113,829 research outputs found
Luckau / [Gez. v. H. v. Poyda ; Gest. v. Wilh. Voss]
LUCKAU / [GEZ. V. H. V. POYDA ; GEST. V. WILH. VOSS]
G. D. Reymann's topographische Special-Karte von Central-Europa (-)
Luckau / [Gez. v. H. v. Poyda ; Gest. v. Wilh. Voss] (110) ( -
De Ritibus Romanorum
Die Vorlage enth. insgesamt 3 Werke. - Titelbl. in Rot- und Schwarzdr.Autopsie nach Ex. der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltDie gezählten Ill. Nr. VI, VIII, , X u. XII. sind gef. Bl.G. H. Nievpoort De Ritibvs RomanorvmVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Berolini, Prostat Apvd C. F. Voss Et Filivm, MDCCLXXXIV.Kupfert., Ill. und graph. Darst. (Kupferst.), 13 Ill. (Kupferst.
Cleve / gez. v. H. v. Poyda u. Zirbeck ; Gest. v. Carl Jättnig u. Wilh. Voss
CLEVE / GEZ. V. H. V. POYDA U. ZIRBECK ; GEST. V. CARL JÄTTNIG U. WILH. VOSS
G. D. Reymann's topographische Special-Karte von Central-Europa (-)
Cleve / gez. v. H. v. Poyda u. Zirbeck ; Gest. v. Carl Jättnig u. Wilh. Voss (102) ( -
Cryo-generated Seismic Events in Greenland
Parametric data from cryo-generated seismic events in Greenland, detected, processed and analysed at the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland – GEUS, using data from the earthquake monitoring network. Daily updates of the data is available via the URL https://seis.geus.net/quakes/cryo.lis for a simple CSV listing of event time and location, given by date and UTC time and latitude and longitude (WGS 84). Or via the URL https://seis.geus.net/quakes/cryo.nor for the complete set of parametric data available in the event database at GEUS. Here the data are given in the Nordic format, described in appendix A of the SEISAN manual (Ottemöller et al. 2021).
REF:
Ottemöller, L., Voss, P.H. and Havskov J. (2021). SEISAN Earthquake Analysis Software for Windows, Solaris, Linux and Macosx, Version 12.0. 607 pp. University of Bergen. ISBN 978-82-8088-501-2
The cephalopod family Histioteuthidae (Oegopsida): systematics, biology, and biogeography
This study is based on the large, mostly unreported collections of histioteuthids that have accumulated since the family was first revised by Voss in 1969. Of primary importance are the collections made in 1971, 1973, 1975/1976, and 1979 by the R/V Walther Herwig and the R/V Anton Dohrn in the Atlantic and the worldwide collections found in nine Russian or former Russian institutions.
An investigation of the food and feeding of large juvenile to adult Histioteuthis celetaria pacifica (G. Voss, 1962) in the western Indian Ocean shows crustaceans and fishes to be the dominant items of prey and of about equal importance in the overall diet. The findings suggest that feeding occurs at approximately equal intensity in the sampled population near the bottom between 364 and 1000 m during both daytime and twilight. Maturity in the histioteuthids is accompanied by marked changes, not only in the genital organs, but also in the arms, especially arms I, which undergo marked secondary, symmetrical modification; in the photophores patterns, particularly on the arms and mantle where unusual, enlarged, darkly pigmented, simple
photophores of different sizes and shapes appear in some species; and in the shape of the gladius and mantle in one species. Characters important in distinguishing among taxa include the photophore patterns on the mantle, around the right eyelid and on the arms, the sculpture of the dorsal pad of the funnel organ, the sucker enlargement pattern on the club, the development and structure of the inner web, the number of elements and the attachments of the buccal membrane, the single or double nature of the male genetalia, the internal structure of the spermatophore, the
morphologies of the gladius and the lower beak, and the surface morphology of the skin.
We recognize 13 species of the family Histioteuthidae in a single genus. Subspecies are recognized in two of the species, Histioteuthis celetaria (G. Voss, 1960) and H. corona (Voss and Voss, 1962), and the available material suggests that more than one taxon is represented in at least two other species, H. reversa (Verrill, 1880) and H. bonnellii (Ferussac, 1834). A key to the species and
subspecies is given. Histioteuthis elongata (Voss and Voss, 1962) is the mature stage of H. reversa. The cosmopolitan, warm-water species H. hoylei (Goodrich, 1896), more commonly known in recent literature as H. dofleini (Pfeffer, 1912), comprises two separate, closely related species, H. hoylei in the Pacific and Indian oceans and//, arcturi (Robson, 1948) in the Atlantic. Investigation
failed to clearly distinguish the two nominal subspecies of H. bonnellii, H. b. bonnellii and H. b. corpuscula Clarke, 1980, so H. bonnellii is restored, for the time being, to the status of an undivided species with two discrete, ecologically distinct northern and southern populations. A survey of the large new collections of H. meleagroteuthis (Chun, 1910) confirms that//, bruuni N. Voss, 1969, is a variant form of, and synonymous with, the senior species.
Five species groups are characterized: the H. reversa species group, comprising H. reversa, H. atlantica (Hoyle, 1885), and H. eltaninae (N. Voss, 1969); the H. hoylei species group, comprising H. hoylei and//, arcturi; the//, bonnellii species group, comprising H. bonnellii and H. macrohista (N. Voss, 1969); the H. Miranda species group, comprising H. miranda (Berry, 1918) and the recently resurrected H. oceani (Robson, 1948); and the H. meleagroteuthis species group, comprising H. meleagroteuthis and H. heteropsis (Berry, 1913). Of the two species not belonging to a currently recognized group, H. corona and H. celetaria, a future, more detailed study than was possible with the available material of H. celetaria will probably result in the elevation of its two
subspecies to the specific level, and together they will form the sixth distinct group of closely related species in the family. The distributional patterns nearly equal the number of taxa. The patterns show (1) a close correspondence with patterns of variations in environmental conditions in the oceans; (2) the important role of
productivity on the formation of the patterns and in the
determination of the abundance of a taxon within its range; and (3) the contiguous nature of the patterns of members of a species group or of subspecies of a polytypic, widespread species. Only three of the eight warm-water species in the family inhabit all three oceans, and of the three cosmopolites, only one is regarded as an undivided
species. Of the four species or subdivisions of a species that have Southern Ocean-related patterns, two are typically circumglobal, and two are semicircumglobal. For the latter pair, the broad expanse of low nutrient waters of the central Pacific appears to act as an east-west barrier for dispersal. Although there are no strictly
cold-water species or recognized subspecies in the northern
hemisphere, two histioteuthids normally extend from warm water into north temperate or subarctic waters in the Atlantic. A tendency for some species or subdivisions of a species to be present in the eastern half of the Atlantic and absent in the western half is shared by both groups. The distributions of the four histioteuthids that are
confined to the Pacific appear to be more restricted than are the distributions of purely Atlantic taxa. The differences in the patterns appear to reflect important hydrographical differences between the two oceans
M. H. van Voss. Ägypten. Die 21. Dynastie
Leclant Jean. M. H. van Voss. Ägypten. Die 21. Dynastie. In: Revue de l'histoire des religions, tome 201, n°2, 1984. pp. 198-199
H. Douglas Goff and Karen Voss Peters with their plaques
permission received.H. Douglas Goff with the plaque he received for the book he authored, "Ice Cream", and Karen Voss Peters with the plaque she received for the book she author, "William meets the Stick family " at the Campus Author Recognition Program annual reception, November 7, 2013.http://author.lib.uoguelph.ca/viewAuthorBook.cfm?biblioId=605 and http://author.lib.uoguelph.ca/viewAuthorBook.cfm?biblioId=630The University of Guelph Librar
Nancy Voss
Nancy Voss of Wichita Falls, forgot about her cancer, as she receives a big slice of birthday cake from her mother, Mrs. H. M. Voss, at a party in her honor. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram evening edition July 19, 1951.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/13723/thumbnail.jp
Synorchestes grisescens Voss
Synorchestes grisescens Voss (Figs. 5 –8, 19–20, 25– 26) Synorchestes grisescens Voss, 1958: 103 (habitus illustration; China); Morimoto & Miyakawa, 1996: 76 (habitus photo and figures of ventral body, head and rostrum, hind leg and its femoral apodeme, antenna of male; Taiwan); Kojima & Morimoto, 1996: 116 (figures of male tergite, metendosternite, spermatheca and spiculum ventrale). Description See Voss (1958) and Morimoto & Miyalawa (1996) for description except genitalia (Figs. 5 –8, 9–12, 19–20, 25– 26): aedeagus with short setae on anterior margin (as in S. indicus); spiculum gastrale longer than aedeagal body; bladal part of female sternite 8 longer than apodeme; spermatheca with ramus not developed. This species is very similar to S. indicus except for the characters provided in the key. Specimens examined. 1 male, Holotype (preserved in the Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig, Bonn); 1 female, Shi Nan Shanm near Liu Kui, S-Taiwan, 29.IV. 1986, K. Baba (ELKU); 1 male, Shan Piug (1000 m), nea Liu Kui, S-Taiwan, 29.IV. 1986, K. Baba (ELKU); 1 female, near Liukuei, Kaosiung Hs., Taiwan, 5–9.iv. 1995, H. Kojima (ELKU). Distribution. China (Fukien), Taiwan.Published as part of Ayri, Shaloo, Kojima, Hiroaki & Y, R A M A M U Rt H, 2012, Flea weevils of the genus Synorchestes Voss (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Curculioninae, Rhamphini), with description of a second species from India, pp. 74-80 in Zootaxa 3568 on page 80, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21381
Healthcare-associated infections with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Acinetobacter in Turkey. Losing the battle?
Contains fulltext :
88412.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, 20 september 2010Promotores : Voss, A., Doganay, M. Co-promotor : Leblebicioglu, H.120 p
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