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SHARMA  B. D. 《Annals of botany》1970,34(5):1071-1077
Seeds of Williamsonia collected from Amarjola in the RajmahalHills, Bihar, are described. Mature seeds are found in ripe,naked, bractless fructifications. Seeds are oblong or ovate,stalked, dicotyledonous, partially endospermic, and have longmicropyles. The seed coat is differentiated into an outer coveringof tubular cells, middle parenchymatous true integument, andan inner vascularized layer which forms after fertilizationand as a result of modification of the peripheral portion ofnucellus.  相似文献   

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SHARMA  B. D. 《Annals of botany》1970,34(5):1063-1070
The anatomical structure of the naked receptacles of seed-bearingWilliamsonias collected from Amarjola in the Rajmahal Hills,Bihar, is described. The main stele of the receptacle consistsof a large number of poorly developed, inverted, collateral,exarch bundles. In the pedicel portion of the receptacle thereare present double bundle traces of the bracts, while in theupper part of the receptacle there are present isolated, collateral,endarch bundles in the peripheral region of the cortex whichsupply traces to the seminiferous and interseminal scales. Onthe basis of this study it is concluded that the receptacleof Williamsonia is a modified axis of two noded inflorescence.  相似文献   

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A prolific foraminiferal assemblage comprising 51 species is reported from Jurassic sediments of the Chari Formation, Jumara Hills, Kutch, India. The assemblage is dominated by the families Vaginulinidae and Nodosariidae. Sixteen species are reported for the first time from the Indian region including one new species. The foraminiferal assemblage suggests a Callovian to Oxfordian age for the studied sequence. The depositional environment of the studied sequence is interpreted based on foraminiferal evidence combined with lithology and megafauna which indicates that the sediments of the Chari formation exposed at Jumara Hills were deposited in a shallow-water, near shore, environment with fluctuating shoreline in a tectonically unstable shelf zone. The Jumara Hills foraminiferal assemblage exhibits close affinity with certain other Jurassic assemblages of the Tethyan Realm and helped in drawing palaeogeographic conclusions, suggesting that during the Middle and Late Jurassic epochs Kutch had close sea connections with Central Arabia, Afghanistan and Rajasthan on the one hand and Somalia and Malagasy on the other.  相似文献   

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The First Jurassic turtle from India   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A primitive cryptodiran turtle, Indochelys spatulata gen. et sp. nov., is described from the Early Jurassic Kota Formation, a member of the Upper Gondwana Group in the Pranhita-Godavari Valley, Deccan, India. The shell morphology of Indochelys differs substantially from that of the Triassic Proganochelys of Germany but is significantly similar to the oldest known Early Jurassic cryptodire, Kayentachelys , from the Kayenta Formation of Arizona. Indochelys also shares many shell characters with the Late Jurassic North American turtles, in particular Dinochelys . The new family Indochelyidae is proposed, which probably has the same phyletic status as that of Kayentachelyidae, with both evolving simultaneously in different regions.  相似文献   

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Bedi  S. J. 《Economic botany》1978,32(3):278-284
Economic Botany - This paper deals with the plants used by aboriginal tribes of Ratan Mahal and surrounding hills. Some of the important food and medicinal plants restricted to these tribes or this...  相似文献   

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The nutritional status of preschool children of the three sects of the Pahariya tribe (Rajmahal Hills, Bihar) was studied with the help of anthropometric indices like weight for age, height for age, weight for height und nutritional deficiency signs. The correlation between age and nutritional indices showed that the relationship was significant for % expected weight for age in the male children of all the three sects; r = +0.70 in Saurias, r = +0.32 in Mals and r = -0.72 in Kumarbhags (p > 0.01). Significant relationships were also observed in the correlations between weight for height in both sexes. Based on height for age and weight/height2 (Body Mass Index, BMI), 89% of the children of the Saurias, 92% of the Mals and 93% of the Kumarbhags were malnourished. Height for age of 50% of the children of the Pahariyas were below the 3rd percentile or below 90% of the Harvard standard. Chronic and current severe forms of malnutrition (i.e. height for age below 3rd percentile of standard and BMI 13.5) was highest in the Kumarbhags (17.5%). According to the modified Waterlow's classification chronic and current severe forms of malnutrition (i.e. height for age below 3rd percentile of the National Centre for Health Statistics, NCHS, and weight for height less than 80% of the standard) was highest in the Saurias (21.6%) and least in the Kumarbhags (15.4%). Kwashiorkor and marasmus for all the children of the Pahariyas ranged between 0.5-1.4% and 1.5-5.2%, respectively. Associated with signs of Protein Caloric Malnutrition (PCM), like moon face, dyspigmentation, sparseness and easy pluckability were more prevalent in all the three sects of the Pahariyas. Ocular manifestation of vitamin-A deficiency like conjunctiva xerosis and Bitos' spots were also frequent among these children.  相似文献   

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Paleontological Journal - The xylotomy of the silicified wood from the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Kota Formation of the Pranhita-Godavari Basin is studied and its systematic affinity is...  相似文献   

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Four Mongoloid populations, viz., Garo , Hajong , Rabha and Koch, belonging to the Tibetoburman language family of Garo Hills, India, were examined for blood types ( A1A2BO , Rh, MN), secretor factor, ability to taste PTC and cerumen types. Gene A1 is more frequent than B in Hajong and Rabha . Garo shows a higher frequency of gene B, Koch also shows a little higher frequency of gene B than A. R1 is the commonest chromosome in all the groups followed by R2. Frequency of gene M is very high in all these populations. In respect of ABH secretion in saliva, there is preponderance of the secretor gene. Incidence of non- taster gene is somewhat lower in them. Dry cerumen gene is frequent in these Mongoloid groups. In general, the Garo Hills populations show closer affinity to the Mongoloids of Northeast India in respect of gene frequencies.  相似文献   

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Miocene to Pleistocene fossiliferous sediments in the Tugen Hills span the time period from at least 15.5 Ma to 0.25 Ma, including time periods unknown or little known elsewhere in Africa. Consequently, the Tugen Hills deposits hold the potential to inform us about crucial phylogenetic events in African faunal evolution and about long-term environmental change. Among the specimens collected from this region are a number of discoveries already important to the understanding of primate evolution. Here, we describe additional cercopithecoid material from the Miocene deposits in the Tugen Hills sequence, including those from securely dated sites in the Muruyur Beds (16-13.4 Ma), the Mpesida Beds (7-6.2 Ma) and the Lukeino Formation (∼6.2-5.7 Ma). We also evaluate previously described material from the Ngorora Formation (13-8.8 Ma). Identified taxa include Victoriapithecidae gen. et sp. indet., cf. Parapapio lothagamensis, and at least two colobines. Specimens attributed to cf. Pp. lothagamensis would extend the species’ geographic range beyond its type locality. In addition, we describe specimens sharing derived characters with modern African colobines (Tribe: Colobina), a finding that is congruent with previous molecular estimates of colobine divergence dates. These colobine specimens represent some of the earliest known members of the modern African colobine radiation and, in contrast to previous hypotheses, suggest that early African colobines were mainly arboreal and that semi-terrestrial Late Miocene and Plio-Pleistocene colobine taxa were secondarily derived in their locomotor adaptations.  相似文献   

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Survey and census of the hoolock gibbon in West Garo Hills,Northeast India   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
During a long-term study on the hoolock gibbon in Northeast India, a detailed survey was made in West Garo Hills District of the Meghalaya, India from July 1985 to March 1987. Approximately 5,075 km2 of the area was covered. Groups and individuals were counted in 32 localities (812 km2). Interestingly only 1,395 ha was the actual forest area occupied by these gibbons. Forty-two family groups and four floating individuals of gibbons made up the total count. Of these the adult males and females comprised of nearly 67% while the sub-adults, juveniles, and infants were 6%, 12%, and 15%, respectively. Each family group's territory ranged from 14 to 55 ha. Of the 32 localities only 6 had more than one family group. The present paper deals with the diminishing habitats for these gibbons. The discussion is based on the available small forest patches throughout the district (a common feature for the whole of Northeast India) surrounded by bare hills due to shifting cultivation. A strategy for conservation is also outlined.  相似文献   

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