257,822 research outputs found

    Field day attendees view turf fertility research plots at Texas A&M University in 1952

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    View, from behind the plots, of visiting group viewing lined turf fertility plots at Texas A&M University in 1952. Pickup with roof-mounted loudspeakers behind.Photographer uncertain"8-12-52 A&M Turf plots Fert Test 215"Image taken on Kodachrome Duplicate.Warm humi

    Viola singularis J. M. Watson

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    Viola singularis J.M. Watson & A.R. Flores Type: ARGENTINA. Provincia de Catamarca, Belén, Río de los Nacimientos, entre rocas, en la orilla del río, mimética, 21-I-1992, Luis A. Del Vitto s.n. (MERL 55055). Location:— The true position in Catamarca is sited 600 km to the north and slightly east of the speculative version provided in the protologue (Watson & Flores 2009). Information on the water resources of Catamarca, published by the province’s local government (ETISIG 2014), positions the Río de Los Nacimientos (otherwise known as Río Las Cuevas) north of Belén, above and to the north of Los Nacimientos village. The valley of the Río Villa Vil lies to the west, and both watercourses meet south of Hualfín to form the Río Belén. Several maps we have consulted confirm this geography. We estimate the probable elevation of the viola site at between 3500 and 4500 m. Figs. 1 & 2.Published as part of Watson, John M. & Flores, Ana R., 2014, Upping their number, addressing their risk. Viola singularis (Violaceae) revisited, and an evaluation of sect. Andinium, its higher taxonomic group, pp. 177-182 in Phytotaxa 177 (3) on pages 177-178, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.177.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/514471

    View of dormant bermudagrass campus turf at Oklahoma A&M, Stillwater, outside the Student Center in 1954, with a lone person walking on a sidewalk through the golden tan sward

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    View from upper level of the Student Center at Oklahoma A&M College of a portion of the landscaped campus, including striking golden tan bermudagrass in dormancy. Solitary individual walking on sidewalk across a depressed quad-like open space, with scattered small trees and a surrounding berm.Photographer uncertain"Grass & Design Ber. Dorm. Golden Tan Okla A&M Stu. Cent Oct 54"Image taken on Kodachrome.Landscape designLawn careHumid transitiona

    Watson Collection

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    The Watson Family Collection is a collection from the early settlers of Kingsville, Oliver S. and Ella Watson who built and operated a boarding house on 5th Street. Their children worked on the railroad, joined the service, married and eventually moved to Houston and other places in Texas. The McAllister's, the Sell's, and the Bohanan's were all related by marriage to the Watson's

    Telegram re: Edwin M. Watson

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    Telegram from Amon Carter to Frances Nash Watson, wife of White House Appointments Secretary Edwin M. Watson, regarding General Watson

    Watson, M H, 845

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/424267Surname: WATSON. Given Name(s) or Initials: M H. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 845. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 9894.252130 Item: [2016.0049.56528] "Watson, M H, 845

    Halecium ralphae Watson & Vervoort 2001

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    Halecium ralphae Watson & Vervoort, 2001 Figure 5A–B Halecium ralphae Watson & Vervoort, 2001: 162, fig. 7a–d.— Vervoort & Watson, 2003: 94, fig. 18A–G.— Bouillon et al., 2006: 313. Halecium beanii.— Ralph, 1958: 332, fig. 10e. Halecium sessile.— Hirohito, 1995, 27, fig. 7e–h. Material examined. SAM H2533, one microslide. West of the South Australia – Western Australia border, depth 180 m, trawl; coll: R. Southcott 1/07/1988. Description. Fragments of a dichotomously branched infertile colony. Branching in one order. Internodes long, slender, cylindrical, widening to below hydrotheca; oblique nodes above hydrotheca, a strong tumescence above and below node, sometimes a secondary oblique node passing from base of hydrotheca to opposite side of internode. Hydrotheca shallow bowl-shaped, adcauline wall closely adpressed to front of internode, margin transverse to internodal axis, rim circular, smooth, without replications, diaphragm concave, no desmocytes. Stem internode length 480–760 width at node 96–112 Hydrotheca width across margin 144–160 depth, margin to diaphragm 60–76 Remarks. The small damaged sample conforms to the description of Halecium ralphae by Watson & Vervoort (2001) and Vervoort & Watson (2003). Distribution. Chatham Is.,? Japan; a new record for the Great Australian Bight.Published as part of Watson, Jeanette E., 2018, Some Hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Great Australian Bight in the collection of the South Australian Museum, pp. 1-34 in Zootaxa 4410 (1) on page 11, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4410.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/122117
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