6,180 research outputs found
There's silver in your hair [music] : (but there's gold within your heart) /
271 (Publisher number). Extra special edition no. 8. For voice and piano. Includes tonic sol-fa notation.; Cover title.; Pl. no.: 271.; "Extra special edition no. 8".; "Sung ... by Miss Gertie Gitana".; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn3420661
Introduction, excerpt and conclusion from Nelson Mandela : the struggle against apartheid (chapter 5-8) translated by Chantal Wright
The city glorious [music] : song with violin obligato /
431 (Publisher number). Cover title.; Pl. no.: 431.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an12653243
When I awake! [music] /
19622 (Publisher number). Caption title.; For voice and piano.; "No. 5 of A cycle of love songs dedicated to and sung by Mr. Santley"--Cover.; Pl. no.: 19622.; "F"--Cover.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn2106739
Lilacs [music] : song /
A.& Co. 1093 (Publisher number). For voice and piano.; "No. 3 in E-flat".; Pl. no.: A.& Co. 1093.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an14169451
O my beloved [music] : song /
20279 (Publisher number). For voice and piano.; Cover title.; Pl. no.: 20279.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn3683768
Primnoella biserialis Wright & Studer 1889
Primnoella biserialis Wright & Studer, 1889 (Fig. 3 B) Primnoella biserialis Wright & Studer, 1889: 87; May 1899: 16; Versluys 1906: 55; Kükenthal 1919: 399; 1924: 285. Diagnosis. See Wright and Studer 1889: 87–88, pl. XVII, fig. 3, pl. XXI, fig. 14. Material examined. ARGENTINA, Chubut, San Matías Gulf, 41 º 13 ’S, 65 º 59 ’W, 30 April 1971, st. 110, 90 m, “Survey S.A. O. II”, (MLP s/n). Description. Finely planar colony, branching dichotomously, 32 cm in height. Terminal branches whiplike. Polyps appear in whorls of 6–7 polyps, which are uniformly spaced along the stem. Polyps 1.2–1.5 mm in height. Polyp scales placed in two abaxial longitudinal rows with 13–15 scales. Scales with multituberculate warts. Opercular scales ovoid with concentric lines (0.087–0.10 mm wide and 0.15–0.21 mm long); triangulated marginal scales with a small terminal point (0.18 mm wide and 0.23 mm long); and basal and medial scales rounded, rectangular, polygonal (0.23 mm wide and 0.16 mm long). Coenenchymal scales rounded with few warts (0.06–0.1 mm wide and 0.098–0.15 mm long), small tuberculated rods (0.036 mm wide and 0.078 mm long) and a few tuberculate clubs (0.053 mm wide and 0.11 mm long). Distribution (Fig. 1). Macaé (39 m) (Brazil), Montevideo (35 º05’S, 52 º 33 ’W, 115 m) (Uruguay) (TixierDurivault 1969 – 70); Tom Bay (50 º 10 ’S, 74 º 42 ’W, 815 m) (Chile) (Wright & Studer 1889); Smyth Canal (15 m) (Chile) (May 1899); Burdwood Bank (54 º 43 ' S, 60 º 14 ' W, 202 m) (Broch 1965). New record. San Matías Gulf, Chubut (Argentina). Remarks. The present record is the first off the Argentinian continental slope.Published as part of Pérez, Carlos Daniel & Zamponi, Mauricio Oscar, 2004, New records of octocorals (Cnidaria, Anthozoa) from the south western Atlantic Ocean, with zoogeographic considerations, pp. 1-12 in Zootaxa 630 on pages 7-8, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.15844
Bimeria vestita Wright 1859
Bimeria vestita Wright, 1859 (Fig. 5A–B) Bimeria vestita Wright, 1859: 109, pl. 8 fig. 4; Hincks, 1868: 103, pl. 15 fig. 2; Hartlaub, 1905: 535, fig. P; Millard, 1975: 95, fig. 32C–H; Calder, 1988: 21, figs 17–18; Hirohito, 1988: 94, figs 33D–F, 34A; Ramil & Vervoort, 1992: 14; Calder, 1993: 66; Migotto, 1996: 9, fig. 2A–B; Parapar & Ramil, 1996: 21; Genzano & Zamponi, 1999: 63, figs 4–5; Marques et al., 2000: 322, figs 1–3; Genzano, 2002: 89, fig. 10B; Bouillon et al., 2004: 42, fig. 25A–C; Calder & Kirkendale, 2005: 479; Vervoort, 2006: 196, fig. 5. Bimeria corynopsis: Stepanjants, 1979: 12, pl. 1 fig. 5. Material examined. Stn. CVI — 06.iii.2006, S143 (15 m): one colony with numerous female gonophores; hydranths poorly preserved, epizoic on Sertularella fuegonensis (MHNG INVE 53445); S142 (15–25 m): one sterile colony, epizoic on Sertularella fuegonensis (MHNG INVE 53438). Type locality. Firth of Forth, Scotland. Remarks. The present material is in good agreement with the available descriptions of this species (Calder 1988, Migotto 1996, Schuchert 2007). An extensive synonymy is also available in Calder (1988). World distribution. Worldwide, with exception of Arctic and Antarctic waters (Vervoort, 2006). Records from Chile. Previously reported from Calbuco by Hartlaub (1905). The present material was found at only one station, Canal Vicuña, extending its distribution southward to 52° S.Published as part of Galea, Horia R., 2007, Hydroids and hydromedusae (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from the fjords region of southern Chile, pp. 1-116 in Zootaxa 1597 (1) on page 17, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.1650.1.4, http://zenodo.org/record/509797
The FM and PL Libraries Documentation
Building complex SPMD code in an ecient and portable way is nowadays a challenge, especially when there is no uniformity of tools and libraries across platforms. The Fast Messages (FM) and the Portability Library (PL) where both designed to provide the basis of an abstract enough framework for C, so that problems can be coded and ported to any supported platform with no more than a few changes in the makeles and a recompilation. The FM library provides a message passing communications library built around the Berkeley Active Messages library. The PL library provides the primitives for host to node communication for problem initialization and results collection, as well as other miscellaneous and potentially non-portable primitives. This technical report contains the documentation for both libraries.Technical report LCSR-TR-25
Acanella chiliensis Wright & Studer 1889
Acanella chiliensis Wright & Studer, 1889 Figure 8 Acanella chiliensis Wright & Studer, 1889: 31, pl. IX, fig 3. Type: Collected via dredge. Station 301, in the Messier Channel, Patagonia, Chile. 175 fathoms depth. Indicated as deposited in the Natural History Museum, London; however we were not able to verify the location of the type specimen at the time of this publication. For description see: Wright & Studer 1889 Remarks: The specimens represented by Haplotype C (Figure 8) have 5̄ 7 mm tall polyps with curved, slightly club-shaped sclerites with spine-like projections, which corresponds with the species description of A. chiliensis as described in Wright and Studer (1889). A. chiliensis is the only valid species within the genus that has club-shaped sclerites. Published reports of A. chiliensis appear only once, a collection from the eastern South Pacific (Messier Channel, Patagonia, Chile) at 320 m depth; our samples thus expand the known distribution of the species to the western South Pacific and Indian Ocean (New Zealand-Kermadec [n=5] and Indian [n=1] deep-sea provinces; Watling et al. 2013) and the depth range to 1195 m. Distribution: South Pacific and Indian Ocean, 320̄ 1195 m depth.Published as part of France, Scott C., 2017, A taxonomic review of the genus Acanella (Cnidaria: Octocorallia: Isididae) in the North Atlantic Ocean, with descriptions of two new species, pp. 359-390 in Zootaxa 4323 (3) on pages 373-374, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4323.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/91980
- …
