 3; ss—stylet support; st—stylet; ta—tarsus. Type species: Tanarctus tauricus Renaud-Debyser, 1959. Additional species: Tanarctus arborspinosus Lindgren, 1971; Tanarctus bubulubus Jørgensen & Kristensen, 2001; Tanarctus dendriticus Renaud-Mornant, 1980; Tanarctus diplocerus Fujimoto, Miyazaki & Suziki, 2013; Tanarctus gracilis Renaud-Mornant, 1980; Tanarctus helleouetae Renaud-Mornant, 1984; Tanarctus heterodactylus Renaud-Mornant, 1980; Tanarctus longisetosus Grimaldi de Zio, D'Addabbo Gallo, Morone De Lucia, Vaccarella & Grimaldi, 1982; Tanarctus minotauricus Renaud-Mornant, 1984; Tanarctus ramazzottii Renaud-Mornant, 1975; Tanarctus tauricus Renaud-Debyser, 1959; Tanarctus velatus McKirdy, Schmidt & McGinty-Bayly, 1976. Remarks. Several new species of tanarctids with unknown phylogenetic relationships have been reported from the coarse shell gravel of the Faroe Bank (Hansen et al. 2001). These species might represent a North Atlantic radiation, and together with the common occurance of Tanarctus in subtidal samples (R.M. Kristensen pers. obs.), suggest that this genus is much more numerous than the current number of described species. If all the undescribed species residing in various tardigrade collections were examined, the number of known Tanarctus species would greatly increase; as shown with the descriptions of several new species of stygarctids (Hansen et al. 2012).Published as part of Jørgensen, Aslak, Boesgaard, Tom M., Møbjerg, Nadja & Kristensen, Reinhardt M., 2014, The tardigrade fauna of Australian marine caves: With descriptions of nine new species of Arthrotardigrada, pp. 401-443 in Zootaxa 3802 (4) on pages 432-434, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3802.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/25249

    Coronarctus tenellus Renaud-Mornant 1974

    No full text
    37. Coronarctus tenellus Renaud-Mornant, 1974 Coronarctus tenellus gen. et sp. nov. (Renaud-Mornant 1974) Terra typica: Indian Ocean (Mozambique Channel, Africa) Atlantic Ocean: • 22 °01′S, 10 ° 17 ′E; 3694 m bsl: [FAO 47] ca. 350 km E from Namibian coast, S slope of Walvis Ridge, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) Indian Ocean: • 08° 11.2 ′N, 50 ° 57.4 ′E / 08° 11 ′N, 50 ° 57 ′E; 3110 m bsl: [FAO 51] Somalian coast, Station 115, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) • 07° 54.1 ′N, 50 °36.0′E / 07° 54 ′N, 50 ° 36 ′E; 2600 m bsl: [FAO 51] Somalian coast, Station 121, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) • 05°05.6′N, 50 °31.0′E / 05°06′N, 50 ° 31 ′E; 4690 m bsl: [FAO 51] Somalian coast, Station 129, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) • 02° 23.5 ′N, 48 ° 30.7 ′E / 02° 24 ′N, 48 ° 31 ′E; 4140 m bsl: [FAO 51] Somalian coast, Station 134, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) • 02° 23.5 ′N, 48 ° 30.7 ′E / 02° 24 ′N, 48 ° 31 ′E; 4130 m bsl: [FAO 51] Type Locality: Somalian coast, Station 134, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) • 01° 20.5 ′N, 44 ° 57.4 ′E / 01° 21 ′N, 44 ° 57 ′E; 1630 m bsl: [FAO 51] Somalian coast, Station 143, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) • 00°33.0′N, 45 °35.0′E / 00° 33 ′N, 45 ° 35 ′E; 3390 m bsl: [FAO 51] Somalian coast, Station 146, abyssal sediments. Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1975b) Record numbers (Sea/Ocean classification): Atlantic Ocean: 1, Indian Ocean: 7; total: 8. Record numbers (FAO classification): FAO 47: 1, FAO 51: 7; total: 8. Remarks: This abyssal species (found at depths below 1600 m) has been reported from a transect in the Indian Ocean and an Atlantic locality off the coast of Namibia. Although only eight localities are involved, C. tenellus is the most frequently reported Coronarctus.Published as part of Kaczmarek, Łukasz, Bartels, Paul J., Roszkowska, Milena & Nelson, Diane R., 2015, The Zoogeography of Marine Tardigrada, pp. 1-189 in Zootaxa 4037 (1) on page 43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4037.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23351

    Coronarctidae Renaud-Mornant 1974

    No full text
    1.3 CORONARCTIDAE Renaud-Mornant, 1974 (emended by Hansen 2007) Arthrotardigrades with cylindrical worm-like body. Trunk cuticle smooth, with folds, bearing three somatic cirri (B, C and E) or only one (E). Eleven cephalic sense organs present, including large flattened secondary clavae (occasionally occurring as indistinct areas). Three or four claws, connected to foot by membranes. 1.3.1 Coronarctus Renaud-Mornant, 1974 (emended by Hansen 2007; Figs 4 B, 10A, B) Coronarctidae with unplated cylindrical body, with more or less pronounced cuticular folds. Three pairs of somatic cirri with accordion-like scapus. Conical head separated into two parts; anterior triangular part with median cirrus and flattened secondary clavae, posterior part narrower, bearing lateral cirri and primary clavae. Four claws on each leg displaying more or less important heterometry6. Buccal apparatus without stylet supports or placoids17. Digestive tract with poorly developed diverticula. Female with two seminal receptacles. Type species: Coronarctus tenellus Renaud-Mornant, 1974 Selected literature for further information: Renaud-Mornant (1974, 1987b) and Romano III et al. (2011). 1.3.2 Trogloarctus Villora-Moreno, 1996 (Figs 4 C, 10C) Coronarctidae with elongated body with cuticular folds. Only one pair of somatic cirri (cirrus E) with accordion-like scapus. Eleven cephalic sense organs. Primary clava, small and globular, inserted separately from cirrus A. Secondary clavae flattened and not pronounced. Small cephalic cirri consisting of two parts: scapus and flagellum. External cirri equally distant from the internal cirri and the primary clavae. Spines on all legs. Three claws on each leg, very long on fourth leg. Buccal apparatus with bar-shaped placoids, but without stylet supports. Type species Trogloarctus trionyches Villora-Moreno, 1996 Selected literature for further information: Villora-Moreno (1996).Published as part of Fontoura, Paulo, Bartels, Paul J., Jørgensen, Aslak, Kristensen, Reinhardt Møbjerg & Hansen, Jesper Guldberg, 2017, A dichotomous key to the genera of the Marine Heterotardigrades (Tardigrada), pp. 1-45 in Zootaxa 4294 (1) on page 26, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4294.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/83154

    Trans-Planckian dispersion and scale invariance of inflationary perturbations

    No full text
    We investigate the insensitivity of the predictions of inflationary models with respect to modifications of Planck energy physics. The modification we consider consists in replacing the usual dispersion relation by nonlinear ones. This way of addressing the problem has recently recieved attention and contradictory results were found. Our main result is to show that the adiabaticity of the mode propagation and the separation of two scales of interest, the Planck scale and the cosmological horizon scale, are sufficient conditions for the predictions to be unchanged. We then show that almost all models satisfy the first condition if the second is met. Therefore the introduction of a nonlinear dispersion is unlikely to have any discernable effects on the power spectrum of cosmological perturbations

    C. Lequesne, Paris-Bruxelles. Comment se fait la politique européenne de la France

    No full text
    Dorandeu Renaud. C. Lequesne, Paris-Bruxelles. Comment se fait la politique européenne de la France. In: Politix, vol. 8, n°30, Deuxième trimestre 1995. Incertitudes italiennes, sous la direction de Jean-Louis Briquet , Christophe Bouillaud, Jean-Yves Dormagen et Isabelle Sommier. pp. 210-212
    corecore