121,106 research outputs found
Salpingogaster abdominalis Sack 1920
abdominalis Sack, 1920: 242. Type locality: " Bolivia ". HT M (SMT). Distr.: Colombia (Quindío (Salento)), Bolivia. Refs.: Sack, 1920: 242, fig. D (tip of abdomen); Thompson et al. 1976: 31 (cat.). Material examined. COLOMBIA: Quindio: Salento, 4.613714 °, - 75.581637 °, 1800m, 3 males, 28.iv. 2009, Leg. A.L. Montoya (CEUA).Published as part of Montoya, Augusto L., 2016, FAMILY SYRPHIDAE, pp. 457-537 in Zootaxa 4122 (1) on page 477, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4122.1.39, http://zenodo.org/record/25932
Sack Race
Sack races at the May Day Festival. Front (l-r) Unidentified and Ronnie Allen. Back l-r: Roger Salis and Unidentified.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/festivals/1040/thumbnail.jp
Sack Tie.
Patent for sack-ties that consist of a brace with a wire that folds in with the upper edges of the mouth of the sack and hold it into position, by hooking around the ends of the brace
Sack Race
Sack races at the May Day Festival. Front (l-r) Unidentified, Unidentified, Unidentified, Ronnie Allen, and Unidentified.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/festivals/1042/thumbnail.jp
Syrphus diaphanus Sack 1921
<p> <b>diaphanus</b> Sack, 1921:146. Type locality: Paraguay, St. Trinidad. HT M (DEI). Distr.: Colombia (Meta (Villavicencio)), Brazil, Paraguay. Refs.: Sack, 1921:146, figs. 21 (habitus), 22 (head); Thompson <i>et al.</i> 1976:64 (cat.); Reemer & Ståhls, 2013:146 (status notes).</p> <p> <b>Material examined. COLOMBIA: Meta:</b> Villavicencio, 4.150000°, -73.633333°, 467m, 1male, Leg. ICN group (ICN).</p>Published as part of <i>Montoya, Augusto L., 2016, FAMILY SYRPHIDAE, pp. 457-537 in Zootaxa 4122 (1)</i> on page 487, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4122.1.39, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/259323">http://zenodo.org/record/259323</a>
Syrphus diaphanus Sack 1921
<p> <b>diaphanus</b> Sack, 1921:146. Type locality: Paraguay, St. Trinidad. HT M (DEI). Distr.: Colombia (Meta (Villavicencio)), Brazil, Paraguay. Refs.: Sack, 1921:146, figs. 21 (habitus), 22 (head); Thompson <i>et al.</i> 1976:64 (cat.); Reemer & Ståhls, 2013:146 (status notes).</p> <p> <b>Material examined. COLOMBIA: Meta:</b> Villavicencio, 4.150000°, -73.633333°, 467m, 1male, Leg. ICN group (ICN).</p>Published as part of <i>Montoya, Augusto L., 2016, FAMILY SYRPHIDAE, pp. 457-537 in Zootaxa 4122 (1)</i> on page 487, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4122.1.39, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/259323">http://zenodo.org/record/259323</a>
Newport Mine, miner with explosives-carrying sack
Date scanned: 2002-5-20.USBM #58830; Filling explosives-carrying sack in explosives magazine; 2800-level, Newport Mine, Pickands, Mather& Company, Ironwood, Gogebic County, Michigan. (Feb. 1945 - M.S.P.).Held in the Russell L. and Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, Arthur Lakes Library, Colorado School of Mines.Donor: United States Bureau of Mines.A miner fills an explosives-carrying sack in an explosives magazine at the Newport Mine. The Newport Mine in the Gogebic district near Ironwood, Michigan began operations in 1884. The mine was operated by the Newport Mining Company, then eventually by Pickands, Mather & Company
Ditaeniella Sack 1939
2. Ditaeniella Sack, 1939 (Figs. 5, 7, 34, 66) Ditaeniella Sack, 1939: 37. Type species: Sciomyza grisescens Meigen, 1830 (original designation). Diagnosis. Frons matt with only 1 orbital seta. Prosternum with a few setulae. Propleural seta distinct. Wing hyaline without spots or reticulated pattern. Remarks. Of the 4 described species, only Ditaeniella grisescens (Meigen, 1830) is known from the Palearctic Region (its range extends into the Oriental Region); the other 3 species are Nearctic or Neotropical. Rozkošný (1987) reported D. grisescens from China, and it is still the only species of Ditaeniella known from China. About 10 males and 5 females were collected both in the Palearctic Region (Heilongjiang, Inner Mongolia, Beijing, Hebei, Xinjiang, Tibet) and the Oriental Region (Yunnan) of China, which is consistent with the known distribution of the genus in the Eastern Hemisphere.Published as part of Li, Zhu, Yang, Ding & Murphy, William L., 2019, Review of genera of Sciomyzidae (Diptera: Acalyptratae) from China, with new records, synonyms, and notes on distribution, pp. 71-98 in Zootaxa 4656 (1) on page 76, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4656.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/336671
Cotton Sack Carrier.
Patent for a carrying sack meant to carry cotton to and from the field. It is not carried on a worker's back or dragged on the ground. The sack is on an adjustable axle and "may be arranged at an inclination to cause the truck to travel upon a curved line to facilitate the guiding of the same in operation; and furthermore, to provide a fender to prevent objects from falling between the cotton sacks and the wheels of the truck" (lines 14-20)
Cotton Sack Carrier.
Patent for cotton-sack carriers "which will offer no impediment to the free movements of the picker," and constructed "such that the ends of the carrier will not engage and 'hang' upon the stalks of cotton, and will pass readily over irregularities in the surface of the field." (Lines 22-38) Includes instructions and illustrations
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