You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Established on April 5, 1851, Colorado's oldest town, San Luis de la Culebra, remains remarkably true to its heritage. Nestled below the Sangre de Cristo Land Grant in the San Luis Valley, San Luis and its descendants sustain a way of life and preserve a culture in this high, isolated desert region. Eighteen men migrated north from New Mexico into the northernmost area of Spanish exploration in the mid-1800s to settle San Luis along the Culebra River. These pioneering families brought their use of communal land and water and a language dating back to 16th-century Castilian Spain. They carried on a deep faith from the Old World into the New. The traditions of San Luis and the surrounding villages--Chama, San Pablo, San Pedro, San Francisco, and San Acacio--continue today among the young and old who remain the keepers of culture.
June 29-July 01, 2017 Madrid, Spain Key Topics : Clinical and Cellular Immunology, Inflammatory/Autoimmune Diseases, T-Cells and B-Cells, Cancer and Tumor Immunobiology, Vaccines and Vaccination, Immunotherapy, Neuro Immunology, Infectious Diseases and Immune System, Reproductive Immunology, Immunodeficiences, Costimmulatory pathways in multiple sclerosis, Autoimmunity and Therapathies, Diagnostic Immunology, Clinical Immunology, Microbial, Parasitic, and Fungal Immunology, Allergy and Therapathies, Technological Innovations in Immunology, Antigen Processing, Hematopoiesis and Immune System Development, Immune Response Regulation, Molecular Mechanisms, Innate Immune Responses, Transplantation Immunology, Viral Immunology, Immunoinformatics and Systems Immunology, Cellular Adhesion, Immunopathology, Mucosal and Regional Immunology,
A comprehensive companion guide to medicinal plants found in the deserts and canyons of the West and Southwest.
In what follows can be found the doors to a house of words and stories. This house of words and stories is the "Archive of New Mexico" and the doors are each of the documents contained within it. Like any house, New Mexico's archive has a tale of its own origin and a complex history. Although its walls have changed many times, its doors and the encounters with those doors hold stories known and told and others not yet revealed. In the Archives, there are thousands of doors (4,481) that open to a time of kings and popes, of inquisition and revolution. "These archives," writes Ralph Emerson Twitchell, "are by far the most valuable and interesting of any in the Southwest." Many of these documen...
None
This book focuses on Augmented Lagrangian techniques for solving practical constrained optimization problems. The authors rigorously delineate mathematical convergence theory based on sequential optimality conditions and novel constraint qualifications. They also orient the book to practitioners by giving priority to results that provide insight on the practical behavior of algorithms and by providing geometrical and algorithmic interpretations of every mathematical result, and they fully describe a freely available computational package for constrained optimization and illustrate its usefulness with applications.
Reimpresión del original, primera publicación en 1871.
None
Macro-level study of the South Atlantic throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries demonstrating how Brazils emergence was built on the longest and most intense slave trade of the modern era. The seventeenth-century missionary and diplomat Father Antônio Vieira once observed that Brazil was nourished, animated, sustained, served, and conserved by the sad blood of the black and unfortunate souls imported from Angola. In The Trade in the Living, Luiz Felipe de Alencastro demonstrates how the African slave trade was an essential element in the South Atlantic and in the ongoing cohesion of Portuguese America, while at the same time the concrete interests of Brazilian colonists, dependent on Angolan slaves, were often violently asserted in Africa, to ensure men and commodities continued to move back and forth across the Atlantic. In exposing this intricate and complementary relationship between two non-European continents, de Alencastro has fashioned a new and challenging examination of colonial Brazil, one that moves beyond its relationship with Portugal to discover a darker, hidden history.