An Analysis of What Fostered Resilience of the Irish Sea Area Gaels and the Bedouin of the Mamluk Frontier Leading Up to the Black Death

2020 ◽  
pp. 221-258
Author(s):  
Raymond Ruhaak
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
R.P. Briggs ◽  
R.J.A. Atkinson ◽  
M. McAliskey ◽  
A. Rogerson

Histriobdella homari is a polychaete annelid belonging to the Order Eunicida and Family Histriobdellidae. Histriobdella homari is normally found in the gill chambers or among the eggs of the lobster Homarus vulgaris from the English Channel (Roscoff) and in the southwestern part of the North Sea (George & Hartmann-Schroder, 1985). Two independent sightings of H. homari living on the pleopods of Nephrops norvegicus from the Irish Sea and Clyde Sea area are reported.


2020 ◽  
pp. 87-98
Author(s):  
Caroline Paterson ◽  
Craig Stanford
Keyword(s):  

1971 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 501-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Baker

SummaryThe deep-seated caledonoid lineaments which developed in conjunction with the L. Palaeozoic basins in Wales, S. Irish Sea and Co. Wexford, bounded elongated fault-blocks within the resistant basement and its cover; it is suggested that under compression these broke internally along contemporary, strike-slip cross-faults. In the Central Wales and N. Wales–SE Co.Wexford blocks the latter were principally E–W and N–S faults respectively. Repeated movements of diverse styles along members of all three suites have influenced sedimentalogic, volcanic, plutonic and geomorphologic events throughout the Phanerozoic; in particular, they permitted the Irish Sea Geanticline to rise above the roots of the Monian tectogene, and determined the form of the younger Irish Sea sedimentary basins.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 142-144
Author(s):  
John Kennedy

Review(s) of: The medieval cultures of the Irish sea and the North Sea: Manannan and his neighbors, by MacQuarrie, Charles W., and Nagy, Joseph Falaky Nagy (eds), (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2019) hardcover, 212 pages, 1 map, 4 figures, RRP euro99; ISBN 9789462989399.


Author(s):  
L. J. Clarke

AbstractA free-swimming thornback ray Raja clavata specimen demonstrating significant morphological abnormality is reported, captured by beam trawl in the Irish Sea off north Wales, UK. The anterior sections of both pectoral fins were separated from the head section for a length of approximately 140 mm extending from the rostrum tip to a point posterior of the spiracles, along with abnormal morphology of the gill slits. This phenomenon has been observed elsewhere but is the first documented example of this abnormality in the eastern Irish Sea, despite widespread targeting of the species across the region by commercial and recreational fishers. Possible causes and consequences of the observed abnormality are discussed.


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