Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2020 (5) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
Sprache
- Englisch (5) (entfernen)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- nein (5)
Schlagworte
- Badische Landesbibliothek (2)
- Baden-Württemberg (1)
- Elektronische Bibliothek (1)
- Kloster Salem (1)
- Kloster Sankt Peter im Schwarzwald (1)
- Liturgische Handschrift (1)
- Mauer 〈Rhein-Neckar-Kreis〉 (1)
- Milben (1)
- Motten 〈Familie〉 (1)
- Neozoen (1)
- Online-Ressource (1)
- Paläozoologie (1)
- Pleistozän (1)
- Sammlung (1)
- Schmetterlinge (1)
- Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe (1)
- Tastermotten (1)
Heidelberg (SW Germany) became famous for the
discovery of the lower jaw of Homo heidelbergensis
in October 1907 (Schoetensack 1908). Until the termination
of the extractions in 1962 the sand pit yielded
a rich and diverse mammalian faunal assemblage. In
2007 and the following years new preparation activities
connected to the celebrations of the centenary of
the hominid lower jaw discovery of H. heidelbergensis
produced samples of sediment (medium gravel to fine
pebble) in which at least two isolated lower cheek teeth
of macaques have been found. The finds demonstrate
the presence of Macaca sylvanus in the Mauer faunal
assemblage and represent the occurrence of a second
primate species in this Pleistocene hominid site.
Collection records for Baden-Württemberg in Germany
are provided for seven rare oribatid mite species, five
of which are so far unknown from this federal state. The
species Camisia biverrucata (C. L. Koch, 1840), Microzetorchestes
emeryi (Coggi, 1898), Neoliodes theleproctus
(Hermann, 1804), Parhypochthonius aphidinus
Berlese, 1904 and Scapheremaeus palustris (Sellnick,
1924) were discovered in sites in Mannheim. Camisia
invenusta (Michael, 1888) and Licnobelba latiflabellata
(Paoli, 1908) originate from the Königstuhl mountain
near Heidelberg. Camisia invenusta is recorded for the
first time in Germany.
The Gelechiidae of the SMNK were curated and rearranged
in a main collection: approximately 35,000
specimens of more than 800 species have been arranged
in 91 drawers. This is the result of the integration
of several separate collections as well as unsorted
specimens. With 125 primary types (holotypes and
lectotypes) and a considerable number of specimens
from poorly studied regions, the Gelechiidae collection
of the SMNK is one of the most species-rich collections
of this family worldwide. The material from the collection
is frequently used in recent taxonomic revisions
of Gelechiidae. The history of the collection is briefly
discussed.
At the Badische Landesbibliothek Karlsruhe (BLB) we offer a variety of e-resources
with different access requirements. On the one hand, there is free access to open
access material, no matter where you are. On the other hand, there are e-resources
that you can only access when you are in the rooms of the BLB. We also offer eresources
that you can access from anywhere, but you must have a library account
for authentication to gain access. To test the functionality of these access methods,
we have created a project to automatically test the entire process from searching our
catalogue, selecting a hit, logging in to the provider’s site and checking the results.
For this we use the End 2 End Testing Framework CodeceptJS.
Flirting with the forbidden?
(2020)
In an oft-quoted section of his Apology, written in 1125 at the request of his friend William of St Thierry, Bernard of Clairvaux mounts a strenous attack on Cluniae excesses in food, clothing, and buildings, ridiculing his rival order's large churches and their sumptuous paintings that catch the worshipper's eye and, as Bernard laments, dry up his devotion. Fiant haec ad honorem Dei - 'You might say', Bernard concedes, if only as a rhetorical gesture, 'these things are all to the honour of God; nevertheless, just as the pagan poet Persius inquired of his fellow pagans, I as a monk ask my fellow monks: "Tell me, oh pontiffs (as he said), what is gold doing in the sanctuary?" I say (folowwing the meaning, not the meter): "Tell me, poor men, if you really are poor: what is gold doing in the sanctuary?" - in sancto quid facit aurum?'