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Lincoln Green

Forest Service, Wood Products Insect Research Unit, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 201 Lincoln Green, Starkville, MS 39759... [Pg.179]

The most important yellow dye in ancient and medieval times was weld, a flavone derivative extracted from the seeds, stems, and leaves of Reseda luteola, commonly known as dyer s rocket. Weld is resistant to atmospheric oxidation, rendering it quite lightfast and hence extremely popular and useful. In combination with the blue dye woad it was used to produce the Lincoln green made famous by Robin Hood and his merry men. Quercitron, a flavonol derivative, is much more susceptible to degradation by light and hence was not as important [23]. [Pg.9]

FIGURE 2.2 Omer Elbasheer at Southeast Community College, Lincoln, Nebraska, holds a separatory funnel containing two immiscible liquid layers. The lower layer has green food coloring added for contrast. [Pg.30]

Fig. 6 Typical PET probes (a) and representative fluorescence light-up responses toward selected metal ions in tabulated (b) and graphical form (c trace 1 = 14, trace 2 = 14-(Zn2+)2, trace DMA = 9,10-dimethylanthracene in MeCN). Color code coordinating atoms in blue, atoms which take part in the complexation and show (main, in 14) PET activity in orange, fluorophore in green. Lincoln and co-workers have demonstrated that the attachment of two dimethylamino groups through propylene spacers to the 9,10-positions of anthracene has a more than 100-fold weaker PET activity than the attachment through methylene spacers [62]. The blue N atoms in 14 are thus predominantly responsible for coordination. For symbols, see Fig. 3. Quantum yield of 14 in MeCN estimated from intensity readings published in [61] and quantum yield data of the parent compound without active PET, DMA, published in [63]. (Reprinted in part with permission from [61]. Copyright 1988 American Chemical Society)... Fig. 6 Typical PET probes (a) and representative fluorescence light-up responses toward selected metal ions in tabulated (b) and graphical form (c trace 1 = 14, trace 2 = 14-(Zn2+)2, trace DMA = 9,10-dimethylanthracene in MeCN). Color code coordinating atoms in blue, atoms which take part in the complexation and show (main, in 14) PET activity in orange, fluorophore in green. Lincoln and co-workers have demonstrated that the attachment of two dimethylamino groups through propylene spacers to the 9,10-positions of anthracene has a more than 100-fold weaker PET activity than the attachment through methylene spacers [62]. The blue N atoms in 14 are thus predominantly responsible for coordination. For symbols, see Fig. 3. Quantum yield of 14 in MeCN estimated from intensity readings published in [61] and quantum yield data of the parent compound without active PET, DMA, published in [63]. (Reprinted in part with permission from [61]. Copyright 1988 American Chemical Society)...
Peters NS, Severs NJ, Rothery SM, Lincoln C, Yacoub MH, Green CR Spatiotemporal relation between gap junctions and fascia adherens junctions during postnatal development of human ventricular myocardium. Circulation 1994 90 713-725. [Pg.133]

Johnson, H.D. 1995. Green Plans Greenprint for Sustainability. Nebraska Press, Lincoln. [Pg.405]

Allen Nevins preface to William Quentin Maxwell, Lincoln s Fifth Wheel The Political History of the United States Sanitary Commission (New York Longmans, Green, 1956), p. viii. [Pg.304]

On women s role during the war see George C. Rable, Civil Wars Women and the Crisis of Southern Nationalism (Urbana University of Illinois, 1989) and on the United States Sanitary Commission, in which women played such an important role, see William Quentin Maxwell, Lincoln s Fifth Wheel The Political History of the United States Sanitary Commission (New York Longmans, Green, 1956). [Pg.344]

Barcellos LF, Oksenberg JR, Green AJ, Bucher P, Rimmler JB, Schmidt S, Garcia ME, Lincoln RR, Pericak-Vance MA, Haines JL, Hauser SL, Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Group (2002) Genetic Basis for clinical expression in multiple sclerosis. Brain 125 150-158. [Pg.294]

Green, B.K. 1999. Horse Tradin . New York Knopf [Lincoln University of Nebraska Press, 1967]. [Pg.433]

Alio S.N., Lincoln T.M., Wilson G.L., Green F.J. Watanabe A.M., Schaffer S.W. Noninsulin-dependent diabetes-induced defects in cardiac cellular calcium regulation. Am. J. Physiol. Cell. Physiol. 260 (1991) C1165-C1171. [Pg.315]

Green, W.P. (1913). Hugh Lincoln Cooper. Scientific American 109(Nov.08) 366. P http //www.asoe.org/PPLContent.aspx id=2147487347... [Pg.198]

Amersham International pic., Lincoln Place, Green End, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire HP20 2TP, UK. [Pg.331]


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