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1

Wall, Åsa. "Borderline Viewpoints: The Early Iron Age Landscapes of Henged Mountains in East Central Sweden." Current Swedish Archaeology 10, no. 1 (June 10, 2021): 95–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.37718/csa.2002.06.

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The concept "henged mountain" refers to different archaeological categories of enclosure (hill-forts, enclosures and ceremonial enclosures) that have one thing in common; they all delimit a mountain top. This study focuses on the henged mountains of east central Sweden, taking its point of departure in the henges of eastern Södermanland. It is argued that the henges need to be understood as monuments with an influence over time. Instead of grouping henged mountains into separate categories divided by time, variation between areas is considered. The aim is to show that variations in the henge material express different ways of perceiving landscape and organising social life.
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2

Clare, T. "Towards a reappraisal of henge monuments: origins, evolution and hierarchies." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 53, no. 1 (1987): 457–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00006344.

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A simple derivation of henges from causewayed camps is rejected. Attention is also drawn to a range of neolithic structures, some covered by a mound, some not. Though interpreted as mortuary structures, they have affinities to henges. Henges may thus best be derived from a broad tradition of neolithic structures; this may in turn have been part of a more widely distributed north-west European tradition of both ritual and domestic structures. Within Britain, similarities of form and function suggest that henges should be seen as a parallel development to ring banks, ring ditches and stone circles. Regional preferences rather than distinct regional types of monuments emerged. Later survival of henge traditions into the first millennium is also discussed.
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3

Gibson, Alex, Wolfgang Neubauer, Sebastian Flöry, Petra Schneidhofer, Mike Allen, Enid Allison, Wendy Carruthers, et al. "SURVEY AND SAMPLING AT THE CASTLE DYKES IRON AGE ‘HENGE’, WENSLEYDALE, NORTH YORKSHIRE." Antiquaries Journal 99 (April 15, 2019): 1–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581518000628.

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Survey and sampling at the classic single-entranced henge monument at Castle Dykes, in North Yorkshire, has revealed traces of circular timber structures, interpreted as later prehistoric roundhouses, in the immediate vicinity and within the henge. Coring of the waterlogged silts of the internal ditch has produced considerable environmental data: plant, insect, pollen and charcoal remains. A small jet bead was also recovered. Radiocarbon dates from short-lived materials unexpectedly indicate that the monument was constructed in the Iron Age, which prompts a review of other potentially Iron Age ‘henges’ further afield.
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4

Richards, Colin. "Henges and Water." Journal of Material Culture 1, no. 3 (November 1996): 313–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/135918359600100303.

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5

Clare, T. "Towards a Reappraisal of Henge Monuments." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 52 (1986): 281–316. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x0000668x.

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The definition and classification of ‘henges’ and ‘hengiform’ sites are reconsidered. A new classification is proposed based on the nature of the perimeter, the number of entrances, and a range of features within or concentric to the perimeter. It is suggested that there is no valid distinction between sites termed ‘henge’ or ‘hengiform’. The site, distribution and chronology of these sites are also considered. Some of the associated features have close parallels in earlier neolithic sites.
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6

Nakken, Karl O. "Når legefrakken henges bort – hva da?" Tidsskrift for Den norske legeforening 134, no. 14 (2014): 1384. http://dx.doi.org/10.4045/tidsskr.14.0701.

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7

Topping, P. "The Penrith Henges: A Survey by the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 58, no. 1 (1992): 249–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00004187.

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Detailed topographical surveys and geophysical examinations of the Penrith ‘henges’ were undertaken in order to assess the present state of the monuments for management purposes. At Mayburgh geophysical prospection was designed to assess the validity of the early reports of the presence of two concentric settings of stones. Some possible parallels in Ireland are noted. The nearby site of King Arthur's Round Table was also sampled by geophysical techniques, but was found to be too disturbed for the recovery of any further information as to its original form. The ‘cremation trench’ discovered in pre-War excavations at this site was relocated. The position of the enigmatic Little Round Table was re-established by both topographical and geophysical methods, and its north entrance firmly located. The classification of Mayburgh and of the Little Round Table is considered. The apparent disunity of these three distinctly different monuments within one complex is emphasised—all are traditionally classified as ‘henge-related’, yet the structure and orientation of each site is markedly different. Contemporary topographical considerations are now difficult to reconstruct.
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8

Gibson, Alex. "Excavation and Survey at Dyffryn Lane Henge Complex, Powys, and a Reconsideration of the Dating of Henges." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 76 (2010): 213–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00000505.

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The henge monument and round barrow at Dyffryn Lane, near Welshpool, Powys, represent a rare instance of earthwork survival amongst the Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments of the upper Severn Valley. Antiquarian excavation in response to agricultural degradation suggested that the monument represented a round barrow covering a stone circle. Whether these stones represented a stone circlesensu strictoor a stone kerb for a turf barrow, was not determined at the time. Aerial photography subsequently demonstrated that the barrow as surrounded by a single-entranced henge monument. The present excavation was designed to assess the degree of plough damage to the site, determine the nature of the circular arrangement of stones, investigate the development of the site, and retrieve absolute dating and palaeoenvironmental material for the various phases encountered. Excavation has demonstrated that the site saw the ritual deposition of Impressed Ware pottery prior to a stone circle being erected on the site. This circle was allowed to decay before being encircled by a henge and subsequently covered by a round mound. The site adds to a small but growing body of evidence suggesting the lateness of the henge element within multi-phased monuments.
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9

Henty, Liz. "Continuity or change?" Journal of Skyscape Archaeology 1, no. 2 (December 3, 2015): 243–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/jsa.v1i2.28258.

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General archaeological accounts of Scotland tend to demonstrate broad ideas of the Neolithic transition to farming and the subsequent economic changes in the Bronze Age. Whilst they concentrate on important economic and cultural advancement they tend to lack discussions on cosmological change. This paper looks at one small area in Aberdeenshire to examine four different classes of monument that are found there: long mounds and long cairns; Recumbent Stone Circles; henges and Beaker burial sites. It argues that skyscape archaeology, through the use of archaeoastronomical techniques, can provide clues to cosmological change.
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10

Darvill, Timothy, Geoffrey Wainwright, Vanessa Constant, Yvette Staelens, Anna Stocks, and Judith Wainwright. "Stone Circles, Oval Settings and Henges in South-west Wales and Beyond." Antiquaries Journal 83 (September 2003): 9–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500077660.

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Topographical and geophysical surveys carried out in August 2002 at three monuments in the Preseli Hills of Pembrokeshire are reported: Bedd Arthur, Gors Fawr and Meini Gwyr. Previously unrecorded features were revealed at all three sites, most spectacularly at Meini Gwyr which, from the evidence of geophysical survey, appears to be a multi-phase monument that includes a double pit-circle, hengi-form monument and embanked enclosure with an internal stone circle. Comparisons are made with plans prepared by Flinders Petrie in 1926, published here for the first time. A viewshed analysis of the surveyed sites and others of similar kind in the area allows an appreciation of landscape setting and intervisibility. It is suggested that the stone circles are sited in relation to upland stone sources. All the monuments considered here are compared with contemporary structures recorded elsewhere in the British Isles. It is concluded that while the stone circles and oval setting fit comfortably within a distribution pattern that extends across most of the British Isles, the later phases of Meini Gwyr at least belong to a more localized tradition of monument building focused on the Irish Sea region.
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11

Edwards, Benjamin. "A Henge Too Far? Reinterpreting the Neolithic Monument Complex at Milfield, Northumberland." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 73 (2007): 59–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00027304.

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This paper reinterprets the archaeological evidence from the Neolithic monument complex in the Milfield Basin, Northumberland; a palimpsest landscape of earlier Neolithic enclosures, later Neolithic henges and Early Bronze Age burial monuments. Recent interpretative accounts of the Early Neolithic use of this complex have stressed economic factors as the driving-forces behind enclosure construction, whilst the six major later Neolithic henges have been integrated into a scheme of ritual processions. These interpretations are critically evaluated and the sites are placed in their regional and national context in an attempt to provide a new framework for the use and development of the complex. It is concluded that, far from having simplistic economic functions, the earlier Neolithic enclosures could be unique to the area. Representing the formalisation of a community's attempts to ensure social reproduction in times of change, through the articulation of the difference between circular and linear monumental forms. The re-examination of the later Neolithic evidence raises interesting questions as to how far we can ‘read’ monument complexes, and critically evaluates the extent to which we can argue a unity of purpose for these enigmatic accumulations of the past. Importantly, the reinterpretation of the Neolithic activity in this area exposes how readily archaeologists export social models from other regions, such as Wessex, and attempt to fit very diverse evidence into their framework. This paper concludes that we must continue the definition of the British Neolithic on a more regional basis and accept that core-periphery models, even if not explicitly articulated, have no place in archaeological explanation.
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12

Fahlander, Fredrik. "The Relational Life of Trees. Ontological Aspects of “Tree-Ness” in the Early Bronze Age of Northern Europe." Open Archaeology 4, no. 1 (October 1, 2018): 373–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/opar-2018-0024.

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AbstractDuring the Early Bronze Age in northern Europe, tree-like features appear in henges, burials, and rock art in ways that differ from earlier periods. Rather than investigating this phenomenon in symbolic or metaphorical terms, a concept of tree-ness is explored that focuses on the real constitution of trees and what trees actually do. It is suggested that the accentuation of tree-ness in Early Bronze Age ritual contexts can be related to an ontological shift in conjunction with emerging bronze technology in which different entities can merge or take advantage of each other’s generative properties.
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13

Gibson, Alex. "Survey and Excavation at the Henges of the Wharfe Valley, North Yorkshire, 2013 – 15." Archaeological Journal 175, no. 1 (August 2, 2017): 1–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00665983.2017.1312071.

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14

Loveday, Roy. "The Greater Stonehenge Cursus – the Long View." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 78 (2012): 341–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00027195.

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The WSW–ENE alignment of the Greater Stonehenge Cursus appears to have been prefigured by the line of Mesolithic post-holes found in the Stonehenge car park. If this is not a coincidence, a means of transmission must be hypothesised since the posts could not have survived the 4000 years separation. The fact that a significant number of henges in western lowland Britain adopt the same broad alignment hints at a very long-lived mental template. That, it is argued, is likely to have been celestially triggered and tied to seasonal rhythms. Simple luni-solar calculation (akin to that determining events as disparate as the ancient Olympic festival and present day Easter) rather than precisely measureable astronomical events, would create such azimuth clustering. The focus on April sunrises or October sunsets argues for an association with the pastoral cycle.
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15

Miket, Roger, M. van der Veen, and J. Weyman. "Ritual Enclosures at Whitton Hill, Northumberland." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 51, no. 1 (December 1985): 137–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00007064.

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To the north of Milfield, Northumberland the A697 cuts through a cluster of ring-ditches centred at NT933347. Discovered during aerial survey by Professor N. McCord, these were included in Dr A. Harding's survey of the ritual henges and related monuments of the Milfield Basin (Harding 1981, 101). Subsequent aerial reconnaisance by Mr T. Gates has increased the number of visible ring-ditches to at least eleven and, of these, three types may be tentatively isolated (fig. 1). The smallest appears to have a diameter no greater than 3.5 m, but with a ditch some 2 m in width (3 examples); in the second type the ditch appears less than a metre in width, but enclosing a larger area estimated at between 9 and 20 m (3 examples). A single example (Site 1 below) lies outside these dimensions and it was this, together with an example from the second group, that was chosen for excavation in 1982 and 1983.
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16

Hale, Duncan, Andy Platell, and Andrew Millard. "A Late Neolithic Palisaded Enclosure at Marne Barracks, Catterick, North Yorkshire." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 75 (2009): 265–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00000372.

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An open-area excavation conducted in advance of development at Marne Barracks, Catterick, in 2004 identified a relatively rare Late Neolithic ‘palisaded’ enclosure and other features. Approximately 55% of the enclosure was exposed. It consisted of two concentric sub-circular palisades with diameters up to 175 m and 200 m respectively. Each palisade consisted of a double circuit of posts, with the posts being c. 1 m apart from centre to centre. Many of the posts on the western side of the monument had been sufficiently carbonised for the remains of individual posts to be identifiable. Twenty-one radiocarbon ages were determined and Bayesian modelling has produced a date estimate of 2530–2310 cal BC for the start of construction of the monument. This date matches well with new dates for the construction of Silbury Hill, the appearance of Beaker pottery in graves, the Amesbury Archer, and the timber circles at Durrington Walls, for example.The Marne Barracks monument exhibits significant differences to other known examples of this type, and is in some respects unique. In particular the ‘paired post’ arrangement of a double circuit of posts in each palisade is unparalleled in any other known example. The apparent width of the entrances to the Marne enclosure is also at variance with other known sites, though this may in part be an artefact of post-depositional survival. The monument sits in a ritual landscape and, like a few others of its type, is close to water and a hill or large mound from where the activities taking place within the enclosure might have been observed. Do the nearby hill, the entrances, and the arrangement of the uprights all relate to control of physical and visual access into, or out of, the monument?A number of broadly contemporary monuments, all within 5 km of Marne Barracks, contribute to a significant Neolithic ritual focus on the River Swale gravels. The complex of cursus and henge monuments at Thornborough and the henges at Nunwick, Hutton Moor, and Cana Barn all lie less than 25 km to the south, in the Swale-Ure interfluve.
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17

Bradley, Richard. "Time Signatures: The Temporality of Monuments in Early and Middle Neolithic Britain." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 86 (June 18, 2020): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2020.3.

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Analysis of radiocarbon dates has established the chronological contexts of three kinds of Neolithic monument in Britain: long mounds or long cairns, causewayed enclosures, and cursuses. It is more difficult to appreciate how such structures developed over time. The building of a barrow or cairn was sometimes the final act in a place that had already experienced a longer history. The construction of the monument brought activities to an end, and the site was effectively closed. Individual sequences were shorter than once thought but might be repeated at different locations over several hundred years.On the other hand, the construction of causewayed enclosures according to a widely accepted template occurred almost simultaneously. Once those earthworks were established some went out of use, but a few others were adapted and changed so that they could play an increasing variety of roles over a longer period. The same contrasts are illustrated by cursuses. Timber structures in the north had finite histories before they decayed or were destroyed by fire, whilst earthworks had a wider distribution and enjoyed a longer currency. A similar approach might shed light on later monuments, including henges, stone circles, and round barrows. It is important to consider how the chronologies of all these structures are related to past conceptions of time.
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18

Impey, Ron. "Henge bodge." New Scientist 199, no. 2663 (July 2008): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0262-4079(08)61668-1.

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19

Mattsson, Margareta, and Eva Adolfsson. "I hennes frånvaro." World Literature Today 64, no. 2 (1990): 324. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40146519.

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20

Sonnichsen, André, Allan Dreyer Hansen, and Carsten Jensen. "Politisk bevægelse i Europa og Mellemøsten:." Slagmark - Tidsskrift for idéhistorie, no. 71 (August 18, 2015): 213–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/sl.v0i71.107317.

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Chantal Mouffe har altid sat spørgsmålet om sociale bevægelser i relation til spørgsmålet om demokratisering. Hendes ideer om agonistisk og radikalt demokrati har fået gennemslag i den europæiske samfundsmæssige debat, men i den sammenhæng glemmer man måske, at hun først og fremmest er engageret i en radikalisering af det liberale demokrati (Jensen, 2013). I hendes nuancerede debatstil kan de mange begreber, nogle af hvilke hun selv er ophavet til, godt få læseren til at fokusere på enkelte træer, som for eksempel netop agonistisk og radikalt demokrati. Dermed kan selve skoven, det liberale demokrati og dets udvikling, forsvinde ud af fokus. Det gør det imidlertid ikke i dette interview, der fandt sted i hendes hjem i Hampstead, Nordlondon, primo 2012, omtrent samtidig med, at hendes seneste bog Agonistics (Mouffe, 2013) blev afsluttet.
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21

Stevenson, Deborah. "Egg by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 70, no. 5 (2017): 217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2017.0023.

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22

Hulick, Jeannette. "Waiting by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 69, no. 4 (2015): 200–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2015.0931.

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23

Torriset, Kjell. "Den hengtes siste ønske." Kunst og Kultur 87, no. 02 (May 24, 2004): 78–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn1504-3029-2004-02-03.

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24

Haraldsen, Arild. "Styringen henger ikke med." Stat & Styring 28, no. 01 (April 9, 2018): 12–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn0809-750x-2018-01-05.

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25

Dorogi, Dániel, and László Baranyi. "Sajátfrekvencia-hányados hatása a szabadrezgést végző körhenger körüli folyadékáramlásra." Jelenkori Társadalmi és Gazdasági Folyamatok 14, no. 1 (March 15, 2019): 19–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/jtgf.2019.1.19-27.

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A jelen dolgozatban a kétdimenziós, összenyomhatatlan, newtoni folyadék párhuzamos áramlásába helyezett, kétszabadságfokú szabadrezgést végző körhenger körüli áramlási folyamatokat vizsgáljuk CFD technika segítségével. A számítások során a Reynolds-számot, a tömegarányt és a dimenziótlan csillapítási tényezőt rendre 150, 8/π és 0 értékeken rögzítettük. A vizsgálatok során a henger hossz- és keresztirányú sajátfrekvenciáinak hányadosát az FR = 1–3 tartományban változtattuk fv/fNy = 0,9; 1,0 és 1,1 esetén, ahol fv az álló hengernél lévő örvényleválási frekvencia és fNy a henger keresztirányú sajátfrekvenciája. Az eredmények azt mutatják, hogy az FR és fv/fNy paraméterek jelentős hatást gyakorolnak a henger hossz- és keresztirányú rezgési amplitúdóira. A henger minden vizsgált számítási pontban torzított nyolcas alakú pályagörbét követ, amely FR < 2 és FR > 2,6 esetén szimmetrikus, míg az FR ≅ 2–2,6 tartományban aszimmetrikus. Szimmetrikus pályagörbe esetén 2S, aszimmetrikus esetben pedig P+S örvényszerkezet figyelhető meg. A felhajtóerő-tényező frekvenciaspektrumában az f/fNy = 1 és 3 csúcsok játszottak nagy szerepet.
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26

Rosta, Judith. "Arbeidstid og helse henger sammen." Tidsskrift for Den norske legeforening 136, no. 5 (2016): 461. http://dx.doi.org/10.4045/tidsskr.16.0071.

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27

Stevenson, Deborah. "Summer Song by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 73, no. 8 (2020): 349–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2020.0256.

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28

Stevenson, Deborah. "A House by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 74, no. 11 (2021): 469. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2021.0376.

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29

Liveng, Anne, and Anne Liveng. "Social- og sundhedshjælperelevers omsorgsorientering og hjælperarbejdets modsætningsfyldte krav." Tidsskrift for Arbejdsliv 8, no. 1 (March 1, 2006): 32. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/tfa.v8i1.108537.

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Denne artikel handler om social- og sundhedshjælperelevers orientering mod omsorgsarbejdet og om, hvordan arbejdets indhold og rammer på en gang forudsætter og negligerer denne 'omsorgsorientering'. Gennem analysen af et livshistorisk interview med Lotte, der er sosu-hjælperelev, viser jeg, hvordan omsorgsorienteringen er en del af en livshistorisk socialisation for Lotte, hvordan den farver hendes uddannnelses- og jobvalg, og hvordan omsorgsorienteringen projiceres ud i hendes fremtidsdrømme. Klip fra observationer med Lotte i uddannelsens praktikperiode il lustrerer de modsætningsfyldte krav til Lotte, når hun er på arbejde i hjemmeplejen.
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EVENHUIS, NEAL L., and THOMAS PAPE. "Battling the un-dead: the status of the Diptera genus-group names originally proposed in Johann Wilhelm Meigen’s 1800 pamphlet." Zootaxa 4275, no. 1 (June 8, 2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4275.1.1.

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The work of Meigen 1800 was suppressed by the ICZN Commission in 1963 for the purposes of zoological nomenclature. The work as such is still to be treated as having been published and it remains available as a source of published descriptions and illustrations. Therefore, while the names in Meigen (1800) are deemed unavailable, a subsequent usage of any of the names may be considered a novel proposal. We review the first post-Meigen 1800 occurrence of each name, its first date of availability and authorship, and determine status and synonymy. Designations of type species are given for the following genus-group names: Coryneta Hendel, 1908 [Hybotidae]; Cyanea Hendel, 1908 [Hippoboscidae]. Acting as First Reviser, we select the following as the correct original spelling from multiple original spellings: Calirrhoe Hendel, 1908. New synonymies are proposed for the following: Ablabesmyia Johannsen, 1905 under Pelopia Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Limoniidae]; Amasia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Penthetria Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Bibionidae]; Amphinome Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Limonia Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Limoniidae]; Antiopa Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Chrysotoxum Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Apivora Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Volucella Geoffroy, 1762, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Atalanta Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Clinocera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Empididae]; Calirrhoe Meigen & Hendel in Hendel, 1908 under Prosena Le Peletier & Audinet-Serville, 1828, n. syn. [Tachinidae]; Chrysozona Hendel, 1903 under Haematopota Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Tabanidae]; Cinxia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Sericomyia Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Cleona Meigen in Hendel 1908 under Callomyia Meigen, 1804, n. syn. [Platypezidae]; Clythia Hendel, 1903 under Platypeza Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Platypezidae]; Coryneta Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Tachydromia Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Hybotidae]; Crocuta Bezzi, 1907 under Siphona Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Tachinidae]; Cyanea Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Melophagus Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Hippoboscidae]; Cypsela Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Sphaerocera Latreille, 1804, n. syn. [Sphaeroceridae]; Dionnaea Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Rhamphomyia Meigen, 1822, n. syn. [Empididae]; Dorilas Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Pipunculus Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Pipunculidae]; Echinodes Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Eriothrix Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Tachinidae]; Erinna Hendel, 1903 under Xylophagus Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Xylophagidae]; Eulalia Hendel, 1903 under Odontomyia Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Stratiomyidae]; Euphrosyne Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Macrocera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Keroplatidae]; Flabellifera Osten Sacken, 1882 under Tanyptera Latreille, 1804, n. syn. [Tipulidae]; Fungivora Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Mycetophila Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Mycetophilidae]; Helea Osten Sacken, 1882 under Ceratopogon Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Ceratopogonidae]; Hermione Bezzi, 1908 under Oxycera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Stratiomyidae]; Itonida Bezzi, 1908 under Cecidomyia Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Cecidomyiidae]; Lampetia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Merodon Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Laphria Bezzi, 1907 under Laphria Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Asilidae]; Lapria Bezzi, 1907 under Laphria Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Asilidae]; Larvaevora Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Tachina Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Tachinidae]; Liriope Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Ptychoptera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Ptychopteridae]; Lycoria Latreille, 1802 under Sylvicola Harris, 1776, n. syn. [Anisopodidae]; Melusina Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Trichocera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Trichoceridae]; Musidora Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Lonchoptera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Lonchopteridae]; Noeza Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Hybos Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Hybotidae]; Omphrale Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Scenopinus Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Scenopinidae]; Pales Bezzi, 1906 under Nephrotoma Meigen, 1803, n. syn . [Tipulidae]; Penthesilea Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Blera Billberg, 1820, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Petaurista Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Trichocera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Trichoceridae]; Phalaenula Desmarest, 1818 under Psychoda Latreille, 1797, n. syn. [Psychodidae]; Philia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Dilophus Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Bibionidae]; Phryne Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Sylvicola Harris, 1776, n. syn. [Anisopodidae]; Polymeda Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Erioptera Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Limoniidae]; Polyxena Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Cordyla Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Mycetophilidae]; Potamida Hendel, 1903 under Clitellaria Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Stratiomyidae]; Rhodogyne Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Gymnosoma Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Tachinidae]; Salmacia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Gonia Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Tachinidae]; Scathophaga Meigen, 1803 under Scopeuma Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Scathophagidae]; Coremacera Rondani, 1856 under Statinia Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Sciomyzidae]; Tendipes Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Chironomus Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Chironomidae]; Titania Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Chlorops Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Chloropidae]; Trepidaria Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Calobata Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Micropezidae]; Tritonia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Temnostoma Le Peletier & Audinet-Serville, 1828, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Tubifera Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Eristalis Latreille, 1804, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Urophora Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830 under Euribia Latreille, 1802, n. syn. [Tephritidae]; Zelima Hendel, 1903 under Xylota Meigen, 1822, n. syn. [Syrphidae]; Zelmira Meigen in Hendel, 1908 under Orfelia Costa, 1857, n. syn. [Keroplatidae]. The following three names have not been found to be synonymous with any other taxon, and are treated here as nomina dubia: Orithea Meigen in Hendel, 1908; Salpyga Meigen in Hendel, 1908; Titia Meigen in Hendel, 1908 (preoccupied). The following four names are found to be senior synonyms of more commonly used genus-group names: Euribia Latreille, 1802 of Urophora Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830, n. syn. [Tephritidae]; Pelopia Latreille, 1802 of Ablabesmyia Johannsen, 1905, n. syn.; Scopeuma Latreille, 1802 of Scathophaga Meigen, 1803, n. syn. [Scathophagidae]; Statinia Latreille, 1802 of Coremacera Rondani, 1856, n. syn. [Sciomyzidae]. If they are construed as threatening stability of nomenclature and/or taxonomy, applications to the ICZN Commission may be warranted to request suppression of these names in favor of their junior synonyms.
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31

Barclay, G. J. "Henge Monuments: Reappraisal or Reductionism?" Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 55, no. 1 (1989): 260–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00005430.

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Classification has been a fundamental tool in archaeology since the birth of the discipline, particularly in artefactual analysis. All artefacts, including field monuments, have a limitless variety of characteristics and their reduction into a system of classification necessitates the selection, summarization and simplification of those characteristics regarded as diagnostic in order to clarify groupings of related monuments which might otherwise be obscured by concentration on detail. While some doubt has been cast on the value of the classification of henge monuments as an internally coherent group (and the discovery of many more sites has certainly done little to consolidate that coherence) it can still be argued that a strictly defined class of henge is a useful contribution to our understanding (Harding 1987). Other classes of monument of the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC which seem to have ceremonial/funerary functions have also been defined, such as enclosed cremation cemeteries, recumbent stone circles, postcircles, ring cairns, ring ditches and so on. It is widely agreed that there are complex relationships between these various types and their myriad hybrids, or at least that comparisons can be made between various constructional elements.
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32

Aveling, Elizabeth. "Husbandry at the oldest henge." Nature 387, no. 6633 (June 1997): 553–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/42359.

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33

KLYMKO, JOHN, and STEPHEN A. MARSHALL. "Systematics of New World Curtonotum Macquart (Diptera: Curtonotidae)." Zootaxa 3079, no. 1 (October 28, 2011): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3079.1.1.

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The New World species of the curtonotid genus Curtonotum Macquart are reviewed, and all species outside the vulpinum and murinum species complexes (as defined below) are revised. Descriptions and illustrations are provided for 24 species, including 13 newly described species: C. adusticrus sp. n., C. atlanticum sp. n., C. bivittatum sp. n., C. brunneum sp. n., C. curtispinum sp. n., C. desperatum sp. n., C. papillatum sp. n., C. gracile sp. n., C. hunkingi sp. n., C. flavisetum sp. n., C. floridense sp. n., C. nigrum sp. n., and C. scambum sp. n. Curtonotum nigripalpe Hendel is proposed as a new junior synonym of C. hendelianum (Enderlein). A key to these New World species is presented and the phylogenetic relationships between them are discussed. Lectotypes are designated for C. tumidum Enderlein, C. bathmedum Hendel, C. taeniatum Hendel, C. trypetipenne Hendel, C. impunctatum Hendel, 1913, nec impunctatum Hendel, 1932 and C. apicale Hendel. Curtonotum perplexum nom. n., is given as the replacement name for C. impunctatum Hendel, 1932 nec impunctatum Hendel, 1913. Two species complexes are left untreated at the species level (the C. murinum species complex, including C. murinum Hendel, C. coriaceum Hendel, C. perplexum nom. n., and C. decumanum Bezzi; and the C. vulpinum species complex including C. vulpinum Hendel and C. fumipenne Hendel). Both complexes are included in the phylogenetic analysis and key.
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34

Hulick, Jeannette. "When Spring Comes by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 69, no. 9 (2016): 469. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2016.0438.

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35

Danielsson, Arne. "Kristinas Alexanderfixering, återspeglad i hennes porträtt." Konsthistorisk Tidskrift/Journal of Art History 61, no. 1-2 (January 1992): 45–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00233609208604306.

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36

Stevenson, Deborah. "Winter Is Here by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 72, no. 3 (2018): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2018.0761.

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37

Stevenson, Deborah. "Sun Flower Lion by Kevin Henkes." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 74, no. 2 (2020): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2020.0676.

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38

Lien, Y. Edmund. "Zhang Heng's Huntian yi zhu Revisited." T'oung Pao 98, no. 1-3 (2012): 31–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853212x634644.

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AbstractThe Huntian yi zhu is one of the earliest surviving works on astronomy in ancient China. It is traditionally attributed to Zhang Heng (78-139) of the Eastern Han. Modern scholars have studied the text for the past seven decades and there seems to be agreement on its interpretation, especially on its mathematical contents. This article identifies one major flaw in the assumptions among the modern studies of the piece: the term shao ban, incorrectly taken to mean “one quarter,” should mean “one third.” The mathematical interpretation of the Huntian yi zhu by scholars including Christopher Cullen and Chen Meidong has to be reworked. A new reading is presented here, which demonstrates Zhang Heng's meticulousness on the one hand and our adherence to the philological principle of lectio difficilior potior (the more difficult reading is the stronger) on the other.
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39

Shetelig, Kaare Andreas, and Tommy Thomsen. "Overprøving av voldgiftsdommer: Henger Norge etter?" Lov og Rett 53, no. 10 (December 3, 2014): 622–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn1504-3061-2014-10-04.

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40

Korneyev, V. A. "New Taxa and Synonymy in the Family Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Tephritoidea). II. Subtribe Adapsiliina and Afrotropical Campylocera." Vestnik Zoologii 50, no. 3 (June 1, 2016): 195–218. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2016-0024.

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Abstract In the tribe Pyrgotini, a monophyletic lineage is considered as the subtribe Adapsiliina Rondani, 1869, revised rank; it includes the genera Adapsilia Waga, 1842, Campylocera Macquart, 1843, Euphya Wulp, 1885, Eupyrgota Coquillett, 1899, Geloemyia Hendel, 1908, Hendelpyrgota Vanschuytbroek 1963, Plectrobrachys Enderlein, 1942, Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942, Pyrgotomyia Hendel, 1934, Siridapha Enderlein, 1942, Trichopeltia Wulp, 1885, and an unnamed and unplaced genus-group taxon (represented by the group of species related to Adapsilia hirtoscutellata Hendel, 1933). Based on having at least two synapomorphies: the incomplete costa not reaching apex of medial vein, and male cerci flattened dorsoventrally, large, slightly longer and wider than epandrium, the broadest concept of the genus Campylocera Macquart, 1843 is proposed. In the Afrotropical Region, it therefore includes also all the species assigned by Steyskal (1980) to the genera Clemaxia Enderlein, 1942, Congopyrgota Aczel, 1958, syn. n., Diasteneura Hendel, 1908, syn. n., Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, Hexamerinx Enderlein, 1942, Hypotyphla Loew, 1873, syn. n., Hypotyphlina Enderlein, 1942, syn. n., Lygiohypotyphla Enderlein, 1942, and Prohypotyphla Hendel, 1934, syn. n. The other important characters of Campylocera are the low epistome, subocular sclerite well expressed, and femoral organ on female mid femur always lacking. The following synonymy is established: Campylocera ferruginea Macquart, 1843 = Prohypotyphla omissa Hendel, 1934, syn. n.; Campylocera hyalipennis (Aczel, 1958, comb. n.) = Congopyrgota hyalipennis Aczel, 1958 = Congopyrgota kivuensis Vanschuytbroeck, 1963, syn. n. = Congopyrgota ethiopica Steyskal, 1972, syn. n.; Campylocera latigenis Hendel, 1914 = Prohypotyphla obtusicornis Hendel, 1934, syn. n. = Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein, 1942, syn. n.; Campylocera loewi (Hendel, 1908), comb. n. = Hypotyphla loewi Hendel, 1908 = Prohypotyphla (Hypotyphlina) saegeri Aczel, 1958, syn. n.; Campylocera caudata (Hendel, 1914), comb. n. = Hypotyphla caudata Hendel, 1914 = Lygiohypotyphla hyalipennis Vanschuytbroeck, 1963, syn. n. = Lygiohypotyphla ruwenzoriensis Vanschuytbroeck, 1963, syn. n.; Campylocera basilewskyi (Vanschuytbroeck, 1963), comb. n. (= Diasteneura basilewskyi Vanschuytbroeck, 1963), Campylocera laticeps (Hendel, 1908), comb. n. (= Diasteneura laticeps Hendel, 1908), Campylocera obscura (Vanschuytbroeck, 1963), comb. n. (= Diasteneura obscura Vanschuytbroeck, 1963), Campylocera similis (Steyskal, 1963), comb. n. (= Diasteneura similis Steyskal, 1963), Campylocera variceps (Curran, 1928), comb. n. (= Diasteneura variceps Curran, 1928), Campylocera nigripennis (Hendel, 1934) comb. n. (= Prohypotyphla nigripennis Hendel, 1934), Campylocera scalaris (Hendel, 1934) comb. n. (= Prohypotyphla scalaris Hendel, 1934).
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41

Basso, Umberto, Marco Maruzzo, Anna Paola Fraccon, Teodoro Sava, Francesco Massari, Cosimo Sacco, Francesca Valcamonico, et al. "Do pathological parameters of primary tumor correlate with overall survival (OS) of metastatic clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC)?" Journal of Clinical Oncology 34, no. 2_suppl (January 10, 2016): 549. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2016.34.2_suppl.549.

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549 Background: T and N stage, Fuhrman grade, necrosis and sarcomatoid features in the primary tumor are key prognostic factors for relapse of ccRCC, but they are not part of Heng's algorithm applied to predict OS in the metastatic setting, which instead is based on 6 clinical/laboratory items. Methods: Retrospective analysis on correlation between pathological parameters and OS (from start of first-line targeted therapy) and Heng's prognostic factors in a multicenter cohort of pts with advanced ccRCC, all of whom had undergone surgery on the kidney. Results: From 2006 to 2012, data of 903 eligible metastatic pts were collected from 33 Italian Oncology Institutions, median age 66 years, 72.6% males, 36.4 metastatic at diagnosis. After a median observation of 42 mo, 70,5% of pts died, estimated OS is 28.5 mo. Heng good prognosis pts were 14.45%, intermediate 69.1% and poor 16.45%. Univariate analysis showed that all pathological parameters significantly correlated with OS: T stage 3-4 vs 1-2 (HR 1.3), N1 vs N0 (1.3), Fuhrman grade 3-4 vs 1-2 (1.7) presence of necrosis (1.5) and sarcomatoid features (1,6). All pathological parameters had a strong correlation with a time to metastases < 1 year, while only weak correlations were found with the other clinical prognostic items of Heng's model. At multivariate analysis only N stage showed an independent impact on OS (table). Conclusions: T3-4 stage, N1, Fuhrman grade 3-4, presence of necrosis and sarcomatoid features negatively affect OS of metastatic ccRCC, but clinical items of Heng's model confirm to have a more robust prognostic significance at multivariate analysis. [Table: see text]
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NORRBOM, ALLEN L., BRUCE D. SUTTON, GARY J. STECK, and JOSÉ MONZÓN. "New genera, species and host plant records of Nearctic and Neotropical Tephritidae (Diptera)." Zootaxa 2398, no. 1 (March 12, 2010): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2398.1.1.

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Three new genera and five new species of Tephritidae (Diptera) are described from the Nearctic and Neotropical Regions. The new genera are: Agallamyia Norrbom (type species: A. pendula Norrbom, n. sp.), Neosphaeniscus Norrbom (type species: Euribia m-nigrum Hendel), and Phacelochaeta Norrbom (type species: Procecidochares quinquefasciata Hendel). The new species include: Acidogona stecki Norrbom (Guatemala, Mexico: Chiapas), Agallamyia pendula Norrbom (Guatemala), Phacelochaeta obliqua Norrbom (Ecuador), Procecidochares suttoni Norrbom (Guatemala), Stenopa mexicana Norrbom (Mexico). Five new generic synonyms are proposed: Cecidocharella Hendel, 1936 =4 · Zootaxa 2398 © 2010 Magnolia PressDracontomyia Becker, 1919; Gerrhoceras Hering, 1942 = Pyrgotoides Curran, 1934; Stoneola Hering, 1941 = Rhagoletis Loew, 1862; Strobelia Rondani, 1868 = Rachiptera Bigot, 1859; and Xenochaeta Snow, 1894 = Acidogona Loew, 1873. The following 41 new combinations are proposed: Acidogona dichromata (Snow), Dictyotrypeta crenulata (Wulp), D. incisa (Wulp), Dioxyna crockeri (Curran), Dracontomyia tucumana (Aczél), D. borrichia (Bush & Huettel), and D. elegans (Hendel), Homoeothrix aberrans (Schiner), Neosphaeniscus m-nigrum (Hendel) and N. flexuosus (Bigot), Paracantha trinotata (Foote), Phacelochaeta quinquefasciata (Hendel) and P. quinquevittata (Norrbom), Plaumannimyia ameghinoi (Brèthes), P. coelestina (Hering), P. delicatella (Blanchard), P. difficilis (Malloch), P. dolores (Hering), P. eugenia (Wulp), P. flava (Adams), P. hestiae (Hendel), P. imitatrix (Hering), P. miseta (Hering), P. plagiata (Blanchard), P. scutellata (Séguy), P. setulosa (Malloch), P. subaster (Malloch), P. suspecta (Malloch), P. thomsoni (Hendel), P. titschacki (Hering), and P. valdesiana (Gandolfo & Norrbom), Pyrgotoides paradoxus (Hering) and P. peruvianus (Korytkowski), Rachiptera alboguttata (Hendel), R. baccharidis (Rondani), R. bimaculata (Hendel), R. ferruginea (Hendel), R. lutulenta (Hendel), R. parallela (Hendel), and R. rubiginosa (Rondani), and Rhagoletis fuscobasalis (Hering). A lectotype is designated for R. fuscobasalis. New distribution and host plant records also are reported.
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43

Greaney, Susan, Zoë Hazell, Alistair Barclay, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Elaine Dunbar, Irka Hajdas, Paula Reimer, Joshua Pollard, Niall Sharples, and Peter Marshall. "Tempo of a Mega-henge: A New Chronology for Mount Pleasant, Dorchester, Dorset." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 86 (August 20, 2020): 199–236. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2020.6.

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Radiocarbon dating and Bayesian chronological modelling have provided precise new dating for the henge monument of Mount Pleasant in Dorset, excavated in 1970–1. A total of 59 radiocarbon dates are now available for the site and modelling of these has provided a revised sequence for the henge enclosure and its various constituent parts: the timber palisaded enclosure, the Conquer Barrow, and the ditch surrounding Site IV, a concentric timber and stone monument. This suggests that the henge was probably built in the 26th century cal bc, shortly followed by the timber palisade and Site IV ditch. These major construction events took place in the late Neolithic over a relatively short timespan, probably lasting 35–125 years. The principal results are discussed for each element of the site, including comparison with similar monument types elsewhere in Britain and Ireland, and wider implications for late Neolithic connections and later activity at the site associated with Beaker pottery are explored.
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44

Simonsen, Peter. "Prekarisering og preært arbejdsliv i Helle Helles roman, Ned til Hundene." Tidsskrift for Arbejdsliv 19, no. 1 (February 1, 2017): 63–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/tfa.v19i1.109078.

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Helle Helle er en af dansk samtidslitteraturs vigtigste stemmer, og hun finder mange læsere både inden for og uden for akademiet. Hendes romaner befolkesaf personer, som kan forbindes med prekariatet, og en analyse af hendes værk leder til en bedre og mere nuanceret forståelse af levevilkårene for prekære mennesker i den neoliberale samtid. I en litterær tekstanalyse af Helle helles nyklassiske roman, Ned til Hundene (2008), vises det, hvordan den gennem en særlig prekær stil giver læseren indsigt i det at være sårbar og udsat, dels som et menneskeligt eksistentielt grundvilkår, dels som en specifik erfaring af at være genstand for andre og mere privilegerede gruppers manglende forståelse og empati.
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45

Černý, Miloš, and Jindřich Roháček. "New records of the Agromyzidae (Diptera) from the Muránska planina National Park (Central Slovakia)." Acta Musei Silesiae, Scientiae Naturales 69, no. 2 (July 1, 2020): 97–140. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/cszma-2020-0009.

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Abstract A total of 166 species of Agromyzidae have been recorded from the Muránska planina National Park in the Gemer region in Central Slovakia during surveys of Diptera in years 2012–2019. Of these 94 species represent first records from this area and 35 species, viz. Agromyza felleri Hering, 1941, A. orobi Hendel, 1920, A. seticercus L. Papp in Papp & Černý 2015, Amauromyza (Cephalomyza) luteiceps (Hendel, 1920), Aulagromyza luteoscutellata (de Meijere, 1924), Aul. similis (Brischke, 1880), Cerodontha (Butomomyza) falcata Černý in Papp & Černý, 2016, C. (B.) pseuderrans (Hendel, 1931), C. (B.) vigneae Nowakowski, 1967, C. (Cerodontha) stackelbergi Nowakowski, 1972, C. (C.) vandalitiensis Spencer, 1965, C. (Dizygomyza) chaixiana (Hering, 1956), C. (Poemyza) estlandica Zlobin, 1993, C. (P.) morula (Hendel, 1920), Chromatomyia luzulae (Hering, 1924), Ch. periclymeni (Hendel, 1922), Ch. primulae (Robineau-Desvoidy, 1851), Ch. scolopendri (Robineau-Desvoidy, 1851), Galiomyza morio (Brischke, 1880), Liriomyza taurica Zlobin, 2003, L. valerianae Hendel, 1932, Napomyza merita Zlobin, 1993, Melanagromyza zlobini Pakalniškis, 1996, Nemorimyza posticata (Meigen, 1830), Phytobia carbonaria (Zetterstedt, 1848), Phytomyza actaeae Hendel, 1922, Ph. artemisivora Spencer, 1971, Ph. elsae Hendel, 1927, Ph. homogyneae Hendel, 1927, Ph. kaltenbachi Hendel, 1922, Ph. obscurella Fallén, 1823, Ph. scotina Hendel, 1920, Ph. sedicola Hering, 1924, Ph. silai Hering, 1935 and Ph. vilnensis Pakalniškis, 1998 are new additions to the fauna of the whole of Slovakia. With these additions, altogether 213 species are currently known from the Muránska planina NP so representing by far the largest regional diversity of Agromyzidae hitherto ascertained in Slovakia.
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46

Ala-Kyyny, Juuso. "Pääkirjoitus: Tiedon hinta 2.0." Signum 53, no. 1 (April 25, 2021): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.25033/sig.107801.

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Miksi pääsy tieteellisiin tutkimusjulkaisuihin on niin kallista? Tätä kysyy Bo-Christer Björk tuoreessa artikkelissaan, joka löytyy ajan hengen mukaisesti final draft -versiona DHanken-julkaisuarkistosta.
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47

Heile, B. "Die Sinfonien Hans Werner Henzes: Entstehungsgeschichtliche und werkanalytische Untersuchungen zu einer Sinfonie-Asthetik Henzes. By Benedikt Vennefrohne." Music and Letters 88, no. 3 (August 1, 2007): 545–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ml/gcl145.

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48

Parikh, Kinjal, David D. Stenehjem, Arun Sendilnathan, Hilda Crispin, Joan Van Atta, Julia Anne Batten, Daniel Sageser, et al. "Conditional survival (CS) of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) patients treated with high dose interleukin-2 (HD IL-2)." Journal of Clinical Oncology 32, no. 4_suppl (February 1, 2014): 460. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2014.32.4_suppl.460.

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460 Background: CS is a clinically useful prediction measure that adjusts prognosis of patients on the basis of survival since treatment initiation or therapy duration. CS was recently reported in mRCC patients treated with VEGF targeted therapy in patients stratified by Heng’s criteria. CS has not been reported in mRCC in the context of treatment with HD IL-2. Methods: Patients with histologically confirmed clear cell mRCC treated with HD IL-2 at the University of Utah Huntsman Cancer Institute from 2000 to 2012 were evaluated. Performance status and prognostic risk groups were included. Two-year CS was defined as the probability of surviving an additional 2 years from initiation of HD IL-2 to 18 months after the start of HD IL-2 at 3-month intervals estimated by Kaplan-Meier methodology. Results: A total of 85 patients were included with a median age of 56 years (range 32-76 years) and 79% (n = 67) were male. The median overall survival from HD IL-2 administration was 817 days. Stratification by Heng’s criteria at therapyinitiation resulted in survival estimates for the favorable (n = 13; 15%), intermediate (n = 56; 66%) and poor (n = 16; 19%) prognostic groups of 1616 (p = 0.1993 vs intermediate), 817 (p = 0.0041 vs poor), and 365 (p < 0.0001 vs favorable) days, respectively. Two-year overall CS increased from 56.2% at therapy initiation to 89.5% at 18 months (Table). Two-year CS stratified by Heng’s favorable, intermediate, and poor prognostic risk groups is presented in the Table. Conclusions: CS is a relevant prediction measure in the context of mRCC treated with HD IL-2.A longer survival interval from HD IL-2 treatment was associated with an increased survival probability. CS in this cohort was especially relevant in adjusting prognosis for patients with Heng’s intermediate risk. [Table: see text]
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Haug, Charlotte. "Legende hender." Tidsskrift for Den norske legeforening 129, no. 7 (2009): 615. http://dx.doi.org/10.4045/tidsskr.09.07e1.

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MCMANUS, C. "Even-Hended." Cortex 39, no. 2 (2003): 348–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70114-x.

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