Measurement, Interpretation and Classification of South African Track Geometry

1995 ◽  
Vol 24 (sup1) ◽  
pp. 133-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROBERT D. FRÖHLING
Keyword(s):  
Koedoe ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
G.J. Bredenkamp ◽  
H. Bezuidenhout

A procedure for the effective classification of large phytosociological data sets, and the combination of many data sets from various parts of the South African grasslands is demonstrated. The procedure suggests a region by region or project by project treatment of the data. The analyses are performed step by step to effectively bring together all releves of similar or related plant communities. The first step involves a separate numerical classification of each subset (region), and subsequent refinement by Braun- Blanquet procedures. The resulting plant communities are summarised in a single synoptic table, by calculating a synoptic value for each species in each community. In the second step all communities in the synoptic table are classified by numerical analysis, to bring related communities from different regions or studies together in a single cluster. After refinement of these clusters by Braun-Blanquet procedures, broad vegetation types are identified. As a third step phytosociological tables are compiled for each iden- tified broad vegetation type, and a comprehensive abstract hierarchy constructed.


2005 ◽  
Vol 221 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 520-528 ◽  
Author(s):  
André de Villiers ◽  
Pavel Majek ◽  
Frederic Lynen ◽  
Andrew Crouch ◽  
Henk Lauer ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 228-243
Author(s):  
Shené Steenkamp ◽  
Rudie Nel

The classification of income from cloud computing activities, according to the substance-over-form doctrine, is fundamental to the application of the correct taxation source test. The designation of IaaS, PaaS and SaaS, the three main cloud computing service models, clearly denotes the form of cloud computing activities as that of a service. However, the nature of cloud computing inherently raises the question of whether or not cloud computing income should not rather be classified as income from leasing activities or the imparting of know-how. In fact, the findings of this study suggest the classification would not necessarily always be that of a service. The possible classification as lease income can be either income from the lease of tangible computer hardware and/or of intellectual property (royalty income). The aim of this study was to formulate guidelines to assist in the correct classification of income from cloud computing activities. This was achieved by performing doctrinal research based on the South African and international literature.


1894 ◽  
Vol 185 ◽  
pp. 1029-1041 ◽  

The South African fossils with broad, flat, tuberculate tooth-crowns of mammalian type all from the eastern part of Cape Colony. Some of the most interesting are known from fragments, which indicate nothing but the middle region of the sail. They are apparently extremely rare. Two species, with teeth well preserved, found ten years ago by Dr. Kannemeyer, at Wonderboom, and presented to South African Museum, Cape Town, where they were brought under my notice by Peringuey. Others were found in a fragmentary condition by Mr. Alfred of Aliwal North, to the west of that town, in a bed which appeared to me be reconstructed. There is no doubt that the fossils are from the upper part of te Karroo formation, probably of Permian age, and below the Stormberg beds, in Saurischian fossils are found allied to those of the Trias of Europe. If the teeth had occurred isolated, without the means of demonstrating their rsemblance to Theriodonts, by comparison of what remains of the skull, it would have legitimate to have referred them to Mammals. There is no evidence of affinity Accept resemblances to Theriodonts, which show that the skull had pre-frontal and frontal bones, and therefore may be inferred to have had the lower jaw composite. The teeth are such as might be expected, perhaps, in a Monotreme Mammal, their interest is therefore the greater that there is no ground for suspecting them be mammalian, other than a general resemblance of the crown to the crowns of true teeth of Ornithorhynchus. That teeth of this type should occur in a group animals in which the shoulder-girdle and pelvis have monotreme characters, and in hich the principal limb bones are intermediate in character between Monotremes Marsupials, is evidence of a closer approximation between Mammals and Pep tiles has been manifest. And so far as I am aware the only Theriodont characters remaining to distinguish these animals from Mammals are the composite lower which is covered externally by the dentary bone along its whole length, and the resence of the pre-frontal, post-frontal, and transverse bones in the skull.


2012 ◽  
Vol 62 (Pt_12) ◽  
pp. 3072-3080 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marizeth Groenewald ◽  
Teresa Coutinho ◽  
Maudy Th. Smith ◽  
J. P. van der Walt

The present classification of Galactomyces and its anamorph, Geotrichum, is based on various studies that used morphology, ecology, biochemistry, DNA–DNA reassociation comparisons and gene sequencing. In this study, the identities of strains of the Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures yeast culture collection, as well as seven strains from South Africa, were examined by analyses of the nucleotide divergence in the internal transcribed spacer regions of the nuclear rRNA gene (nrRNA) operon, the D1/D2 domains of the 26S rRNA gene and partial actin gene sequences as well as compatibility studies. The South African strains were assigned to species in the genus Galactomyces. The phylogenetic analyses and mating studies revealed that Geotrichum silvicola and Geotrichum bryndzae are synonyms of Galactomyces candidus and that Geotrichum vulgare is a synonym of Galactomyces pseudocandidus.


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