Showing 181 - 200 results of 251 for search '"museums"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 181
  2. 182

    Confused Flour Beetle, Tribolium confusum Jacquelin du Val and Red Flour Beetle, Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) by Rebecca Baldwin, Thomas R. Fasulo

    Published 2005-02-01
    “… Red and confused flour beetles attack stored grain products such as flour, cereals, meal, crackers, beans, spices, pasta, cake mix, dried pet food, dried flowers, chocolate, nuts, seeds, and even dried museum specimens (Via 1999, Weston and Rattlingourd 2000). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 183

    Confused Flour Beetle, Tribolium confusum Jacquelin du Val and Red Flour Beetle, Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) by Rebecca Baldwin, Thomas R. Fasulo

    Published 2005-02-01
    “… Red and confused flour beetles attack stored grain products such as flour, cereals, meal, crackers, beans, spices, pasta, cake mix, dried pet food, dried flowers, chocolate, nuts, seeds, and even dried museum specimens (Via 1999, Weston and Rattlingourd 2000). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 184

    Supports d’écriture et gestion de production au quotidien dans le nord de la Gaule (Nerviens, Atrébates) : estampilles et graffiti sur briques et sur tuiles by Christine Hoët-Van Cauwenberghe

    Published 2013-12-01
    “…Some of the items presented here have never been published: two bricks from the Bavay Museum as well as an imbrex recovered during a recent excavation in Bavay (Nord) bear ante cocturam marks, respectively graffiti for the former, a stamp for the latter. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 185

    From byssus threads to Pinna nobilis sea-silk: a fiber characterization by Lorena C. Giannossa, Annarosa Mangone, Giovanni Lagioia, Gerardo Palazzo, Luigi Gentile

    Published 2023-11-01
    “…In this study, we present an investigation into Pinna nobilis byssus samples collected from the Commodity Science Museum of the University of Bari Aldo Moro (Italy) at various stages of the textile manufacturing process. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 186
  7. 187
  8. 188
  9. 189
  10. 190
  11. 191
  12. 192

    Et si les ethnosciences facilitaient la production de passerelles au sein du monde académique comme non-académique ? by Catherine Sabinot

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…Our current practices of ethnoecology in the Pacific have been resolutely built up on the ethnosciences born at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in Paris and marked by several major figures of the discipline who have now passed away. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 193

    The Portrait of heshuo Guo-qinwang Yunli as the Source for Weapons and Horse Equipment of Oirats and their Neighbors in the first half of the 18th Century by Leonid A. Bobrov

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…As the portrait has the exact date, it can be used for the attribution and dating of quivers and saddles of the Oirats and Tibetans, similar in design, which are kept in Russian and foreign museum and private collections. Conclusions. Materials of Qing iconography are currently not being actively used to study the Oirat cultural heritage. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 194
  15. 195
  16. 196
  17. 197
  18. 198
  19. 199
  20. 200

    Просторовий аналіз та моделювання індивідуального сільського житла 60–70-их рр. ХХ ст. в експозиції НМНАП України... by Тамара Василенко

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…On the basis of the analysis and systematization of literary sources, field studies, an attempt was made to show the architectural image of the housing and the constructive solutions of folk housing from various local building materials using the example of museum exhibits. The article deals with the main compositional techniques, typical for all of Ukraine in the organization of a rural housing in the 60s and 70s of the 20th century, its planning and decorative and artistic decoration, where folk creativity was clearly manifested: plastic design of facades and interiors, artificial texture, through carving, etc.…”
    Get full text
    Article