Results 251 to 260 of about 43,543 (282)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Statius’ Argonautic Background
Classical Philology, 2020AbstractAs a study of Statius’ Argonautic background, this article samples Argonautic elements from Statius’ works to show how popular the Argo myth was not only as a subject of literary treatments...
openaire +2 more sources
Nature, 2002
A global network of sea-going floats is set to transform our understanding of the world's oceans. As the data start to roll in, researchers are lining up the problems they hope to solve. Rex Dalton reports.
openaire +2 more sources
A global network of sea-going floats is set to transform our understanding of the world's oceans. As the data start to roll in, researchers are lining up the problems they hope to solve. Rex Dalton reports.
openaire +2 more sources
Archaic Argonauts: Where are They?
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2010The myths surrounding Jason, his quest for the Golden Fleece of Colchis, and his rather disastrous union with Medea loom large in the literature of Classical Greece – Euripides' Medea provides one memorable treatment of the subject. The Argonaut myth-cycle seems to be quite old, as Homer (in Odyssey 12) and Hesiod (in the Catalogue of Women) refer to ...
openaire +2 more sources
The Legend of Jason and the Argonauts
2011The story of Jason and the men of the ship Argo is one of the most famous legends in Greek literature. Ironically, Jason has never been immortalized in the heavens, although three of the Argonauts have. His ship was also given a place in the sky and was a single constellation in Ptolemy’s list of 48 groupings, though the Argo has since been broken into
openaire +2 more sources
2011
Athamas, the ruler of Boetia, was forced by Hera to marry Nephele, a phantom which had been created by Zeus to fool a human suitor of Hera. Although Nephele was neither god nor human, she was just as beautiful as Hera and able to be a normal wife to Athamas, and she bore him a son and a daughter, Phrixus and Helle.
openaire +2 more sources
Athamas, the ruler of Boetia, was forced by Hera to marry Nephele, a phantom which had been created by Zeus to fool a human suitor of Hera. Although Nephele was neither god nor human, she was just as beautiful as Hera and able to be a normal wife to Athamas, and she bore him a son and a daughter, Phrixus and Helle.
openaire +2 more sources
Argonaute proteins: key players in RNA silencing
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2008Gyorgy Hutvagner, Martin J Simard
exaly
Argonaute HITS-CLIP decodes microRNA–mRNA interaction maps
Nature, 2009Sung Wook Chi, Robert B Darnell
exaly
Argonaute proteins: functional insights and emerging roles
Nature Reviews Genetics, 2013Gunter Meister
exaly
Structure of an argonaute silencing complex with a seed-containing guide DNA and target RNA duplex
Nature, 2008Yanli Wang, Stefan Juranek, Haitao Li
exaly