143,994 research outputs found

    Review of Huerta de Soto´s `Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles´

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    This article reviews the first English edition of Prof. Jesús Huerta de Soto´s book `Dinero, Crédito Bancario y Ciclos Económicos´ which first appeared in Spain in 1998.Business Cycle Theory; Law and Economics of Money and Banking; Austrian school; new institutional economics; financial markets; history of money; credit and banking; deregulation of financial institutions; economics of transition

    Aglaophenia baggins Soto Angel & Pena Cantero 2017

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    <i>Aglaophenia baggins</i> Soto Àngel & Peña Cantero, 2017 <p>(Fig. 15a)</p> <p> <b>Material examined.</b> <i>ANT XV/3</i>: <b>48-33</b>, one cormoid, c. 42 mm high, with corbulae; <b>48-34</b>, three cormoids, up to 45 mm high, with corbulae.</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> Recently described species, whose finding constituted the first evidence of the genus for any polar region and the first report of the family from Antarctic waters (see Soto Àngel & Peña Cantero 2017b).</p> <p> <b>Ecology and distribution.</b> Reported at depths from 62 to 116 m. Only known for now from the Cape Norvegia region, in the Weddell Sea.</p>Published as part of <i>Soto, Joan J. & Peña, Álvaro L., 2019, Benthic hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Weddell Sea (Antarctica), pp. 1-78 in Zootaxa 4570 (1)</i> on page 44, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4570.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/2608527">http://zenodo.org/record/2608527</a&gt

    Bertha Soto and family

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    Bertha Soto with aunts and papacitohttps://digitalcommons.acu.edu/coc_missions_photos/1875/thumbnail.jp

    Emrique Soto, diputado, retrato.

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    Foto extraida de una credencial de la cámara de diputados. I.O. ""Soto Enrique L"

    1989 De Soto Celebration

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    The back of the card reads, "The heroic exploits of Hernando De Soto, gallant 16th century Spanish Conquistador, are vivdly portrayed in Bradenton, Florida each spring during De Soto Celebration. Authentically uniformed Conquistadors re-enact the landing of the first expeditionary force to explore what is now the United States southeast. De Soto National Memorial Park in Bradenton is maintained by the United States Park Service to denote the historical landing site. Pictured L-R: Captain Charlie Hackney; Padre Austin Pickering; Hernando De Soto, Tyrone Shinn; Lieutenant Vance Noles; Lieutenant David Wilder. 1989 De Soto Celebration, 450th anniversary of De Soto's landing: Apr. 8-22." The Hernando De Soto Historical Society was formed in 1939 to plan and produce the De Soto Celebration (today known as the De Soto Heritage Festival). The multi-day event included a parade and festival as well as historical reenactments and other events. The organization and its festivities continue today and are intended to celebrate local history, culture, and identity while commemorating the historical significance of the Hernando De Soto landing on the Manatee River. This postcard is courtesy of Manatee County Historical Records Library

    1989 De Soto Celebration

    No full text
    The back of the card reads, "The heroic exploits of Hernando De Soto, gallant 16th century Spanish Conquistador, are vivdly portrayed in Bradenton, Florida each spring during De Soto Celebration. Authentically uniformed Conquistadors re-enact the landing of the first expeditionary force to explore what is now the United States southeast. De Soto National Memorial Park in Bradenton is maintained by the United States Park Service to denote the historical landing site. Pictured L-R: Captain Charlie Hackney; Padre Austin Pickering; Hernando De Soto, Tyrone Shinn; Lieutenant Vance Noles; Lieutenant David Wilder. 1989 De Soto Celebration, 450th anniversary of De Soto's landing: Apr. 8-22." The Hernando De Soto Historical Society was formed in 1939 to plan and produce the De Soto Celebration (today known as the De Soto Heritage Festival). The multi-day event included a parade and festival as well as historical reenactments and other events. The organization and its festivities continue today and are intended to celebrate local history, culture, and identity while commemorating the historical significance of the Hernando De Soto landing on the Manatee River. This postcard is courtesy of Manatee County Historical Records Library

    1989 De Soto Celebration

    No full text
    The back of the card reads, "The heroic exploits of Hernando De Soto, gallant 16th century Spanish Conquistador, are vivdly portrayed in Bradenton, Florida each spring during De Soto Celebration. Authentically uniformed Conquistadors re-enact the landing of the first expeditionary force to explore what is now the United States southeast. De Soto National Memorial Park in Bradenton is maintained by the United States Park Service to denote the historical landing site. Pictured L-R: Captain Charlie Hackney; Padre Austin Pickering; Hernando De Soto, Tyrone Shinn; Lieutenant Vance Noles; Lieutenant David Wilder. 1989 De Soto Celebration, 450th anniversary of De Soto's landing: Apr. 8-22." The Hernando De Soto Historical Society was formed in 1939 to plan and produce the De Soto Celebration (today known as the De Soto Heritage Festival). The multi-day event included a parade and festival as well as historical reenactments and other events. The organization and its festivities continue today and are intended to celebrate local history, culture, and identity while commemorating the historical significance of the Hernando De Soto landing on the Manatee River. This postcard is courtesy of Manatee County Historical Records Library

    Astrothelium caucavallense Soto-Medina & Aptroot 2023

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    <i>Astrothelium caucavallense</i> Soto-Medina & Aptroot, sp. nov. (Fig. 1) <p> A new <i>Astrothelium</i> similar to <i>A. megaeneum</i> Flakus & Aptroot, but differs by its larger ascospores.</p> <p> HOLOTYPE. — <b>Colombia</b>. Valle del Cauca, Municipio Roldanillo, corregimiento Higueroncito, 4°29’52.2”N, 76°06’39.1”W, 998 m, tropical dry forest, 16.XI.2020, <i>Soto Medina 28H</i> (holo-, TULV).</p> <p> ISOTYPE. — <b>Colombia</b>. Valle del Cauca, Municipio Roldanillo, corregimiento Higueroncito, 4°29’52.2”N, 76°06’39.1”W, 998 m, tropical dry forest, 16.XI.2020, <i>Soto Medina 82H</i> (iso-, CUVC).</p> <p>ETYMOLOGY. — The epithet refers to refers to the Valle del Cauca, a department in Colombia.</p> <p> ECOLOGY. — This species grows on bark of <i>Zanthoxylum caribaeum</i> Lam. and <i>Euphorbia cotinifolia</i> L. in tropical dry forest.</p> <p>CHEMISTRY. — Thallus UV– but orange pruina UV+ red, K+ red, C–; medulla C–, K–, KC–; orange pruina on pseudostromata surface UV+ red, K+ red.</p> <p>MYCOBANK. — MB 849069.</p> DESCRIPTION <p> Thallus corticolous, crustose, corticate, smooth, (olive-)green but partially covered by orange pruina. Photobiont of a species of <i>Trentepohlia</i> Martius. Ascomata globose in section, 0.5-1.0 mm diam., single to laterally aggregated, immersed in weakly delimited pseudostromata, their base often immersed in the bark; pseudostromata covered by orange pruina. Perithecial wall fully carbonized, up to up 100 µm wide. Ostioles apical, not fused, appearing as flat, dark brown spots from above. Hamathecium not inspersed. Asci 8-spored. Ascospores hyaline, 3-septate, oblong, 35-50 × 11-15 µm, their ends rounded and their lumina diamond-shaped, surrounded by a gelatinous layer up to 10 µm thick. Pycnidia not observed.</p> NOTES <p> With the external orange pigment produced on the thallus and particularly the pseudostromata, <i>Astrothelium caucavallense</i> Soto-Medina & Aptroot, sp. nov. belongs in the <i>A. aeneum</i> complex, but within which it is distinguished by its comparatively large ascospores. Most species in this complex have small ascospores around 20-25×6-10 µm large; the only species so far known with somewhat larger ascospores (25- 35× 10-12 µm) is <i>A. megaeneum</i> Flakus & Aptroot, but even in that species, the ascospores are considerably smaller than in the new species (Aptroot & Lücking 2016). Within the <i>A. aeneum</i> complex, species either have a clear or an inspersed hymenium. An inspersed hymenium is found in <i>A. inspersaeneum</i> E.L.Lima, Aptroot & M.Cáceres and <i>A. aenascens</i> Aptroot, both with small ascospores, whereas a clear hymenium is found in <i>A. aeneum</i> (Eschw.) Aptroot & Lücking (small ascospores), <i>A. megaeneum</i> (ascospores of intermediate size), and in the new species, with large ascospores, all with a similar overall morphology (Aptroot & Lücking 2016). The new species would key out in the recent world key to the family (Aptroot 2021) in couplet H31, with: ascospores 35-50 µm long.</p>Published as part of <i>Soto-Medina, Edier, Aptroot, André & Lücking, Robert, 2023, New species of lichen for Colombia tropical dry forest, pp. 103-107 in Cryptogamie, Mycologie 20 (7)</i> on page 104, DOI: 10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2023v44a7, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/8296198">http://zenodo.org/record/8296198</a&gt
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