The Magnificent Flora Graeca: How the Mediterranean Came to the English Garden. By Stephen Harris. Oxford (United Kingdom): Bodleian Library. $60.00. 189 p.; ill.; no index. 978‐1‐85124‐306‐8. 2007.

2008 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando E. Vega
1993 ◽  
Vol 107 (9) ◽  
pp. 834-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Vernham ◽  
H. Sadiq ◽  
E. A. Mallon

AbstractLeishmaniasis is an uncommon condition in Western Europe, except around the Mediterranean coast. However, it may occasionally be seen in the United Kingdom, in patients who acquired the infection in foreign lands. An unusual case of localized cutaneous leishmaniasis recidiva affecting the nose after septal surgery is presented.


2019 ◽  
Vol 150 (3) ◽  
pp. 568-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tammy Y N Tong ◽  
Albert Koulman ◽  
Julian L Griffin ◽  
Nicholas J Wareham ◽  
Nita G Forouhi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Background Cardiometabolic benefits of the Mediterranean diet have been recognized, but underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Objectives We aimed to investigate how the Mediterranean diet could influence circulating metabolites and how the metabolites could mediate the associations of the diet with cardiometabolic risk factors. Methods Among 10,806 participants (58.9% women, mean age = 48.4 y) in the Fenland Study (2004–2015) in the United Kingdom, we assessed dietary consumption with FFQs and conducted a targeted metabolomics assay for 175 plasma metabolites (acylcarnitines, amines, sphingolipids, and phospholipids). We examined cross-sectional associations of the Mediterranean diet score (MDS) and its major components with each metabolite, modeling multivariable-adjusted linear regression. We used the regression estimates to summarize metabolites associated with the MDS into a metabolite score as a marker of the diet. Subsequently, we assessed how much metabolite subclasses and the metabolite score would mediate the associations of the MDS with circulating lipids, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), and other metabolic factors by comparing regression estimates upon adjustment for the metabolites. Results Sixty-six metabolites were significantly associated with the MDS (P ≤ 0.003, corrected for false discovery rate) (Spearman correlations, r: −0.28 to +0.28). The metabolite score was moderately correlated with the MDS (r = 0.43). Of MDS components, consumption of nuts, cereals, and meats contributed to variations in acylcarnitines; fruits, to amino acids and amines; and fish, to phospholipids. The metabolite score was estimated to explain 37.2% of the inverse association of the MDS with HOMA-IR (P for mediation < 0.05). The associations of the MDS with cardiometabolic factors were estimated to be mediated by acylcarnitines, sphingolipids, and phospholipids. Conclusions Multiple metabolites relate to the Mediterranean diet in a healthy general British population and highlight the potential to identify a set of biomarkers for an overall diet. The associations may involve pathways of phospholipid metabolism, carnitine metabolism, and development of insulin resistance and dyslipidemia.


2018 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-110
Author(s):  
Petra Lukeneder ◽  
Alexander Lukeneder

Abstract Lower Jurassic ammonites were collected from deep-water limestones of the Tannscharten section, southwest of Reichraming (Northern Calcareous Alps, Upper Austria). The outcrop provides a rich Upper Sinemurian (Lower Jurassic) ammonite fauna of the Allgäu Formation. The area is situated in the westernmost part of the Schneeberg Syncline in the north of the Reichraming Nappe (High Bajuvaric Unit). The ammonite fauna consists of seven different genera, each apparently represented by 1-2 species. Echioceratids are the most frequent components (Echioceras, Leptechioceras, Paltechioceras), followed by the phylloceratids (Juraphyllites, Partschiceras) and oxynoticeratids (Gleviceras, Paroxynoticeras). Juraphyllites libertus, Partschiceras striatocostatum, Gleviceras paniceum, Echioceras quenstedti, Echioceras raricostatoides, Paltechioceras boehmi, Leptechioceras meigeni, Leptechioceras macdonnelli and Paltechioceras oosteri are new for the Schneeberg Syncline and allow for the first time a detailed biostratigraphy of the Echioceras raricostatum zone. The assemblage is correlated with other faunae from Austria, Germany, United Kingdom, France, Switzerland and Romania. The cephalopod fauna consists of a mix of elements from the Northwest European Province and the Mediterranean Province. The detailed biostratigraphy based on ammonites is presented here.


1978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alvin M. Bryant ◽  
Addison C. Ehrlich ◽  
Horace Mann ◽  
Martin III ◽  
Richard C.

Author(s):  
Jane Gilbert ◽  
Simon Gaunt ◽  
William Burgwinkle

This chapter pursues the theme of travel, focusing on how both the representation and, crucially, the non-representation of movements, travels, and networks become key to the retooling of some texts in transmission. In the first section of this chapter, we show how the prose Tristan is made to travel, indeed is relocated to the Mediterranean, through a prologue and lengthy prequel; the whole of British culture is thereby glossed as a dislocation of, and exile from, the holy East. The second section takes a well-known and much-studied manuscript, Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Bodley 264, and follows a textual (non-)thread via the Paon (Peacock) cycle of Alexander texts, to trace the career of a poet, Jean de le Mote, whose career exemplifies cultural networks that today are often overlooked.


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