Results 111 to 120 of about 2,558 (130)
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Austrolebias botocudo Lanés & Volcan & Maltchik 2021, new species
2021Published as part of Lanés, Luis Esteban Krause, Volcan, Matheus Vieira & Maltchik, Leonardo, 2021, Two new annual fishes (Cyprinodontiformes: Rivulidae) unexpectedly discovered in the highlands of southern Brazil, pp. 499-520 in Zootaxa 4949 (3) on pages 501-506, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4949.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record ...
Lanés, Luis Esteban Krause +2 more
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Indian species of genusBotocudoKirkaldy (Hemiptera : Lygaeidae : Rhyparochrominae)
Oriental Insects, 1981Abstract Detailed descriptions and new distributional records from India of the species, Botocudo fraternus (Distant) and B. Signanda (Distant) are given.
N.P. Chopra, Shiv K. Singal
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Isoctenus botocudos Pontes Moraes & Polotow & Labarque & Da Silva 2023, new species
2023Isoctenus botocudos new species Figures 5–7 Type material. Male holotype from Fazenda Santa Tereza, Uruçuca, 14º35’S, 39º17’W, Bahia, Brazil, 3.VI.1970, Ceplac Team coll., deposited in MNRJ 13435. Additional material examined. BRAZIL. Bahia: Belmonte, Barrolândia, Estação Experimental Gregório Bóndar, 16º05’S, 39º16’W, 1 male, 15.X.1987, J ...
Pontes Moraes, Isadora M. +3 more
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Henri Henrikhovitch Manizer's Botocudo folklore texts: a symbol analysis
STUF - Language Typology and Universals, 2014Abstract Henri Henrikhovitch Manizer (1889–1917) was a Russian ethnographer and linguist who spent six months among the Botocudo people from the Southeastern region of Brazil in the beginning of the twentieth century. His research was the result of a Russian expedition through South America in 1915.
Kâtia Nepomuceno Pessoa, Lucy Seki
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Sphaenorhynchus botocudo Caramaschi, Almeida & Gasparini, 2009, sp. nov.
2009Sphaenorhynchus botocudo sp. nov. (Figures 1–3; Table 1) Holotype: MNRJ 50625. Male (Figure 1). Lagoa Nova (17o57’89”S, 40o25’80”W), Fazenda Gemada, Municipality of Mucurici, State of Espírito Santo, Brazil, collected by J.L. Gasparini and A.P. Almeida, in 12–13 October 2002.
Caramaschi, Ulisses +2 more
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Colonization, Mediation, and Mestizaje in the Borderlands of Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais, Brazil
The [Oxford] Handbook of Borderlands of the Iberian World, 2019This research brings together the colonization of existing indigenous peoples in the Sertões do Leste (the eastern backlands of Brazil) and the formation of a national Brazilian narrative.
Izabel Missagia de Mattos
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Pedinotus botocudo Shimbori, Castro et Penteado-Dias 2017, sp. nov.
2017Pedinotus botocudo Shimbori, Castro et Penteado-Dias, sp. nov. (Fig. 3) Type material. Holotype: female, “ Brazil, Linhares, E. Santo, IX.1972, M. Alvarenga ” (CNCI). Paratypes. 1 female, Brazil, Espirito Santo, Linhares, IX.1972, M. Alvarenga MT. Sweep (CNCI); 1 female, Brazil, ES, Itaguaçu, Alto Lajinha, Fazenda Binda, 19°48'S– 40°48' S, 22–29.IX ...
Belokobylskij, Sergey A. +5 more
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Revista Trabalho Necessário
Lélia Gonzalez nasceu em 1935, na cidade de Belo Horizonte. Filha de mãe indígena, Urcinda Serafim de Almeida, nascida por volta 1889, no Espírito Santo, e pai negro-ferroviário, Acácio Joaquim de Almeida. Não há muitas informações sobre seu pai. Sabe-se
Kenia Antonio Cardoso
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Lélia Gonzalez nasceu em 1935, na cidade de Belo Horizonte. Filha de mãe indígena, Urcinda Serafim de Almeida, nascida por volta 1889, no Espírito Santo, e pai negro-ferroviário, Acácio Joaquim de Almeida. Não há muitas informações sobre seu pai. Sabe-se
Kenia Antonio Cardoso
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The cranial morphology of the
ABSTRACTThe Botocudo Indians were hunter‐gatherer groups that occupied the East‐Central regions of Brazil decimated during the colonial period in the country. During the 19th century, craniometric studies suggested that the Botocudo resembled more the Paleoamerican population of Lagoa Santa than typical Native Americans groups.
Strauss, A. ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2336-1381 +4 more
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Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 2021
In the foothills of the Laramie Mountains in southeast Wyoming, the little-known seed bug, Botocudo modestus (Barber), occurs in discrete, local populations that interact as part of a metapopulation. Habitat for adults and nymphs consists of pockets of litter under the canopies of ponderosa pine trees.
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In the foothills of the Laramie Mountains in southeast Wyoming, the little-known seed bug, Botocudo modestus (Barber), occurs in discrete, local populations that interact as part of a metapopulation. Habitat for adults and nymphs consists of pockets of litter under the canopies of ponderosa pine trees.
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