scholarly journals Harpacticoid Copepods from the West Indian Islands: Darcythompsoniidae (Copepoda, Harpacticoida)

1986 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 282-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Fiers

The present article in a series on the harpacticoid copepods gathered during the West Indian expeditions of the University of Amsterdam deals with three species of the family Darcythompsoniidae: Darcythompsonia inopinata Smirnov, Leptocaris glaber n. sp., and Leptocaris echinatus n. sp. Through comparison with other specimens from different localities, Darcythompsonia radans Por is considered here a synonym of D. inopinata Smirnov.

1986 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 132-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Fiers

The present paper deals exclusively with the species of the family Laophontidae found in samples gathered during several expeditions of the University of Amsterdam to the West Indies. Four new species belonging to different genera are described. Two new species and Laophonte adriatica are assigned to a new genus: Lipomelum n. gen. Furthermore, additional information on seven other laophontids is given.


1984 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Fiers

This paper is the first of a series dealing with the systematics of harpacticoid copepods collected during the West Indian Expeditions of the University of Amsterdam. In the present paper a new species, Scottolana antillensis n. sp., is described. Furthermore, Ellucana secunda Coull, 1971, is compared with E. longicauda Sewell, 1940, and morphological details are given for Longipedia spec.


1948 ◽  
Vol 6 (17) ◽  
pp. 231-250

Frederick Maurice Rowe, Professor in the Department of Colour Chemistry and Dyeing at the University of Leeds, died on the 8 December 1946, at the age of fifty-five. He was born on 11 February 1891 at Stroud in Gloucestershire where his father, H. J. Rowe, was engaged in business as a coal merchant and dealer in builders’ materials, under the name of Wood and Rowe. From 1901 to 1908 he attended Marling School, Stroud, and always retained for it a strong attachment for which there were solid grounds. The school, founded and endowed in 1887 by Sir Samuel Marling, a prominent figure in the West of England cloth trade in that part of Gloucestershire, had attracted the attention of the Worshipful Company of Cloth workers by whose efforts a Department of Dyeing had been established at the Yorkshire College, Leeds. The Company decided to provide funds for an annual leaving scholarship to help a Marling School boy to proceed to Leeds for two years’ technological training in textile dyeing at the College. Similar provision was made at Cheltenham Grammar School and in consequence there were unusual opportunities for boys from Gloucestershire to go north for scientific and technical training whilst becoming familiar with another district famous for its woollen industry. On his mother’s side Rowe was descended from a family of Huguenots who fled from France after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 and settled in Gloucestershire to practise their craft of woollen manufacture with which some members of the family continued to maintain a connexion. This circumstance and the Cotswold environment may have helped to direct Rowe’s choice of a career, but a love for chemistry was awakened in him by one of the masters at the school, Bartlett, whose influence in after years he frequently acknowledged with gratitude.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Buthainah Abdah ◽  
Issam A. Al-Khatib ◽  
Abdelhaleem I. Khader

Water bottling industry has negative environmental impacts due to exploitation and possible pollution of water resources and due to solid waste problems related to the use of plastic bottles. To mitigate these impacts, it is important to study the link between consuming bottled drinking water and the perception of its quality. The objective of the study is to assess the perception of Birzeit University students’ of the bottled water marketed in the West Bank and its impact on the humans and the environment. Universities play an important role in providing awareness about environmental issues and sustainability, and university students are thought to be more environmentally conscious about these issues. A quantitative survey was used to analyze the behaviors and perceptions of Birzeit University students. The sample size was 375 students, distributed according to the college, gender, and the academic year at the university. The results show that the factors that affect the perception of the students are mainly the educational year at the university, the income, the family size, and the community type.


1967 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 343-357

Walter Stiles was born on 23 August 1886 at Shepherd’s Bush, Hammersmith. He was the eldest child of the family and had one sister born three years later. Both his parents were Londoners. His father, Walter Stiles (1861-1938), was an artist who worked in wood and clay and whose work ornamented many large houses in London and elsewhere. His mother was Elizabeth Sarah Stiles ( née Dury; 1859-1943). His grandfather, James Stiles, was a corn merchant of Pimlico and the family appears previously to have been long settled in Kent in the neighbourhood of Cobham. James’s brother, Walter Stiles, at Cobham, was the grandfather of Walter Stanley Stiles, F.R.S. On 7 July 1920 Walter Stiles married Edith Ethel May Harwood at St Mary’s Church, Stamford Brook, Hammersmith. Her parents came from the West Country, her father from Wiltshire and her mother from Dorset. There were two children; Walter born in 1922 and Ruth Mary born in 1927. The son graduated in physics at the University of Birmingham and now works on irrigation problems as a member of the staff of the Grassland Research Institute, Hurley, Berkshire. The daughter, after graduating at Birmingham in Spanish and Portuguese, went on to the University of Madrid and is now a lecturer in Spanish at Torquay Technical College. Stiles’s education commenced at the public elementary school in Westville Road, Shepherd’s Bush (1890-1897). He then, with the assistance of L.C.C. junior and intermediate scholarships, went to Latymer Upper School, Hammersmith, of which he afterwards wrote in enthusiastic terms. Very much, he said, was due to the wisdom of the headmaster, the Reverend C. J. Smith, who, from a modest beginning in 1895, raised the school to a leading position among the grammar schools of London. Personally, he felt that he owed a great deal to the teaching of the Mathematics and Senior Science Master, G. M. Grace, who was a source of inspiration to his pupils. Contemporary with Stiles were Harold Spencer Jones, later F.R.S. and Astronomer Royal; G. K. Livers, afterwards Professor of Mathematics at University College, Cardiff; and D. Orson Wood, for many years an Editor of Science Progress .


1953 ◽  
Vol 8 (22) ◽  
pp. 566-582

To chemists, biochemists and physiologists, H. S. Raper is known for his pioneer work on the metabolism of fat and the formation of melanin, and to them, and his intimate friends, his sudden death has left a gap which will endure. In his later years, and with the development of his career, the management of academic affairs robbed him of the time which he would have preferred to have given to the laboratory. As a recompense, however, the circle of his friendships and acquaintances extended, and he became widely known and revered and greatly esteemed for his gentle, kindly nature, the wisdom of his judgment, and the careful, considered soundness of his counsel and advice, which he willingly gave to the individual and to the wider gathering of his colleagues who sat with him on committees, or joined with him in his endeavours for the medical school, and the university, he loved and served so long and so well. Family and early history Henry Stanley Raper was born on 5 March 1882, in Bradford, in Yorkshire. There were, in all, nine children in the family, of whom seven survived —two daughters and five sons. Henry Stanley was the eighth child and the youngest son. He was survived by one brother and one sister. He was the son of James Rhodes Raper and Sarah Ann Tankard. J. R. Raper was a well-known and much-revered figure in the business life of the West Riding of Yorkshire. He was first cashier, and later, he and his elder sons came to manage, and then to own, a large business house in the West Riding. When J. R. Raper retired he went to live in Grassington in the upper reaches of his beloved Wharfedale, and became an authority on the flora of the district. Here in Wharfedale, for many years, the Raper boys spent much time and came to know the adjoining moors and dales. The youngest son, Henry Stanley, although the only one of this large family to make as his calling the pursuit of natural knowledge and research, was very like physically, and had many of the characteristics of, his much esteemed and beloved father.


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