Results 91 to 100 of about 218,779 (308)
Propagation of Dry Habitat Fern Species Using Spore Collections from Historic Herbarium Specimens
Spores sourced from historic herbarium specimens have been used to introduce wild-collected material to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) living plant collection. The ability of dry habitat ferns to maintain spore viability for prolonged periods
Gunnar Ovstebo
doaj +1 more source
PROMOTING – A BASE COMPONENT OF THE MARKETING MIX IN MUSEUMS. CASE STUDY: THE MUSEUM OF THE ROMANIAN PEASANT [PDF]
The Museum of the Romanian Peasant is part of the European museums family of Art and Popular Traditions. It is a national museum which is under the patronage of the Ministry of Culture, being the owner of some extremely rich object collections, housed in
Ruxandra Irina POPESCU
core
Cell wall target fragment discovery using a low‐cost, minimal fragment library
LoCoFrag100 is a fragment library made up of 100 different compounds. Similarity between the fragments is minimized and 10 different fragments are mixed into a single cocktail, which is soaked to protein crystals. These crystals are analysed by X‐ray crystallography, revealing the binding modes of the bound fragment ligands.
Kaizhou Yan +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Historical Collections Research
The paper describes experiences of the author in historical collections research since the 1960s and some methodological practices derived from it. It offers insights into the needs and opportunities of looking at museum objects as material documents of the past and at the implications for contemporary collecting and for the preservation of cultural ...
openaire +3 more sources
The Medical-Historical Collection
Exhibits collected by the Duke of Weissenfels provided the basic stock for a larger collection of the Collegium Medico-Chirurgicum in Dresden. This was the first Saxon school of surgery, opening in 1748. It was succeeded by the Provisional Teaching Institute of Medicine and Surgery (1814/15) and the Surgical-Medical Academy (1815 to 1864).
Lienert, Marina, Heidel, Caris-Petra
openaire +2 more sources
We reconstituted Synechocystis glycogen synthesis in vitro from purified enzymes and showed that two GlgA isoenzymes produce glycogen with different architectures: GlgA1 yields denser, highly branched glycogen, whereas GlgA2 synthesizes longer, less‐branched chains.
Kenric Lee +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Historical Time, Collective Memory, and the Finitude of Historical Understanding
This text focuses on the decline of the traditional conceptions of historical unity which, in different ways, encouraged the philosophies of history, as well as the ideologies that this generated, in the modern period. As a result of the comprehension of the limits of historical understanding which has emerged in an atmosphere of rapid change, the ...
openaire +2 more sources
Caddo Ceramic Vessels from the Sam Kaufman Site (41RR16) in the R. K. Harris Collection at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution [PDF]
Over the years, R. King Harris and his Dallas Archeological Society colleagues excavated a number of ancestral Caddo burials (Burials 1-19) from cemeteries exposed along the eroding bank of the Red River at the Sam Kaufman site (41RR16) and have ...
Perttula, Timothy K.
core +1 more source
We identified a systemic, progressive loss of protein S‐glutathionylation—detected by nonreducing western blotting—alongside dysregulation of glutathione‐cycle enzymes in both neuronal and peripheral tissues of Taiwanese SMA mice. These alterations were partially rescued by SMN antisense oligonucleotide therapy, revealing persistent redox imbalance as ...
Sofia Vrettou, Brunhilde Wirth
wiley +1 more source
"The Right to Know": Decolonizing Native American Archives
This work examines the historic and current policies regarding Native American archives, detailing the broader historic landscape of information services for tribal communities, the initiative to develop tribal archives in Indian Country, and the ...
Jennifer R. O'Neal
doaj

