The natural history of blood pressure in black populations in the West Indies, West Africa and the UK: a comparison with the USA

Author(s):  
J.K. Cruickshank
Romanticism ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deirdre Coleman

Henry Smeathman (1742–86) was a self-taught naturalist who collected naturalia in West Africa and the West Indies for wealthy London sponsors. In 1783 he travelled to Paris with letters of introduction to Benjamin Franklin with the aim of finding supporters in either France or America for a free African settlement which would undermine the slave trade through ‘legitimate’ commerce. His arrival coincided with the launch of the Montgolfier balloons, followed by the race to invent a mode of aerial transportation. Drawing on Smeathman's eye-witness accounts of the ascents, many of which have never been published, this essay explores his use of biomimetics to design a steerable balloon which would fund his return to Africa at the head of a mixed-race colony. His collaborators in Paris and London included Barthélemy Faujas de Saint-Fond, Le Marquis d'Arlandes, Paolo Andreani, and Jean-Pierre Blanchard.


1960 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 306-307
Author(s):  
Benjamin Keen

1982 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 491-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Galenson

Evidence drawn from records of auctions held by the Royal African Company in Barbados between 1673 and 1723 is used to obtain annual estimates of slave prices by demographic category. These price series are then used to investigate the implications of an economic analysis of the demographic composition of the slave trade. The results provide quantitative support for the prediction that rising slave prices in the West Indies caused an increase in the share of children among the population of slaves in the transatlantic trade. This economic effect may have been a significant link between American slave markets and the demographic history of black populations in both Africa and America.


Author(s):  
Ian Whittington

As a colonial subject and woman of colour, Una Marson occupies a unique place in the history of wartime broadcasting in Britain. Her weekly programCalling the West Indies began as a “message home” program for Caribbean soldiers stationed in the UK but grew, as the war progressed, into a literary and cultural forum for writers from across the Black Atlantic. Though barred from advocating openly for independence, Marson used her program to promote West Indian cultural autonomy by spotlighting emerging Caribbean literary figures and forging connections with activists and intellectuals from the U.S., Britain, Africa, and elsewhere. Beyond building such transatlantic networks, Calling the West Indies afforded listeners in the Caribbean the first opportunities to hear literature spoken in the West Indian forms of English which Edward Kamau Brathwaite would go on to call “nation language.” By focusing on Marson’s wartime work, this chapter rectifies a persistent tendency, in histories of Caribbean literature and broadcasting, to omit not only the central role played by this progressive feminist intellectual, but also the role of the war itself as catalyst to the postwar literary renaissance in the West Indies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 388-393
Author(s):  
A. E. Oliveira-Souza ◽  
M. M. Salviano Santana ◽  
T. Dos Santos Reis ◽  
C. E. Costa-Campos ◽  
C. Albuquerque de Miranda ◽  
...  

SummaryLeptodactylus petersii is a species of anuran found in both terrestrial and aquatic habitats and occurs from South America to southern North America and the West Indies. Studies involving the fauna of anuran parasites offer complementary information related to ecology. Thus, since there are few studies on the natural history of this species, this research aims to analyze the diet and the presence of endoparasitic helminths of Leptodactylus petersii from the state of Amapá, Brazil. We found 10 different taxonomic categories of prey in stomach contents, with the categories Hymenoptera (Formicidae) with 32.26 % (n = 12) being the most representative. Among the 12 individuals of L. petersii that were analyzed for helminth parasites, 83.3 % were infected with at least one species of helminths allocated to Phylum Nematoda. Our results report a new occurrence site for Rhabdias breviensis, originally described for Leptodactylus petersii in the state of Pará, as well as the second report of Ortleppascaris sp. in Brazil.


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