988 resultados para Tomlinson, Owen A., 1882-
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O presente estudo ambiciona examinar as escritas literárias de Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) e Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) considerando-as como uma forma de presságio de arte na América, ou seja, como uma escrita literária que parece ter sido herdada no ambiente artístico das obras plásticas contemporâneas de Richard Serra (1939-) e Waltercio Caldas (1946-), entre outras. Tal herança endossa a noção de linguagem ordinária, compreendida como o ponto de acolhimento, ou de uma inquietação, que se faz presente nas circunstâncias da contemporaneidade. Por sua vez, o gesto de endereçamento que envolve estas escrituras expressa a marca de uma indecibilidade acerca da continuidade ou descontinuidade da existência de categorias como literatura, filosofia e artes. Assim, a problematização dessas remissões ganha vulto no presente estudo, por meio de uma abordagem em perspectiva comparada entre Thoreau, Emerson, Waltercio, Serra e outros. E deste modo, a questão que se estabelece nesse panorama diz respeito aos problemas do pensamento, que em âmbito plástico parecem se estender para uma tradição crítica no Novo Mundo
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In response to declining biomass of Northeast Pacific groundfish in the late 1990s and to improve the scientific basis for management of the fishery, the Northwest Fisheries Science Center standardized and enhanced their annual bottom trawl survey in 2003. The survey was expanded to include the entire area along the U.S. west coast at depths of 55–1280 m. Coast-wide biomass and species richness significantly decreased during the first eight years (2003–10) of this fishery-independent survey. We observed an overall tendency toward declining biomass for 62 dominant taxa combined (fishery target and nontarget species) and four of seven subgroups (including cartilaginous fish, flatfishes, shelf rockfishes, and other shelf species), despite increasing or variable biomass trends in individual species. These decreases occurred during a period of reduced catch for groundfish along the shelf and upper slope regions relative to historical rates. We used information from multiple stock assessments to aggregate species into three groups: 1) with strong recruitment, 2) without strong recruitment in 1999, and 3) with unknown recruitment level. For each group, we evaluated whether declining biomass was primarily related to depletion (using year as a proxy) or environmental factors (i.e., variation in the Pacific Decadal Oscillation). According to Akaike’s information criterion, changes in aggregate biomass for species with strong recruitment were more closely related to year, whereas those with no strong recruitment were more closely related to climate. The significant decline in biomass for species without strong recruitment confirms that factors other than depletion of the exceptional 1999 year class may be responsible for the observed decrease in biomass along the U.S. west coast.
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Quantifying scientific uncertainty when setting total allowable catch limits for fish stocks is a major challenge, but it is a requirement in the United States since changes to national fisheries legislation. Multiple sources of error are readily identifiable, including estimation error, model specification error, forecast error, and errors associated with the definition and estimation of reference points. Our focus here, however, is to quantify the influence of estimation error and model specification error on assessment outcomes. These are fundamental sources of uncertainty in developing scientific advice concerning appropriate catch levels and although a study of these two factors may not be inclusive, it is feasible with available information. For data-rich stock assessments conducted on the U.S. west coast we report approximate coefficients of variation in terminal biomass estimates from assessments based on inversion of the assessment of the model’s Hessian matrix (i.e., the asymptotic standard error). To summarize variation “among” stock assessments, as a proxy for model specification error, we characterize variation among multiple historical assessments of the same stock. Results indicate that for 17 groundfish and coastal pelagic species, the mean coefficient of variation of terminal biomass is 18%. In contrast, the coefficient of variation ascribable to model specification error (i.e., pooled among-assessment variation) is 37%. We show that if a precautionary probability of overfishing equal to 0.40 is adopted by managers, and only model specification error is considered, a 9% reduction in the overfishing catch level is indicated.
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Cape Cod Bay (Massachusetts) is the only known winter and early spring feeding area for concentrations of the endangered North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis) population. During January–May, 1998–2002, 167 aerial surveys were conducted (66,466 km of total survey effort), providing a complete representation of the spatiotemporal distribution of right whales in the bay during winter and spring. A total of 1553 right whales were sighted; some of these sightings were multiple sightings of the same individuals. Right whale distribution and relative abundance patterns were quantified as sightings per unit of effort (SPUE) and partitioned into 103 23-km2 cells and 12 2-week periods. Significant interannual variations in mean SPUE and timing of SPUE maxima were likely due to physically forced changes in available food resources. The area of greatest SPUE expanded and contracted during the season but its center remained in the eastern bay. Most cells with SPUE>0 were inside the federal critical habitat (CH) and this finding gave evidence of the need for management measures within CH boundaries to reduce anthropogenic mortality from vessel strikes and entanglement. There was significant within-season SPUE variability: low in December−January, increasing to a maximum in late February−early April, and declining to zero in May; and these results provide support for management measures from 1 January
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Em seu ensaio de 1924, Mr Bennet and Mrs. Brown, Virginia Woolf declara que por volta de 1910 o caráter humano mudara. A presente tese, seguindo o apontamento da ensaísta Woolf, pretende entender as mudanças promovidas nas duas primeiras décadas do século XX, na Inglaterra, a partir da vida dos artistas e amigos que ficariam eternizados como o Bloomsbury Group. Em nossa primeira parte, apontaremos em que sentido, ao adotar o método pós-impressionista, o Bloomsbury Group alarga as discussões da teoria do conhecimento que fervilhava em Cambridge. Análogo ao silêncio dos quadros, agora totalmente formalistas, apontaremos que a linguagem de resistência de Bloomsbury parece ter sido antecipada pela vida de duas de suas artistas: elas são a própria Virginia Woolf e sua irmã, Vanessa Bell. A partir dessa suposição, de que haja uma conexão entre a vida das mulheres de Bloomsbury e a natureza refratária do grupo, começaremos uma discussão, já em nossa segunda parte, de como o silêncio que marca o feminino construído historicamente ganha um status de uma nova linguagem na prosa de Virginia Woolf. Nesse momento, tal silêncio da prosa parece comparável à própria linguagem poética, e aqui Virginia Woolf dialoga com o futuro, representado por Jean-Paul Sartre. Após marcarmos o que seria a prosa poética, ou poesia prosaica, de Woolf, apontaremos por fim a relação entre essa escrita do silêncio e o conceito de mente andrógina em Virginia Woolf, relação esta mediada pelo movimento que seria chamado de écriture féminine, representado pela francófona Hélène Cixous, entre outras
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Rio del Rio Hortega (1882-1945) discovered microglia and oligodendrocytes (OLGs), and after Ramon y Cajal, was the most prominent figure of the Spanish school of neurology. He began his scientific career with Nicolas Achucarro from whom he learned the use of metallic impregnation techniques suitable to study non-neuronal cells. Later on, he joined Cajal's laboratory. and Subsequently, he created his own group, where he continued to develop other innovative modifications of silver staining methods that revolutionized the study of glial cells a century ago. He was also interested in neuropathology and became a leading authority on Central Nervous System (CNS) tumors. In parallel to this clinical activity, del Rio Hortega rendered the first systematic description of a major polymorphism present in a subtype of macroglial cells that he named as oligodendroglia and later OLGs. He established their ectodermal origin and suggested that they built the myelin sheath of CNS axons, just as Schwann cells did in the periphery. Notably, he also suggested the trophic role of OLGs for neuronal functionality, an idea that has been substantiated in the last few years. Del Rio Hortega became internationally recognized and established an important neurohistological school with outstanding pupils from Spain and abroad, which nearly disappeared after his exile due to the Spanish civil war. Yet, the difficulty of metal impregnation methods and their variability in results, delayed for some decades the confirmation of his great insights into oligodendrocyte biology until the development of electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. This review aims at summarizing the pioneer and essential contributions of del Rio Hortega to the current knowledge of oligodendrocyte structure and function, and to provide a hint of the scientific personality of this extraordinary and insufficiently recognized man.
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At her launch on 19 October 1882 in Wilmington, Del., the Albatross was the world’s first large deep-sea oceanographic and fisheries research vessel, and she would go on to have a distinguished 40-year career, ranging from the north Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, around Cape Horn in 1887–88, and into the North Pacific. By 1908, Deputy Fish Commissioner Hugh M. Smith reported that “The Albatross has contributed more to the knowledge of marine biology than has any other vessel.” And, of course, her career continued for another 13 years, being decommissioned in late 1921, serving later as a training vessel for nautical cadets, and disappearing from the records in Hamburg, Germany, in late 1928.
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The marine invertebrates of North America received little attention before the arrival of Louis Agassiz in 1846. Agassiz and his students, particularly Addison E. Verrill and Richard Rathbun, and Agassiz's colleague Spencer F. Baird, provided the concept and stimulus for expanded investigations. Baird's U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries (1871) provided a principal means, especially through the U.S. Fisheries Steamer Albatross (1882). Rathbun participated in the first and third Albatrossscientific cruises in 1883-84 and published the fist accounts of Albatross parasitic copepods. The first report of Albatross planktonic copepods was published in 1895 by Wilhelm Giesbrecht of the Naples Zoological Station. Other collections were sent to the Norwegian Georg Ossian Sars. The American Charles Branch Wilson eventually added planktonic copepods to his extensive published works on the parasitic copepods from the Albatross. The Albatross copepods from San Francisco Bay were reported upon by Calvin Olin Esterly in 1924. Henry Bryant Bigelow accompanied the last scientific cruise of the Albatross in 1920. Bigelow incorporated the 1920 copepods into his definitive study of the plankton of the Gulf of Maine. The late Otohiko Tanaka, in 1969, published two reviews of Albatross copepods. Albatross copepods will long be worked and reworked. This great ship and her shipmates were mutually inspiring, and they inspire us still.
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Charles Henry Gilbert (Fig. 1) was a pioneer ichthyologist and, later, fishery biologist of particular significance to natural history of the western United States. Born in Rockford, Illinois on 5 December 1859, he spent his early years in Indianapolis, Indiana, where, in 1874, he came under the influence of his high school teacher, David Starr Jordan (1851-1931). Gilbert graduated from high school in 1875, and when Jordan became a professor of natural history at Butler University in Irvington, Indiana, Gilbert followed, and received his B.A. degree in 1879. Jordan moved to Indiana University, in Bloomington, in the fall of 1879, and Gilbert again followed, earning his M.S. degree in 1882 and his Ph.D. in 1883 in zoology. His doctorate was the first ever awarded by Indiana University.
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O presente estudo apresenta dados de uma pesquisa de caráter histórico, que visa contribuir para as análises de representações acerca dos perfis femininos nos anos de 1920 a 1940, a partir do diálogo com personagens criadas pelo escritor Monteiro Lobato em alguns de seus livros infantis do mesmo período. Os livros analisados são Serões de Dona Benta (1937), Histórias de tia Nastácia (1937), Reinações de Narizinho (1931), Memórias de Emília (1936) títulos selecionados, pois cada um possui como protagonista uma das personagens femininas analisadas ; História do mundo para crianças (1933), História das Invenções (1937) e O poço do Visconde (1937) em que as questões da modernidade e da história são destacadas pelo autor. Os livros compõem a coleção Obras Completas de Monteiro Lobato Literatura Infantil (2a série). Neste estudo, inserido no campo da história da educação, o principal corpus documental é o material literário e, por isso, foi necessária a aproximação com a história cultural, com a história do impresso e com a micro-história. Em um primeiro momento, ressalta-se a interferência das inovações tecnológicas e culturais na trajetória do intelectual Monteiro Lobato, que desempenhou diferentes papéis escritor, editor e distribuidor no circuito de comunicações no âmbito brasileiro nas primeiras décadas da República. Ademais, de maneira interdisciplinar, através de pesquisa bibliográfica, o estudo se debruça sobre o conceito de modernidade, que possibilitou a apreensão das relações da escrita fictícia de Lobato com discursos e práticas femininas, aos quais se teve acesso por meio de cartas e impressos da época analisada, assim como revistas e manuais de civilidade. Observa-se que as caracterizações das personagens apresentavam a modernidade ligada principalmente aos meios culturais, artefatos tecnológicos e ao debate educacional. Todavia, as práticas desses discursos renovadores dependeram, igualmente, das origens sociais, étnicas e econômicas das personagens representadas naquele contexto
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O presente trabalho pretende analisar as representações da cidade do Rio de Janeiro nas crônicas de José de Alencar e Joaquim Manuel de Macedo, publicadas, respectivamente, sob os títulos Ao Correr da Pena (1855-1856) e Labirinto (1860), tendo como objetivo mapear a cidade capital do império e as transformações pelas quais passou entre as décadas de 1850 e 1860. Tal proposta foi desenvolvida à luz do método cartográfico apresentado por Franco Moretti, em suas obras Atlas do Romance Europeu 1800-1900 e A Literatura Vista de Longe, nas quais o autor trata a criação de mapas como um instrumento intelectual que abriria caminho para novos questionamentos e novas conclusões no campo do imaginário. Ademais, ao utilizar obras literárias como fontes primárias para a análise da cidade do Rio de Janeiro do século XIX e suas especificidades no cenário brasileiro imperial, o presente trabalho dialoga com uma história cultural do urbano.