4,572 research outputs found

    Fig. 1 in Globales Informationssystem Zünslerfalter (GlobIZ)

    No full text
    Fig. 1: Online-Eingabemaske für Artgruppennamen.Published as part of <i>Nuss, Matthias & Segerer, Andreas H., 2005, Globales Informationssystem Zünslerfalter (GlobIZ), pp. 445-449 in Beiträge Zur Entomologie = Contributions to Entomology 55</i> on page 447, DOI: 10.21248/contrib.entomol.55.2.445-449, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10109427">http://zenodo.org/record/10109427</a&gt

    Fig. 2 in Globales Informationssystem Zünslerfalter (GlobIZ)

    No full text
    Fig. 2: Taxon Report für die Abfrage "Anarpia" (Hier ist nicht die Bildschirmansicht gezeigt, da diese nur mittels Scrollen die gesamte Information anzeigen kann).Published as part of <i>Nuss, Matthias & Segerer, Andreas H., 2005, Globales Informationssystem Zünslerfalter (GlobIZ), pp. 445-449 in Beiträge Zur Entomologie = Contributions to Entomology 55</i> on page 448, DOI: 10.21248/contrib.entomol.55.2.445-449, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10109427">http://zenodo.org/record/10109427</a&gt

    Epinotia cinereana (Haworth, 1811) bona sp., a Holarctic tortricid distinct from E. nisella (Clerck, 1759) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Eucosmini) as evidenced by DNA barcodes, morphology and life history

    No full text
    Mutanen, Marko, Aarvik, Leif, Landry, Jean-François, Segerer, Andreas H., Karsholt, Ole (2012): Epinotia cinereana (Haworth, 1811) bona sp., a Holarctic tortricid distinct from E. nisella (Clerck, 1759) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Eucosmini) as evidenced by DNA barcodes, morphology and life history. Zootaxa 3318: 1-25, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21150

    Stylos kai edraiōma tēs ekklēsias, sive, Dissertatio de iustificatione hominis

    No full text
    quam ... sub praesidio ... Ioh. Henrici Heideggeri ... placido eruditorum examini subiicit Andreas Steinerus, Vitod. author & respondens, ad diem Octobris loco horisque solitisDiss. Hohe Schule Zürich, 167

    Author: Andreas Johannis Prytz

    No full text
    An edition of the consecration sermons in Gothenburg Cathedral 1633 by Superintendent Andreas Johannis Prytz, with introductory comments. The first sermon deals with the need for Church buildings, the second with the consecration of a new Church

    We must combine conservation of nature with benefits to society. Interview by Gaby Allheilig with Andreas Heinimann on IPBES' Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services

    No full text
    On 6 May 2019, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) presented its report on the state of biodiversity and ecosystem services worldwide. The first such assessment since 2005, it concludes that biodiversity and ecosystem loss has reached the point where it threatens human well-being. The researchers involved recommend several urgent measures to political decision-makers. Andreas Heinimann of CDE was the one Swiss scientist who worked as a lead author on a chapter of the report

    To athanaton tēs psychēs, sive, Dissertatio de animae immortalitate, ex naturae & sanae rationis lumine demonstrata

    No full text
    quam ... sub praesidio ... Iohannis Lavateri ... publicae ac placidae disquisitioni submittit Andreas Steinerus, Vitod. author & respondens ...Dedikation an Johannes Lavater, Jacob Meyer, Joh. Jacob Schaedler und Jacob Hegner auf dem Titelbl. versoDiss. Hohe Schule Zürich, 167

    Family Virtues and Social Critique: Andreas Latzko’s Anti-War Prose (1917-1918)

    No full text
    Between 1917 and 1918, the Austro-Hungarian author Andreas Latzko (1876-1943) wrote three separate publications against the Great War: Menschen im Krieg (1917), Friedensgericht (1918), and Der letzte Mann (published 1919). Literary historians tend to bypass these works, and the few who note them chiefly focus on the best-selling novella cycle Menschen im Krieg (1917). It is usually presented as an example of expressionist political prose, or as a mixture of social satire and aesthetic shock-tactics that chiefly remains indebted to realist traditions, albeit with occasional incursions into expressionistic styles..

    A novel mutation in FGFR-3 disrupts a putative N-glycosylation site and results in hypochondroplasia

    No full text
    Winterpacht, Andreas, Katja Hilbert, Christiane Stelzer, Thorsten Schweikardt, Heinz Decker, Hugo Segerer, Jürgen Spranger, and Bernhard Zabel. A novel mutation in FGFR-3 disrupts a putative N-glycosylation site and results in hypochondroplasia. Physiol. Genomics 2: 9–12, 2000.—Fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) is a glycoprotein that belongs to the family of tyrosine kinase receptors. Specific mutations in the FGFR3 gene are associated with autosomal dominant human skeletal disorders such as hypochondroplasia, achondroplasia, and thanatophoric dysplasia. Hypochondroplasia (HCH), the mildest form of this group of short-limbed dwarfism disorders, results in ∼60% of cases from a mutation in the intracellular FGFR3-tyrosine kinase domain. The remaining cases may either be caused by defects in other FGFR gene regions or other yet unidentified genes. We describe a novel HCH mutation, the first found outside the common mutation hot spot of this condition. This point mutation, an N328I exchange in the extracellular Ig domain III of the receptor, seems to be unique as it affects a putative N-glycosylation site that is conserved between different FGFRs and species. The amino acid exchange itself most probably has no impact on the three-dimensional structure of the receptor domain, suggesting that the phenotype is the result of altered receptor glycosylation and its pathophysiological consequences. </jats:p

    Short laws for finite groups and residual finiteness growth

    No full text
    We prove that for every n ∈ N n \in \mathbb {N} and δ &gt; 0 \delta &gt;0 there exists a word w n ∈ F 2 w_n \in F_2 of length O ( n 2 / 3 log ⁡ ( n ) 3 + δ ) O(n^{2/3} \log (n)^{3+\delta }) which is a law for every finite group of order at most n n . This improves upon the main result of Andreas Thom [Israel J. Math. 219 (2017), pp. 469–478] by the second named author. As an application we prove a new lower bound on the residual finiteness growth of non-abelian free groups. </p
    corecore