990 resultados para Coker, Daniel, 1780-1846.


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Pyrenae acoge la reseña de una obra divulgativa, que debe ser valorada dentro de ese género. No obstante, su lectura también será útil para cualquier profesional que quiera abrir una cata en el estado de la arqueología peninsular de finales de la primera década del siglo XXI, puesto que la firma un doctor en la materia y no un divulgador procedente de otro campo. El arqueólogo enamorado va precedido de un prólogo escrito con amor por Carmen Rigalt, periodista y madre del autor. Bajo el subtítulo Historia oculta de la arqueología española: de los hallazgos fortuitos a los falsificadores de tesoros, se plantea un proyecto elogiable, que aspira a ofrecer un panorama completo del pasado hispánico, desde la más remota prehistoria a los visigodos, haciendo cuadrar, de forma bastante equilibrada, la amplia geografía peninsular en 14 capítulos y una introducción.

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Collection : Bibliothèque des écoles et des familles

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This is an excerpt from the book titled: Documentary material relating to the history of Iowa / edited by Benjamin F. Shambaugh. - Iowa City, Ia.: The State Historical Society of Iowa, [1895-1901] vol. 1 – vol. 3.

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A multivariate morphometric study of the Greater white-toothed shrew (C. russula) throughout its Palearctic range was carried out to search for patterns of geographic variation within the species boundary. Burnaby's and multiple group principal component analysis allowed the adjustment of raw data with respect to within-sample allometric variation. Multivariate 'size-free' results show a stepped dine with the phenotypical trait reduction and shape change from the eastern to the western Maghreb. Pleistocene fossil mandibles proved to have low phenetic distances with eastern populations (Tunisia, east Algeria) and it is argued that their character set is the primitive condition. The ancestral Mid-Pleistocene shrews lived in a relatively more humid climate. Gee-climatic changes in the north African range during the Quaternary provoked phenetic variation of C. russula and, it can be argued, evolution of the modern western C.r. yebalensis. A historical process can thus be assumed as the main cause of this categorical variation, by segmentation of the species range due to gee-climatic events. Morphometric discontinuity within the C. russula Maghreb range is shown to be congruent with karyological and biochemical studies. Moroccan and Tunisian shrews differ, for example, in NFa chromosomes and electrophoretical traits. A stasipatric process should be invoked to explain categorical variation in the Maghreb range. Colonization and divergence of insular populations results in more or less differentiated geographic races. The populations of Ibiza and Pantelleria are close to the species threshold (Nei's D greater than or equal to 0.1). The process of speciation undergone by the Greater white-toothed shrew results in a complex pattern of geographic variation, including both allopatric and non-allopatric modes.