998 resultados para P-31 NMR


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En la segunda etapa del crucero 9702-04 "Evaluación Hidroacústica de Recursos Pelágicos", del 4 al 23 de abril de 1997, se registraron temperaturas superficiales entre 19,8 °C a 25,2 °C, originando anomalías térmicas positivas de alrededor de 2 °C. Las aguas Ecuatoriales Superficiales (AES) mostraron una fuerte proyección hacia el sur por fuera de las 60 mn entre Punta Falsa y Pimentel, impactando en las costas de Chicama a Salaverry. Esta agua de salinidades menores de 34,8‰, también se presentaron fuera de las 40 mn frente a Chimbote, con un espesor de 30 m aproximadamente. El afloramiento costero se presentó con temperaturas de 20 °C a 21 °C y salinidades alrededor de 34,90‰ en áreas no mayores de 10 a 15 mn frente a Supe-Huarmey, Chimbote-Pimentel y Punta Falsa-Sechura. Esta surgencia se desarrolló sobre los 50 m de profundidad. La distribución vertical mostró a lo largo del área de estudio un intenso flujo hacia el sur, originado por la Extensión Sur de la Corriente de Cromwell, la misma que se visualiza por la profundización de las isotermas y su relativo alto contenido de oxígeno (2.,3 mL/L). Las características anómalas observadas en este crucero, muestran gran similitud a las de los años 1976, 1987 y 1992, los cuales fueron considerados por la comunidad científica como "Niños Moderados".

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Describe las actividades de rastreo del E/E Huamanga, que efectuó del 01 al 18 de diciembre de 1996, entre Puerto Pizarro y Callao. Se demuestra la longitud del cable principal de arrastre y la profundidad que se determinó en una proporción de 3:1. Así mismo, la correspondencia entre los parámetros de abertura vertical y horizontal de la boca de red en función a la velocidad de arrastre, la misma que fue inversa y directamente proporcional teniendo un alto grado de correlación.

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Se hipotetiza que la mortalidad por pesca ocasiona efectos ecosistémicos, no sólo sobre la anchoveta, sino también sobre otros componentes del ecosistema, tales como los depredadores tope. El objetivo es realizar simulaciones con un modelo ecotrófico multiespecífico cubriendo el decenio de los años 2000, cambiando la mortalidad por pesca y analizando las variaciones en la biomasa de anchoveta, aves guaneras y lobos marinos. Se usó el Índice de Oscilación Peruano (IOP) para incluir una mediación que afecte la vulnerabilidad de las presas de la anchoveta. Se comparó el ajuste de los datos observados, usando dos tipos de dieta para anchoveta (fitoplanctófaga y zooplanctófaga). Se realizaron proyecciones de la biomasa, cambiando la mortalidad por pesca de 0,0 a 1,4 año-1. Las simulaciones con la dieta zooplanctófaga, que eleva el nivel trófico de la anchoveta de 2,35 a 3,36, produjo un menor ajuste entre los datos observados y simulados. La relación inversa entre la mortalidad por pesca y la biomasa desovante de la anchoveta, mostró que mortalidades por pesca entre 0,8 y 1,4 año-1 estarían asociadas a una biomasa desovante mínima de anchoveta, tomando en consideración sus relaciones multiespecíficas. También se encontró una relación inversa entre la mortalidad por pesca y las poblaciones de aves guaneras y lobos marinos.

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Dispone de información para el manejo del recurso erizo, considerando su alto valor comercial. Presenta aspectos de su biología, pesquería, tallas de los ejemplares e información sobre la población desovante.

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Se describe la biomasa de los principales recursos encontrados durante este crucero de evaluación hidroacústica: anchoveta, sardina, jurel, caballa, samasa, vinciguerria, falso volador, bagre, pez cinta, entre otros.

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En la Región La Libertad se encuentran asentadas 11 comunidades pesqueras artesanales y 21 organizaciones de pescadores artesanales legalmente registradas, con un total de 1191 integrantes además de un número semejante de pescadores artesanales informales. Se reconocieron 9 artes y aparejos de pesca, así como la extracción manual y por buceo. El arte de pesca más utilizado es la red cortina, con tamaños de malla que varían de 4 - 36 cm. El aparejo más utilizado es el espinel de superficie con tamaños de anzuelo desde el número 1 al 5. La flota artesanal está compuesta por 4 tipos de embarcaciones: lancha, bote, chalana y caballito de totora. La capacidad de bodega varía de 0,5 t a 20 t, mientras que los caballitos de totora su capacidad de carga es de 100 k. Se identificaron 31 especies de macroalgas marinas siendo Chondracanthus chamissoi (yuyo) y Gracilariopsis lemanaeformis (pelillo) de importancia económica. En invertebrados marinos se identificaron 69 especies, de las cuales 68 especies son costeras y 1 es oceánica Dosidicus gigas (pota). De las especies costeras, 9 son de importancia comercial: Platyxanthus orbignyi (cangrejo violáceo), Stramonita chocolata (caracol negro), Octopus mimus (pulpo), Argopecten purpuratus (concha de abanico), Semele solida y S.corrugata (almeja), Emerita analoga (muy muy), Pattalus mollis (pepino de mar), Donax sp. (palabritas). Se identificaron 112 especies de peces, 89 de ellas corresponden a peces óseos y 23 a cartilaginosos.

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p. 1v : Manuscrits africains, p. 2 : copies et photographies d'inscriptions assyriennes, p. 3 : manuscrits en langue berbère, p. 7 estampages des inscriptions du Cambodge, p. 17 fonds coréen (collection Collin de Plancy), p. 18 papyrus égyptiens, p. 31 : estampages des inscriptions des pyramides, p. 38 : manuscrit harari, p. 38 : manuscrits malgaches, p. 40 : manuscrits et xylographes tibétains, p. 57 : manuscrits et xylographes mongols, p. 62 : inscriptions lyciennes (suppl. grec 1303-1306).

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Collection : Bibliothèque des merveilles

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Marshall McLuhan's "global village", and his theories on communications and technology, in conjunction with Patrick McGoohan's television series The Prisoner (ATV, 1967-1968) are explored in this thesis. The Prisoner, brainchild of McGoohan, is about the abduction and confinement of a British government agent imprisoned within the impenetrable boundaries of a benign but totalitarian city -state called "The Village". The purpose of his abduction and imprisonment is for the extraction of information regarding his resignation as a government spy. Marshall McLuhan originally popularized the phrase "the global village" in The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making o/the Topographic Man (1962), asserting that, "The new electronic interdependence recreates the world in the image of a global village" (p. 31). This thesis argues that valid parallels exist between McGoohan's conception of "village", as manifested in The Prisoner, and McLuhan's global village. The comprehensive methodological stratagem for this thesis includes Marshall McLuhan's "mosaic" approach, Mikhail Bakhtin's concept ofthe "chronotope", as well as a Foucauldian genealogicallhistorical discourse analysis. In the process of deconstructing McLuhan's texts and The Prisoner as products of the 1960s, an historical "constellation" (to use Walter Benjamin's concept) of the same present has been executed. By employing this synthesized methodology, conjunctions have been made between McLuhan's theories and the series' main themes of bureaucracy as dictatorship, the perversion of science and technology, freedom as illusion, and the individual in opposition to the collective. A thorough investigation of the global village and The Prisoner will determine whether or not Marshall McLuhan and/or Patrick McGoohan visualize the village as an enslaving technological reality.

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- The first part of the document traces Mr. Haile’s lineage. His father, James Haile was a farmer. His grandfather, Amos Haile was a sailor for the early part of his life. He was placed on a British man-of- war in about 1758. He escaped and settled in Putney. (p.1) - His father’s mother’s maiden name was Parker. His mother’s maiden name was Campbell. Her father was a captain in the Revolutionary Army. (p.2) - His earliest memories revolve around the death of his aunt and the funeral of General Washington (although he did not witness this). At the time, his father was a Lieutenant in a regiment militia of Light Dragoons who wore red coats. (p.3) - In 1804, an addition was added to the Haile house which necessitated that William was to stay home to help with the building. He continued to study and read on his own. He was particularly interested in Napoleon Bonaparte’s victories. In that same year he was sent to Fairfield Academy where Reverend Caleb Alexander was the principal. (p.4) - On June 1, 1812, William was appointed as an Ensign in the Infantry of the Army of the United States. He was put into the recruiting service at Nassau (20 miles east of Albany) where he remained until September. (p.4) - He was assigned to the 11th Regiment of the W.S. Infantry and directed to proceed to Plattsburgh to report to Colonel Isaac Clark. (p.7) - He was assigned to the company commanded by Captain Samuel H. Halley who was not in the best of health and often absent. For a good part of the time William was in charge of the company. (p.8) - The 11th Regiment was encamped beside the 15th Regiment commanded by Col. Zebulon Montgomery Pike [Pike’s Peak was named after him]. Col. Pike generously drilled and disciplined the 11th Regiment since their officers didn’t seem capable of doing so. (p.8) - The first brigade to which William’s regiment was attached to was commanded by Brigadier General Bloomfield of New Jersey. Brigadier Chandler of Maine commanded the second brigade. (p.9) - At the beginning of November, Major General Dearborn took command of the army. He had been a good officer in his time, but William refers to him as “old and inefficient” earning him the nickname “Granny Dearborn” (p.9) - On November 17th, 1812, General Dearborn moved north with his army. The troops ended up in Champlain. There was no fighting, only a skirmish between a party of men under Colonel Pike and a few British troops who he succeeded in capturing. (p.10) - The troops were moved to barracks for the winter. Colonel Pike’s troops were put into suitable barracks and kept healthy but another part of the army (including the 11th Regiment) were sent to a barracks of green lumber north of Burlington. Disease soon broke out in the damp barracks and the hundreds of deaths soon followed. One morning, William counted 22 bodies who had died the previous night. He puts a lot of this down to an inexperienced commanding officer, General Chandler. (p.11) - At the beginning of 1813, William was stationed as a recruiter on the shore of Shoreham across from Fort Ticonderoga. In February, he returned to Burlington with his recruits. In March he received an order from General Chandler to proceed to Whitehall and take charge of the stores and provisions. In April and May it was decided that his half of the regiment (the First Battalion) should march to Sackett’s Harbour, Lake Ontario. They arrived at Sackett’s Harbour about the 10th of June, a few days after the Battle of Sackett’s Harbour. (p.12) - He was camped near the site of Fort Oswego and got word to head back to Sackett’s Harbour. A storm overtook the schooner that he was on. (p.14) - William was involved in the Battle of Williamsburg (or Chrysler’s Farm) which he calls a “stupid and bungling affair on the part of our generals”.(p. 18) - General Covington was wounded and died a few days after the battle. (p.19) - William speaks of being ill. The troops were ordered to march to Buffalo, but he is able to go to his father’s house in Fairfield where his mother nursed him back to health (p.23) - Upon arrival at Buffalo, the “old fogy Generals” were replaced with younger, more efficient men. (p.25) - On page 27 he sums up a few facts: In 1812, the army was assembled on Lake Champlain with the intention of capturing Montreal, and then Quebec. That year, under General Dearborn the army marched as far as Champlain, then turned back and went into winter quarters. In 1813, the army was assembled at Sackett’s Harbour and that year the campaign ended at French Mills which was 70 or 80 miles from Montreal. In 1814, the army at Buffalo were some 400 miles from Montreal with still the same object in view. - He says that these facts make “a riddle – difficult to explain”. (p.27) - On the evening of July 2nd they embarked on the boats with the objective of capturing Fort Erie. The enemy were all made prisoners of war (p.27) - On July 4th they went to Street’s Creek, 2 miles above the Chippewa [Chippawa] River (p.28) - Page 29 is titled The Battle of Chippewa [Chippawa] - He speaks of 2 drummers who were fighting over the possession of a drum when a cannonball came along and took of both of their heads (p.29) - He proclaims that this was one of the “most brilliant battles of the war”. The battle was fought and won in less than an hour after they left their tents. He credits General Scott with this success and states that was due to his rapid orders and movements. (p.30) - The dead of the battle remained on the field during the night. He describes this as quite gloomy seeing friend and foe lying side by side. At daybreak they set to work digging trenches to bury the dead. (p.31) - Colonel Campbell was wounded and advised to have his leg amputated. He refused, and subsequently died. (p.32) - It is said that the British threw several of their dead into the river and they went over the Falls. (p.32) - His troops repaired the bridge over Chippawa which the enemy had partially destroyed and then pursued the British as far as Queenston Heights. (p.32) - On pages 33 and 34 he speaks about meeting an old friend of his, Philip Harter. - The account ends at Queenston Heights