982 resultados para Winkler, Brian
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Contenido: Il Dio dei filosofi e il Dio dei teologi in Guglielmo di Ockham / Alessandro Ghisalberti – La Trinidad divina y la deificación del hombre por el nacimiento del hijo en el alma, según los escritos del maestro Eckhart / Brian J. Farrelly – Suárez y Descartes sobre la noción de verdades eternas y su relación con Dios / Bernardo Cantens – Interacción mente-cuerpo y libre arbitrio en Descarles / Enrique Chávez-Arvizo – Razón y verdad : Hobbes y el Aquinate / María L. Lukac de Stier – Pascal y la crisis de la razón / Francisco Leocata – La contribución de Jacques Maritain a la teología natural / Juan J. Álvarez – Ontología de lo social / Abelardo Pithod – Réflexions sur une introduction à la métaphysique / Yves Floucat – El conocimiento divino del ente futuro contingente / Gabriel Delgado – Insegnamento sociale cristiano : magistero e scienze umane / Enrique Colom – Aquinas on Aristotle and creation : use or misuse? / Timothy L. Smith – La verdad, raíz de la libertad / Gustavo Eloy Ponferrada – Besoin de Dieu et désir de Dieu : l’illusion d’une mort / Michel Mahé – El ser a merced de la afectividad / Mario Enrique Sacchi – Notas y comentarios -- Bibliografía
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Integran este número de la revista ponencias presentadas en Studia Hispanica Medievalia VIII : Actas de las X Jornadas Internacionales de Literatura Española Medieval, 2011, y de Homenaje al Quinto Centenario del Cancionero General de Hernando del Castillo.
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El ensayo se estableció en las áreas de la Universidad Nacional Agraria, ubicada en elkm 12½ carretera norte, Managua. En febrero del año dos mil doce, para evaluar efecto de diferentes láminas de riego y momentos de aplicación de 50 kg.ha-1 de nitrógeno, sobre el crecimiento de maíz (Zea mays L.), variedad NB-S, y rendimiento del chilote, a una densidad de 62, 500 Ptas.ha-1. Se utilizó un diseño de parcelas divididas en bloques completos al azar (BCA), con cuatro repeticiones, y los factores en estudios fueron los siguientes: Factor A: Lamina de riego por goteo, con 3 láminas: 4.5 l de agua/m/día, 3.6 l de agua/m/día,2.5 l de agua/m/día y el Factor B: fraccionamiento de la dosis de nitrógeno de 50 kg.ha-1, con 3 niveles b1(100 % de la dosis aplicada a los 21 ddg); b2 dosis fraccionada (50 % de la dosis aplicada a los 21 ddg y 50 % de la dosis a los 42 ddg) y b3 dosis completa (100 % de la dosis aplicada a los 42 ddg). Las variables de crecimiento evaluadas fueron: altura de la planta en cm, diámetro del tallo cm y numero de hojas por planta; para las variables del rendimiento y sus principales componentes fueron: altura de la primera y segunda inserción del chilote (cm), diámetro del chilote con y sin bráctea (cm), longitud del chilote con y sin bráctea (cm), peso de 12 chilote con y sin bráctea (kg), y rendimiento de chilote con y sin bráctea (kg),y rendimiento del chilote con bráctea (kg.ha-1). El análisis de varianza (ANDEVA), realizado a todas las variables de crecimiento dio significativo para las variables altura de la planta y diámetro del tallo con diferencias significativas Tanto para del Factor A, Factor B y la interacción A*B a los 35 y 48 días después de la germinación. El número de hojas por planta presento diferencias significativas en el factor A, a los 35 ddg y para el factor B a los 35 y 48 ddg y en la interacción A*B. Todas las variables de los componentes del rendimiento presentaron deferencias significativas para los niveles del Factor A, Factor B y la interacción A x B a los 60 después de la germinación. De los nueve tratamientos evaluados, el tratamiento a1 b2 indujo al mayor rendimiento de chilote con una producción de 880.67 kg de chilote. ha-1 con un total de costos variables de 3,858.00C$.ha-1, un beneficio neto de 3,539.63 C$.ha-1 y una tasa de retorno marginal de 362.46 por ciento.
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A more generalized model of a beam resting on a tensionless Reissner foundation is presented. Compared with the Winkler foundation model, the Reissner foundation model is a much improved one. In the Winkler foundation model, there is no shear stress inside the foundation layer and the foundation is assumed to consist of closely spaced, independent springs. The presence of shear stress inside Reissner foundation makes the springs no longer independent and the foundation to deform as a whole. Mathematically, the governing equation of a beam on Reissner foundation is sixth order differential equation compared with fourth order of Winkler one. Because of this order change of the governing equation, new boundary conditions are needed and related discussion is presented. The presence of the shear stress inside the tensionless Reissner foundation together with the unknown feature of contact area/length makes the problem much more difficult than that of Winkler foundation. In the model presented here, the effects of beam dimension, gap distance, loading asymmetry and foundation shear stress on the contact length are all incorporated and studied. As the beam length increases, the results of a finite beam with zero gap distance converge asymptotically to those obtained by the previous model for an infinitely long beam. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Resumen: La idea de que los compositores barrocos planificaban su obra en función de las reglas de la retórica es común en los manuales especializados. No obstante, Brian Vickers descarta la posibilidad de su utilización como medio analítico en la música. Rubén López Cano considera la retórica como un metalenguaje y abre la posibilidad de aplicar el sistema retórico, propio del sistema lingüístico, a otro no verbal. En el presente trabajo pretendo demostrar cómo el aparato teórico de la retórica del barroco subyace en la composición musical de este período. Con el fin de ejemplificar esto, utilizo el análisis de una sección de la Pasión según San Mateo de J. S. Bach.
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Contenido: L’inquiétude de Dieu chez saint Augustin / Rosa Muriel Zelasco – El camino trinitario a la deificación conforme a los místicos renanos del siglo XIV: Meister Eckhart, Juan Tauler y el beato Enrique Seuze / Brian J. Farrelly – El comentario de Santo Tomás a los Posteriores analíticos: notas metodológicas / Celina A. Lértora Mendoza – Memoria e identidad en Santo Tomás de Aquino / Martín Federico Echavarría -- ¿Elegimos a Dios?: acerca de la no elección del fin último en concreto según Tomás de Aquino / Beatriz Reyes Oribe – Hacia un realismo hermenéutico sobre la base Santo Tomás de Aquino-Husserl: Los horizontes / Gabriel J. Zanotti – Pascal à la lumière de saint Jean de la Croix / André Bord – El principio de contradicción en Kant / Lorenzo Vicente Burgoa – La mutua implicación poder-saber según Michel Foucault / Jorge Martínez Barrera – Modernidad e Ilustración en Jürgen Habermas / Francisco Leocata – Hacia una hermenéutica analógico-icónica del símbolo / Mauricio Beuchot – El principio de autoridad / Mario Enrique Sacchi – Notas y comentarios – Discusiones -- Bibliografía
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El 29 de noviembre de 2012, el Lord Justice Brian Leveson presentó al Gobierno británico su informe de 1987 páginas sobre la “Cultura, prácticas y ética de la prensa”. Este reporte fue el resultado de un año y cuatro meses de labor de la comisión presidida por el juez, convocada para analizar la situación de la prensa y proponer reformas en su regulación a raíz del escándalo desatado debido al descubrimiento de la red de escuchas ilegales organizada por el periódico News of the World. El organismo regulador de la prensa británica es la Press Complaints Commission, cuya característica principal es la de estar integrada mayoritariamente por miembros de la industria de medios...
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In summer and fall 2004, the California Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) initiated the Carmel River Lagoon Enhancement Project. The project involved excavation of a dry remnant Arm of the lagoon and adjacent disused farmland to form a significant new lagoon volume. The intention was to provide habitat, in particular, for two Federally threatened species: the California Red-Legged Frog, and the Steelhead Trout (South Central-Coastal California Evolutionary Significant Unit). DPR contracted with the Foundation of California State University Monterey Bay (Central Coast Watershed Studies Team, Watershed Institute) to monitor water quality and aquatic invertebrates in association with the enhancement, and to attempt to monitor steelhead using novel video techniques. The monitoring objective was to assess whether the enhancement was successful in providing habitat with good water quality, adequate invertebrate food for steelhead, and ultimately the presence of steelhead. (Document contains 102 pages)
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Introduction [pdf, 0.17 MB] Warren S. Wooster [pdf, 0.12 MB] PICES - the first decade, and beyond Paul H. LeBlond [pdf, 0.03 MB] The Physical Oceanography and Climate Committee: The first decade D.E. Harrison and Neville Smith [pdf, 0.04 MB] Ocean observing systems and prediction - the next ten years Tsutomu Ikeda and Patricia A. Wheeler [pdf, 0.85 MB] Ocean impacts from the bottom of the food web to the top: Biological Oceanography Committee (BIO) retrospective Timothy R. Parsons [pdf, 0.2 MB] Future needs for biological oceanographic studies in the Pacific Ocean Douglas E. Hay, Richard J. Beamish, George W. Boehlert, Vladimir I. Radchenko, Qi-Sheng Tang, Tokio Wada, Daniel W. Ware and Chang-Ik Zhang [pdf, 0.2 MB] Ten years FIS in PICES: An introspective, retrospective, critical and constructive review of fishery science in PICES Richard F. Addison, John E. Stein and Alexander V. Tkalin [pdf, 0.12 MB] Marine Environmental Committee in review Robie W. Macdonald, Brian Morton, Richard F. Addison and Sophia C. Johannessen [pdf, 1.89 MB] Marine environmental contaminant issues in the North Pacific: What are the dangers and how do we identify them? R. Ian Perry, Anne B. Hollowed and Takashige Sugimoto [pdf, 0.36 MB] The PICES Climate Change and Carrying Capacity Program: Why, how, and what next? List of acronyms [pdf, 0.07 MB] (Document contains 108 pages)
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Table of Contents [pdf, 0.22 Mb] Executive Summary [pdf, 0.31 Mb] Report of the 2001 BASS/MODEL Workshop [pdf, 0.65 Mb] To review ecosystem models for the subarctic gyres Report of the 2001 MONITOR Workshop [pdf, 0.7 Mb] To review ecosystem models for the subarctic gyres Workshop presentations: Sonia D. Batten PICES Continuous Plankton Recorder pilot project Phillip R. Mundy GEM (Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council`s "Gulf Ecosystem Monitoring" initiative) and U.S. GOOS plans in the North Pacific Ron McLaren and Brian O`Donnell A proposal for a North Pacific Action group of the international Data Buoy Cooperation Panel Gilberto Gaxiola-Castrol and Sila Najera-Martinez The Mexican oceanographic North Pacific program: IMECOCAL Sydney Levitus Building global ocean profile and plankton databases for scientific research Report of the 2001 REX Workshop [pdf, 1.73 Mb] On temporal variations in size-at-age for fish species in coastal areas around the Pacific Rim Workshop presentations: Brian J. Pyper, Randall M. Peterman, Michael F. Lapointe and Carl J. Walters [pdf, 0.33 Mb] Spatial patterns of covariation in size-at-age of British Columbia and Alaska sockeye salmon stocks and effects of abundance and ocean temperature R. Bruce MacFarlane, Steven Ralston, Chantell Royer and Elizabeth C. Norton [pdf, 0.4 Mb] Influences of the 1997-1998 El Niño and 1999 La Niña on juvenile Chinook salmon in the Gulf of the Farallones Olga S. Temnykh and Sergey L. Marchenko [pdf, 0.5 Mb] Variability of the pink salmon sizes in relation with abundance of Okhotsk Sea stocks Ludmila A. Chernoivanova, Alexander N. Vdoven and D.V. Antonenko [pdf, 0.3 Mb] The characteristic growth rate of herring in Peter the Great Bay (Japan/East Sea) Nikolay I. Naumenko [pdf, 0.5 Mb] Temporal variations in size-at-age of the western Bering Sea herring Evelyn D. Brown [pdf, 0.45 Mb] Effects of climate on Pacific herring, Clupea pallasii, in the northern Gulf of Alaska and Prince William Sound, Alaska Jake Schweigert, Fritz Funk, Ken Oda and Tom Moore [pdf, 0.6 Mb] Herring size-at-age variation in the North Pacific Ron W. Tanasichuk [pdf, 0.3 Mb] Implications of variation in euphausiid productivity for the growth, production and resilience of Pacific herring (Clupea pallasi) from the southwest coast of Vancouver Island Chikako Watanabe, Ahihiko Yatsu and Yoshiro Watanabe [pdf, 0.3 Mb] Changes in growth with fluctuation of chub mackerel abundance in the Pacific waters off central Japan from 1970 to 1997 Yoshiro Watanabe, Yoshiaki Hiyama, Chikako Watanabe and Shiro Takayana [pdf, 0.35 Mb] Inter-decadal fluctuations in length-at-age of Hokkaido-Sakhalin herring and Japanese sardine in the Sea of Japan Pavel A. Balykin and Alexander V. Buslov [pdf, 0.4 Mb] Long-term variability in length of walley pollock in the western Bering Sea and east Kamchtka Alexander A. Bonk [pdf, 0.4 Mb] Effect of population abundance increase on herring distribution in the western Bering Sea Sergey N. Tarasyuk [pdf, 0.4 Mb] Survival of yellowfin sole (Limanda aspera Pallas) in the northern part of the Tatar Strait (Sea of Japan) during the second half of the 20th century Report of the 2002 MODEL/REX Workshop [pdf, 1.2 Mb] To develop a marine ecosystem model of the North Pacific Ocean including pelagic fishes Summary and Overview [pdf, 0.4 Mb] Workshop presentations: Bernard A. Megrey, Kenny Rose, Francisco E. Werner, Robert A. Klumb and Douglas E. Hay [pdf, 0.47 Mb] A generalized fish bioenergetics/biomass model with an application to Pacific herring Robert A. Klumb [pdf, 0.34 Mb] Review of Clupeid biology with emphasis on energetics Douglas E. Hay [pdf, 0.47 Mb] Reflections of factors affecting size-at-age and strong year classes of herring in the North Pacific Shin-ichi Ito, Yutaka Kurita, Yoshioki Oozeki, Satoshi Suyama, Hiroya Sugisaki and Yongjin Tian [pdf, 0.34 Mb] Review for Pacific saury (Cololabis saira) study under the VENFISH project lexander V. Leonov and Gennady A. Kantakov [pdf, 0.34 Mb] Formalization of interactions between chemical and biological compartments in the mathematical model describing the transformation of nitrogen, phosphorus, silicon and carbon compounds Herring group report and model results [pdf, 0.34 Mb] Saury group report and model results [pdf, 0.46 Mb] Model experiments and hypotheses Recommendations [pdf, 0.4 Mb] Achievements and future steps Acknowledgements [pdf, 0.29 Mb] References [pdf, 0.32 Mb] Appendix 1. List of Participants [pdf, 0.32 Mb] Appendices 2-5. FORTRAN codes [pdf, 0.4 Mb] (Document pdf contains 182 pages)
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Navassa is a small, undeveloped island in the Windward Passage between Jamaica and Haiti. It was designated a National Wildlife Refuge under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1999, but the remote location makes management and enforcement challenging, and the area is regularly fished by artisanal fishermen from Haiti. In April 2006, the NOAA Center for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research conducted a research cruise to Navassa. The cruise produced the first high-resolution multibeam bathymetry for the area, which will facilitate habitat mapping and assist in refuge management. A major emphasis of the cruise was to study the impact of Haitian fishing gear on benthic habitats and fish communities; however, in 10 days on station only one small boat was observed with five fishermen and seven traps. Fifteen monitoring stations were established to characterize fish and benthic communities along the deep (28-34 m) shelf, as these areas have been largely unstudied by previous cruises. The fish communities included numerous squirrelfishes, triggerfishes, and parrotfishes. Snappers and grouper were also present but no small individuals were observed. Similarly, conch surveys indicated the population was in low abundance and was heavily skewed towards adults. Analysis of the benthic photoquadrats is currently underway. Other cruise activities included installation of a temperature logger network, sample collection for stable isotope analyses to examine trophic structure, and drop camera surveys to ground-truth habitat maps and overhead imagery. (PDF contains 58 pages)
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On September 7, 2000 the National Marine Fisheries Service announced that it was reinitiating consultation under Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act on pelagic fisheries for swordfish, sharks, tunas, and billfish. 1 Bycatch of a protected sea turtle species is considered a take under the Endangered Species Act (PL93-205). On June 30, 2000 NMFS completed a Biological Opinion on an amendment to the Highly Migratory Pelagic Fisheries Management Plan that concluded that the continued operation of the pelagic longline fishery was likely to jeopardize the continued existence of loggerhead and leatherback sea turtles.2 Since that Biological Opinion was issued NMFS concluded that further analyses of observer data and additional population modeling of loggerhead sea turtles was needed to determine more precisely the impact of the pelagic longline fishery on turtles. 3,4 Hence, the reinitiation of consultation. The documents that follow constitute the scientific review and synthesis of information pertaining to the narrowly defined reinitiation of consultation: the impact of the pelagic longline fishery on loggerhead and leatherback sea turtles The document is in 3 parts, plus 5 appendices. Part I is a stock assessment of loggerhead sea turtles of the Western North Atlantic. Part II is a stock assessment of leatherback sea turtles of the Western North Atlantic. Part III is an assessment of the impact of the pelagic longline fishery on loggerhead and leatherback sea turtles of the Western North Atlantic. These documents were prepared by the NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science Center staff and academic colleagues at Duke University and Dalhousie University. Personnel involved from the SEFSC include Joanne Braun-McNeill, Lisa Csuzdi, Craig Brown, Jean Cramer, Sheryan Epperly, Steve Turner, Wendy Teas, Nancy Thompson, Wayne Witzell, Cynthia Yeung, and also Jeff Schmid under contract from the University or Miami. Our academic colleagues, Ransom Myers, Keith Bowen, and Leah Gerber from Dalhousie University and Larry Crowder and Melissa Snover from Duke University, also recipients of a Pew Charitable Trust Grant for a Comprehensive Study of the Ecological Impacts of the Worldwide Pelagic Longline Industry, made significant contributions to the quantitative analyses and we are very grateful for their collaboration. We appreciate the reviews of the stock definition sections on loggerheads and leatherbacks by Brian Bowen, University of Florida, and Peter Dutton, National Marine Fisheries Service Southwest Fisheries Science Center, respectively, and the comments of the NMFS Center of Independent Experts reviewers Robert Mohn, Ian Poiner, and YouGan Wang on the entire document. We also wish to acknowledge all the unpublished data used herein which were contributed by many researchers, especially the coordinators and volunteers of the nesting beach surveys and the sea turtle stranding and salvage network and the contributors to the Cooperative Marine Turtle Tagging Program. (PDF contains 349 pages)