1000 resultados para Allen, William, 1803-1879.
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Bibliographic footnotes.
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Vol. 3 has title: Annals of a publishing house. John Blackwood, by his daughter Mrs. Gerald Porter ... Edinburgh and London, W. Blackwood and sons, 1898.
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Read before the Maine Historical Society at Portland, May 15, 1879.
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Appendices : I. Extracts from s̲piritual ̲letters. II. Abstracts of papers read at church congresses in 1869, 1877, 1879, 1883, 1888, and 1893.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Index at end of each volume: Classified subject index to the set at end of v. 4.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vols. 3-9 edited by W.A. Davis and Samuel S. Sadtler.
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Back Row: Jack A. Green, William W. Hannan, David DeTar, Charles A. Mitchell, Frank Reed, Albert S. Pettit
2nd Row: Irving K. Pond, Tom R. Edwards, John Chase, Charlie H. Campbell
Front Row: Collins H. Johnson, Richard Guy Depuy, Edmund Barmore
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Reprint of the author's thesis, Columbia University.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The collection was presented to the British museum (Nat. Hist.) by W. Wilson Saunders.
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"In presenting the accompanying work ... it should be mentioned that M. Graf ... died before he had been able to complete it, the thread being then taken up by his successor, M. Petrasch."--Pref.
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The exponential growth of studies on the biological response to ocean acidification over the last few decades has generated a large amount of data. To facilitate data comparison, a data compilation hosted at the data publisher PANGAEA was initiated in 2008 and is updated on a regular basis (doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.149999). By January 2015, a total of 581 data sets (over 4 000 000 data points) from 539 papers had been archived. Here we present the developments of this data compilation five years since its first description by Nisumaa et al. (2010). Most of study sites from which data archived are still in the Northern Hemisphere and the number of archived data from studies from the Southern Hemisphere and polar oceans are still relatively low. Data from 60 studies that investigated the response of a mix of organisms or natural communities were all added after 2010, indicating a welcomed shift from the study of individual organisms to communities and ecosystems. The initial imbalance of considerably more data archived on calcification and primary production than on other processes has improved. There is also a clear tendency towards more data archived from multifactorial studies after 2010. For easier and more effective access to ocean acidification data, the ocean acidification community is strongly encouraged to contribute to the data archiving effort, and help develop standard vocabularies describing the variables and define best practices for archiving ocean acidification data.