Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Science - Taxonomy
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 9     161-180 of 185    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Taxonomy:     more books (100)
  1. A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, Abridged Edition by Lorin W. Anderson, David R. Krathwohl, et all 2000-12-29
  2. Microbiology with Diseases by Taxonomy (3rd Edition) by Robert W. Bauman, 2010-01-15
  3. The New Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
  4. Organising Knowledge: Taxonomies, Knowledge and Organisational Effectiveness (Chandos Knowledge Management) by Patrick Lambe, 2007-02-08
  5. Designing and Assessing Educational Objectives: Applying the New Taxonomy
  6. A Taxonomy of Barnacles: A Novel by Galt Niederhoffer, 2006-12-12
  7. Primate Taxonomy (Smithsonian Series in Comparative Evolutionary Biology) by Colin Groves, 2001-04-17
  8. Taxonomy of Educational Objectives Book 2/Affective Domain by David R. Krathwohl, Benjamin S. Bloom, et all 1999-07-19
  9. Plant Taxonomy: The Systematic Evaluation of Comparative Data by Tod F. Stuessy, 2008-12-10
  10. Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, Handbook 1: Cognitive Domain
  11. The New Taxonomy (Systematics Association Special Volumes)
  12. Virus Taxonomy: VIIIth Report of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses
  13. Taming the Taxonomy : Toward a New Understanding of Great Lakes Archaeology (Proceedings of the 1997 Ontario Archaeological Society Midwest Archaeological Conference Symposium in Toronto) by Christopher M Watts, Ronald F Williamson, 1998-06
  14. Taxonomy: Evolution at Work by M. Daniel, 2009-02-17

161. Kew Record Of Taxonomic Literature, Home
Database of references to publications on the taxonomy of flowering plants, gymnosperms, and ferns.
http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/bibliographies/KR/
You need to enable JavaScript to use this page
Search How to cite this database Register Quarterly journal details Welcome to the Kew Record of Taxonomic Literature , a database of references relevant to the taxonomy of flowering plants, gymnosperms and ferns. There is no charge for using the database and you may carry out a simple search, retrieving a limited number of references, without registering. However, it would be helpful to us if you would provide the details requested in the registration process. This information will only be used by us to monitor use of the database and to generate statistical analysis to help us improve this service: it will not be made available to third parties outside Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Registration gives access to advanced searching facilities and retrieval of a larger number of references. Thank you for your help. While every effort has been taken to ensure that the information held in the database is reliable and complete, the Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew will take no responsibility for any errors or omissions in the data or any damage, howsoever caused, arising from the use or interpretation of the data. Copies, including those made in electronic form, may be made of the data held within this database for your own use or for use within your organisation. It may also be used in the compilation of a bibliography supplemental to work of your own preparation. Please contact the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew if you wish to make use of the data beyond that described above.

162. Classification Of Living Things
Classification of Living Things aka taxonomy Classification of Living Things ANSWER PAGE. Carolus Linnaeus is the father of modern taxonomy . back.
http://www.borg.com/~lubehawk/taxonmy.htm
Classification of Living Things : aka "taxonomy" Today's classification is based mostly on similarities in structure and evolutionary relationships. Answer me this Which of these brainy scientists is to blame (responsible) for our current classification system : Charles Darwin, Robert Hooke, Carolus Linnaeus, or Rudolph Virchow ? Do you know, do you know, do you know ? The answer is ...
Now before we get to classyifying anything, we have to make sure we know some ...(can you guess ?) ......VOCABULARY !!!! See if you know these terms. If you don't, everything else is just gonna look like gobbaldy-gook.
So learn these 1st !!! WORD BANK
autotrophic
eukaryotic
heterotrophic
motile
colony multicellular
prokaryotic
sessile
unicellular 1. capable of locomotion (can move from place to place - walk, fly, swim) 2. not capable of locomotion (movement) 3. composed of more than one cell 4. composed of only one cell 5. a cell that does not have a membrane-bound nucleus 6. a cell that does have a nucleus 7. a number of individual cells that exist as a closely associating group 8. can synthesize (make) organic compounds (food) from inorganic materials

163. DELTA: DEscription Language For TAxonomy
A flexible format for encoding taxonomic descriptions for computer processing. It can be used to produce naturallanguage descriptions, keys, classifications, and information-retrieval systems.
http://www.biodiversity.uno.edu/delta/
DELTA
The DELTA format (DEscription Language for TAxonomy) is a flexible method for encoding taxonomic descriptions for computer processing. It has been adopted by the International Taxonomic Databases Working Group (TDWG) as a standard for data exchange. DELTA-format data can be used to produce natural-language descriptions, interactive or conventional keys, cladistic or phenetic classifications, and information-retrieval systems. Biodiversity and Biological Collections Server

164. Oz-TeacherNet :: Teachers Helping Teachers
You can register for free by clicking here. Revised Bloom s taxonomy. The taxonomy of areas of study. The Revised Bloom s taxonomy.
http://rite.ed.qut.edu.au/oz-teachernet/training/bloom.html
@import url("themes/OzTeachers2/style/style.css"); May 27, 2004 - 03:18 PM Projects Book Raps
Travel Buddies

oz-Webquests

Global Youth Forums
...
Quest Atlantis in Australia

Main Menu Home
User's Login Username Password Remember me
Log in Problems?

New User? Sign Up!
Who's Online We have 4 guests and members online
You are an anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here Revised Bloom's Taxonomy The Taxonomy of Educational Objectives was created by Benjamin Bloom in the 1950's as a means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking. Bloom's Taxonomy has since been adapted for classroom use as a planning tool and continues to be one of the most universally applied models across all levels of schooling and in all areas of study. The Revised Bloom's Taxonomy During the 1990's, Lorin Anderson (a former student of Benjamin Bloom) led a team of cognitive psychologists in revisiting the taxonomy with the view to examining the relevance of the taxonomy as we enter the twenty-first century. As a result of the investigation a number of significant improvements were made to the existing structure. Before turning to examples of how the newly revised Taxonomy may be applied, it would be appropriate at this point to make both the revisions and reasons for the changes explicit.Figure1 below describes both the ‘

165. Larissa's Bunny Guide- Rabbit Care, Rabbit Behavior, Rabbit Links
A guide to educate people on rabbit care. Offers information on behavior, taxonomy, photos and related links.
http://www.spacerad.com/lara/rabbit.html
The purpose of this rabbit page is to educate people about rabbit care, behavior, and companionship. Please enjoy yourself while you are here and be sure to sign my guestbook! If you have found this website to be helpful and would like to do something helpful in return, please click here Care: *UPDATED 4/11/04* If you want to learn more about caring for your furry little lagomorph, this is certainly a good place to look! If you don't find what you are looking for here, e-mail me! Behavior: If you are wondering about rabbit behavior then this is a good place to start. Litter training, bonding, etc. You might just want to check it out to see if your rabbit has been telling you something all this time! Taxonomy: *UPDATED 4/11/04* This is the Scientific Classification of Rabbits page. Here you'll learn about rabbit breeds and species plus some other lagomorphs. Check it out! Review: *UPDATED 12/23/03* This is a collection of reviews of movies with rabbits in them. If you see a rabbit movie that is not reviewed on my website, I sure would appreciate it if you would e-mail me and tell me about it. You could even do your own review! Links: *UPDATED 4/11/04* All kinds of rabbit links! I've been adding new links and clearing out dead ones! If you would like your page to be under my links section, e-mail me at

166. NEWT
query official names and official synonyms all names and all synonyms. or taxonomy ID NEWT is the taxonomy database maintained by the SwissProt group.
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/newt/
To query NEWT: Enter text: match: complete word
substring query: official names and official synonyms
all names and all synonyms or Taxonomy ID:
Archaea
Bacteria Eukaryota Viroids ... Contact
NEWT is the taxonomy database maintained by the Swiss-Prot group. It integrates taxonomy data compiled in the NCBI database and data specific to the Swiss-Prot protein knowledgebase. NEWT is updated daily. Species with protein sequences stored in the Swiss-Prot protein database are named according to Swiss-Prot nomenclature. For each species, NEWT displays the following taxonomy data: Swiss-Prot scientific name, Swiss-Prot common name and Swiss-Prot synonym, lineage, number of protein sequence entries in Swiss-Prot and TrEMBL, its computer-annotated supplement. Entries are displayed with the NiceProt interface on the ExPASy server. Links to external sites are chosen by the Swiss-Prot taxonomy team and show pictures and various scientific data of interest (taxonomy, biology, physiology,...). Due to the sheer volume of data present on the world-wide web, it is unfortunately not possible to contact each site individually. The complete list of current external sites that are linked to NEWT is available here . Should you wish to have your site linked to NEWT, or would prefer us to have the link to your site removed, please do not hesitate to

167. BRACHIOPODA
Directory of the specialists working on brachiopods, recent publications, and systematics and taxonomy of the Brachiopoda.
http://www.com.univ-mrs.fr/EuroBrachNet/
About Br@chNet BRACHIOPOD List >> How to subscribe Webmasters: Christian C. EMIG and Miguel V. PARDO All right reserved Updated 25 May 2004
previous 21 May
Site Map

NOTA : Br@chNet is not working with . Sorry! Try by site Map More information on browsers click here

168. Page Lab - Other Software
Top/Science/Biology/taxonomy/Software/Directories
http://taxonomy.zoology.gla.ac.uk/software.html
Taxonomy, Systematics, and Bioinformatics
at the University of Glasgow Home People Research Data ... Programming and other documents This is a list of some software we have found useful. A much more extensive list is provided by Joe Felsenstein.
Tree viewing
TreeView
View NEXUS and PHYLIP format tree files on Macs (68K and Power Mac) and Windows (16 and 32 bit). Unix version as well ( TreeView X
TreeExplorer
View and manipulate MEGA format trees under Windows.
Tree building
CAFCA
C ollection of A PL F unctions for C ladistic A nalysis, written by Rino Zandee . Currently Macintosh only, but Windows version coming.
MrBayes
MrBayes is a program for Bayesian inference of phylogeny using Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods. Avaialble for Mac, PC, and Unix.
PAUP*
The standard program for phylogenetic analysis (Mac OS, Windows, Unix).
PHYLIP
The most comphrehensive, all imbracing collection of phylogenetic programs, including parsimony, maximum likelihood, and distance methods, plus utility programs. Runs on anything.
Spectronet
Spectronet is a package for the analysis and visualization of complex evolutionary data that is not best represented by a bifurcating tree. Given an alignment in NEXUS format, the package works by computing a collection of weighted splits or bipartitions of the taxa and then allowing the user to interactively analyze the resulting collection using tools such as Lento-plots and median networks (Windows only).

169. Using Bloom's Taxonomy - EWP
Using Bloom s taxonomy in Assignment Design. Bloom, BS (Ed.). ( 1956). taxonomy of educational objectives, Vol.1 The cognitive domain. New York McKay.
http://www.umuc.edu/ugp/ewp/bloomtax.html
Using Bloom's Taxonomy in Assignment Design Introduction Faculty Resources

170. Bioexplorer Toolbar
Internet Explorer toolbar designed for biologists. It allows direct access to NCBI databases (PubMed, Protein, Nucleotide, and taxonomy) and from other biological Web resources, including search engines.
http://www.bioexplorer.net/toolbar/
Home Books Forum Pub Med
ExPASy
... Top : Bioexplorer Toolbar
Download
Help Support Forum Contact Us The Bioexplorer Toolbar is the fastest and easiest way to get the information you want from NCBI databases (PubMed, Protein, Nucleotide, and Taxonomy) and from other biological Web resources. It also allows you to search Google, Britannica and Amazon books directory and contains links for fast redirection to literature databases, companies websites, BLAST, ClustalW et.c. All previous searches (up to 20) are stored in the history box. You can clear the history box from the Bioexplorer Toolbar main menu by clicking "Clear Search History" option. The Bioexplorer Toolbar is free to download and appears every time you open a new Internet Explorer window.
The minimum system requirements for running the Bioexplorer Toolbar are:
  • Microsoft Windows 95 Microsoft Internet Explorer, version 5.0 or later.
If your system meets these requirements, click here to download the Bioexplorer Toolbar setup file. After downloading, run the setup file and follow all instructions. Download count: 799 Help Support Forum Contact Us
You can also download the Russian version of the toolbar. It has additional features: search in Rambler and Yandex, links to MolBiol.ru, Bioscience.ru, Rambler dictionary and other web resources.

171. Search GAMS
Search Netlib Repository (standard interface). Netlib Repository (advanced interface). GAMS Problem taxonomy. Numerical Analysis Digest. Scientific Conferences.
http://www.netlib.org/misc/gams.html
Search : Netlib Repository (standard interface) Netlib Repository (advanced interface) GAMS Problem Taxonomy Numerical Analysis Digest Scientific Conferences The Guide to Available Mathematical Software (GAMS) is a cross-index and virtual repository of mathematical and statistical software components of use in computational science and engineering. To see what software that Netlib has available in a certain GAMS category, click the corresponding entry in the list below. Also see the GAMS server at NIST A Arithmetic, error analysis Integer ... Other

172. PaleoBytes
Introduction to the brachiopods, with information about taxonomy, morphology, and ecology.
http://members.cts.com/crash/b/brucem/
Paleobytes
Brachiopods
Introduction A brief introduction to the phylum. Subphylum Linguiliformea Brachiopods with organophosphatic inarticulated shells. Subphylum Craniiformea Brachiopods with calcitic inarticulated shells. Subphylum Rhynchonelliformea Brachiopods with calcitic shells that are typically articulated. The subphylum contains all the members of the obsolete class Articulata. Brachiopod Anatomy and Morphology Links
Recommended reading:
Living and Fossil Brachiopods , M. J. S. Rudwick, Hutchinson University Library, 1970 This is a great book. Very few serious biology books read as smoothly as this great introduction to the phylum. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology This was it, the definitive work on brachiopods. Not light reading, but comprehensive. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology (H) volumes 1 Revised, edited by Roger L. Kaesler, The University of Kansas Press, 1997 Three more volumes to follow. This is it. . The Fossil Book This classic for the amateur is again available in bookstores. My favorite popular guide to paleontology.
Coming Soon:
Fixes and updates.

173. Elsevier Science And Technology Books: Academic Press Catalog
Welcome to Academic Press Catalog. Academic Press is now part of Elsevier. Before we direct you to the page you requested, we need to know where you are.
http://www.apnet.com/virustaxonomy/
Welcome to Academic Press Catalog Academic Press is now part of Elsevier Before we direct you to the page you requested, we need to know where you are. Enter here if you are: in North America outside North America www.elsevier.com

174. Phylogenetic Analysis
Top/Science/Biology/taxonomy/Software/Directories
http://www.hgmp.mrc.ac.uk/GenomeWeb/phylogenetic-anal.html
Welcome to the GenomeWeb
Phylogenetic Analysis
Search for
This provides utilities for phylogenetic analysis Phylodendron - an application for phylogenetic tree drawing
LVB - Reconstructing evolution with parsimony and simulated annealing

TreeBASE - A Database of Phylogenetic Knowledge

Neighbor TreeMaker
...
TreeTop - Phylogenetic Tree Prediction
Other
The Genetic Software Forum
Detailed information on the above options
Phylodendron - an application for phylogenetic tree drawing
Phylodendron is an application for drawing phylogenetic trees, used in evolutionary biology. It will read tree data in New Hampshire (Newick) format, then display graphical views of the phylogenetic tree. Various options allow you to modify, adorn and edit the tree. Standard application functions to save, print, edit and manage preferences are included. This program will not estimate nor produce the tree data. For that, software such as Phylip, Clustal W, and others may be used. Phylodendron is written as a Java application. This means that it will run on most personal computers and workstations as a standard program. This application is an enhancement of the Mac Hypercard program "Tree Draw Deck" released by the author in 1990. LVB - Reconstructing evolution with parsimony and simulated annealing
LVB is intended for use where there is a very large amount of information (e.g., hundreds of aligned DNA sequences). The program was written to investigate use of the heuristic known as simulated annealing in the search for parsimonious phylogenetic trees.

175. Educational Technology: Media For Inquiry, Communication, Construction, And Expr
This taxonomy is compared to previous taxonomies of educational technologies, and is found to cover a wider range of uses, including many of the cuttingedge
http://www.lis.uiuc.edu/~chip/pubs/taxonomy/
Educational Technology:
Media for
Inquiry, Communication, Construction, and Expression
Bertram C. Bruce
James A. Levin

College of Education

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Champaign, IL 61820
Published in the Journal of Educational Computing Research Vol. 17(1), pp. 79-102.
Abstract
We describe a new way of classifying uses of educational technologies, based on a four-part division suggested years ago by John Dewey: inquiry, communication, construction, and expression. This taxonomy is compared to previous taxonomies of educational technologies, and is found to cover a wider range of uses, including many of the cutting-edge uses of educational technologies. We have tested the utility of this taxonomy by using it to classify a set of "advanced applications" of educational technologies supported by the National Science Foundation, and we use the taxonomy to point to new potential uses of technologies to support learning.
Introduction
Discussions in the field of educational technology concern a host of issues, including pedagogical theory, choice of hardware or software, methods of use, and evaluation of effectiveness. But in many cases these debates leave unexamined some fundamental assumptions about what counts as educational technology, or how we might think about innovative applications. Experts often disagree about what constitutes the objects of their study but avoid addressing their disagreements directly. It is no surprise that discourse in the field appears disjointed and inconclusive.

176. NMNH Department Of Systematic Biology, Division Of Mammals - Mammal Species Of T
A database of mammalian taxonomy providing an online reference for identifying or verifying recognized scientific names and for taxonomic research.
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/msw/
Division of Mammals
Mammal Species of the World (MSW)
The Mammal Species of the World (MSW) contains the names of the 4,629 currently recognized species of mammals, in a taxonomic hierarchy that includes Order, Family, Subfamily, and Genus. The information was taken from: Wilson, D. E., and D. M. Reeder (eds). 1993. Mammal Species of the World. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1206 pp. (Available from Smithsonian Institution Press, 1-800-782-4612 or 703-435-7809.) The list was compiled by an international team of contributors . It can be used as an on-line reference, or adapted as an authority file for collections management activities of mammal collections. The list was compiled under the auspices of the American Society of Mammalogists. The data in this checklist of mammal species of the world are being presented for non-commercial, personal, and collections management use only. Copying or redistributing these data in any manner for personal or corporate gain is not permitted. MAMMALIA's place in the Tree of Life NMNH Division of Mammals Vertebrate Zoology Department of Systematic Biology ...
NMNH Home

177. The Brachiopoda
Introduction to the morphology and taxonomy of the Brachiopoda with detailed sections on each major group.
http://www.palaeos.com/Invertebrates/Brachiopods/brachiopoda.htm
Palæos: Brachiopoda INVERTEBRATES Brachiopoda
Home
Palaeont-
ology
Evolution ...
Page Back
Page Up Unit Home Metazoa Page Next Page Down Parent Cladogram Invertebrates
The Brachiopoda
The Brachiopod Shell
Anatomy

Ecology

Evolutionary History
...
Links
Brachiopods are marine shelled invertebrates that look superficially very much like clams. They are actually quite different from clams in their anatomy, and they are not closely related to mollusks at all. In fact they belong to a (possibly polyphyletic ) group known as the Lophophorata , because they feed by using a fringe of tentacles known as the lophophore . These tentacles sweep microscopic food particles in the water into the creature's mouth. Most species of brachiopods are attached to the substrate by a muscular stalk, known as the pedicle . There is however still a free-floating larval stage. Sixteen hundred genera and many more species of Brachiopoda are known altogether, the vast majority being fossil (extinct) forms.
The Brachiopod Shell
Brachiopods superficially resemble bivalve mollusks in that the animal secretes a bivalved (two-part) shell of calcium carbonate or a combination of calcium phosphate and chitinous organic substance. However, Bivalve mollusks generally have shells that are equal in size and shape (although mirror images of each other), whereas the two shells of brachiopods are of unequal size (the technical term is inequalvalved ). The

178. TreeMap
Experimental program for comparing host and parasite trees.
http://taxonomy.zoology.gla.ac.uk/rod/treemap.html
TreeMap
TreeMap is an experimental program for comparing host and parasite trees. It is available for both Windows and Apple Macs. by Michael Charleston and Roderic Page is available for Mac OS. Response to Ashley Dowling's critique of TreeMap in Cladistics TreeMap versus BPA (again): A response to Dowling. Roderic D. M. Page and Michael A Charleston . Technical Reports in Taxonomy 02-02.
Warning: TreeMap 1.0 has bugs in the randomisation test!
4 July 2000 There are two bugs in the randomisation routine in TreeMap, which have surfaced as a result of papers presented at the recent Glasgow meeting on host-parasite cospeciation in August 1999, and a workshop I gave at Sydney in June 2000. Because much of the tree and interface code libraries used by TreeMap are shared with other programs (such as TreeView ) and have changed dramatically in the five years since TreeMap was written, it has been difficult to create a stop-gap release with these bugs fixed. A new version of TreeMap is currently being developed, which will fix the randomisation bugs. This version uses a completely different (and better) algorithm for reconstructing the history of host-parasite assemblages ("jungles"). Until TreeMap 2 is released, please interpret the results of TreeMap 1.0 statistical tests with great caution.

179. History Of The Guinea Pig (Cavy, Cuy, Cavia Porcellus)
A summary of scientific knowledge, including taxonomy, history of domestication, and traditional husbandry practices in the Andean region of South America.
http://cavyhistory.tripod.com/
var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
Viewing this page requires a browser capable of displaying frames.

180. A Checklist Of The Ants Of Michigan
The taxonomy of the 113 ant species recorded in Michigan, with an introduction describing the history of Michigan myrmecology.
http://insects.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/fauna/MICHANTS.html
CHECKLIST OF THE ANTS OF MICHIGAN
(HYMENOPTERA: FORMICIDAE) George C. Wheeler[1], Jeanette N. Wheeler[2], and Paul B. Kannowski[3]
[1]Deceased.,[2]Research Associates, Florida State Collection of Arthropods. Address: 3338 NE 58th Avenue, Silver Springs, FL 34488-9464.
[3]Adjunct Curator of Insects, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan. Address: Department of Biology, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND 58202-9019. (NOTE: This document has been slightly modified for the WWW from its original appearance in Vol.26, No. 1 of the Great Lakes Entomologist , pp. 297-310, 1994.)
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION RESULTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ... FORMICINAE ABSTRACT A total of 113 species of ants is recorded by county from the state of Michigan. The list is based upon literature records and specimens in the authors' collections and those of the University of Michigan Museum of Zoology and the Michigan State University Department of Entomology. The list includes 3 species in Ponerinae, 44 in Myrmicinae, 6 in Dolichoderinae, and 60 in Formicinae. Ten species represent new state records. Five distribution patterns are evident: statewide (39 species), southern counties only (5), southern 3/4th of Lower Peninsula (10), Lower Peninsula (17), and Upper Peninsula (2). Forty species have been collected too infrequently to determine the distribution within the state.
INTRODUCTION The earliest record of ants collected in Michigan is W. M. Wheeler's (1905) description of

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 9     161-180 of 185    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

free hit counter