1,376,667 research outputs found

    [Selfie of Patrick Voss]

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    Photograph of Patrick Voss in a bathroom the day he returned to UNT 31 years after completing his first Master's program, year 2022, exact date unknown

    Mrs. Adrian De Voss Card

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    A letter sent by Sarah De Voss, mother of Frank De Voss, from Sheboygan, Wisconsin on January 19, 1943 to the First Christian Church of Morehead, Kentucky.https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/mfcc_ww2_letters/1078/thumbnail.jp

    The Terrifying Mystery of the Cave: Interview With Georgina Voss

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    The exploration of systems that Georgina Voss proposes engages with their affective dimensions and the complex interplay between visibility, power, and the unknown, reimagined as The Terrifying Mystery of the Cave. This metaphor shifts focus from the expectation of solutions to an acknowledgment of the profound complexity and enigmatic nature of systemic challenges. Drawing on perspectives from cybernetics to design theory, this analysis interrogates the mechanistic metaphors dominating system thinking, situating them within broader socio-political and historical contexts. A central focus lies in the tension between what is visible and what remains hidden — what occurs “backstage” — and the ways these obscured layers shape the visible outcomes of systems. Deterministic framings of systems as controllable entities are critiqued, emphasizing their human-made origins and deeply ingrained ideological structures. The unknown emerges as a generative space, where unknowing becomes a means to rethink complexity and disrupt reductive narratives

    Anke Voss

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    Voss discusses the origin/creation of the archives in the new library, her early teaching experiences in Illinois and being identified as person to take over at a time when plans to host the Remington Trust exhibit of rare books were under way. Myers gave presentations on those books, encouraging their use by students and faculty. She recalls Myers saying there would be an archives pedestal on top of the new library and that he was a love everything, celebrate everything kind of person who was rarely idle. Voss recounts Myers\u27 visits to her office and that he did not interfere with her work. Voss does not recall Myers wanting Special Collections to have a specific focus but she also recalls the areas she tried to emphasize: the John Wesley Powell Pottery Collection, working on the campus photograph workflows, and responding to the water disaster in the new building. She describes going through the manuscript material at the president\u27s house and book selection decisions for retention and the auction. Voss concludes with reflections on the purpose of a presidency and Myers\u27 place within that range of work

    Marmosa (Eomarmosa) Voss 2014

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    Subgenus Eomarmosa Voss et al., 2014 TYPE SPECIES: Marmosa rubra Tate, 1931, by original designation. SYNONYMS: None. REMARKS: Only a single species is currently recognized.Published as part of Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455) on page 10, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/716137

    Philander pebas Voss 2018

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    <i>Philander pebas</i> Voss et al., 2018 <p>TYPE MATERIAL AND TYPE LOCALITY: MVZ 190343, the holotype by original designation, consists of the skin, skull, and frozen tissues of an adult male collected at Igarapé Nova Empresa (6.80° S, 70.73° W) on the left bank of the Rio Juruá, Amazonas, Brazil.</p> <p>SYNONYMS: None.</p> <p> DISTRIBUTION: As currently documented by examined specimens, <i>Philander pebas</i> occurs in eastern Ecuador (Orellana), eastern Peru (Loreto, Madre de Dios, Ucayali), and western Brazil (Acre, Amazonas), but Voss et al. (2018) speculated that the species might range throughout the <i>várzea</i> landscapes (seasonally inundated by white-water rivers) of western Amazonia, including those in southeastern Colombia, where it is still unknown.</p> <p>REMARKS: A morphological description, illustrations, comparisons with congeneric species, summary statistics for external and craniodental measurements, and analyses of mtDNA sequence data were provided by Voss et al. (2018).</p>Published as part of <i>Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455)</i> on pages 39-40, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7161371">http://zenodo.org/record/7161371</a&gt

    Cryptonanus Voss 2005

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    Genus Cryptonanus Voss et al., 2005 TYPE SPECIES: Marmosa agilis chacoensis Tate, 1931, by original designation. SYNONYMS: None. REMARKS: See Voss and Jansa (2009) for an emended generic description. Phylogenetic analyses of multilocus sequence datasets strongly support generic monophyly and convincingly recover Cryptonanus and Chacodelphys as sister taxa in a larger clade that includes Gracilinanus, Lestodelphys, and Thylamys, but not Marmosops (Díaz-Nieto et al., 2016a; Fegies et al., 2021). Of the five species originally referred to Cryptonanus by Voss et al. (2005), only four are now recognized as valid. Currently recognized species of Cryptonanus are all from south of the Amazon (in Brazil, Paraguay, Bolivia, Uruguay, and Argentina), but specimens of a possibly undescribed species have been reported from Amapá (Silva et al., 2013) and French Guiana (Baglan and Catzeflis, 2016).Published as part of Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455) on page 41, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/716137

    Coendou roosmalenorum Voss and da Silva 2001

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    Coendou roosmalenorum Voss and da Silva, 2001 Coendou roosmalenorum Voss and da Silva, 2001: 24; type locality “ Novo Jerusalem near the left bank of the middle Rio Madeira in the Brazilian state of Amazonas.” Sphiggurus roosmalenorum: Woods and Kilpatrick, 2005: 1549 (name combination). DISTRIBUTION: Coendou roosmalenorum occurs on both banks of the Rio Madeira in the Brazilian states of Amazonas and Rondônia. Although specimens have only been collected at three localities (Voss and da Silva, 2001), photographs of a small porcupine closely resembling this species were taken in 1992 on the south bank of the Amazon near Alvarães (13°13′ S, 64°48′W), about 500 km NW of the type locality (Franz Kern, personal commun., 2011).Published as part of Voss, Robert S., 2011, Revisionary Notes on Neotropical Porcupines (Rodentia: Erethizontidae) 3. An Annotated Checklist of the Species of Coendou Lacépède, 1799, pp. 1 in American Museum Novitates 2011 (3720) on page 1, DOI: 10.1206/3720.2, http://zenodo.org/record/535951

    Eugenia Hunter Voss oral history recording

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    A video recording of an oral history of Eugenia Hunter Voss
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