165,249 research outputs found

    Wunderlich, A., J. U. Dr. (Visitenkarte)

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    WUNDERLICH, A., J. U. DR. (VISITENKARTE) Wunderlich, A., J. U. Dr. (Visitenkarte) ( -

    Balticoroma Wunderlich, 2004, n. gen.

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    Balticoroma n. gen. Photos 143-151 Remark: WEITSCHAT & WICHARD (2002: 72) published the name Balticorma (misspelling!) as a nomen nudum; see below, B. serafinorum. Diagnosis: A "paracymbium" is present as a large retrodorsal outgrowth (fig. 5b, 13), several bulbus sclerites and a large functional conductor are present. Type species: Balticoroma reschi n. sp. - Further species: Four fossil species (see the cladogram) as well as one or two extant species from SE-Asia: B. maculosa (Ol 1960) (sub Comaroma, n. comb.) and probably B. nakahirai (YAGINUMA 1959) (sub Archerius, later transferred to Comaroma)? unknown) (questionable n. comb.). Relationships: See Comaroma. Distribution: Extant: SE-Asia (Japan, Korea), fossil: Baltic amber forest, incl. Bitterfeld.Published as part of Wunderlich, J., 2004, Descriptions of the remaining fossil spider taxa (excl. Mygalomorpha, Dysderoidea, Eresoidea and Oecobioidea) / Beschreibung der übrigen fossilen Spinnen-Gruppe (excl. Längskieferspinnen, Sechsaugenspinnen-Verwandten, Röhrenspinnen-Verwandten und Scheibennetzspinnen-Verwandten), pp. 1035 in Beitr. Araneol. 3 on page 103

    Meioneta canariensis Wunderlich 1987

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    Meioneta canariensis (Wunderlich, 1987) Taxonomy & Ecology, 1: 151–152 Paratypes. Canary Islands. Tenerife, Anaga Montains: 1♂ 1 ♀ 2 subadult ♂ IV J. Wunderlich leg. (DZUL 24652). Current status: valid species, originally described as Agyneta canariensis (see Platnick 1989). Additional notes: these paratypes were collected by J. Wunderlich and originally published as deposited in his collection (SJW), but were subsequently assigned by the author and kept at DZUL.Published as part of Reboleira, Ana Sofia P. S., Pérez, Antonio José, López, Heriberto, Hernández, Nuria Macías -, Cruz, Salvador De La & Oromí, Pedro, 2012, Catalogue of the type material in the entomological collection of the University of La Laguna (Canary Islands, Spain). I. Arachnida, pp. 61-79 in Zootaxa 3556 on pages 73-74, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21283

    Tenuiphantes canariensis Wunderlich 1987

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    Tenuiphantes canariensis (Wunderlich, 1987) Taxonomy & Ecology, 1: 157–158 Paratypes. Canary Islands. La Palma, without locality: 3♂ 3 ♀ VII J. Wunderlich leg. (DZUL 24643). Current status: valid species, originally described as Lepthyphantes canariensis (see Saaristo & Tanasevitch 1996). Additional notes: these paratypes were collected by J. Wunderlich and originally published as deposited in his collection (SJW), but were subsequently assigned by the author and kept at DZUL.Published as part of Reboleira, Ana Sofia P. S., Pérez, Antonio José, López, Heriberto, Hernández, Nuria Macías -, Cruz, Salvador De La & Oromí, Pedro, 2012, Catalogue of the type material in the entomological collection of the University of La Laguna (Canary Islands, Spain). I. Arachnida, pp. 61-79 in Zootaxa 3556 on page 74, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21283

    Replik auf die Buchbesprechung von Y. Marusik über „Jörg Wunderlich (Ed.) (2011): Extant and fossil spiders (Araneae). Heutige und fossile Spinnen“

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    Reply to the book review by Y. Marusik on „Jörg Wunderlich (Ed.) (2011): Extant and fossil spiders (Araneae). Heutige und fossile Spinnen

    On applying the set covering model to reseeding

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    The Functional BIST approach is a rather new BIST technique based on exploiting embedded system functionality to generate deterministic test patterns during BIST. The approach takes advantages of two well-known testing techniques, the arithmetic BIST approach and the reseeding method. The main contribution of the present paper consists in formulating the problem of an optimal reseeding computation as an instance of the set covering problem. The proposed approach guarantees high flexibility, is applicable to different functional modules, and, in general, provides a more efficient test set encoding then previous techniques. In addition, the approach shorts the computation time and allows to better exploiting the tradeoff between area overhead and global test length as well as to deal with larger circuits

    Wunderlich Syndrome From Lupus-Associated Vasculitis

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    Spontaneous perinephric hemorrhage is a clinically rare life-threatening condition, also known as Wunderlich syndrome. Presentations can be variable, but patients typically display symptoms and signs including flank or abdominal pain, abdominal mass, and hypovolemia. It is important to diagnose the syndrome early because untreated cases carry a high mortality risk, and prompt intervention with an endovascular procedure or surgery is life saving. Causes range from anatomical anomalies, including vascular diseases (vasculitides and aneurysms) and renal tumors, to functional coagulation defect (bleeding tendency). The most common causes of Wunderlich syndrome are renal angiomyolipoma and renal cell carcinoma, constituting 60%similar to 70% of cases. Vascular causes of Wunderlich syndrome are infrequent, and the culprit most frequently is vasculitis resulting from polyarteritis nodosa. Other vasculitides presenting as Wunderlich syndrome are infrequent. We describe a 39-year-old woman with end-stage renal disease from lupus nephritis and spontaneous renal hemorrhage, ascribed to lupus-related vasculitis after serologic testing, computed tomography, and angiographic studies. Am J Kidney Dis. 61(1):167-170. (C) 2012 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc

    Long Island Historical Journal, Volume 02, Number 1 (Fall 1989)

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS - EDITORIAL COMMENT - 1 / FEATURE ARTICLES: “An Island of Mine Own”: The Life and Times of Lion Gardiner, 1599-1663 by Roger Wunderlich - 3 / The Gardiners and Their Island, 1937-1972 by Richard P. Harmond - 15 / Prosperity on the Ways: Shipbuilding in Colonial Oyster Bay, 1745-1775 by Geoffrey L. Rossano - 21 / Shinnecock and Montauk Whalemen by John A. Strong - 29 / African American Whalers: Images and Reality by Floris Barnett Cash - 41 / The Montauk Steamboat Company by Edwin L. Dunbaugh - 52 / Oystering on Long Island in Comparative Perspective by Lawrence J. Taylor - 64 / Connecticut’s Changing Relationship with Long Island Sound by Andrew German - 76 / The Brooklyn Bridge in Literary and Popular Imagination by Bernice Braid - 90 / Bridges and the Urban Landscape by Jeffrey A. Kroessler - 104 / Is Long Island an Island? by R. Lawrence Swanson - 118 / REVIEWS OF BOOKS: Peter Matthiessen. Men's Lives: the Surfmen and Baymen of the South Fork by Gary Marotta - 128 / Grania Bolton Marcus. A Forgotten People: Discovering the Black Experience in Suffolk County by Lynda R. Day - 130 / Salvatore J. LaGumina. From Steerage to Suburbs: Long Island Italians by Frank J. Cavaioli - 132 / Ronald G. Pisano. Long Island Landscape Painting, 1820 - 1920 by George M. Cohen - 134 /SUNY Digital Repository (DSpace): Stony Brook University - Campus Newspapers and JournalsArchived web conten

    Long Island History Journal

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS - EDITORIAL COMMENT / FEATURE ARTICLES: Go East, Young Man: Nineteenth-Century Farm Life on the South Fork of Long Island by Roger Wunderlich - 1 / Long Island to the Measure of Oxen by Elizabeth Shepherd - 11 / History Visited and Revisited by Donald E. Simon - 23 / Introduction to the “Recollections of the Reverend Nathaniel S. Prime” by Richard P. Harmond - 23 Material Evidence of Ideological and Ethnic Choice in Long Island Gravestones, 1670-1800 by Gaynell Stone - 44 / Photographic Depiction of Race and Ethnicity in Newsday and The New York Times Long Island Sunday Supplement by Arthur B. Dobrin - 72 / An Accommodating Artistry Robert Morris Copeland’s Landscape Designs for Shelter Island by David Sokol - 82 / SECONDARY SCHOOL ESSAY CONTEST WINNERS: Guglielmo Marconi and His Influence on Long Island’s Italian American Community by Lauren Branche - 94 / Nassau County Executive Eugene Nickerson’s Decade of Development by Jonathan Chavkin - 100 / What Cost Reform? Fiscal Policy in the City Of Brooklyn, 1870-1898 by Perri Thaler - 108 / REVIEWS - 122 / Joann P. Krieg and Natalie A. Naylor, eds. Nassau County: From Rural Hinterland to Suburban Metropolis by Joshua Ruff / Tom Twomey, ed. Tracing the Past: Writings of Henry P. Hedges 1817-1911 Relating to the East End by John A. Strong / Elizabeth K. Kaplan, Robert W. Kenny, and Roger Wunderlich, eds. William Sidney Mount: Family, Frienas, and Ideas by Phyllis Braff / James Driscoll, Derek M. Gray, Richard J. Hourahan, and Kathleen G. Velsor. Angels of Deliverance: The Underground Railroad in Queens, Long Island, and Beyond by Natalie A. Naylor / Arnold A. Bocksel. Rice, Men and Barbed Wire by Richard Acritelli / COMMUNICATIONS – 139SUNY Digital Repository (DSpace): Stony Brook University - Campus Newspapers and JournalsArchived web conten

    Spatiator martensi Wunderlich, 2006, n. sp.

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    Spatiator martensi n. sp. Figs 1 –3, 5 Type material: Male holotype in Baltic amber, its origin is most probably the region of Kaliningrad (Königsberg), F 1688 /BB/AR/ CJW, SMF. Derivatio nominis: This species is dedicated to Prof. Jochen Martens, University of Mainz, who discovered numerous arachnids which were new to science; I had the pleasure to describe some of the spiders which were collected by J. Martens in Nepal. J. Martens and the present author have been in close and best contact for 35 years. Diagnosis ( ♂; Ψ unknown ): Close to Spatiator praeceps, but embolus in S. martensi n. sp. not that slender, forming a large triangle, and tips of embolus and conductor separated (Fig. 3). Description ( ♂ ): Measurements (in mm): Body length 4.3, prosomal length 2.1, opisthosoma: Length 1.9, width 1.3; leg I: Femur 1.3, patella 1.7, tibia 1.15, metatarsus 0.85, tarsus 0.8, tibia IV 1.5, its diameter 0.14. Color: Body and legs dark brown, opisthosoma yellow brown. Prosoma (Figs 1, 5) ca. 1.7 times longer than wide, cephalic part distinctly raised, thoracic fissure long, setae indistinct, mostly short, cuticula fairly rugose. 8 eyes in two rows, anterior median eyes distinctly largest, posterior row distinctly procurved. Basal cheliceral articles large, retrolaterally with a large field of stridulatory files, fangs short, peg teeth hidden. Gnathocoxae converging above the labium which is long and slender. Sternum finely rugose, prolongated between the coxae IV. Petiolus is long and apparently symmetrically bi­partite. Legs fairly long and slender, order IV/I/II/III, bristles absent, setae short and indistinct­ Tibia and metatarsus I slightly bent, bearing some prodorsal to prolateral spatulate setae, tarsi I–II bear a weak ventral pseudoscopula, metatarsus III bears a dense field of long ventral preening setae in the distal half. Opisthosoma (Figs 1, 5) oval, 1.45 times longer than wide, dorsally covered with short setae and hardened (apparently leathery) along its whole length. Epigaster sclerotized, lung covers hairless, small; epiandrous gland spigots absent. Spinnerets short and partly hidden. Pedipalpus (Figs 2–3) fairly small, with stout articles, tibia with a short prodorsal bristle and at least one dorsal trichobothrium. Cymbium wide, enclosing the bulbus, with few strong prodorsal setae besides long normal setae, bulbus long, tegulum large, embolus in a retroventral position, conductor distinctly separate from the embolus and in a more prolateral position and bent distally to the embolus, sperm duct easily recognizable. Female: unknown. Relationships: Only a single congeneric species has been described previously: Spatiator praeceps. The holotype of S. praeceps is a female. I described a male which I regarded as conspecific with the holotype, see Wunderlich (2004: 768, 807, fig. 56) (in this figure I probably mistook the embolus for the conductor). This male is probably conspecific with the female holotype of S. praeceps but — according to the distinctly different structures of their bulbi — it is not conspecific with S. martensi n. sp. No somatic differences are known to exist between these three specimens. This case reflects a fundamental problem in the taxonomy of numerous congeneric — fossil species: (a) the generotype is known from one sex only (or is juvenile), (b) no somatic differences between different species are known and (c) it is not likely to find both sexes in the same piece of amber: How do deal with different congeneric species of the other sex? Occasionally — for practical reasons — fossil specimens from the other sex were described as different species (in contrast to extant species), e.g. by Petrunkevitch (1942). So it would be consequent to designate a new name for Spatiator praeceps sensu Wunderlich (2004) but this is not a matter of this paper. I found no somatic differences between the present holotype and the material of praeceps sensu Wunderlich (2004) but the bulbus structures are clearly different (and in my opinion surely not caused by circumstances of the preservation): embolus and conductor are in close contact in the male of S. praeceps (Fig. 4) in contrast to S. martensi n. sp. (Fig. 3). Distribution: Early Tertiary (Eocene) Baltic amber forest. Preservation: The spider is situated at the corner of a yellow piece of amber which has a size of 3.1 x 2.0 x 0.9 mm. Legs and pedipalpi are completely and well preserved, some parts are darkened apparently by heating, the ventral side is weakly covered with a white emulsion, the opisthosoma has a low longitudinal depression dorsally (probably the result of a blow), a bubble is situated close to the left cymbium, but distinctly separated from the cymbial cuticula. Syninclusions: Four Formicidae, workers (body length 1.3, 2.4, 2.4 and 4.3 mm), remains of the abdomen of an ant (two parts, 1.4 mm long) 2 mm right of the spider in the same layer of the amber, an adult Acari (body length 1 mm), few tiny to small larvae of Acari (body length up to 0.5 mm), numerous stellate hairs of plants, numerous small bubbles and bubble­shaped particles which are dried out as well as particles of detritus. Notes: (a) Myrmecophagy: Remains of an ant — two parts of an abdomen — near the spider's body may be remains of the spider's prey, but this presumption is quite tentative: Most relatives of the Spatiatoridae, e. g. Archaeidae and Palpimanidae, are araneophages. The complete ants in the same piece of amber are apparently not injured. (b) Myrmecomorphy: The silvery glancing cuticle in most congeneric specimens (S. praeceps) which are preserved in pieces of amber which were not heated, the slender body and legs as well as the raised cephalic part — which give the illusion of a tripartite body of the spider — may be hints that these spiders were only weakly ant­shaped. We do not know the behavior of the fossil spiders, and a saddle­shaped inclination of the opisthosoma is absent. Therefore I am not sure about the actual ant­mimicry of these fossil spiders. The largest ant which is embedded together with the spider has the same body size as the spider and may have been a model of a probable Batesian mimicry. The small ants may have been the model of conspecific juveniles.Published as part of Wunderlich, Jörg, 2006, Spatiator martensi n. sp., a second species of the extinct spider family Spatiatoridae in Eocene Baltic amber (Araneae), pp. 313-318 in Zootaxa 1325 on pages 314-317, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17402
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