701 resultados para Convento Real de Santa Clara de Gandía
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Pós-graduação em Microbiologia Agropecuária - FCAV
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Proteção de Plantas) - FCA
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Park Service Thwarts Cat Allies, by Marilyn Davis, Native Species Network, Bodega Bay, California Jim Miller Elected VP of Wildlife Society ADC Aerial Hunting Accident Kills 2 Obituary: Carl R. Gustavson HSUS Former Employee File Lawsuits Rats Shut Down Internet at Stanford Call for Papers: A Symposium on Mammal Trapping August 1997 in Edmonton, Alberta Fur in Cyberspace: The Fur Institute of Canada announces it has established a site on the World Wide Web, at the following address: http://www.fur.ca. Book Review: Beaver and Otter: Open Water Techniques, by Charles Dobbins 1992. Beaver Pond Publishing and Printing, P.O. Box 224, Greenville, Pennsyulvania, 16125. 114 pages. American Association of Wildlife Veterinarians: Resolution on Management of Feral Cats Use of Zinc Phosphide for Marmot Control, by Mark Collinge, NADCA Northern Rockies Region Director, USDA-APHIS-ADC Cat Colony Ordinance Adopted by Santa Clara County, California
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Proteção de Plantas) - FCA
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We studied the reproduction, sexual dimorphism, and diet of Oxyrhopus trigeminus from two sites in southeastern Brazil. Oxyrhopus trigeminus from Irape Power Plant (IPP) contained vitellogenic follicles and eggs in both rainy and dry seasons and clutch size was not correlated with female snout vent length (SVL). Sexual dimorphism was evident. Females attain larger SVL but males have longer tails. We found three females from Santa Clara Power Plant (SPP) with vitellogenic follicles, all of them collected in the dry season. Mean SVLs of adult females from IPP and SPP were 717.7 mm and 786 mm, respectively. Mean SVL of adult males from IPP was 553.4 mm and the single adult male from SPP was 507 mm. The diet of O. trigeminus from IPP included rodents (46.7%), lizards (33.3%), and birds (20%). The volume of individual prey items was not correlated with snake SVL. The diet of O. trigeminus from SPP included rodents (37.5%), lizards (37.5%), birds (12.5%), and marsupials (12.5%). It seemed that an ontogenetic shift may occur in individuals of this snake species from IPP.
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A laboratory experiment using nanoindentation to demonstrate the indentation size effect is described. This laboratory introduces students to sophisticated instrumentation at low cost and low risk and utilizes recent research in the materials community as its foundation. The motivation, learning objectives, experimental details, data, and data analysis are presented. This experiment is intended for use in an upper-division materials science elective at the university level and has been successfully used in laboratory courses for senior undergraduates and first-year graduate students at Stanford University and Santa Clara University.
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The aim of this study was to demonstrate that the prevention of early scaffold area shrinkage of the ABSORB BVS (Rev.1.1, Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, California) was sustained and not simply delayed by a few months.
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OBJECTIVES This study sought to describe the frequency and clinical impact of acute scaffold disruption and late strut discontinuity of the second-generation Absorb bioresorbable polymeric vascular scaffolds (Absorb BVS, Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, California) in the ABSORB (A Clinical Evaluation of the Bioabsorbable Everolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System in the Treatment of Patients With De Novo Native Coronary Artery Lesions) cohort B study by optical coherence tomography (OCT) post-procedure and at 6, 12, 24, and 36 months. BACKGROUND Fully bioresorbable scaffolds are a novel approach to treatment for coronary narrowing that provides transient vessel support with drug delivery capability without the long-term limitations of metallic drug-eluting stents. However, a potential drawback of the bioresorbable scaffold is the potential for disruption of the strut network when overexpanded. Conversely, the structural discontinuity of the polymeric struts at a late stage is a biologically programmed fate of the scaffold during the course of bioresorption. METHODS The ABSORB cohort B trial is a multicenter single-arm trial assessing the safety and performance of the Absorb BVS in the treatment of 101 patients with de novo native coronary artery lesions. The current analysis included 51 patients with 143 OCT pullbacks who underwent OCT at baseline and follow-up. The presence of acute disruption or late discontinuities was diagnosed by the presence on OCT of stacked, overhung struts or isolated intraluminal struts disconnected from the expected circularity of the device. RESULTS Of 51 patients with OCT imaging post-procedure, acute scaffold disruption was observed in 2 patients (3.9%), which could be related to overexpansion of the scaffold at the time of implantation. One patient had a target lesion revascularization that was presumably related to the disruption. Of 49 patients without acute disruption, late discontinuities were observed in 21 patients. There were no major adverse cardiac events associated with this finding except for 1 patient who had a non-ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization. CONCLUSIONS Acute scaffold disruption is a rare iatrogenic phenomenon that has been anecdotally associated with anginal symptoms, whereas late strut discontinuity is observed in approximately 40% of patients and could be viewed as a serendipitous OCT finding of a normal bioresorption process without clinical implications. (ABSORB Clinical Investigation, Cohort B [ABSORB B]; NCT00856856).
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Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) is a form of accelerated atherosclerosis, which represents the leading cause of late morbidity and mortality after heart transplantation. The recent bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) technology represents a potential novel therapeutic tool, in the context of CAV, by allowing transient scaffolding and concomitant vessel healing. Eligible subjects will be treated by using the Absorb Everolimus-Eluting BVS (Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, CA, USA), and evaluated at pre-determined time points, up to 3 years since the index procedure. Both clinical and imaging data will be collected in dedicated case report forms (CRF). All imaging data will be analyzed in an independent core laboratory. The primary aim of the study is to evaluate the angiographic performance at 1 year of second-generation Absorb BVS, in heart transplant recipients affected by CAV.
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[115]. El mercado municipal de Cullera, sobre la montaña el Santuario de la Virgen, en primer plano carro tirado por un caballo, 1925 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [116-117]. El abogado Ribera y el secretario sentados junto al Mercado municipal de Cullera y apoyados en la barandilla de la fuente del mercado, 1925 (2 pares estereoscópicos) (2 fot.) [118-122]. Francisco Roglá López con gorro y gafas de motorista, en la moto con sidecar en Villa Rosalía, en la moto cerca del faro al fondo playa del Dosel, 1925 (5 pares estereoscópicos) (5 fot.) [123-124]. El faro de Cullera, 1925 (2 pares estereoscópicos) (2 fot.) [125]. Pescando desde las rocas próximas al faro, al fondo la playa del Dosel de Cullera, 1925 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [126]. Puente de hierro visto desde un campo de cultivo, 1925 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [127]. Trabajadores de Villa Rosalía (dos hombres y una mujer con un perro) (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [128-129]. Luís, Ignacio y Paquito jugando con un carro lleno de leña, los tres llevan boina, 1925 (2 pares estereoscópicos) (2 fot.) [130-134]. Los tres hermanos Luís, Ignacio y Paquito en el jardín de Villa Rosalía y jugando en el columpio, 1925 (5 pares estereoscópicos) (5 fot.) [135]. Luís, Ignacio y Paquito con su madre sentados en un banco del jardín, la niñera Pilar y otra muchacha (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [136]. Luís, Ignacio y Paco al volante en el coche de papá, la perrita Isa mira al fotógrafo padre de los niños Francisco Roglá López, 1926 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [137]. Luís, Ignacio y Paquito con su madre sentados alrededor de una mesa de madera, felices con los cachorros de su perrita Isa (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [138]. Paquito Roglá Orrico de pié en el campo (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [139-141]. Paco Roglá Orrico con Merceditas Orrico Gay vestidos para una celebración (ella con teja y mantilla negra), en una foto acompañan a Pilar que lleva en brazos un bebé (posiblemente Manolo Orrico Gay), 1925 (3 pares estereoscópicos) (3 fot.) [142]. Portada gótica de la Colegiata de Santa María de Gandía, Isabel Orrico con sus tres hijos y Mercedes Gay Llovera con sus hijos, 1926 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [143]. Isabel Orrico Vidal, Mercedes Gay y Manolo Orrico Vidal con su hija Merceditas Orrico Gay, Manolo Orrico Gay con las manos sobre la cabeza de su primo Ignacio Roglá Orrico, éste y Luís y Paco Roglá Orrico vestidos de marinero, 1926 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [144]. Matilde Vidal Gasco y Manolo Orrico Guzmán bajando de la Ermita de los Santos de la Piedra, Abdón y Senen, situada en una colina rodeada por arrozales frente a Villa Rosalía, 1926 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [145]. Isabel Orrico Vidal con sus padres Matilde Vidal Gasco y Manuel Orrico Guzmán, 1926 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [146-150]. Chalet de la playa en construcción frente a la playa de San Antonio de Cullera (5 pares estereoscópicos) (5 fot.) [151]. Isabel Orrico Vidal en la terraza del chalet de la playa (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [152]. Vista del Castillo de Cullera desde la fachada posterior del chalet de la playa, al fondo la Iglesia de San Antonio (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [153-154]. Vistas: campos de naranjos, al fondo la playa del Racó (2 pares estereoscópicos) (2 fot.) [155-156]. Santuario de la Virgen y Castillo de Cullera, vistas desde el Castillo (2 pares estereoscópicos) (2 fot.) [157]. Isabel Orrico Vidal en la montaña del Castillo, al fondo la playa del Racó con los campos de naranjos próximos al mar, Cullera 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [158-159]. Vistas del pueblo y de la playa de San Antonio desde el Castillo, 1927 (2 pares estereoscópicos) (2 fot.) [160]. Los tres hermanos Luis, Paco e Ignacio junto a una caseta de baño, en la playa de San Antonio de Cullera, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [161]. Ignacio, Paco y Luis tumbados en la orilla de la playa de San Antonio, al fondo se ve el faro, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [162]. En la playa Mercedes Gay, Isabel Orrico Vidal y Josefina Vila Gimeno bajo las sombrillas, los hermanos Ignacio, Luís y Paco jugando en la arena con Merceditas, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [163]. Ignacio, Paco y Luís Roglá Orrico junto a la fuente en la Avenida Peris Mencheta de Cullera, al fondo el Santuario de la Virgen del Castillo, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [164-166]. Luís con la toalla, Paco tumbado en la orilla e Ignacio con el barquito de juguete, en otra foto jugando con los pozalitos en la playa de San Antonio, los tres hermanos sentados en los escalones, 1927 (3 pares estereoscópicos) (3 fot.) [167]. Merceditas Orrico Gay en la playa de San Antonio de Cullera, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [168]. Rincón típico de Cullera entre las casas, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [169-173]. Subida al Santuario de la Virgen del Castillo, restos del Castillo de Cullera, 1927 (5 fot.) [174]. Bajada de la Virgen del Castillo de Cullera, multitud en la calle junto al anda que lleva la Virgen, balcones engalanados, 1927 (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.) [175]. Manolo y Miguel Orrico Vidal comiendo una paella con unos amigos (1 par estereoscópico) (1 fot.)
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Presentamos un conjunto de 424 monedas y 4 objetos de oro recuperados durante la excavación de una vivienda islámica en la calle Jabonerías de Murcia construida en el siglo XI. Las monedas se hallaban en el interior de una vasija cerámica que se ocultaba en uno de los muros de dicha casa. El tesorillo está compuesto por moneda procedente del norte de África y Sicilia, mayoritariamente fatimí, y fracciones de dinar de las taifas andalusíes.
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Title from cover.
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Pacific coast avifauna, no. 6, 13, 20, 28, 30, 36, issued as ten volume indexes to Condor.
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Bibliography: p. 66-69.
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Introducción (v. 1., p. [v]-lxxiii) signed: Manuel Serrano y Sanz.