Both Easterson and Jerimijenko's projects point to the difficulties in conventional
natural history studies of noting where «natural» habitats and behaviors end and the human world begins, if in fact they can be separated.
In one
natural history study of 55 untreated US patients with early Lyme disease associated with erythema migrans, 34 (62 %) developed objective signs of arthritis, 10 (18 %) developed arthralgias without arthritis, but 11 (20 %) remained completely well over a mean follow - up of 6 years [2].
The Pediatric Neuromuscular Clinical Research Network will launch with
a natural history study of patients suffering from spinal muscular atrophy.
Although this study began with a focus on child care, it has evolved to
a natural history study of children.
Not exact matches
Thus university theology is characteristically in search
of the very possibility
of theology as such and tends, on the one hand, rarely to advance beyond prolegomena, programmatic probings, or an apologetic
natural theology — unless it turns, on the other hand, with no little relief, to the very respectable
study of the
history of theology (as demonstrated, for instance, by the Bonhoeffer Society, the 19th Century Working Group
of the AAR, the Tillich Working Group, or even the recently founded Karl Barth Society).
To suppose that the scientific
study of nature is a
natural by - product
of a certain stage
of cultural development simply does not fit the facts
of world
history.
He clarifies his rather vague definition
of the field by contrasting biblical theology with five other modes
of study: doctrinal theology, nontheological biblical
studies,
history of religion, philosophical and
natural theology, and «the interpretation
of parts
of the Bible as distinct from the longer complexes taken as wholes.»
Many who have come to accept
history in this sense trace their conversion, first, to a breakdown
of natural structure that began with Charles Darwin, was magnified by quantum physics, and is still unfolding in the philosophies
of the sciences; and, second, to a breakdown
of cultural structure that began with Friederich Nietzsche in Europe and William James in America, was magnified by the chaos and brutality
of twentieth century politics and warfare, and is still unfolding in postmodern
studies.
The Strategy
of the Genes: A Discussion
of Some Aspects
of Theoretical Biology (London: Allen and Unwin, 1957); Hardy, Sir Alister, The Biology
of God: A Scientist's
Study of Man the Religious Animal (New York: Taplinger Publishing Company, 1976); by the same author, The Living Stream: A Restatement
of Evolution and its Relation to the Spirit
of Man (London: Collins, 1965), and The Divine Flame: An Essay Towards a
Natural History of Religion (London: Collins, 1966), Vols.
This was an effort to bring the methods and models
of the
natural sciences to bear on the
study of history.
Originally founded so that scientists and nature aficionados alike could
study and share the specimens they collected, we continue to build on our legacy
of natural history education at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum through immersive exhibits, critical conservation and research initiatives, public engagement and education programming.
More broadly, updated longitudinal
studies of the
natural history of hypertension, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease are needed, because the data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey that we used in our model are somewhat dated.
With data collected over time, the
study will increase our understanding
of the local impacts
of climate change and contribute to the
natural history of Great Lakes fish.
The
history of adoption if you
study it in depth demonstrates that the real story is all about the adopters with little or no genuine consideration for the children and their
natural parents.
Co-author, Prof Paul Barrett,
of the
Natural History Museum, says: «This
study radically redraws the dinosaur family tree, providing a new framework for unravelling the evolution
of their key features, biology and distribution through time.
If the new dates for the Spanish cave art are confirmed, they could indicate that Neandertals and H. sapiens exchanged artistic traditions earlier than previously thought, says paleoanthropologist Chris Stringer
of the
Natural History Museum in London, who was not involved in the
studies.
«The goal was to identify which soil characteristics have a greater effect on the persistent presence
of chronic wasting disease in the five counties,» says Sheena Dorak, lead author
of the
study and research associate with the Illinois
Natural History Survey.
But A. deyiremeda and its neighbors do indicate that hominins with ape - size brains had developed successful adaptations to different environments, says the
study's lead author Yohannes Haile - Selassie, a paleoanthropologist at the Cleveland Museum
of Natural History.
Sketches
of skulls successfully balance the
study of natural history.
It has now been documented in 23 species in the eastern and midwestern United States, says
study coauthor Frank Burbrink, a herpetologist at the American Museum
of Natural History in New York City.
In order to reconstruct climate
history, it is necessary to
study natural climate archives since, in terms
of Earth's
history, humankind has only very recently begun measuring the planet.
While
studying natural philosophy and
history of science at Cambridge University, he wrote science articles for the British Association.
The joint
study by researchers at the Finnish Museum
of Natural History and Uppsala University, shows that that there is some hope for pied flycatchers within the breeding range
of collared flycatcher.
«By rushing to respond to climate change at different speed, the pressure to respond to each other lessens,» explains Päivi Sirkiä, researcher at the Finnish Museum
of Natural History and co-author
of the
study at the University
of Helsinki
In the 1980s Caroline and Robert Blanchard, working together at the University
of Hawaii, carried out a pioneering
study on the
natural history of fear.
But according to a new
study from scientists at the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History (NMNH), extravagant investments in reproduction also have their costs.
«This discovery
of a previously unknown species in relatively well -
studied rocks underscores that we still have many more new species
of dinosaurs to left to find,» said co-author Dr. Mark Loewen, research associate at the
Natural History Museum
of Utah.
A team
of researchers
studied this specimen and others in the collections
of the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History to better understand the role
of sexual selection in extinction.
Funding for this
study was provided by the National Science Foundation and the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History.
The
study suggests that the two African elephants split at least 2.5 million years ago, and possibly much earlier, although Pascal Tassy at the National Museum
of Natural History in Paris, France, warns that looking at historical genetic divergence does not give the final word on separating species.
Sam Droege
of the US Geological Survey and Sean Brady
of the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History study native bee populations on the base.
The value
of this information is illustrated by the results
of a
study published May 19 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters by Oster's group, working with colleagues from the Berkeley Geochronology Center, the Smithsonian Institution National Museum
of Natural History and the University
of Cambridge titled «Northeast Indian stalagmite records Pacific decadal climate change: Implications for moisture transport and drought in India.»
A new giraffid species from Spain may extend the range and timespan
of the ancestors
of giraffes, according to a
study published November 1, 2017 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by María Ríos from the National Museum
of Natural History, Spain, and colleagues.
This fall researchers at the Georgia Museum
of Natural History at the University of Georgia will lead an effort to digitize around 2.1 million specimens from the order Lepidoptera — moths and butterflies — and to make that data available to scientists studying climate, natural habitats and agricultural
Natural History at the University
of Georgia will lead an effort to digitize around 2.1 million specimens from the order Lepidoptera — moths and butterflies — and to make that data available to scientists
studying climate,
natural habitats and agricultural
natural habitats and agricultural pests.
«It's estimated that 95 percent
of the livable space on our planet is in the ocean,» said Carole Baldwin, curator
of fishes at the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History, lead author
of the
study and director
of the Smithsonian's Deep Reef Observation Project (DROP).
Since 2011, when DROP began, more than 40 researchers, most from the National Museum
of Natural History and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), have intensively
studied deep - reef fishes and invertebrates off Curaçao.
The
study, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, was produced by a group
of scientists including The
Natural History Museum, London, the University
of Leicester and Yunnan University in China.
Therese Sallstedt and colleagues from University
of Southern Denmark, Swedish Museum
of Natural History and Stockholm University
studied fossilized sediments from India, and they found round spheres in the microbial mats.
Dr Greg Edgecombe from The
Natural History Museum in London, a co-author on the
study, says: «Evidence
of symbiotic relationships are rare in the invertebrate fossil record, and this beautiful example shows how these associations began to develop as ecosystems became more complex in the Cambrian Period.
Miller's «departure from the field will have serious ramifications for many on - going archaeological projects throughout» the Near East, where she
studies plant remains to better understand agricultural economies, wrote Melinda Zeder, director
of the archaeobiology program at the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History in Washington, D.C., in a letter sent last weekend to Richard Hodges, the museum's director.
Dr. Paul Barrett, dinosaur researcher at the
Natural History Museum, London, who was not involved with the
study, commented, «Daohugou is proving to be one
of the key sites for understanding the evolution
of feathered dinosaurs, early mammals, and flying reptiles, due largely to the fantastic levels
of preservation.
Acrotholus was identified by a team comprising
of palaeontologists Evans,
of the Royal Ontario Museum; and Ryan,
of The Cleveland Museum
of Natural History; as well as Ryan Schott, Caleb Brown, and Derek Larson, all graduate students at the University
of Toronto who
studied under Evans.
Nearly half (48 %)
of patients with severe or difficult - to - treat asthma in The Epidemiology and
Natural History of Asthma: Outcomes and Treatment Regimens follow - up
study (TENOR II) still had very poorly controlled (VPC) symptoms after more than a decade
of treatment, according to a new
study presented at the ATS 2016 International Conference.
(DeStefano and Stein shared a stage January 23 for a discussion
of urban wildlife at the Harvard Museum
of Natural History in Cambridge, Mass.) Where the wily things are At the forefront
of this research into coyote behavior is Stanley Gehrt, a wildlife biologist at The Ohio State University, who has
studied coyote populations in the Chicago area for more than a decade.
A
study released in February says early farmers and cooks were spiking their food with chilies about 6,000 years ago: «Probably the earliest spice plant found thus far in the Americas,» says Linda Perry, an archaeobiologist working with the National Museum
of Natural History in Washington, D.C. «It would have made a diet
of roots, tubers, and corn taste a little better.»
In his capacity as president
of the Batavian Society, dedicated to the
study of Java's
natural history, Raffles frequently toured the island and recorded his observations
of geological phenomena.
The
study, published today in the journal Scientific Reports and led by researchers at the American Museum
of Natural History, finds that the inner ear
of modern cheetahs is unique and likely evolved relatively recently.
Studies of fossil seabird skulls at London's
Natural History Museum have revealed that the animals» brains and sensory systems were remarkably advanced.
The
study forms part
of the GATEWAYS (www.gateways-itn.eu) project
of the European Commission's 7th Framework Programme, coordinated by Rainer Zahn, a researcher with the Institute for Environmental Science and Technology (ICTA - UAB) and the UAB's Department
of Physics, and taking part in it was Martin Ziegler, a post-doctoral researcher at the School
of Earth and Ocean Sciences
of the University
of Cardiff (UK) and scientists from the
Natural History Museum, London (UK).
The 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill did $ 17.2 billion in damage to the
natural resources in the Gulf
of Mexico, a team
of scientists recently found after a six - year
study of the impact
of the largest oil spill in U.S.
history.