00758nam0-22002891i-450 99000172122040332120190613102704.088-206-2749-3000172122FED01000172122(Aleph)000172122FED0100017212220030910d1988----km-y0itay50------baitaBonsai per interniPaul LesniewiczBolognaEdagricole1988VI, 190 p.21 cmBonsai635.977Lesniewicz,Paul74347ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK99000172122040332160 635.977 LESP 19881007FAGBCFAGBCBonsai per interni360491UNINA03970 am 2200781 n 450 9910629398803321202107092-7351-2602-110.4000/books.editionsmsh.41418(CKB)5590000001000969(FrMaCLE)OB-editionsmsh-41418(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/95058(PPN)266362842(EXLCZ)99559000000100096920221116j|||||||| ||| 0freuu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEnceintes romaines d’Aquitaine Bordeaux’ Dax’ Périgueux’ Bazas /Pierre Garmy, Louis MaurinParis Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’homme20211 online resource (197 p.)Documents d’archéologie française2-7351-0630-6 Considérés traditionnellement comme le résultat d’une invasion de la Gaule par les barbares en 275, les remparts du Bas-Empire sont étudiés ici à travers les quatre villes de Bordeaux, Dax, Périgueux, Bazas. Les spécificités de chacune tiennent a passé de l’agglomération, à son rôle au Bas-Empire, à la topographie, aux solutions diverses adoptées par les constructeurs, enfin à la date qu’on peut attribuer à l’enceinte. Cependant, dans leur conception générale, le mode de construction des murs, les détails des aménagements (implantation des tours, petit nombre des portes, absence de fossés, abondances ou rareté des remplois), ces villes fortes ne constituent pas des cas réseaux de défense constitués à des dates variables entre l’empire gaulois et la fin de la domination romaine dans le sud-ouest de la Gaule. Considered as the result of the barbarian invasions in 275 AD, four late roman town defences have been examinated here, Bordeaux, Dax, Périgueux and Bazas. The caracterstics of each one depend one depend on its past, on its role during the late roman period, on the various solutions adopted by the constructors and the date to which one can attribute the defances. However, in their general conception, the construction methods of the rampart, the details of organisation of defensive structures (positioning of towers, small number of gates, absence of ditches, abundance or rarety of reused building materials), these fortified towns do not represent individual cases but take their place within a system of defence created at different dates between the gallic empire and the end of roman domination in south-west GaulArchaeologyurbanismecadastreinvasionAntiquité tardiverempartcastrumNovempopulanieempire gauloisurbanismecadastreinvasionAntiquité tardiverempartcastrumNovempopulanieempire gauloisArchaeologyurbanismecadastreinvasionAntiquité tardiverempartcastrumNovempopulanieempire gauloisBarraud Dany1347973Garmy Pierre480072Girardy‑Caillat Claudine1347974Guy Max1320621Linères Jacques1347975Maurin Louis241876Mélendez Marie‑Christine1347976Pichonneau jean‑François1347977Watier Brigitte1347978Garmy Pierre480072Maurin Louis241876FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910629398803321Enceintes romaines d’Aquitaine3084997UNINA00793oam 2200265z- 450 991014186320332120241212215914.097814799506381479950637(CKB)2560000000337605(EXLCZ)99256000000033760520220628c2014uuuu -u- -engCloud Computing (CLOUD), 2014 IEEE 7th International Conference onIEEE9781479950645 1479950645 9781479950621 1479950629 2014 IEEE 7th International Conference on Cloud ComputingCloud Computing PROCEEDING9910141863203321Cloud Computing (CLOUD), 2014 IEEE 7th International Conference on2534995UNINA05573nam 2200709 a 450 991082912950332120230803023826.0978111845391911184539139781118453926111845392197811184539021118453905(CKB)2560000000103664(EBL)1211930(OCoLC)851315970(SSID)ssj0000889622(PQKBManifestationID)12438097(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000889622(PQKBWorkID)10876542(PQKB)11405847(OCoLC)868940046(MiAaPQ)EBC1211930(Au-PeEL)EBL1211930(CaPaEBR)ebr10719155(Perlego)1000246(EXLCZ)99256000000010366420150303d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrDiseases and disorders of mineral metabolism /editor, Clifford J. Rosen8th ed.Iowa, U.S.A. Wiley-Blackwell20131 online resource (1106 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9781118453889 1118453883 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Cover; Title page; Copyright page; Contents; Contributors; Primer Corporate Sponsors; Preface to the Eighth Edition of the Primer; About ASBMR; President's Preface; About the Companion Website; Section I: Molecular Cellular and Genetic Determinants of Bone Structure and Formation; 1: Skeletal Morphogenesis and Embryonic Development; Early Skeletal Patterning; Craniofacial patterning; Axial patterning; Limb patterning; Embryonic Cartilage and Bone Formation; Chondrocyte Proliferation and Differentiation in The Developing Cartilage; Regulation of Chondrocyte Survival; Conclusions; References2: Signal Transduction Cascades Controlling Osteoblast DifferentiationIntroduction; Runx2 and Osterix Transcription Factors; BMP Signaling; TGF-β Signaling; WNT Signaling; Hedgehog Signaling; PTH Signaling; IGF-1 Signaling; FGF Signaling; Notch Signaling; Concluding Remarks; Acknowledgments; References; 3: Osteoclast Biology and Bone Resorption; Cell Biology of The Osteoclast; Integrin Signaling; Small GTPases; Factors Regulating Osteoclast Formation And/Or Function; Proteins; Small molecules; Cell-Cell Interactions in Bone Marrow; Intracellular Signaling Pathways; Human Genetics; References4: OsteocytesIntroduction; Osteocyte Ontogeny; Osteocytes as Orchestrators of Bone (Re)Modeling; Osteocyte Cell Death and Apoptosis; Osteocyte Modification of Their Microenvironment; Mechanosensation and Transduction; Role of Gap Junctions and Hemichannels in Osteocyte Communication; The Potential Role of Osteocytes in Bone Disease; Acknowledgment; References; 5: Connective Tissue Pathways That Regulate Growth Factors; Introduction; The Fibrillinopathies; Fibrillin Microfibrils; Regulation of Growth Factors by Fibrillin Microfibrils; Molecular Mechanisms Orchestrated on a Microfibril ScaffoldSummaryAbbreviations; References; 6: The Composition of Bone; Introduction; The Composite; The mineral; Collagen; Noncollagenous Proteins; Serum-derived proteins; Proteoglycans; Glycosylated proteins; Small integrin-binding ligand, N-glycosylated protein, and other glycoproteins with cell attachment activity; Gla-containing proteins; Other Components; References; 7: Assessment of Bone Mass and Microarchitecture in Rodents; Introduction; Radiographs; Peripheral Dual-Energy X-Ray Absorptiometry; Peripheral Quantitative Computed Tomography; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Microcomputed TomographyNanocomputed TomographyImaging Considerations; Voxel size and image resolution; Segmentation; Skeletal site and volume of interest; Calibration; Other considerations; Conclusions; References; 8: Animal Models: Genetic Manipulation; Introduction; Overexpression of Target Genes; Chondrocytes; Osteoblasts; Tendon and ligament; Osteoclasts; Advantages and disadvantages of overexpression approaches; Gene Targeting; Advantages and disadvantages of gene targeting; Tissue-Specific and Inducible Knockout and Overexpression; Uncondensed mesenchyme, mesenchymal condensations, and neural crest; CartilageOsteoblastsPrimer on the Metabolic Bone Diseases and Disorders of Mineral Metabolism, 8th Edition is the comprehensive revision of the field-leading reference on bone and mineral health. The eighth edition has been fully revised by the leading researchers and clinicians in the field to provide concise coverage of the widest possible spectrum of metabolic bone diseases and disorders of mineral metabolism. Chapters look to explain basic biological factors of healthy development and disease states and make it easily translatable to clinical interventions.Primer on the Metabolic Bone DiBonesMetabolismDisordersMineral metabolismDisordersBonesMetabolismDisorders.Mineral metabolismDisorders.616.7/16Rosen Clifford J878534American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910829129503321Diseases and disorders of mineral metabolism4099958UNINA