983 resultados para Evangelical Association of North America
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Issued Apr. 1978.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 45-49).
Treaties between the United States of America and the several Indian tribes, from 1778 to 1837 ... /
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Signatures numbered: "Voyages, vol. v."
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Published also in v. 3 [pt. 1] of the Memoirs of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
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The substance of this book is a lecture delivered in 1842, before the Young men's missionary association of Boston.
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"Concluded at ... Washington ... District of Columbia."
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Published by the National Council of Young Men's Christian Associations of the United States of America
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"Preface" signed: John W. Ford.
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Vols. 3, 13, 16, 18 include music.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Four page publisher's catalog at end.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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A new mesosuchian crocoddian from the Nova Olinda Member of the Crato Formation (Lower Cretaceous, Aptian) of north-eastern Brazil is described. Susisuchus anatoceps gen. et sp. nov. is the first crocodillan to be reported from this formation. It is represented by an incomplete, partially articulated skeleton: the skull and mandible, partial postcranial axial skeleton, forelimbs and portions of the osteodermal skeleton. Preservation of soft tissues includes the skin surrounding both forelimbs and the digits of the right hand. The state of preservation of the specimen suggests that it was incorporated into the basin as a desiccated carcass. Susisuchus anatoceps is one of the oldest crocodilians with a eusuchian-type dorsal shield, comprising a tetraserial paravertebral shield and, either side of this, two sagittal rows of accessory osteoderms. It also possesses amphicoelous thoracic, lumbar and caudal vertebrae. This combination of postcranial features have never before been seen in a crocodilian and warrant the erection of a new family within Mesosuchia: Susisuchidae. Taxonomically, S. anatoceps is similar to a number of Lower Cretaceous mesosuchians previously considered to have given rise to eusuchians, most notably the Glen Rose crocodilian and a new, but as yet undescribed crocodillan from the Lower Cretaceous Winton Formation of western Queensland, Australia. Preliminary preparation of the Winton crocodilian indicates that it may belong to Susisuchidae, supporting the hypotheses of interchange between the vertebrate faunas of South America and Australia during the Lower Cretaceous.