Anatomic significance of topographical relief in the pars basalis telencephali. Implications in forensic psychopathology

2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Gheorghe S. Drăgoi ◽  
Ileana Marinescu
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
P.J. Dailey

The structure of insect salivary glands has been extensively investigated during the past decade; however, none have attempted scanning electron microscopy (SEM) in ultrastructural examinations of these secretory organs. This study correlates fine structure by means of SEM cryofractography with that of thin-sectioned epoxy embedded material observed by means of transmission electron microscopy (TEM).Salivary glands of Gromphadorhina portentosa were excised and immediately submerged in cold (4°C) paraformaldehyde-glutaraldehyde fixative1 for 2 hr, washed and post-fixed in 1 per cent 0s04 in phosphosphate buffer (4°C for 2 hr). After ethanolic dehydration half of the samples were embedded in Epon 812 for TEM and half cryofractured and subsequently critical point dried for SEM. Dried specimens were mounted on aluminum stubs and coated with approximately 150 Å of gold in a cold sputtering apparatus.Figure 1 shows a cryofractured plane through a salivary acinus revealing topographical relief of secretory vesicles.


1992 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 146-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Yanlong ◽  
Huang Maohuan

Avalanches are a widespread hazard that cause serious damage in the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Abundant solid precipitation and high relief are favourable for avalanche occurrence. The monsoon climate brings a lot of precipitation which, however, is not well distributed. Avalanches are most common around the margins of the plateau. Wet snow avalanches occur most frequently. Based on data on precipitation and topographical relief, a map is drawn showing the areal distribution of avalanche hazards.


Geophysics ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 643-645 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. F. Ivanhoe

The effect of varying surface densities on gravity anomalies is a more common problem in areas of topographical relief than is generally recognized. There is an unjustified tendency to assume that gravity maps are unique and final, even though one basic assumption (density of surface rocks) is inherent in all gravity maps. The use of incorrect elevation factors will produce gravity anomalies over any topographic feature. Both positive and negative gravity anomalies can be produced by either a topographic hill or valley depending on the degree of error in the elevation factor. These “elevation factor anomalies” are especially troublesome on residual gravity maps. The interpretation of gravity data should always include an analysis of the elevation factor effect as well as a study of the surface geology.


1992 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 146-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Yanlong ◽  
Huang Maohuan

Avalanches are a widespread hazard that cause serious damage in the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Abundant solid precipitation and high relief are favourable for avalanche occurrence. The monsoon climate brings a lot of precipitation which, however, is not well distributed. Avalanches are most common around the margins of the plateau. Wet snow avalanches occur most frequently. Based on data on precipitation and topographical relief, a map is drawn showing the areal distribution of avalanche hazards.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roksana Zarychta ◽  
Adrian Zarychta ◽  
Katarzyna Bzdęga

Open pit mining leads to irreversible changes in topographical relief, which makes a return to the original morphology virtually impossible. This is important for quarries that were part of former mining areas. This research presents an innovative approach to the reconstruction of the relief of anthropogenically transformed land on the example of Liban Quarry in Cracow, where operations began before 1873 to 1986. The basis for the reconstructed area was a Topographic Map of Poland with a scale 1:10,000 from 1997, from which a set of data was obtained to perform spatial analyses. The estimation was conducted using the ordinary kriging method, enabling a reconstruction of the morphology of the studied area and presenting it in the form of a hypsometric map and a digital elevation model. The correctness of the modelling was verified by cross-validation and a kriging standard deviation map (SDOK). These revealed low values of estimation errors in the places without contour lines on the base map. The comparison of the obtained maps and model with a Tactical Map of Poland with a scale 1:100,000 from 1934 indicated great similarities. The highest interpolation error value was recorded in the part of the pit where the difference between the actual and reconstructed elevation was about 30 m on average. In the exploited part, the SDOK did not exceed 0.52 m, and in the entire studied area, it reached a maximum of 0.56 m. The proposed approach fulfilled the assumptions of reconstruction, as the analysis revealed elements matching the historic relief in both forms of presentation of the topography of the quarry, on the obtained hypsometric map and on the tactical map. Our study is among the very few in the world concerning the application of geostatistics in the restoration of the relief of land transformed by open pit mining activities.


1971 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Seigel Associates Australasia Pty. Ltd.

The applicability of airborne electromagnetic methods to base-metal exploration has been well established by a success record of discovery spanning two decades. Such methods have been restricted by: (a) Their useful depth of exploration; (b) Limited penetration of weathered overburden; (c) Dependence upon topographical relief and/or high tree growth. The Turair method comprising fixed energising source with airborne receiver system greatly enhances the depth of penetration, penetration of conductive overburden and less dependence on topography, with only a limited effect on mobility.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 271-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter W. Skelton ◽  
Eulàlia Gili ◽  
Jean-Pierre Masse

The claim that rudist bivalves competitively displaced corals from reef frameworks in the Cretaceous combines two assertions: (1) that rudist formations commonly developed as reefs; and (2) that the autecology of rudists was convergent with that of hermatypic corals. We dispute both assertions, and thus reject the hypothesis of competitive displacement. We argue instead that mobile sediments, rather than frameworks, dominated the margins of most of the extensive carbonate platforms of the period, and that it was on these non-reefal biotopes that the rudists flourished.Definitions of reefs tend to combine two major elements: (1) a robust biogenic framework (with accompanying sedimentary and diagenetic components); and (2) topographical relief. Such definitions are clearly rooted in Recent coral reefs, in which endosymbiotic zooxanthellae permit the extensive growth of colonial coral frameworks in shallow but relatively nutrient-poor waters and topography is largely the legacy of Pleistocene changes in sea-level. In rudist formations, in contrast, individual rudist aggregations are volumetrically limited, relative to sediment, often loosely constructed, and evidently showed little relief. Tabular and small lenticular units predominate.Differences in structure and palaeoenvironmental situation between rudist and coralgal associations are the effect of the different autecologies of the constituent organisms. While the clonal growth of corals predisposed them to framework development, the aclonal development of rudists was better suited to the opportunistic occupation of a variety of temporarily available substrata. Moreover, the tolerances and growth responses of rudists to such factors as water turbidity, nutrients and current regime were quite different from those of hermatypic corals. Despite repeated assertions in the literature that rudists possessed zooxanthellae, only a few species show any evidence for such a symbiosis and other evidence suggests that most lacked them.Rudist/coral competition is therefore doubtful, even though members of both groups co-occur in many areas. The relative demise and migration into deeper water of coral frameworks in the Cretaceous was thus probably independently caused.


1984 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 180-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan F. Sugai ◽  
David C. Burrell

Regional and seasonal differences in chemical input from the Wilson and Blossom rivers, two pristine, major salmon-producing rivers in southeast Alaska, were examined. For a period of 2 yr, concentrations of dissolved organic carbon, nutrients, Cu, Fe, and Mn in the rivers were determined at approximately monthly intervals and used to calculate export rates. Because of extremely high annual precipitation (400–450 cm) and drainage basins restricted by high topographical relief, the concentrations and export rates of nutrients and Cu are low in the rivers for most of the year. The maximum nutrient export from the Wilson–Blossom system appears to be closely tied to the annual salmon cycle. Iron and Mn export rates from the watersheds are much higher than those for Cu, reflecting solubilization of Fe and Mn under reducing conditions that develop in muskeg ponds during drought periods. The association of metals with organics allows transport of Fe and possibly other metals throughout the fjord system, in contrast with the large-scale removal of metals in or near the river's mouth, as has been observed elsewhere.


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