265,611 research outputs found
Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.16 April 1907
Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - The seven sisters [Poetry] - Sermon [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Teaching of peace - From foreign fields - Cazotte's second-sight
This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana
Nur-i-Afshan V.10 no.20 May 1906
Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - Some of David's nets and some of ours [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Three an unevangelised Himalayan native ruled state [Article] - The grave : the triumph [Poetry]
This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana
Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.18 May 1907
Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - Discourse on John Bunyan's grace a bounding to the chief of sinners [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - The christian communities in Japan by Walshe, W. Gilbert - The glories of the West Indies - Back to Palestine : gradual return of Jews to their land of old
This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana
Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.17 April 1907
Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - Sermon [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Leland Stanford University - A missionary contribution to science - An olf fashioned girl by Foley, J. W. - Christ hath burst the tomb [Poetry] - The evening and the morning [Poetry]
This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana
Whyte, I N, VX37683
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/425614Surname: WHYTE. Given Name(s) or Initials: I N. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: VX37683. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 4290.251735
Item: [2016.0049.57875] "Whyte, I N, VX37683
Nur-i-Afshan V.10 no.21 May 1906
Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - My father's world [Poetry] by Babcock, Maltbie D. - Some of David's nets and some of ours [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - The revival in the Lushai Hills [Article] - The two men [Poetry]
This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana
Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.20 May 1907
Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - My Shadow [Poetry] by Edwards, Louise Betts - Sermon [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Prayer defined [Article] by Frost, W. H. - O love that wilt not let me go - Torrey-Alexander mission at Plymouth - Worship a privilege
This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana
Maratus sagittus Schubert & Whyte 2019
<i>Maratus sagittus</i> Schubert & Whyte 2019 <p> <i>Maratus sagittus</i> Schubert & Whyte 2019</p> <p> Only a single male specimen of this species is known, from the Cape York Peninsula of northern Queensland. The species name, <i>sagittus</i>, refers to the arrow-shaped pattern on the dorsal opisthosoma. Dull-red scales (not shown) are present on the front of the eye region. Photo by Robert Whyte.</p>Published as part of <i>Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3)</i> on page 23, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/3732535">10.5281/zenodo.3732535</a>
Antropologi og medicin i dialog
Medicinsk antropologi er i løbet af de sidste to årtier blevet et centralt emneområde for antropologien. I Danmark har ikke mindst Susan Whyte spillet en stor rolle for opbygningen af dette felt. I denne artikel, baseret på interview med Susan Whyte, beskriver hun, hvordan medicinsk antro-pologi har taget form for hende og for antropologien generelt. Gennem
refleksioner over sit eget arbejde diskuterer hun medikaliseringen af an-tropologien, den medicinske antropologis bidrag til sygdoms‑ og sund-hedsproblematikker, dens bidrag til antropologien som fag og de store udfordringer ved tværfagligt samarbejde
Maratus eliasi Baehr & Whyte, sp. nov.
<i>Maratus eliasi</i> Baehr & Whyte, sp. nov. <p>(FIGURES 11 A, D, G, 12A‒I)</p> <p> <b>Material examined.</b> MALE HOLOTYPE (QM-S96335) from Australia, Queensland, Nuga Nuga National Park, 24°59’S, 148°40’E, M. Girard and D. Elias, 20 Oct. 2015, hand coll. PARATYPES: 1 male (QM-S73641) from Australia, Queensland, Boomer Ra. Mongrel Scub, 23°12’S, 149°46’E, G. Monteith, 16 Dec. 1999 ‒ 22 Mar. 2000, intercept.</p> <p> <b>Records.</b> 1 male, Australia, Queensland, Tregole National Park, 26°29’S, 147°06’E, M. Girard and D. Elias, 20 Oct. 2015, hand coll, deposited in M. Girard’s collection.</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> The specific name is a patronym in honour of Dr Damian Elias, who helped to discover new populations of <i>M. eliasi</i> while assisting his wife, Madeline Girard who was collecting specimens for her PhD work.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> <i>M. eliasi</i> belongs to the <i>digitatus</i> group in having inflatable spinnerets (Fig. 12 A) <i>M. eliasi</i> is closely related to <i>M. digitatus</i> (mentioned in Otto & Hill, 2015: fig. 37 as <i>Maratus</i> cf. <i>digitatus</i>) sharing a nearly identical prosomal colour pattern and in having a larger pair of semicircular, iridescent, flaps which are uniformly dark green in <i>M. digitatus</i>.</p> <p> <i>M. eliasi</i> can be separated from <i>M. digitatus</i> by its opisthosomal colour pattern (golden and striped flaps) (Fig. 12 A) and its shorter embolic tip (Figs 11 B, E).</p> <p> <b>Description. Male</b> (Holotype, QM-S96335). Total length 3.98. Prosoma 2.12 long, 1.60 wide, pl/pw 1.32; sternum 0.91 long, 0.52 wide, sl/sw 1.75; abdomen 1.86 long, 1.44 wide; abdomen wider than long when inflated, (ol/ow 0.68; QM-S73641). Ocular quadrangle 0.93 long. Anterior eye row 1.51, posterior eye row 1.54 wide. AME largest; posterior eye group width 0.92 of caput width; AME 0.47; ALE 0.27; PME 0.23; PLE 0.08; AME‒AME 0.04; AME‒ALE 0.03; PME‒PME 1.19; PME‒PLE 0.180; ALE‒PLE 0.22. Clypeus 0.22 high. Paturon with no promarginal teeth and one retromarginal tooth. Length of leg III, femur: 1.54, patella: 0.65, tibia: 0.88, metatarsus: 0.75, tarsus: 0.52; metatarsus III 0.85 the length of tibia III. Leg formula: 3421. Prosoma dark brown; ocular quadrangle covered with golden setae scattered with white setae forming three bands, sides with a fringe, a posterior median patch and two lateral patches of white setae; AME and ALE dorsally with a fringe of golden setae, ventrally with a fringe of white setae. Endites distally pale; labium, chelicerae and sternum medium brown with darker reticulation; opisthosoma bluish iridescent, a dancing monster with a red head and arms and blue eyes when seen from the front, flaps golden with one black and two white stripes; venter pale. Leg I‒IV covered with white setae; tibiae and metatarsi I‒IV dark brown tarsi I‒IV pale. Male palp (Figs 11 A, D, G, 12G‒I): cymbium short, 1.6 times longer than wide, covered with white setae, prolateral distal half with stronger dark satae; tip stout with distal scopula. Embolic disc wider than long, with broad, flat front and flat retrolateral groove; with few small tooth-like denticules at the retrocentral part of the disc; embolus tip with triangular retrolateral ridge embolic opening pipe or chimney-shaped; finger-like lateral process of embolic disc with pancake-stack shaped retrolateral ridges; tegular shoulder with cone-shaped lamella (LTS); retrobasal tegular lobe (TL) with broader tip only prolateral side concave (Fig. 12 H); patella and tibia covered with long white setae covering 1/2 of the cymbium retolaterally; retrolateral tibial apophysis narrow, finger-shaped.</p> <p> <b>Female.</b> Unknown.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Known only from Queensland.</p>Published as part of <i>Baehr, Barbara C. & Whyte, Robert, 2016, The Peacock Spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Maratus) of the Queensland Museum, including six new species, pp. 501-525 in Zootaxa 4154 (5)</i> on pages 515-518, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4154.5.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/255783">http://zenodo.org/record/255783</a>
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