7,896 research outputs found
Trackways in the Stormberg
Main articleVertebrate trackways in the lower groups of the
Karoo Supergroup are mainly pre- Beaufort fish
trails, although some tetrapod trackways are known
(Griffiths, 1963, p. 292; plate I; specimens in the
South African Museum). Recently fish trails have
been discovered in the Beaufort, for instance at Kilburn
and Wagondrift, but the Beaufort, despite its
rich amphibian, reptilian and synapsid fauna, is remarkable
for the paucity of its vertebrate trackways.
Of the Stormberg (of Lesotho) it was early noted
"Fossils are comparatively rare, but reptile tracks
are fairly abundant"Non
African fossil Lissamphibia
Main articleThe Anura (Frogs and Toads) are represented in Africa and associated regions by fossils of
every epoch from the Cretaceous to the Holocene. Pipid frogs of African affinity are known from
the Early Cretaceous of Israel and Later Cretaceous of South America and Africa; those of Israel
and South America have been well-studied, but only one from Africa has been: Eoxenopoides
reuningi from Namaqualand. Two well-studied Palaeocene frogs of South America, Shelania
pascuali and Xenopus romeri, have affinities with the African pipids. Apart from a Miocene
assemblage from North Africa (including pipids, which are now exclusively sub-Saharan) and one
species from Namibia, Xenopus stromeri, the fossil African anurans remain largely unstudied.
Deposits in which the African anuran fossils occur represent crater lakes, other lacustrine deposits,
including lacustrine tuffs, river terraces, deltas, estuarine/lagoon zones, karst landscapes and
archaeological sites; data are not available for several of the recorded fossils. No fossils in Africa
appear to have been definitely ascribed to the Urodela or Caecilia.Non
Insect faunas of South Africa from the upper permian and the Permian/Triassic boundary
Main articleThose sites in South Africa where more than one insect fossil specimen has been found have been
interpreted as younger than Middle Triassic or as Late Permian. One site which has yielded a number
of specimens and is apparently near the Permian/Triassic boundary is a quarry in the town of Bulwer
KwaZulu-Natai. There are six sites with more than one insect specimen which are stratigraphically lower
than Bulwer, namely Escourt (a new site), Far End, Mooi River (National Road), Mount West,
Balgowan and Lidgetton. According to the 1984 1: 1 000 000 Geological Map of South em Africa Bulwer
is situated in the Tarkastad Subgroup of the Beaufort Group near its lower boundary; the Tarkastad has
been considered as Triassic. The remaining sites, except Balgowan and Lidgetton, fall in the Estcourt
Formation of the Beaufort Group, as do all the sites with single Late Permian specimens except for one
similarly aged specimen from the more easterly Emakwezeni Formation. The stratigraphically lowest
sites are Lidgetton and slightly younger Balgowan; both are mapped as VoIksrust Formation of the Ecca
Group. An analysis is made of vertical distribution of taxa, with those of Lidgetton and Balgowan
grouped together as a lower unit, of Bulwer as upper unit, and of the Estcourt Formation sites and
Emakwezini site as a middle unit. No obvious break between the three units has been noted.Non
Cooperating if one’s Goals are Collective-Based: Social Identification Effects in Social Dilemmas as a Function of Goal-Transformation
Prior studies of the effect of group identification on cooperation in social dilemmas have advanced two competing accounts of this effect, the goal-transformation hypothesis, which holds that identification implies a sense of collective self, which makes personal and collective goals interchangeable, and the goal-amplification hypothesis, which states that identification induces positive expectations about others’ cooperative behavior. These prior studies have, however, neglected to assess the process measures necessary to pit the one account against the other. Following prior research, the present study showed that the effect of identification was moderated by participants’ social value orientation (i.e., individual differences in evaluating the importance of outcomes for self and other) in such a way that identification influenced proselfs’ cooperation more than prosocials’ cooperation. This suggests that the consequence of group identification is that collective goals become personal goals. Extending earlier recent research, mediational analyses showed that the effect of our identification manipulation was mediated by participants’ sense of collective self and not by their expectations. Taken together, these results provide strong support in favor of the goal-transformation hypothesis.Goal-amplification hypothesis;Goal-transformation hypothesis
The social cognition of medical knowledge, with special reference to childhood epilepsy
This paper arose out of an engagement in medical communication courses at a Gulf university. It deploys a theoretical framework derived from a (critical) sociocognitive approach to discourse analysis in order to investigate three aspects of medical discourse relating to childhood epilepsy: the cognitive processes that are entailed in relating different types of medical knowledge to their communicative context; the types of medical knowledge that are constituted in the three different text types analysed; and the relationship between these different types of medical knowledge and the discursive features of each text type. The paper argues that there is a cognitive dimension to the human experience of understanding and talking about one specialized from of medical knowledge. It recommends that texts be studied in medical communication courses not just in terms of their discrete formal features but also critically, in terms of the knowledge which they produce, transmit and reproduce
Гуманізуючий потенціал дистанційного навчання у контексті демократизації мовної освіти
У статті розглядається питання гуманізації мовної освіти за допомогою дистанційного навчання. Зроблено
висновок про те, що слід активно використовувати сучасні інформаційні технології для гуманізації і
демократизації сфери освіти.В статье рассмотрен вопрос гуманизации языкового образования с помощью дистанционного обучения.
Сделан вывод о том, что следует активно использовать современные информационные технологии для
гуманизации и демократизации сферы образования.The question of humanization of language education through distant teaching is considered. It is concluded that
modern information technologies should be actively used for humanization and democratization of the educational
sphere
Permian trace fossils attributed to tetrapods (Tierberg Formation, Karoo Basin, South Africa)
The discovery of a paving slab with a number of prints suggestive of footprints of tetrapods led to a reinvestigation of a trace fossil, known from three localities, of which only two photographs had been published, each with only four prints. The slab was traced to a previously unrecorded site, De Puts, near Calvinia, located in the Tierberg Formation of the Ecca Group of the Karoo Supergroup. The prints from all the sites are referred to Broomichnium permianum Kuhn 1958, of which Quadrispinichna parvia of Anderson 1974 is a synonym.Palaeo-Anthropology Scientific Trust; French Embassy in South Africa; Co-operation and Cultural Servic
Cooperating if one’s Goals are Collective-Based: Social Identification Effects in Social Dilemmas as a Function of Goal-Transformation
Prior studies of the effect of group identification on cooperation in social dilemmas have advanced two competing accounts of this effect, the goal-transformation hypothesis, which holds that identification implies a sense of collective self, which makes personal and collective goals interchangeable, and the goal-amplification hypothesis, which states that identification induces positive expectations about others’ cooperative behavior. These prior studies have, however, neglected to assess the process measures necessary to pit the one account against the other. Following prior research, the present study showed that the effect of identification was moderated by participants’ social value orientation (i.e., individual differences in evaluating the importance of outcomes for self and other) in such a way that identification influenced proselfs’ cooperation more than prosocials’ cooperation. This suggests that the consequence of group identification is that collective goals become personal goals. Extending earlier recent research, mediational analyses showed that the effect of our identification manipulation was mediated by participants’ sense of collective self and not by their expectations. Taken together, these results provide strong support in favor of the goal-transformation hypothesis
Consistent treatment of hydrophobicity in protein lattice models accounts for cold denaturation
The hydrophobic effect stabilizes the native structure of proteins by
minimizing the unfavourable interactions between hydrophobic residues and water
through the formation of a hydrophobic core. Here we include the entropic and
enthalpic contributions of the hydrophobic effect explicitly in an implicit
solvent model. This allows us to capture two important effects: a length-scale
dependence and a temperature dependence for the solvation of a hydrophobic
particle. This consistent treatment of the hydrophobic effect explains cold
denaturation and heat capacity measurements of solvated proteins.Comment: Added and corrected references for design procedure in main text (p.
2) and in Supplemental Information (p. 8
- …
