Results 161 to 170 of about 5,908,011 (360)
ABSTRACT The presence of antibiotics in water not only causes environmental pollution but also increases the growth of antibiotic‐resistant bacterial genes, which pose serious threats to human beings and other water residents. Large numbers of people are reportedly affected by the resistant bacterial genes, as many broad‐spectrum antibiotics are not ...
Amir Zada, Shohreh Azizi
wiley +1 more source
Lucas Hill,1 Shawn R Smith,1 Maile Young Karris2 1University of California San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, San Diego, CA, USA; 2Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA Abstract ...
Hill L, Smith SR, Karris MY
doaj
Abstract Premise DNA barcoding for timber species identification requires comprehensive reference datasets, informative DNA barcodes, and cost‐effective protocols. We developed a workflow leveraging Hyb‐Seq (target capture sequencing and genome skimming) to address these challenges, and we tested it on four genera from the mahogany family (Meliaceae ...
Sidonie Bellot +14 more
wiley +1 more source
[Group of people at San Bernardo Station]
Photograph of a group of people at San Bernardo Station in 1914. Written on the back of the photograph, Ester Wilber Woodward.
Brazoria County News
core
Indigenous people, tourism and development? The San people's involvement in community-based tourism
The overall theme of this thesis is the relationship between tourism and its industry, and indigenous people struggling for sustainable development and cultural recognition. A prevailing assumption has been that tourism, as a modern institution, will change and perhaps even destroy traditional cultures in an effort to turn them into a commercial ...
openaire +1 more source
The Demise and Rise of the Coy San
Review Article:De Jongh, Michael (2012), Roots and Routes: Karretjie People of the Great Karoo: The Marginalisation of a South African First People, Pretoria: UNISA Press, ISBN 978-1-86888-665-4, 220 pp.Glyn, Patricia (2013), What Dawid Knew: A Journey ...
Robert J. Gordon
doaj
Unfused transverse foramen of the atlas vertebra in the Neandertal lineage fossils
Abstract In anatomically modern humans, the atlas can display an unfused transverse foramen (UTF) but currently the presence of UTF in the Neandertal lineage is uncertain due to a scarcity of prevalence studies and no exhaustive record of its presence throughout the entire hominin fossil record.
Asier Gómez‐Olivencia +5 more
wiley +1 more source

