Snakes -- Juvenile poetry. : Hugo Rapp and the hoop snake / by Tony Lintermans ; illustrated by Gillian Campbell
1988
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Snakes -- Middle West -- Guidebooks : Snakes and lizards in your pocket : a guide to reptiles of the upper Midwest / byTerry VanDeWalle ; photographs by Suzanne L. Collins
Snakes -- New Guinea. : Dangerous snakes of Australia and New Guinea : a handbook for bushmen, bushwalkers, mission workers, servicemen, boy scouts, new Australians, medical practitioners, and naturalists on the identification and venoms of Australian snakes, with directions for first-aid treatment of snake-bite and the use of antivenenes / written and illustrated by Eric Worrell
Snakes -- Southeast Asia -- Identification. : A field guide to the reptiles of South-East Asia : Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore, Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Bali / Indraneil Das ; illustrated by Robin Budden ... [and others]
Stories and motifs should be used for more general stories which are either related to ordinary events not associated with Dreamings in the telling or tales for children which work more as moral tales than revealed presence of the ancestor. However, better to also code with Religion - Dreaming as well in the latter case but not the formerTopical term modified 29/1/2007
A superfamily of small proteins which are involved in the MEMBRANE FUSION events, intracellular protein trafficking and secretory processes. They share a homologous SNARE motif. The SNARE proteins are divided into subfamilies: QA-SNARES; QB-SNARES; QC-SNARES; and R-SNARES. The formation of a SNARE complex (composed of one each of the four different types SNARE domains (Qa, Qb, Qc, and R)) mediates MEMBRANE FUSION. Following membrane fusion SNARE complexes are dissociated by the NSFs (N-ETHYLMALEIMIDE-SENSITIVE FACTORS), in conjunction with SOLUBLE NSF ATTACHMENT PROTEIN, i.e., SNAPs (no relation to SNAP 25.)
A superfamily of small proteins which are involved in the MEMBRANE FUSION events, intracellular protein trafficking and secretory processes. They share a homologous SNARE motif. The SNARE proteins are divided into subfamilies: QA-SNARES; QB-SNARES; QC-SNARES; and R-SNARES. The formation of a SNARE complex (composed of one each of the four different types SNARE domains (Qa, Qb, Qc, and R)) mediates MEMBRANE FUSION. Following membrane fusion SNARE complexes are dissociated by the NSFs (N-ETHYLMALEIMIDE-SENSITIVE FACTORS), in conjunction with SOLUBLE NSF ATTACHMENT PROTEIN, i.e., SNAPs (no relation to SNAP 25.)