971 resultados para Averroes, 1126-1198
Resumo:
Vol. 13 issued in co-operation with the Irish Manuscripts Commission; v. 15-20 published: Dublin : Stationery Office for the Irish Manuscripts Commission.
Resumo:
Issued in two parts, 1847-1849.
Resumo:
"September 13, 1990".
Resumo:
A number of studies have shown that methanogens are active in the presence of sulfate under some conditions. This phenomenon is especially exemplified in carbonate sediments of the southern Australian continental margin. Three sites cored during Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 182 in the Great Australian Bight have high concentrations of microbially-generated methane and hydrogen sulfide throughout almost 500 m of sediments. In these cores, the sulfate-reducing and methanogenic zones overlap completely; that is, the usual sulfate-methane transition zone is absent. Amino acid racemization data show that the gassy sediments consist of younger carbonates than the low-gas sites. High concentrations of the reduced gases also occur in two ODP sites on the margin of the Bahamas platform, both of which have similar sedimentary conditions to those of the high-gas sites of Leg 182. Co-generation of these reduced gases results from an unusual combination of conditions, including: (1) a thick Quaternary sequence of iron-poor carbonate sediments, (2) a sub-seafloor brine, and (3) moderate amounts of organic carbon. The probable explanation for the co-generation of hydrogen sulfide and methane in all these sites, as well as in other reported environments, is that methanogens are utilizing non-competitive substrates to produce methane within the sulfate-reducing zone. Taken together, these results form the basis of a new model for sulfate reduction and methanogenesis in marine sediments. The biogeochemical end-members of the model are: (1) minimal sulfate reduction, (2) complete sulfate reduction followed by methanogenesis, and (3) overlapping sulfate reduction and methanogenesis with no transition zone.
Resumo:
Se trata del análisis y el estudio traductológico de Lámpara de los príncipes, traducción de la obra Sirāŷ al-mulūk de Abū Bakr al-Turtūŝī. La obra es de gran importancia en las culturas árabe y española por su carácter político, social, ético y de doctrina islámica, en relación al Ándalus y el mundo cristiano e islámico contemporáneo, a obra y a autor (nacido y criado en Tortosa, residente en Zaragoza y otras ciudades de Al-Ándalus, en La Meca, Bagdad, Jerusalén, el Líbano, Rasid y Alejandría). Es por tanto una fuente de primer orden para la historia de al-Ándalus y Egipto y el momento político, social, filosófico y espiritual de principios del siglo XII en al-Andalus y Oriente Medio. En esta tesis, Además del análisis traductológico se ha llevado a cabo un estudio de la obra original y una nueva traducción de la misma. Durante el proceso de la traducción hemos realizado un glosario de términos y expresiones islámicos traducidos de árabe a español, de este trabajo se concluyó la necesidad de la elaboración de un nuevo diccionario de expresiones y términos islámicos árabe-español como material interesante en la traducción religiosa del árabe al español. Los estudios que se realizaron sobre la obra de al-Ṭurṭusi en español son muy pocos en comparación con los estudios realizados en árabe, aunque su autor fuese, efectivamente, español. Tampoco se le hizo un homenaje merecido a Alarcón por su grandiosa traducción de la obra. Este trabajo es una llamada a seguir descubriendo las joyas literarias, filosóficas, y traductológicas de la obra, en el idioma español.
Resumo:
The News of the Week article that reports on Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) questioning the need to fund social science research at the National Science Foundation is alarming and shortsighted ("Senate panel chair asks why NSF funds social sciences," 12 May, p. 829). Social science research is at the fundamental core of basic research and has much to contribute to the economic viability of the United States. Twenty years of direct and jointly funded social and ecosystem science research at Colorado State University's Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory has produced deep insights into environmental and societal impacts of political upheaval, land use, and climate change in parts of Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Beyond greatly advancing our understanding of the coupled human-environmental system, the partnership of social and ecosystem science has brought scientists and decision-makers together to begin to develop solutions to difficult problems.
Resumo:
Immigrant Entrepreneurs (IE) are often portrayed as being pushed into self-employment due to employment barriers in their adopted countries. But IE have human resources, like international experience, which can help them form international new ventures (INV). We question the role of IE in INV. We use randomly selected data from 561 young firms from the Comprehensive Australian Study of Entrepreneurial Emergence (CAUSEE) project. We find that IE are overrepresented in INV and have many of the characteristics known to facilitate INV success. These findings have relevance to policy makers, IE and NE.