Published in last 50 years
Articles published on Nautilus
- Research Article
- 10.1016/j.fos.2018.03.022
- Mar 1, 2018
- Focus on Surfactants
Croda takes over Nautilus
- Research Article
1
- 10.30610/3.2017.3
- Jan 1, 2017
- Journal18
- Eugenia Zuroski
Nautilus Cups and Unstill Life
- Research Article
9
- 10.1007/s40319-015-0304-5
- Jan 30, 2015
- IIC - International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law
“Nautilus v. Biosig”
- Research Article
1
- 10.15835/buasvmcn-hort:4961
- Sep 29, 2010
- Bulletin of University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca: Horticulture
- Alexandru Silviu Apahidean + 5 more
Cauliflower ( Brassica oleraceea, convar. Botrytis, L.) is grown for its hypertrophied inflorescences, which is used to prep are various dishes and pickles or canning industry. Cauliflower gives a special taste to different kind of foods and it has a very high digestibility. The objectives of this experiment: plants growth and de velopment, production achieved per unit area and the economic efficiency of the culture. In the pres ent experiment were used two hybrids of cauliflower, Valiente and Nautilus, which were grown at different densities, 28, 35 and 47 thousands plants/ha, resulting six experimental variants. By cultivating Nautilus F 1 in open field, with a density of 47 thousands plants/ha, can be obtained yields o f 63 t/ha (harvesting from July 18 to August 1).
- Research Article
- 10.1162/thld_a_00222
- Jan 1, 2007
- Thresholds
- James D Graham
July 01 2019 Mobilis in Mobile: The Hunley, the Nautilus, and the Ethics of the Portable Atmos James D. Graham James D. Graham James D. Graham is an MArch student at MIT. He received his undergraduate degree in architecture from the University of Virginia (2003). Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Scholar Author and Article Information James D. Graham James D. Graham is an MArch student at MIT. He received his undergraduate degree in architecture from the University of Virginia (2003). Online Issn: 2572-7338 Print Issn: 1091-711X © 2007 James D. Graham2007James D. Graham Thresholds (2007) (34): 20–25. https://doi.org/10.1162/thld_a_00222 Cite Icon Cite Permissions Share Icon Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn MailTo Views Icon Views Article contents Figures & tables Video Audio Supplementary Data Peer Review Search Site Citation James D. Graham; Mobilis in Mobile: The Hunley, the Nautilus, and the Ethics of the Portable Atmos. Thresholds 2007; (34): 20–25. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/thld_a_00222 Download citation file: Ris (Zotero) Reference Manager EasyBib Bookends Mendeley Papers EndNote RefWorks BibTex toolbar search Search Dropdown Menu toolbar search search input Search input auto suggest filter your search All ContentAll JournalsThresholds Search Advanced Search This content is only available as a PDF. © 2007 James D. Graham2007James D. Graham Article PDF first page preview Close Modal You do not currently have access to this content.
- Research Article
- 10.1393/ncb/i2005-10104-6
- Jun 1, 2005
- Il Nuovo Cimento B
- G Pizzella
Coincident events have been searched between the gravitational wave (GW) detectors EXPLORER and NAUTILUS during the years 1998. 2001 and 2003. Excess coincidences have been found when the detectors are favorably oriented with respect to the Galactic Disk.
- Research Article
1
- 10.3833/pdr.v2005i55.738
- Jan 1, 2005
- PharmaDeals Review
- Business Review Editor
Serono and Nautilus Sign Hormone Agreement
- Research Article
- 10.17077/0021-065x.5942
- Dec 1, 2004
- The Iowa Review
- Robert Mezey
Tea Dance at the Nautilus Hotel (1925)
- Research Article
5
- 10.13130/2039-4942/6280
- Mar 31, 2004
- Rivista Italiana Di Paleontologia E Stratigrafia
- P Branger
The Middle Jurassic shelf margin limestones and marly limestones of Western France yield quite numerous Nautilida. This record is here described for the first time in detail, nine genera and more than forty species, whose range rarely exceeds one or two ammonite biozones, constitute a rather precise tool to date Middle Jurassic beds. Each taxon is placed in an accurate biostratigraphical chart; a new genus, Pictonautilus nov. gen., is described. The stratigraphical range of Cenoceras , Digonioceras and Gen. B n. ? (sensu Chirat 1997) is extended up to the Middle Callovian. In the Jurassic successions of Poitou, Nautilida always represent a minor part of the fossil record, they are more abundant in four levels: Middle Aalenian, base of Upper Bajocian, Lower Bathonian and top of Middle Bathonian. Dwarf Nautilida ( Paracenoceras ) and species showing more folded septa and a subventral siphuncle (Ps eudaganides ) or strongly ribbed specimens ( Cymatonautilus ) are characteristic of stable open-shelf environments (Callovian), whereas large shelled nautilus would be mostly present during deepening episodes. The geographical extension of many taxa indicates a provincialism that fits with that of ammonites of the same period.
- Research Article
5
- 10.1093/maghis/16.4.13
- Jun 1, 2002
- OAH Magazine of History
- T Doherty
Maligned for trashing a priceless heritage, condemned for fobbing off hallucinations as documentaries, and damned for trading pure truth for filthy lucre, Hollywood film has long been written off by historians. Hands wring before Patriot (2000), heads shake during Pearl Harbor (2001), and minds boggle at JFK (1991). To teachers and scholars in the history racket, the pre-credit tag line based on actual events is a warning sign that suggests everything that follows is basically made up. Yet the grim truth that Americans absorb more history from the multiplex than from middle school demands that Hollywood's treatment of the past be considered carefully rather than simply avoided. Whether as bearers of past tidings (the purview of biopics and fact-based melodramas) or as archeological artifacts (the trea sure trove of 35 mm material in studio and government archives), the motion picture legacy is too important to leave to the ama teurs. Besides, to study World War II without screening Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will (1934) or Frank Capra's Prelude to War (1943) is to neglect more than audiovisual aids: both films were weapons of war as well as expressions of the ethos of the combatants. Likewise, to deny that Saving Private Ryan (1998) and even Pearl Harbor transmit and transmute that ethos is to ignore the strength of dominant culture in American life. As ever, the question is not whether to use film for historical study, but how to make the best use of it. In a famous formulation, the scholar Erasmus divided thinkers into two categories?foxes and hedgehogs. The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one great thing, he declared, plagiarizing from the Greeks. Adapted slightly, the metaphor offers two enlightening methods to chase down meaning in film and history: the way ofthe peripatetic, microminded fox, scurry ing about the text to check out minutiae, or the way of the deliberate, macrominded hedgehog, taking the long view and biting into one big thing. For the historian-cineaste, the bifocal outlook can also serve as a guide for when to unleash moral outrage and when to not sweat the small stuff. microangle on film and history bewails the dumb mistakes that infest the conceit of cinema and decries the poetic license that streamlines the motion picture experience. focus is on pinpoint accuracy in historical recreation. official film jargon term for fidelity to the known record is verisimilitude, the faithful duplication of period detail in dialogue, set design, costuming, and so on. In a combat film, verisimilitude means the faithful depiction of weaponry, uniforms, insignia, and military bearing; in a costume drama, it means a careful restora tion of the once fashionable clothes, furniture styles, and so cial manners. Nitpickers by na ture, historians delight in fixating on micromistakes in verisimili tude, snickering over the way people from foreign countries and remote epochs all seem to speak colloquial American English and inhabit bodies sculpted by Nauti lus, dressed by Donna Karan, and coiffured by Vidal Sassoon. Of course, the historian who blanches at poetic license in the art of cinema, who demands a scrupulous duplication of the common vernacular and standards of beauty in Salem in 1692, had better just avoid celluloid and video altogether. To be sure, at some point, a cascade of shameless departures from known facts and habits will cause even the most carefree historical epic to collapse under the weight of slipshod scaffolding. Suspension of disbelief is no longer possible if the GIs at Normandy are wearing Nikes or sporting Walkmans. But given that Hollywood cinema traffics in entertainment, the medium can not be expected to surrender the pleasures of spectacle and story for static pageants Yet the grim truth that Americans absorb more history from the multiplex than from middle school demands that Hollywood's treatment of the past be considered carefully rather than simply avoided.
- Abstract
- 10.1016/s0305-0491(00)80029-2
- Jul 1, 2000
- Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part B
- R.G Boutilier + 6 more
The metabolic ups and downs of Nautilus
- Research Article
5
- 10.2307/132938
- Jan 1, 1998
- Journal of Japanese Studies
- Miryam Sas
Chambered Nautilus: The Fiction of Ishikawa Jun
- Research Article
1
- 10.1111/j.1502-3931.1994.tb01561.x
- Mar 1, 1994
- Lethaia
- David K Jacobs + 1 more
<i>Nautilus</i> ‐ model or muddle?
- Research Article
19
- 10.5860/choice.26-0920
- Oct 1, 1988
- Choice Reviews Online
- W Bruce Saunders + 1 more
Nautilus: the biology and paleobiology of a living fossil
- Research Article
- 10.1519/0199-610x(1981)003<0032:arttro>2.3.co;2
- Jan 1, 1981
- National Strength Coaches Association Journal
- Michael Yessis
VIEWPOINT: A Response to the Reaction of Dr. Wolf to the Yessis Critique of Nautilus
- Research Article
3
- 10.1519/0199-610x(1980)002<0042:artn>2.3.co;2
- Jan 1, 1980
- National Strength Coaches Association Journal
- Michael Yessis
Viewpoint: A Responce to Nautilus
- Research Article
- 10.1086/409943
- Jun 1, 1977
- The Quarterly Review of Biology
- Sara S Bretsky
<i>The Best of The Nautilus. A Bicentennial Anthology of American Conchology.</i>R. Tucker Abbott
- Research Article
4
- 10.3109/13813457509069838
- Jan 1, 1975
- Archives internationales de physiologie et de biochimie
- M.-F Voss-Foucart + 1 more
(1975). On Biochemical and Structural Alterations of the Nacre Conchiolin in the Nautilus Shell Under Conditions of Protracted, Moderate Heating and Pressure. Archives Internationales de Physiologie et de Biochimie: Vol. 83, No. 1, pp. 43-52.
- Research Article
- 10.2113/gssgfbull.s7-vi.4.576
- Jan 1, 1964
- Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France
- Satya S Sarkar
Abstract The nautiloid from the Polyphemus limestone of Mazar Drik in Baluchistan identified by Noetling as Nautilus intumescens Waagen differs in many respects from Waagen's holotype, and from all known nautiloids of India and Pakistan. It is a new species, for which the name Procymatoceras mazardrikense n. sp. is given.
- Research Article
- 10.2307/1840148
- Apr 1, 1934
- The American Historical Review
- Holden Furber
Fulton and Napoleon in 1800: New Light on the Submarine Nautilus