Results 101 to 110 of about 201 (116)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Description, microhabitat and temporal distribution of the tadpole of Proceratophrys tupinamba Prado and Pombal, 2008

Zootaxa, 2010
We present a description of the external morphology of the tadpoles of Proceratophrys tupinamba, and provide information on its temporal distribution and microhabitat use. Proceratophrys tupinamba differs from other larvae of species in the genus Proceratophrys described by the tooth row, which is similar to that of P. appendiculata.
Fatorelli, Pedro   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

Les beaux-frères ennemis. À propos du cannibalisme tupinamba

Revue du MAUSS, 2020
Cet article analyse les pratiques cannibales chez les indiens Tupunamba à partir du statut singulier des prisonniers de guerre qui en sont systématiquement les victimes. Il décrit de façon minutieuse les rites par lesquels ces prisonniers, intégrés avant d’être ingérés, devaient passer du statut d’ennemi absolu à celui d’allié.
openaire   +1 more source

Four new species of Pseudharpinia Schellenberg, 1931 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Phoxocephalidae) from southwestern Atlantic and new records of P. tupinamba Senna & Souza-Filho, 2011

Zootaxa, 2020
Four new species of Pseudharpinia Schellenberg, 1931 are described. The material examined was collected during the Mini Biological Trawl project, off Atlantic’s southwestern coast on the states of Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul with rectangular dredges at 25 to 500 meters depth. All the new species described present the
Andrade, Luiz F., Senna, André R.
openaire   +2 more sources

Calude d'Abbeville and the Tupinamba: Problems and Goals of French Missionary Work in Early Seventeenth-Century Brazil

Church History, 1989
The Catholic church during the era of the Catholic Reformation experienced great vitality and vigor. Missionary activity was one of the clearest indications of this renewed spiritual energy. Simultaneously with Catholic revitalization there occurred the expansion of European commerce and colonization.
openaire   +1 more source

A disturbing picture of the new world (’I is seen’): tupinamba cannibalism, sixteenth century printed representation and the martyr

2009
This is my body; this is my blood. The ritualistic words spoken by the absent body of Christ mark a sacrifice and crisis in the Christian comrnunity of meaning, and come to inflect another point of crisis, the West's historical encounter with the New World's indigenous body.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy