Academic literature on the topic 'Metamorphoses 12'

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Journal articles on the topic "Metamorphoses 12"

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Chvertko, Svetlana Yurevna. "Double-world and metamorphoses in the Italian short story «Metamorphosis» by D.S. Merezhkovsky." Sibirskiy filologicheskiy zhurnal, no. 1 (March 1, 2014): 88–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/18137083/46/12.

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GORE, JEFFREY, and ALLAN KERSHAW. "AN UNNOTICED ACROSTIC IN APULEIUS METAMORPHOSES AND CICERO DE DIVINATIONE 2.111–12." Classical Quarterly 58, no. 1 (April 18, 2008): 393–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009838808000487.

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Abdullina, Galina Vadimovna, and Zhun Sui. "WALTZ METAMORPHOSES IN THE RUSSIAN MUSIC OF THE XIX CENTURY." Manuscript, no. 12-2 (December 2018): 314–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.30853/manuscript.2018-12-2.28.

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Williams, Gareth. "Medea in Metamorphoses 7: Magic, Moreness and the Maivs Opvs." Ramus 41, no. 1-2 (2012): 49–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0048671x00000254.

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It is now widely recognised that Medea's last words in her elegiac letter to Jason, Heroides 12, combine the terrible foreshadowing of infanticide with a telling metapoetic signature:quo feret ira, sequar! facti fortasse pigebit;et piget infido consuluisse uiro.uiderit ista deus, qui nunc mea pectora uersat!nescioquid certe mens mea maius agit.(Ov. Her. 12.209-12)Where my anger leads, I'll follow. Perhaps I'll regret my deed—as I regret the attention I paid to my faithless husband.Be that the concern of the god who now goads my breast!Certainly, something greater is stirring in my mind!Ovid positions Heroides 12 as ‘a “prequel” to his own Medea-tragedy’, that maius opus which notionally provides Medea with an appropriate generic setting in which to exact her revenge; elegy is too light a medium to bear the weight of so tragic a denouement. Heroides 12 thus concludes by adapting itself to the contours of the larger Ovidian career—a career in which he was to revisit the Medea-theme for the third time in Metamorphoses 7. There, her life-story is selectively told from the beginning of the Argonautic voyage and Medea's first infatuation with Jason to her magical intervention in his gaining of the golden fleece (1-158); from her rejuvenation of Jason's father, Aeson, to the dastardly way in which she induces the daughters of Pelias, Aeson's half-brother, to murder their father (159-349); and from the briefly told murder of her children at Corinth to her marriage to Aegeus and the attempted murder of Theseus, his son, at Athens (394-423). At this point Medea takes flight once more (424; cf. 350-93, in the wake of Pelias' murder) and disappears from the Metamorphoses for good—or, we might imagine, for yet more evil to be worked.
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Holmes, J. A., F. W. H. Beamish, J. G. Seelye, S. A. Sower, and J. H. Youson. "Long-term Influence of Water Temperature, Photoperiod, and Food Deprivation on Metamorphosis of Sea Lamprey, Petromyzon marinus." Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 51, no. 9 (September 1, 1994): 2045–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f94-207.

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After 11 mo in the laboratory, significantly more sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, larvae from the Chippewa River, Michigan, metamorphosed in an ambient temperature regime (3 ± 2 animals∙tank−1) compared with a fixed 21 °C temperature (0 animals); photoperiod and food deprivation did not have detectable effects on the incidence of metamorphosis. Metamorphosing animals in our laboratory study were significantly smaller in size (length and weight) and had a lower condition factor (CF) than animals from the same population that metamorphosed a year earlier under field and shorter term laboratory conditions. We also predicted, using criteria of 120 mm, 3.0 g, and a CF of 1.50, that 12 and 14% of the animals in the ambient and fixed temperature regimes, respectively, would metamorphose. Our prediction for the ambient temperature did not differ significantly from observed (11%). We suggest that larvae in landlocked populations of sea lamprey that are at least 120 mm long, weigh 3.0 g, and have a CF of 1.50 or greater in the fall can be predicted to metamorphose the following summer. Furthermore, our data show that low temperature during the winter followed by rising temperature in the spring is the primary environmental cue initiating metamorphosis in sea lamprey.
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Michalopoulos, Andreas N. "THE EMOTIONS OF MEDEA THE LETTER-WRITER (OVID, HEROIDES 12)." Greece and Rome 68, no. 1 (March 5, 2021): 61–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017383520000248.

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Medea fascinated Ovid more than any other female mythical figure. She features in the Ars Amatoria (1.336; 2.381–2), the Heroides (6.75, 127–8, 151; 12 passim; 17.229, 233), the Metamorphoses (7.1–424), and the Tristia (3.9). Ovid also composed a tragedy called Medea (Am. 2.18.13–16; Tr. 2.553–4), which unfortunately has not survived.1 In the Remedia amoris Medea is mentioned in a list of mythical men and women who would have been cured of their torturing love passion, if Ovid had been their praeceptor. Medea is not named, but the identification is obvious (Rem. am. 59–60): nec dolor armasset contra sua viscera matrem, / quae socii damno sanguinis ulta virum est (‘Nor would a mother's vengeance on her husband / have steeled her heart to slay their progeny’).
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Duplinskya, Y. M. "«Mirror Metamorphoses» in Comparative Phenomenology of Clarification of Mind." Izvestiya of Saratov University. Philosophy. Psychology. Pedagogy 12, no. 2 (2012): 10–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/1819-7671-2012-12-2-10-14.

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Article is devoted the comparative analysis of phenomenological experience of «pure consciousness» in various traditions, as sacral, and деsаcranunted. Various updatings of symbolics of a mirror in which result similar receptions «mind clarifications» in phenomenological experience of different traditions are compared. Specificity of experience of Orthodoxy in its relation to mirror symbolics is considered.
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Loos, Jaap. "How Ovid Remythologizes Greek Astronomy in Metamorphoses 1.747-2.400." Mnemosyne 61, no. 2 (2008): 257–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852507x195439.

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AbstractThis essay discusses Ovid's poetic rendition of Hellenistic astronomy in the Phaethon myth. In Met. 2.63-75 Sol presents his diurnal and annual movements as separate, but the first instruction (127-8) to his son in his second speech refers to the υπολειψις-theory; so far Ovid has followed Geminus Isag. 12. Met. 2.129-33 telescopes the Milky Way (via quinque per arcus) and the ecliptic together, the sectus in obliquum limes zonarumque trium contentus fine reflecting the Aratean system of three imaginary circles connected by means of the fourth (Phaen. 526 ο δε τετρατος) circle, the ecliptic; Nonnus D. 38.256-9 points in the same direction. In the last instruction utrumque (Met. 2.140) refers to the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. In 2.116 I adopt quam, the reading of Par F (Tarrant, OCT 2004), instead of quem, thus making Aurora the subject of petere terras, which makes excellent sense since she carries the passage Met. 2.112-44. In late Antiquity both Nonnus (D. 38.424-5) and Claudian (VI. Cons. Hon. 172) catasterise Phaethon into Auriga; this paper offers some fresh viewpoints, based on e.g. Ov. Am. 3.12.31, 37 and Hyginus Astr. 2.42.1324-7, that could defend the presence of Phaethon's catasterismus in the Metamorphoses.
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Perevaryukha, A. Yu. "ON THE TECHNIQUE OF MODELING ONTOGENETIC CHANGES IN FISH AND INSECTS LIFECYCLE." «System analysis and applied information science», no. 1 (May 4, 2017): 12–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.21122/2309-4923-2017-1-12-23.

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The article discusses the approach to modeling of metamorphoses in the development of a number of species in the context of their influence on the success of long-term trends of population dynamics. Changes in survival during early ontogenesis, controlled by important factor – the rate of individual development in a competing group of individuals, can cause unexpected degradation of population with a small excess fishing impact. The theory of nonlinear efficiency of reproduction leads us to the hypothesis that two different nonlinear effects are controlled by similar mechanisms. For insects such fluctuations in survival during metamorphosis can start another process - the rapid outbreak of pests, where actual formalization of the impact of parasites on the first stage of development, depending on the initial concentration of clutches, but limited resources is taken into account at a finishing. The method has been for submission to decline of generations on the basis of dynamic overriding differential equations with discrete-continuous structure of time. To extend the previously proposed model for the formation of generations is formed computing structure for the account mortality depending on the level of competition, complete with trigger functional and a new scheme describing the changes the growth rate for the example of the Caspian Sea sturgeon in three ecological and physiological stages of development. The new model has a non-trivial possibilities parametrically modification of behavior regimes. The coexistence of alternative cycles is explained by the increase in adaptive interspecies differences.
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Belyaev, A. M., A. K. Nosov, O. K. Ignatova, H. N. Bayramov, R. I. Ryabinin, N. A. Shchekuteev, A. I. Saad, and M. V. Berkut. "Oncourology metamorphoses after the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic." Experimental and Сlinical Urology 12, no. 3 (September 29, 2020): 16–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.29188/2222-8543-2020-12-3-16-24.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Metamorphoses 12"

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Wolf, Kordula. "Troja - Metamorphosen eines Mythos französische, englische und italienische Überlieferungen des 12. Jahrhunderts im Vergleich /." Berlin : Akademie Verlag, 2009. http://hsg.ciando.com/shop/book/short/index.cfm/fuseaction/short/bok_id/19649.

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Wolf, Kordula. "Troja - Metamorphosen eines Mythos französische, englische und italienische Überlieferungen des 12. Jahrhunderts im Vergleich." Berlin Akad.-Verl, 2006. http://d-nb.info/991055632/04.

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Ewing, John Paul. "Goethe's Vision of Natur during the Italian Journey." Thesis, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7335.

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The following project will examine the scientific, metaphysical, and aesthetic themes connected to Goethe's vision of Natur during and surrounding the years of his famed Italian Journey. Goethe's progressing conceptualization of the Urpflanze during this period, as witnessed in his autobiographical Italienische Reise and the Versuch, die Metamorphose der Pflanzen zu erklaren, will be of special concern because of its pertinence to a number of vital natural scientific themes in Goethe's scientific work. I will also trace the progression of these themes over time as seen in Goethe's related theories of the intermaxillary bone and of the morphology of plant organs so as to maintain that the Italian Journey may be seen as a period not only of literary revitalization as commonly cited, but also of scientific progress in connection with Goethe's deepening understanding of Natur as well as its inherent laws and archetypal nature. The first chapter will introduce the project's problem in detail as well as the textual and critical obstructions associated with the project. I will maintain in Chapter II that Goethe's biography during the 1780s shows a systematic progression in the understanding of Natur in his scientific projects and in the Reise, which also helps to demonstrate that Goethe's Journey was a period during which Goethe was able to develop, in greater detail than heretofore, his metaphysical vision of Natur. In Chapter III, I will investigate the primary textual material on Goethe?s notion of the Urpflanze within the Italienische Reise and its resulting extension in his 1790 study of plant morphology, the Metamorphose der Pflanzen. Chapter IV will discuss the topic of the Eins in Nature and anschauende Urteilskraft as detected in Goethe's scientific writings. Chapter V will continue and conclude this argument by linking Richards' argument regarding "Romantic biologists" to Goethe?s natural science during the time of the Italian Journey, thus making a connection between Kunst and Natur in the Italienische Reise and in Goethe's scientific projects during and surrounding the Journey.
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Books on the topic "Metamorphoses 12"

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1992), International Association for People-Environment Studies (conference) (12th Marmaras. IAPS 12 international conference: Socio-environmental metamorphoses. Thessaloniki: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 1992.

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International Association for People-Environment Studies (conference) (12th Marmaras 1992). IAPS 12 international conference: Socio-environmental metamorphoses. Edited by Aristides Mazis, Cleopatra Karaletsou, and Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Thessaloniki: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 1992.

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International Association for People-Environment Studies (conference) (12th Marmaras 1992). IAPS 12 international conference: Socio-environmental metamorphoses. Edited by Aristides Mazis, Cleopatra Karaletsou, and Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Thessaloniki: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 1992.

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International Association for People-Environment Studies (conference) (12th Marmaras 1992). IAPS 12 international conference: Socio-environmental metamorphoses. Edited by Aristides Mazis, Cleopatra Karaletsou, and Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Thessaloniki: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 1992.

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Boston Early Music Festival & Exhibition (2011). Boston Early Music Festival: June 12-19, 2011 : metamorphoses : change and transformation. [Boston: Boston Early Music Festival], 2011.

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International Association for People-Environment Studies (conference) (12th Marmaras 1992). [ IAPS 12 international conference: Socio-environmental metamorphoses] : proceedings of the 12th biennial conference of the International Assocation for People-Environment Studies, hosted by the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Maramas, Chalkidiki, Greece, 11-14 July 1992. Edited by Aristides Mazis, Cleopatra Karaletsou, Kyriaki Tsoukala, and Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Thessaloniki: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 1992.

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Applegate, Katherine. The Reaction: Animorphs #12. New York: Scholastic, 1997.

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Lance, Katherine. Night of the Werecat: Ghosts of Fear Street #12. New York: Pocket Books, 1996.

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Takahashi, Rumiko. Ranma 1/2. vol 12. San Francisco: Viz Communications, 2004.

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Katherine, Applegate, ed. The diversion: The ultimate. London: Scholastic, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Metamorphoses 12"

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Albright, Christine L. "Tiresias." In Ovid's Metamorphoses, 56–59. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315265605-12.

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Sroczyńska, Maria. "The sacred and the young: theoretical and empirical inspirations." In Metamorphoses of Religion and Spirituality in Central and Eastern Europe, 129–42. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003271994-12.

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Puche López, Carmen. "Chapter 20. De opere illicito." In The Reality of Women in the Universe of the Ancient Novel, 329–42. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ivitra.40.20puc.

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In this paper we have analyzed a miracle of Saint Andrew that Iacobus de Voragine included in his Legenda aurea (LA, II §§ 58–75). In this miracle, the motif of the trial for incest appears, together with the motif of Potiphar. We put it in relation to a story contained in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses (X, 2–12), since both stories share many common elements. Our comparative analysis reveals how the hagiographic story draws on certain novelistic elements and adapts them, giving them a new meaning to highlight the power of the saint.
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Chilala, Cheela H. K. "Dorika’s metamorphosis." In Joke-Performance in Africa, 203–22. New York, NY : Routledge, 2017. | Series: Routledge contemporary: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315162669-12.

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"12 The changing national scene." In Metamorphoses, 161–75. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780822385912-015.

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"Book 12." In Ovid's Metamorphoses, 300–318. University of California Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/jj.5590592.18.

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"Book 12." In Ovid's Metamorphoses, 300–318. University of California Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520394865-015.

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"METAMORPHOSES." In The Art of Being a Tiger, 34–35. Liverpool University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv16zjjjm.12.

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"TRANSFORMING MEDICAL EDUCATION." In Metamorphoses, 93–102. Duke University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11cw50k.12.

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Naso], Ovid [Publius Ovidius. "Book 12." In Oxford World's Classics: Ovid: Metamorphoses, edited by A. D. Melville and Edward J. Kenney, 274–445. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00080417.

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Reports on the topic "Metamorphoses 12"

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Shpigel, Muki, Allen Place, William Koven, Oded (Odi) Zmora, Sheenan Harpaz, and Mordechai Harel. Development of Sodium Alginate Encapsulation of Diatom Concentrates as a Nutrient Delivery System to Enhance Growth and Survival of Post-Larvae Abalone. United States Department of Agriculture, September 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2001.7586480.bard.

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The major bottlenecks in rearing the highly priced gastropod abalone (Haliotis spp.) are the slow growth rate and the high mortality during the first 8 to 12 weeks following metamorphosis and settling. The most likely reason flor these problems is related to nutritional deficiencies in the diatom diet on which the post larvae (PL) feed almost exclusively in captivity. Higher survival and improved growth rate will reduce the considerable expense of hatchery-nursery resisdence time and thereflore the production costs. BARD supported our research for one year only and the support was given to us in order to prove that "(1) Abalone PL feed on encapsulated diatoms, and (2) heterotrophic diatoms can be mass produced." In the course of this year we have developed a novel nutrient delivery system specifically designed to enhance growth and survival of post-larval abalone. This approach is based on the sodium-alginate encapsulation of heterotrophically grown diatoms or diatom extracts, including appetite-stimulating factors. Diatom species that attract the PL and promote the highest growth and survival have been identified. These were also tested by incorporating them (either intact cells or as cell extracts) into a sodium-alginate matrix while comparing the growth to that achieved when using diatoms (singel sp. or as a mixture). A number of potential chemoattractants to act as appetite-stimulating factors for abalone PL have been tested. Preliminary results show that the incorporation of the amino acid methionine at a level of 10-3M to the sodim alginate matrix leads to a marked enhancement of growth. The results ol these studies provided basic knowledge on the growth of abalone and showed that it is possible to obtain, on a regular basis, survival rates exceeding 10% for this stage. Prior to this study the survival rates ranged between 2-4%, less than half of the values achieved today. Several diatom species originated from the National Center for Mariculture (Nitzchia laevis, Navicula lenzi, Amphora T3, and Navicula tennerima) and Cylindrotheca fusiformis (2083, 2084, 2085, 2086 and 2087 UTEX strains, Austin TX) were tested for heterotrophic growth. Axenic colonies were initially obtained and following intensive selection cycles and mutagenesis treatments, Amphora T3, Navicula tennerima and Cylindrotheca fusiformis (2083 UTEX strain) were capable of growing under heterotrophic conditions and to sustain highly enriched mediums. A highly efficient selection procedure as well as cost effective matrix of media components were developed and optimized. Glucose was identified as the best carbon source for all diatom strains. Doubling times ranging from 20-40 h were observed, and stable heterotroph cultures at a densities range of 103-104 were achieved. Although current growth rates are not yet sufficient for full economical fermentation, we estimate that further selections and mutagenesis treatments cycles should result in much faster growing colonies suitable for a fermentor scale-up. As rightfully pointed out by one of the reviewers, "There would be no point in assessing the optimum levels of dietary inclusions into micro-capsules, if the post-larvae cannot be induced to consume those capsules in the first place." We believe that the results of the first year of research provide a foundationfor the continuation of this research following the objectives put forth in the original proposal. Future work should concentrate on the optimization of incorporation of intact cells and cell extracts of the developed heterotrophic strains in the alginate matrix, as well as improving this delivery system by including liposomes and chemoattractants to ensure food consumption and enhanced growth.
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