211,539 research outputs found

    Albert P. Schulz Interview, December 4, 1980

    No full text
    Albert Schulz describes some of his experiences trapping along the Rosebud River in Alberta, Canada, in the early 1910s. He talks about learning to snare rabbits from his father, and the three years (1912-1914) that he spent learning to trap from Dan Fletcher, a bachelor rancher who was had lost both feet to frostbite. Schulz talks about a Mr. Gray who trapped outside Edmonton using specially designed pit-traps for gray wolves. Schulz tells how he narrowly missed fighting during World War One, having been called to duty on November 7 and been released when the war ended on November 11, 1918. He recalls moving to Harlowton, Montana in 1937, where he and his wife began trapping to provide supplemental income until 1946. Schulz talks about returning to trapping in the early 1960s around the Big Hole and Grass Range regions with Ralph Hootan.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/montanafurtrappers/1005/thumbnail.jp

    Fenig z okiem

    No full text
    The first Polish translation of a German language story by Bruno Schulz, “Pfennig mit dem Auge,” published in the Illustrierte Cetinjer Zeitung (1917, no. 44, p. 1-2)

    Prochem jesteś. Szkic wojenny

    No full text
    The first Polish translation of a German language story by Bruno Schulz, “Du bist Staub. Kriegskizze,” published in the Illustrierte Cetinjer Zeitung (1918, no. 199, p. 1-2)

    Schulz typograf. Nowa winieta „Przeglądu Podkarpacia”

    No full text
    Schulz’s occasional graphic designs which made the margin of his art included also a vignette of the Przegląd Podkarpacia, drawn in 1937 and used for the first time in the periodical’s 70th number, dated October 17. Before that the vignette had been composed of accidentally chosen type letters available at the printer’s. Schulz preferred a modern type but he did not use the printer’s resources. His vignette was an ink drawing, which guaranteed him maximum liberty. The artist combined a picture of an oil well and a refinery with a letter logo. The first letter “P” was of a double size so that it belonged to both title words placed one under the other. The letters was close enough in style to art deco, yet the whole vignette did not follow any particular schema. The last number of the Przegląd Podkarpacia with Schulz’s vignette was published on July 23, 1939

    Taeniogonalos Schulz 1906

    No full text
    Genus <i>Taeniogonalos</i> Schulz, 1906 <p> <i>Taeniogonalos</i> Schulz, 1906: 212.</p> <p> Type species (by monotypy): <i>Trigonalys maculata</i> Smith, 1851.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis</b>. Antenna filiform with 21–26 antennomeres; supra-antennal elevations reduced, far separated; temple usually punctate; fore wing often with subapical dark patch; second metasomal sternite expanded, often with armature; third sternite never with projection or armature (Binoy <i>et al</i>. 2022).</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Widely distributed genus among all trigonalids. Most species are from eastern Asia and southern America and only one species is known from Europe (Carmean & Kimsey 1998).</p>Published as part of <i>Kumar, P. Girish & Hegde, V. D., 2023, Additions to the knowledge of Taeniogonalos Schulz, 1906 (Hymenoptera: Trigonalyidae) from India with the description of a new species from Western Ghats, pp. 566-572 in Zootaxa 5361 (4)</i> on page 567, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5361.4.6, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10147732">http://zenodo.org/record/10147732</a&gt

    Irenangelus Schulz 1906

    No full text
    Irenangelus Schulz, 1906 Type species Irenangelus hornus Schulz, 1906, by monotypy. Remarks. Species of Irenangelus are rarely collected and poorly represented in collections. They are cleptoparasitoids of other pompilids. Kimsey and Wasbauer (2004) recorded 11 Neotropical species, only two of which are recorded for Caribbean Islands.Published as part of Waichert, Cecilia, Rodriguez, Juanita, Von Dohlen, Carol D. & Pitts, James P., 2012, Spider wasps (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae) of the Dominican Republic, pp. 1-47 in Zootaxa 3353 (1) on page 5, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3353.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/525173

    Pyrgodiscus antiquus A. Forti & P. Schulz 1933

    No full text
    <i>Pyrgodiscus antiquus</i> A.Forti & P.Schulz 1933: 244, pl. 3, fig. 9, 10 =? <p>TYPE:— GERMANY, “hannoverschen Gault” (Forti & Schulz 1933, ‘“ Gault ” Formation (Albian) near Hannover (northwest Germany)’, Gersonde & Harwood 1990: 367).</p> <p>Gersonde & Harwood commented on the locality, writing: “Unfortunately, Forti and Schulz 1933 [1932] did not indicate a type locality. According to Benda (1982), the deposit can no longer be located nor any original raw or type material” (Gersonde & Harwood 1990: 367; see also Georgi 1976).</p>Published as part of <i>Williams, David M. & Sims, Pat A., 2023, Notes on the diatom collection of the Natural History Museum, London (BM) VII: An account of some original specimens of Pyrgodiscus (Bacillariophyta) with notes on Stephanogonia (Bacillariophyta), pp. 213-229 in Phytotaxa 589 (3)</i> on page 222, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.589.3.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7776942">http://zenodo.org/record/7776942</a&gt

    P. de Souza / P. Arnaud (Hg.), The Sea in History. The Ancient World / La mer dans l`histoire. L`Antiquité, Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2017

    No full text
    Schulz R. P. de Souza / P. Arnaud (Hg.), The Sea in History. The Ancient World / La mer dans l`histoire. L`Antiquité, Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2017. Historische Zeitschrift. 2019;308(2):467-468
    corecore