6,987 research outputs found

    Ocular Asymmetry in certain Texas Isopods

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    cente parce glandulosa; corolla 2.2-3 cm. longa; nuculis glabris 4 mm

    Edward Otto Heuse (1879-1954)

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    The death on June 2, 1954, of Dr. Heuse, professor of chemistry from 1918 to 1949, has removed the last of three long-term professors of science in Southern Methodist University

    Porcellio quadriseriatus (Isopoda) at Dallas, Texas

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    The eastern Mediterranean species, Porcellio (Proporcellio) quadriseriatus Verh. (which for some years has been locally very abundant near Southern Methodist University at Dallas), was first found in the summer and fall of 1925 in a rubbish- and stone dump on a corner of the campus

    Ellis William Shuler, Ph.D., LL.D.

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    When Dean Shuler retired from the deanship of the Graduate School of Southern Methodist University last September, the university lost from active teaching the last member of its original faculty of 1915. As associate professor and professor of geology for thirty-seven years, and as chairman of the Graduate Committee, or dean of the Graduate School for thirty years, Dean Shuler has been one of the bulwarks of the developing university. The editors of FIELD & LABORATORY take lively satisfaction in dedicating this volume of the journal to Dr. Shuler

    Summary of the NOW'98 Phenomenology Working Group

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    Summary of the Phenomenology Working Group at the Europhysics Neutrino Oscillation Workshop (NOW'98), 7-9 September 1998, Amsterdam.Comment: 66 page

    William D. Moore (1824-96), Amateur Geologist Of Mississippi

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    It is now nearly ninety years since William D. Moore, then professor of English at the University of Mississippi, collaborated with Eugene W. Hilgard on his famous geological report of that State. The archivists and historians have lost Moore from their records (if, indeed, they ever sought seriously for information of him), so that what was written five years ago of W. D. Moore (in another connection) remains as true as it was then: No record of whence he came, or whither went (when the University closed in 1861), is to be found at the Univer­sity. Since the present writer has been for some time gathering materials on the teaching of science in certain Southern universities and colleges before the Civil War, and since there is now no reason for obscurity about this gifted amateur of science, it seems well to put on paper the outlines, at least, of what we know of his life and work

    William Douglas Wallach, Pioneer Hydrographer Of Texas

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    A recent issue of the Southwest Review gives an account of some phases of the life of William Douglas Wallach (1812-71), noted editor of the Washington Evening Star (1853-67), and at an earlier period (1838-45) surveyor and newspaper editor in Texas. To an historian of scientific work and exploration in Early Texas, the career of Wallach is of especial interest. Almost the first hydrographic work on inland coast-wise waters of the State was done by Wallach in his survey of part of Matagorda Bay, 1839 (at the request and expense of the Board of Aldermen of Matagorda

    Nicholas Marcellus Hentz (1797-1856), Pioneer American Araneologist

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    An account the life of one of the least known among antebellum Southern naturalists. Nicholas Marcellus Hentz was, before his death a hundred years ago – he died 4 November, 1856 – the great American student of spiders. Through his numerous publications, including some 18 articles and a book, he gained wide acclaim as a naturalist

    Men of Science in Texas, 1820-1880: V

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    A collection of short biographies of naturalists in Texas during the years 1829 thru 1880, from Norris to Zink
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