Mourning customs -- New Zealand. : The undiscover'd country : customs of the cultural and ethnic groups of New Zealand concerning death and dying
1987
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Mourning customs -- Pacific Area : Mortuary dialogues : death ritual and the reproduction of moral community in Pacific modernities / edited by David Lipset and Eric K. Silverman
Mourning customs -- Russia (Federation) : We remember, we love, we grieve mortuary and memorial practice in contemporary Russia / Elizabeth Warner, Svetlana Adonyeva
Mourning customs -- Uganda : Birth of an ancestor : songs of death and social responsibility in Eastern Uganda / producer and director, Peter J. Hoesing, PhD
A plant genus of the family BRASSICACEAE that contains ARABIDOPSIS PROTEINS and MADS DOMAIN PROTEINS. The species A. thaliana is used for experiments in classical plant genetics as well as molecular genetic studies in plant physiology, biochemistry, and development
A strain of non-obese diabetic mice developed in Japan that has been widely studied as a model for T-cell-dependent autoimmune insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in which insulitis is a major histopathologic feature, and in which genetic susceptibility is strongly MHC-linked
Strains of mice in which certain GENES of their GENOMES have been disrupted, or "knocked-out". To produce knockouts, using RECOMBINANT DNA technology, the normal DNA sequence of the gene being studied is altered to prevent synthesis of a normal gene product. Cloned cells in which this DNA alteration is successful are then injected into mouse EMBRYOS to produce chimeric mice. The chimeric mice are then bred to yield a strain in which all the cells of the mouse contain the disrupted gene. Knockout mice are used as EXPERIMENTAL ANIMAL MODELS for diseases (DISEASE MODELS, ANIMAL) and to clarify the functions of the genes
A family of the order PRIMATES, suborder Strepsirhini (PROSIMII), containing five genera. All inhabitants of Madagascar, the genera are: Allocebus, Cheirogaleus (dwarf lemurs), Microcebus (mouse lemurs), Mirza, and Phaner
A family of the order PRIMATES, suborder Strepsirhini (PROSIMII), containing five genera. All inhabitants of Madagascar, the genera are: Allocebus, Cheirogaleus (dwarf lemurs), Microcebus (mouse lemurs), Mirza, and Phaner
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Mouse lemurs -- Food : The evolution of exudativory in primates / Anne M. Burrows, Leanne T. Nash, eds