01393nam a2200277 i 450099100098918970753620040322124339.0001124s1608 de ||| | lat b1270071x-39ule_instocm00000006ExLDip.to Filologia Ling. e Lett.itaGiffen, Hubert :van<1534-1604>483380Oberti Giphanii ... Commentarij in politicorum opus Aristotelis :post sat bene longam suppressionem, iam, boni publici gratia, primum in lucem editi ... :cum indice rerum, verborum et sententiarum locupletissimoFrancofurti :impensis Lazari Zetzneri bibliopolae,1608Francoforte :Zetzner, Lazarus,1608[16], 952, [48] p. ;8⁰ (17 cm)Segnatura: *8 A-Z8 Aa-Zz8 Aaa-Qqq8 Rrr4 (Rrr4 bianca)Capilettera, testate, car. rom., cors. e gr.SBN-ICCU 002356.b1270071x02-04-1423-03-04991000989189707536LE008 TS VI A 87 (rari)Esemplare parzialmente digitalizzato1LE008-0894le008-E0.00-no 00000.i1321749523-03-04000:001:JPEG:b1270071:003015:0:0:0:0:0:0Frontespizio (c. *1r)yOberti Giphanii ... Commentarij in politicorum opus Aristotelis269506UNISALENTOle00823-03-04ma olatde 0104905nam 2200709 a 450 991096027480332120200520144314.097866132787919780309215657030921565X9781283278799128327879097803092156330309215633(CKB)2550000000053564(EBL)3564233(SSID)ssj0000534185(PQKBManifestationID)11343003(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000534185(PQKBWorkID)10493982(PQKB)11203466(MiAaPQ)EBC3564233(Au-PeEL)EBL3564233(CaPaEBR)ebr10500212(CaONFJC)MIL327879(OCoLC)748291887(Perlego)4738280(EXLCZ)99255000000005356420111104d2011 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrAssessing the relationship between propagule pressure and invasion risk in ballast water /National Research Council of the National Academies1st ed.Washington, D.C. National Academies Press20111 online resource (156 p.)"Committee on Assessing Numeric Limits for Living Organisms in Ballast Water, Water Science and Technology Board, Division on Earth and Life Studies."9780309215626 0309215625 Includes bibliographical references.""Front matter""; ""Preface""; ""Contents""; ""Summary""; ""1 Setting the Invasive Species Management Stage""; ""2 Policy Context for Regulating Live Organisms in Ballast Discharge""; ""3 Sources of Variation Influencing the Probability of Invasion and Establishment""; ""4 Relationship between Propagule Pressureand Establishment Risk""; ""5 Other Approaches to Setting a Ballast Water Discharge Standard""; ""6 The Path Forward""; ""Glossary""; ""Appendix A Committee Biographical Information"""The human-mediated introduction of species to regions of the world they could never reach by natural means has had great impacts on the environment, the economy, and society. In the ocean, these invasions have long been mediated by the uptake and subsequent release of ballast water in ocean-going vessels. Increasing world trade and a concomitantly growing global shipping fleet composed of larger and faster vessels, combined with a series of prominent ballast-mediated invasions over the past two decades, have prompted active national and international interest in ballast water management. Assessing the relationship between propagule pressure and invasion risk in ballast water informs the regulation of ballast water by helping the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) better understand the relationship between the concentration of living organisms in ballast water discharges and the probability of nonindigenous organisms successfully establishing populations in U.S. waters. The report evaluates the risk-release relationship in the context of differing environmental and ecological conditions, including estuarine and freshwater systems as well as the waters of the three-mile territorial sea. It recommends how various approaches can be used by regulatory agencies to best inform risk management decisions on the allowable concentrations of living organisms in discharged ballast water in order to safeguard against the establishment of new aquatic nonindigenous species, and to protect and preserve existing indigenous populations of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and other beneficial uses of the nation's waters. Assessing the relationship between propagule pressure and invasion risk in ballast water provides valuable information that can be used by federal agencies, such as the EPA, policy makers, environmental scientists, and researchers."--Publisher's description.Ballast waterResearchBallast waterEnvironmental aspectsUnited StatesIntroduced organismsEnvironmental aspectsUnited StatesMarine biological invasionsBallast waterResearch.Ballast waterEnvironmental aspectsIntroduced organismsEnvironmental aspectsMarine biological invasions.578.62National Research Council (U.S.).Committee on Assessing Numeric Limits for Living Organisms in Ballast Water.National Research Council (U.S.).Water Science and Technology Board.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910960274803321Assessing the relationship between propagule pressure and invasion risk in ballast water4365155UNINA05138nam 2200781Ia 450 991097428910332120251116233810.097866108451321-280-84513-90-19-534637-8(PPN)278818951(CKB)2560000000296475(EBL)3052811(OCoLC)319064136(SSID)ssj0000089884(PQKBManifestationID)11113392(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000089884(PQKBWorkID)10092779(PQKB)11598392(StDuBDS)EDZ0000073214(MiAaPQ)EBC3052811(Au-PeEL)EBL3052811(CaPaEBR)ebr10273270(CaONFJC)MIL84513(MiAaPQ)EBC7038826(OCoLC)43903608(FINmELB)ELB166168(Au-PeEL)EBL7038826(OCoLC)1148168029(EXLCZ)99256000000029647520000413d2001 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtccrTonal pitch space /Fred Lerdahl1st ed.Oxford Oxford University Pressc20011 online resource (430 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-19-517829-7 0-19-987037-3 Includes bibliographical references (p. 393-404) and index.Contents; 1 THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS; Overview of GTTM; Goals; Idealizations; The rule system; A representative analysis; Rhythmic structure; Time-span reduction; Principles of prolongational reduction; Constructing a prolongational analysis; Observations and comparisons; Issues in prolongational theory; Prolongational good form; On strict branching; Toward an enrichment of the grouping component; Abstractions and transformations of surface events; 2 DIATONIC SPACE; The concept of pitch space; Tonal and event hierarchies; Previous approaches; The basic space; The pitch-class levelPitch-class and pitch proximity Reflections on steps; Linear completion; The chordal level; Chord proximity within a region; Chordal space and harmonic progression; The regional level; Chord proximity across regions; Regional space; Remarks on Schoenberg space; Combined geometrical representations; The principle of the shortest path; Empirical issues; Issues of quantification; Evidence and explanation; 3 PATHS IN PITCH SPACE; Prolongational paths; The concept of pitch-space paths; Paths in regional space; Paths in chordal/regional space; Paths in scale-degree space; Pc/chordal pathsRegional prolongations Parallel mixture; Collapsing regional space; Two applications; Narrative paths; Parsifal's journey to redemption; Compositional use of the Weber space; A note on semantic paths; 4 TONAL TENSION AND ATTRACTION; The harmonic tension model; Tension and pitch space; Sequential and hierarchical tension; A hierarchical tension analysis; Reformulation of the interaction principle; Melodic tension; Anchoring and asymmetry; The melodic attraction rule; Historical precedents; Attractional asymmetries; Attractions and expectations; An attractional approach to harmonyVoice-leading attractionsAttractional context; Two attractional analyses; Tension, attraction, and expression; The relationship between tension and attraction; Connections with other theories; 5 PROLONGATIONAL FUNCTIONS; Finding the tonic; General principles; Three tonic-finding analyses; Function as prolongational position; On Riemannian functionality; The function rule; Some functional analyses; Issues concerning functionality; Functions and schemas; The sentence; Galant gambits; Schematic tension; 6 CHROMATIC TONAL SPACES; Pitch space in evolution; Constructing chromatic spacesTriadic/octatonic space Triadic/hexatonic space; On the generality of the chord distance rule; Nontriadic octatonic spaces; Whole-tone and mystic spaces; Related issues; Constraints on basic spaces; Tonal attractions in chromatic spaces; Finding the preferred space; Measuring interspatial distances; A metrical analogy; Formal parallelisms; Metrical attractions; Interaction of tonal and metrical attractions; 7 PROLONGATIONS IN CHROMATIC SPACES; Analyses of triadic chromatic tonal music; Some passages in Wagner; A Debussy analysis; A note on neoclassic StravinskyPsychoacoustic factors in prolongational analysis'Tonal Pitch Space' presents a model of diatonic space that quantifies intuitions of the relative distances of pitches chords and keys.Music theoryMusical analysisMusical pitchTonalityMusic theory.Musical analysis.Musical pitch.Tonality.781.2/3Lerdahl Fred1943-1860182MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910974289103321Tonal pitch space4464767UNINA