Kugler J, Chaplain RA (1974) Origin of impulse initiation in the slowly adapting stretch receptor of the crayfish. Pflfigers Arch 351 :339-350Kugler, J., Chaplain, R. A.: Origin of impulse initiation in the slowly adapting stretch receptor of the crayfish. Pflügers Arch. 351 , 339–350...
79. Doolittle WF: The practice of classification and the theory of evolution, and what the demise of Charles Darwin's tree of life hypothesis means for both of them. Philos Trans R Soc B 2009, 364:2221-2228. 80. Dawkins R: A Devil's Chaplain NY: Mariner; 2003. 81. Eldredge N: ...
and French surname that is derived from the Old French wordhardimeaning “bold” or “courageous” or sometimes “foolhardy.” It probably emerged initially as a nickname for someone exhibiting those traits. Hardy and Hardie are the two main spellings of the name. Hardie is the Scottish ...
Quirkes were in Tipperary at the time of the Cromwellian invasion. There were records of Quirkes fighting in the Ormond army in 1649 and also in the Irish army of the 1670’s. The Dominican father Thomas O’Quirke was a priest who was chaplain to the Confederation of Kilkenny at this t...
England.The first record of a notable Fletcher family in England was in Bishop Stortford, Hertfordshire where the clergyman Richard Fletcher lost his job in 1554 because he had married. A later Richard was chaplain to Queen Elizabeth. One of his sons was the Jacobean playwright John Fletcher an...
Origin and movement of groundwater and major ions in a thick deposit of Chaplain Sea clay near Montreal. Canadian Geotechnical Journal 26: 80-89.Desaulniers D.E., Cherry, J.A.: Origin and movement of groundwater and major ions in a thick deposit of Champlain Sea clay near Montreal. Can...
Ireland.The Rev. Jonas Wheeler, born in 1543, served as chaplain to Queen Elizabeth and was appointed Dean of Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin in 1594. He died in Ireland in his 97th year in 1640. Our line from him in county Kildare were mainly medical men, two of whom attained the ...
The surname Hirsch derives from the Old German word hirsch meaning “deer” and described either someone who was a game hunter or who was a keeper of deer. It began as a first name, first recorded in 1170, and had become a surname by the 14th century. Hirsch can also be Jewish. ...