(1) The latter, when reflux is present, behave as ostial valves, playing the role of an anti-reflux system as well as favourizing preferential hemodynamic circuits which explain certain varicose cartographic patterns.
(2) Also cartographically were determined 3 Escherichia infection morbidity zones in children under 1 year of age.
(3) We want to put it back on the map.” Significantly, reproductions of Stanford’s General Map of the World (published 1920) reveal Middlesbrough to be one of only a handful of British towns and cities deemed worthy of naming by the cartographer.
(4) If all of Palestine is marked by furrows and folds, realities that overlap but almost never intermingle, Hebron is a cartographic collapse, a mapmaker’s breakdown.
(5) Developmental and cartographic theories provide a compelling reason to reexamine the early and easy view and suggest the need for alternative conceptual and empirical approaches.
(6) A complicated history of 19th- and 20th-century western cartographic invention, calculated poverty and frustration has fuelled flames of real hatred.
(7) Cartographic plotting and correlation analyses of 23 individual or combined regions of Newfoundland with respect to M, F or M + F mortality rates showed a close similarity between high risk areas and large seabird aggregations which were in the southeast region of the island.
(8) A cartographic study of the laryngeal nerves confirmed the structure of this innervation.
(9) Cartographers, surveyors and engineers, using specially designed cameras, have applied geometrical techniques to locate points on an object precisely.
(10) William Petty, physician, epidemiologist, political economist, demographer, cartographer, and administrator was an intellectual product of the seventeenth century.
(11) Statistical analysis of gene geographical maps is based on 3975 nodes of regular cartographic net for the USSR territory.
(12) The levels of mammary gland development was assessed with regard to their mass, the percentage of fibrous tissue and with regard to mathematically processed cartographic data on sectional histo-topography.
(13) Explorers, cartographers and geographical pioneers from Mercator to Palin are presumably humdrum intellectual backmarkers and the study of authors such as Dickens or Eliot, Günter Grass or Alain-Fournier a form of spiritual imprisonment?"
(14) Diakubama's efforts have been replicated across Africa by scores of amateur mapmakers who have collectively pinpointed hundreds of thousands of roads, cities and buildings in remote areas ignored by colonial cartographers.
(15) The cartographic representation was based on demographic maps which display the area of each country in proportion to its population size.
(16) The correlation between cartographic and vectorcardiographic parameters was, on the contrary, only slightly expressed in moderate RVH and high in marked RVH cases.
(17) Two-dimensional image coordinates are obtained by means of a highly accurate cartographic instrument.
(18) The cartographic analyses revealed important characteristics of the utilization pattern, which would not have been possible to ascertain using traditional methods such as analyses based on administrative areas.
(19) The competing claims are mired in historical ambiguity, and complicated by several name changes and cartographical evidence from myriad Korean, Japanese and western sources stretching back centuries.
(20) The cartographic representation of standardised mortality ratios shows that the incidence of lung cancer mortality in Cape Town is appreciably higher in men than women, and in coloured people than in white people.
Mapmaker
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) If all of Palestine is marked by furrows and folds, realities that overlap but almost never intermingle, Hebron is a cartographic collapse, a mapmaker’s breakdown.
(2) With new results suggesting that even more GTP-binding proteins and coatamers might be involved in transport and targeting, it is clear that the age of mapmaking in polarization research is nearly over.
(3) Traditionally, the interests reflected in maps have been those of states and their armies, because they were the ones who did the mapmaking, and the primary use of many such maps was military.
(4) Diakubama's efforts have been replicated across Africa by scores of amateur mapmakers who have collectively pinpointed hundreds of thousands of roads, cities and buildings in remote areas ignored by colonial cartographers.
(5) The computer software Mapmaker was used to determine the linkage relationships and linear order of segregating markers.
(6) MAPMAKER has been applied to the construction of linkage maps in a number of organisms, including the human and several plants, and we outline the mapping strategies that have been used.
(7) The work is co-ordinated by the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team (HOT), a volunteer group which lets disaster relief workers set tasks for mapmakers at home.
(8) "I honestly think we're seeing a more profound change, for mapmaking, than the switch from manuscript to print in the Renaissance," says the University of London cartographic historian Jerry Brotton.
(9) Under these conditions, use of a computer program such as linkage or mapmaker entails no gain but substantial loss (measured as map distortion, wasted data, concealed evidence, redundant calculation and exaggerated multiple recombination) by comparison with maps based on lod scores.
(10) MAPMAKER also includes an interactive command language that makes it easy for a geneticist to explore linkage data.
(11) "Mapmaking has helped them to assert their claims to the land by identifying exactly the areas they have lived since time immemorial," says the head of the Tebtebba foundation, Vicky Tauli-Corpuz.
(12) We describe here a computer package, called MAPMAKER, designed specifically for this purpose.
(13) The question cartographers are always being asked at cocktail parties, says Heyman, is whether there's really any mapmaking still left to do: we've mapped the whole planet already, haven't we?
(14) "Community mapmaking has been a successful tool to show the government that we are here, and that we want to protect our lands," says Rukka Sombolinggi, a spokeswoman for the Indigenous Peoples' Alliance of the Archipelago (Aman), a Jakarta-based secretariat representing more than 2,000 communities.
(15) Linkage analysis was performed on 40 CEPH families using the computer program packages LINKAGE, CRI-MAP, and MAPMAKER.
(16) Linkage maps were constructed separately using the computer programs LINKAGE and MAPMAKER to determine their relative speed, efficiency, and accuracy.