Results 301 to 310 of about 1,048,588 (348)
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Evolution in developmental biology: Of morphology and molecules

Trends in Genetics, 1994
Experimental embryologists, molecular biologists, evolutionary morphologists, paleontologists, and most modern practitioners of developmental biology met recently (British Society for Developmental Biology Spring Meeting, Edinburgh, UK; organized by M. Akam, P. Holland and G. Wray) to discuss the evolution of development.
Laufer, Ed, MARIGO, Valeria
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Functional morphology and evolutionary biology

Acta Biotheoretica, 1980
In this study the relationship between functional morpholoy and evolutionary biology is analysed by confronting the main concepts in both disciplines. Rather than only discussing this connection theoretically, the analysis is carried out by introducing important practical and experimental studies, which use aspects from both disciplines.
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Glioblastoma multiforme: Morphology and biology

Acta Neurochirurgica, 1978
Glioblastoma multiforme, representing about 50% of all gliomas, encompasses a group of intrinsic tumours of the brain in later years (age peak around 50 years), the morphological hallmarks of which are an ensemble of variations in tumour cell and tissue structure featuring its biological malignancy. Glioblastoma, while sometimes appearing as a distinct
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Review Reflections on the biology, morphology and ecology of the Macrochelidae

Experimental & Applied Acarology, 1998
The Macrochelidae is a cosmopolitan family of predatory mesostigmatic mites, many of which occupy specialized and often unstable habitats. Most known species have adapted to life in dung deposits where prey is plentiful and the potential exists for rapid population growth.
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Ecological morphology: Integrative organismal biology

Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1995
Ecological morphology examines the relation between an animal's anatomy and physiology - its form and function - and how the animal has evolved in, and can inhabit, a particular environment. This book provides a synthesis of major concepts and a demonstration of the ways in which this integrative approach can yield rich and surprising results.
Peter C. Wainwright   +2 more
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Phialophora dermatitidis; Its morphology and biology

Medical Mycology, 1970
Isolates of Phialophora dermatitidis obtained from human infections of the skin and underlying organs were divided into 2 morphologic types on the basis of their colony appearance and microscopic properties. The virulence of these fungi was established for normal and predisposed mice, and their ability to invade different organs determined by isolation
Vinita Jotisankasa   +2 more
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Morphology and twentieth-century biology: A response

Journal of the History of Biology, 1981
I am gratified to find that ideas I published a few years ago in Life Science in the Twentieth Century have stimulated a controversy about some important issues in the history of biology. In the Introduction to that book I wrote, "If this book has any lasting merit . .. it will be less in the questions that it answers than in those it raises . . .
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THE SYNAPSE: BIOLOGY AND MORPHOLOGY

British Medical Bulletin, 1962
V. P. Whittaker, E. G. Gray
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The Axes of Symmetry. Morphology in Aristotle’s Biology

Apeiron, 2016
AbstractMy aim in this paper is to outline and discuss the role played in Aristotle’s inquiry into living things by his extensive comparative account of the body plan of different kinds of animals, and of the shapes and figures of their bodily parts, which we may call his morphology.
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Electron microscopy in morphology and molecular biology

1960
Electron microscopy, in scarcely more than two decades, has led to revolutionary new concepts of cell structure and the mechanism of basic life processes. In many instances biological systems have been observed at or near the molecular level. These advances become the more significant because of profound parallel discoveries in biochemistry, biophysics,
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