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1

Pagés, J. "Dicellurata Genavensia XVI. Parajapygidae (Insecta, Diplura) des Bermudes." Revue suisse de zoologie. 96 (1989): 319–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.5962/bhl.part.117766.

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2

de la Villardière, Bernard, and Hélène Delmotte. "La santé est devenue le Triangle des Bermudes de l’information." Les Tribunes de la santé 49, no. 4 (2015): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/seve.049.0091.

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3

Taillefer, François. "Les rivages des Bermudes et les formes littorales de dissolution du calcaire." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 2, no. 2 (April 12, 2005): 115–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/020026ar.

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The littoral morphology of the Bermudas is an erosional morphology in limestones, the main processes being mechanical action and solution. The temperatures, in January and February, of the waters washing the Bermudas, are low enough to prevent the growing of true coral reefs. Therefore, it is not the morphology of a coral reef. The predominance of wave-cut cliffs is the most striking feature, despite the low and gently rolling topography. There are, however, other types of coasts on the islands, the mangrove being found on many sheltered shores. The writer thus opposes the sheltered shores of the sounds to the ones exposed on the southcoast, while the shores of the north and north-east coasts belong to an intermediate type. The steplike arrangement of the coastal forms of solution of the Bermudas limestones is primarily linked to the amount of the tidal range. These features are similar to those described on the shores of the warm seas, where the tide is negligible or weak. The Bermudas occupy an intermediate position between the regions where reefs are built by corals, and those, to the north, where solution, helped by other processes, occurs without compensation.
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4

Rézeau, Joseph. "L’apprenant, l’enseignant et la machine : triangle d’or ou triangle des Bermudes ?" Recherche et pratiques pédagogiques en langues de spécialité - Cahiers de l'APLIUT 17, no. 3 (1998): 90–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/apliu.1998.1160.

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5

Fosbury, Timothy L. "Bermuda’s Persistent Futures." American Literary History 32, no. 1 (December 4, 2019): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajz049.

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Abstract “Bermuda’s Persistent Futures” recovers Bermuda’s significance to the development of the settler colonial imaginations of early America. Following the 1609 wreck of the Sea Venture that began its settlement, English settlers insisted that Bermuda’s apparent lack of any previous Indigenous population, Spanish failures to account for its potential, and its proximity to England, North America, and the West Indies all made the 20-square-mile archipelago an anomalous and exceptional plantation in an emerging colonial system. Writers and officials seized upon Bermuda’s perceived uniqueness to position it as an isolated, vacant laboratory perfectly suited for uncovering what they believed had been waiting to be discovered—an America that was natural to England. Bermuda, in this sense, inspired a corpus of colonial fantasies about the hemisphere’s futures under a permanent English presence that was previously unimaginable to colonial writers. This essay focuses on Richard Norwood’s The Description of the Sommer Ilands, Once Called the Bermudas (1622–23) and J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur’s Lettres d’un cultivateur amèricain (1784) to reconstruct a Bermuda that persistently appeared to lead the way for the futures of American settlement.
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6

Vincent, Nadine. "Organismes d’officialisation, dictionnaires et médias : le triangle des Bermudes de la francisation." SHS Web of Conferences 8 (2014): 1731–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20140801315.

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7

Robert, Lucie. "Le cartographe à la guitare." Dossier 35, no. 3 (August 17, 2010): 99–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/044264ar.

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En 1903, paraissent dans la Revue canadienne, les Mémoires de Robert Shore Milnes Bouchette, publiés par les soins de son fils Errol et annotés par l’historien Alfred Duclos DeCelles. L’ouvrage est composé en partie des mémoires (inachevés) dont Robert avait entrepris la rédaction, de son journal d’exil aux Bermudes, de notes biographiques rédigées par Errol et des commentaires de DeCelles, lesquels concernent tous la rébellion de 1837, dans laquelle Robert s’était engagé. Le présent article s’interrogera sur cette triple mise en oeuvre, qui engage trois auteurs (les deux Bouchette et DeCelles), trois genres (mémoires, biographie, journal de voyage), trois époques (le temps de l’événement, le temps de la rédaction et le temps de l’édition) et il cherchera à saisir l’enjeu de cette édition, enjeu à la fois politique, mémoriel et esthétique.
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8

Goodbody-Gringley, Gretchen, Emma Strand, and Joanna M. Pitt. "Molecular characterization of nearshore baitfish populations in Bermuda to inform management." PeerJ 7 (July 4, 2019): e7244. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7244.

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Small-bodied marine fishes play an important role in the food web, feeding both larger fishes and seabirds. Often referred to as baitfishes, they concentrate seasonally in coastal areas in large, often heterospecific assemblages that are targeted by both commercial and recreational fishers. Given apparent declines in at least some of Bermuda’s baitfish species over the past 40 years, it is useful to determine the species composition of baitfish assemblages, and how it varies among sites, in order to inform management. Using genetic barcoding of the Cytochrome c oxidase 1 gene (COI), we confirm species identity, assess intraspecific genetic diversity locally, and determine rates of broader genetic connectivity for baitfish assemblages in Bermuda. Species analyzed includedHypoatherina harringtonensis,Anchoa choerostoma,Jenkinsia lamprotaenia,Harengula humeralis,Opisthonema oglinumandSardinella aurita. Species identification based on molecular barcoding revealed some misidentification of individuals based solely on gross morphological characteristics, with an error rate of 11%, validating the usefulness of this approach. Interestingly, sequence results for the endemic Bermuda anchovy,A. choerostoma, were within 1% similarity to the more broadly distributed big-eye anchovy,A. lamprotaenia, and thus additional analyses are warranted to evaluate the genetic basis for endemism. Estimates of genetic diversity within and among baitfish assemblages in Bermuda were high, indicating high rates of local connectivity among sites for all species. As such, management should consider Bermuda’s baitfish species as single, highly mixed populations. However, with the exception ofH. humeralisand the endemicA. choerostoma, significant genetic differentiation and population structure were found when comparing Bermuda’s baitfish populations with those from other regions, suggesting limited gene flow between other regions and Bermuda for these species. Limited regional connectivity has implications for management, as strong genetic divergence suggests that populations in Bermuda are predominantly self-seeding and thus not likely to be replenished from distant populations. These results therefore support precautionary management of baitfish species in Bermuda.
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9

Morabito, Vittorio. "Bermudes João, 2010, Ma géniale imposture, Patriarche du Prêtre Jean, par Sandra Rodrigues de Oliveira (trad.) et Hervé Pennec (intr. et notes)." Journal des Africanistes, no. 83-1 (February 1, 2013): 319–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/africanistes.3644.

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10

WAGNER, DANIEL, and ANDREW SHULER. "The black coral fauna (Cnidaria: Antipatharia) of Bermuda with new records." Zootaxa 4344, no. 2 (November 7, 2017): 367. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4344.2.11.

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The black coral fauna of Bermudan waters is poorly known, in large part due to the logistical challenges of surveying deep-water (>50 m) environments where most species occur. In 2016, the Nekton Expedition sought to survey the deep-water biodiversity around Bermuda using manned submersibles and mixed-gas technical SCUBA. A total of 28 black coral specimens were collected, and these were examined based on skeletal spine morphology, polyp morphology, colony branching pattern and in situ photographs. The specimens were assigned to seven species in three families and four genera, including (1) Antipathes atlantica Gray, 1857, (2) Antipathes furcata Gray, 1857, (3) Stichopathes pourtalesi Brook, 1889, (4) Stichopathes sp., (5) Distichopathes filix (Pourtales, 1867), (6) Tanacetipathes hirta (Gray, 1857), and (7) Tanacetipathes tanacetum (Pourtales, 1867). Of these, three species (Stichopathes sp., S. pourtalesi, and D. filix), one genus (Distichopathes) and one family (Aphanipathidae) are reported from Bermudan waters for the first time, thereby increasing the known black coral diversity of Bermuda to twelve species, five genera and four families. The diagnostic characters of the taxa identified as part of this study are illustrated and described.
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Iliffe, Thomas M., and Fernando Calderón-Gutiérrez. "Bermuda’s Walsingham Caves: A Global Hotspot for Anchialine Stygobionts." Diversity 13, no. 8 (July 30, 2021): 352. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d13080352.

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Bermuda is an Eocene age volcanic island in the western North Atlantic, entirely capped by Pleistocene eolian limestone. The oldest and most highly karstified limestone is a 2 km2 outcrop of the Walsingham Formation containing most of the island’s 150+ caves. Extensive networks of submerged cave passageways, flooded by saltwater, extend under the island. In the early 1980s, cave divers initially discovered an exceptionally rich and diverse anchialine community inhabiting deeper sections of the caves. The fauna inhabiting caves in the Walsingham Tract consists of 78 described species of cave-dwelling invertebrates, including 63 stygobionts and 15 stygophiles. Thus, it represents one of the world’s top hotspots of subterranean biodiversity. Of the anchialine fauna, 65 of the 78 species are endemic to Bermuda, while 66 of the 78 are crustaceans. The majority of the cave species are limited in their distribution to just one or only a few adjacent caves. Due to Bermuda’s high population density, water pollution, construction, limestone quarries, and trash dumping produce severe pressures on cave fauna and groundwater health. Consequently, the IUCN Red List includes 25 of Bermuda’s stygobiont species as critically endangered.
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12

Evans, CR, APM Lockwood, and AJ Evans. "Associations between sea temperature, catch per unit of fishing effort, and yield in the Bermuda spiny lobster fishery, 1975-1989." Marine and Freshwater Research 46, no. 5 (1995): 809. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf9950809.

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Results of graphical analyses of annual records of catch, effort and sea temperature indicate empirical quadratic associations between industry catch per unit of fishing effort (CPUE) in Bermudan spiny lobster (Panulirus argus and P. guttatus) fisheries and the annual average sea temperature at Hamilton Harbour, Bermuda. CPUE and yield of P. argus and of P. guttatus were each associated by quadratic expressions with the annual average sea temperature of the Bermuda Platform. Annual growth and survival of late juvenile P. argus and P. guttatus into the fishable stock at Bermuda is controlled in a quadratic fashion chiefly by sea temperature with a six-month lag. The optimum annual average sea temperature for the survival and growth of late benthic juvenile P. argus into the fishery stock was 23.6 � 0.2�C (mean � s.e.), and the comparable optimum for P. guttatus juvenile recruitment was 24.1 � 0.1�C. The maximum equilibrium catch of P. guttatus lobsters on Bermuda Platform was estimated at approximately 33 000 lobsters from quadratic regression of yield on fishing effort.
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13

Reif, Jo-Ann. "Music and grammar: imitation and analogy in Morales and the Spanish humanists." Early Music History 6 (October 1986): 227–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261127900000802.

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The relationship of mass composition to the study of rhetoric has occupied many writers interested in perceiving the two as analogous in organisation, vocabulary and persuasive goals. Grammar belonged to the choirboy's education but, more importantly, the method of grammar permeated the general teaching method for other subjects as well. Material, such as questions or disputations, was organised into the similar and the dissimilar, so that working from a model and transfer by analogy were the principal means of making connections between statements and ideas. This essay is concerned with the opportunities available in sixteenth-century Spain for the study of grammar and music and how these possibilities affected the leading Spanish composer of the time, Cristóbal de Morales. In this discussion, Juan Bermudo's treatiseDeclaración de instrumentsis important. Not only does it name leading humanists and composers, and present its theoretical remarks in the language of rhetoric; Morales, who had been in close contact with Bermudo at the Marchena estate of the Duke of Arcos, recommended the treatise. Thus Bermudo, a young Minorite monk, reveals a good deal about Morales by both direct quotation and analogy, and in effect provides a more rounded intellectual impression of the composer, who otherwise expressed himself only in his musical works and their dedications. It can be deduced from musical quotations that Morales is Bermudo's model composer, and by analogy that Morales, versed in rhetoric and imitation, understood the application of these rules in musical composition. In his thorough appraisal of musical tradition, theory and practice, Bermudo assumes the function of a critic in the modern sense.
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14

Prognon, François, Isabelle Cojan, Pascal Kindler, Médard Thiry, and Michel Demange. "Mineralogical evidence for a local volcanic origin of the parent material of Bermuda Quaternary paleosols." Quaternary Research 75, no. 1 (January 2011): 256–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2010.08.002.

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AbstractThe alternation of carbonate deposits and paleosols compose the emerged part of the Bermuda archipelago. The pedological units present a complex and diversified mineralogy. Former studies demonstrated that the paleosols are not primarily a product of the unique dissolution of the surrounding carbonates, but contain a massive input of allochthonous non-carbonate detrital material. Researchers during more than the past three decades have attributed this flux of insoluble residues (IR) to Saharan dusts. We carried out systematic field and mineralogical analyses on the Quaternary paleosols from the Bermuda archipelago. Their mineralogical assemblage predominantly includes carbonates, clay minerals (kaolinite, chlorite and chlorite/vermiculite), phosphates, and aluminium and iron oxides/hydroxides. This assemblage is strikingly close to the mineralogy of the weathered volcanic substrate of Bermuda, but noticeably different from the mineralogy of Saharan dust. Moreover, we found volcanic lithoclasts in numerous paleosol profiles all over the archipelago and in all the recorded time intervals. We thus consider the volcanic seamount underlying Bermuda as the main source of non-carbonate minerals detected in the paleosols. This hypothesis further resolves the anomalous maturity of Bermudan paleosols compared to their southern counterparts in the Bahamas and Barbados.
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15

Ebmeier, Klaus. "Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: Clinical Applications for Psychiatric Practice By Richard A. Bermudes, Karl Lanocha, Philip G. Janicak, American Psychiatric Association Publishing. 2017. £48 (pb). 277 pp. ISBN 139781615371051." British Journal of Psychiatry 213, no. 4 (September 24, 2018): 621. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.2018.141.

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16

Outerbridge, Mark, John Davenport, and Anne F. Glasspool. "Reproductive seasonal periodicity of the endemic Bermuda killifish Fundulus bermudae in an anchialine pond." Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 87, no. 3 (May 16, 2007): 797–800. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025315407053982.

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A total of 245 individuals from a population of the endemic Bermuda killifish Fundulus bermudae in an isolated anchialine pond (Mangrove Lake) were trapped between November 2004 and November 2005. Laboratory analysis of gonad development allowed determination of the seasonal reproductive cycles of both females and males. A distinctive annual pattern was evident, with female and male gonadal cycles synchronous throughout the study period. The results indicate that the F. bermudae males and females began their spawning season in February, but reached primary peaks in May and June respectively. Gonadal indices abruptly fell after June and continued to fall at a steady rate until September, marking the end of the spawning season. Gonad recrudescence, as indicated by basal gonad indices, occurred in September and lasted throughout the autumn and early winter months.
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17

Rand, Thomas G., and Michael Wiles. "Salsuginus bermudae sp.n. (Monogenea: Ancyrocephalidae) from Fundulus bermudae Gunther and Gambusia affinis (Baird and Girard) in Bermuda." Canadian Journal of Zoology 65, no. 7 (July 1, 1987): 1847–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z87-280.

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Salsuginus bermudae sp.n. is described from gills of mangrove minnow, Fundulus bermudae Gunther, and mosquito fish, Gambusia affinis (Baird and Girard), from Bermuda. It differs from S. angularis by its shorter ventral hamuli (20–23 versus 22–26 μm); from S. fundulus, S. spirae, and S. heterocliti by its shorter dorsal and ventral hamuli (17–21 versus 22–26, 22–26, 20–24 μm, respectively, for dorsal hamuli and 20–23 versus 23–29, 23–27, 25–28 μm, respectively, for ventral hamuli); from S. bahamianus by its longer ventral hamulus superficial root (6–10 versus 5–6 μm); and from S. umbraensis by its shorter dorsal hamuli and dorsal bar (17–21 versus 23–24 and 19–26 versus 30–31 μm, respectively). It is indistinguishable morphometrically from S. seculus, yet differentiable from other species of Salsuginus by its dorsal and ventral hamuli and by its accessory piece. Mangrove minnows may be distributed in separate populations in the various Bermudian lakes. Differences in accessory piece morphology allowed discrimination of two morphotypes isolated in separate small mangrove minnow populations from two lakes (Mangrove and Lover's) which have different physicochemical characteristics. A possible isolating mechanism is discussed.
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18

Klauk, Stephanie. "Tonos eclesiásticos versus Tonalidad Mayor-Menor. Juan Bermudo: práctica musical y hábitos de escucha en el siglo XVI." Anuario Musical, no. 69 (December 30, 2014): 159. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/anuariomusical.2014.69.166.

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Como es sabido, en el siglo XVI se produce un paso desde el sistema tonal tradicional hacia la tonalidad armónica. Hasta entonces, dominaba el sistema diatónico, que se basaba en dos pilares teóricos: primero, en el sistema de los hexacordos; y segundo, en el sistema de los modos. Uno de los aspectos centrales en el tratado Declaración de instrumentos musicales (Osuna, 1555) de Juan Bermudo, contiene sus observaciones a propósito de la práctica musical de su tiempo, que no correspondía ya a los susodichos principios teóricos. Con la intención de conciliar la teoría tradicional y la práctica musical contemporánea, Bermudo propone algunos conceptos nuevos, sirviéndose también de ejemplos musicales de compositores españoles. [de] Kirchentöne versus Dur-Moll-Tonalität. Juan Bermudo: Aufführungspraxis und Hörgewohnheiten im 16. Jahrhundert Der Umbruch des Tonsystems, mit dem die Ausbildung der Dur-Moll-Tonalität eingeleitet wurde, ist bekanntlich im 16. Jahrhundert anzusiedeln. Bis dahin dominierte das diatonische Tonsystem, das auf zwei theoretischen Grundpfeilern basierte: erstens auf dem Schema der Klangstufen (Hexachorde) und zweitens auf der Moduslehre. Dass diese theoretische Basis der zeitgenössischen Musikpraxis nicht mehr gerecht wurde, bildet einen zentralen Aspekt in Juan Bermudos Traktat Declaración de instrumentos musicales (Osuna 1555), in dem er neue Konzepte zur Aussöhnung dieses Widerspruchs vorschlägt und dafür auch Beispiele spanischer Komponisten anführt.
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Johnston, Michael C., Christopher E. Holloway, and Robert S. Plant. "Cloud Trails past Bermuda: A Five-Year Climatology from 2012 to 2016." Monthly Weather Review 146, no. 12 (November 14, 2018): 4039–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/mwr-d-18-0141.1.

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Abstract Cloud trails are primarily thermally forced bands of cloud that extend downwind of small islands. A novel algorithm to classify conventional geostationary visible-channel satellite images as cloud trail (CT), nontrail (NT), or obscured (OB) is defined. The algorithm is then applied to the warm season months of five years at Bermuda comprising 16 400 images. Bermuda’s low elevation and location make this island ideal for isolating the role of the island thermal contrast on CT formation. CTs are found to occur at Bermuda with an annual cycle, peaking in July, and a diurnal cycle that peaks in midafternoon. Composites of radiosonde observations and ERA-Interim data suggest that a warm and humid low-level environment is conducive for CT development. From a Lagrangian perspective, wind direction modulates CT formation by maximizing low-level heating on local scales when winds are parallel to the long axis of the island. On larger scales, low-level wind direction also controls low-level humidity through advection.
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20

Berger, Franz, Scott LaGreca, and André Aptroot. "Lithothelium bermudense sp. nov., a new saxicolous lichen from Bermuda." Mycotaxon 131, no. 3 (October 18, 2016): 527–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5248/131527.

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21

Wilson, E. "'Bermudas'." Notes and Queries 49, no. 3 (September 1, 2002): 343. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nq/49.3.343.

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22

Wilson, Emily. "‘Bermudas’." Notes and Queries 49, no. 3 (September 1, 2002): 343. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nq/490343.

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23

Shoude, Huang, and Xunxiang Guo. "A Shannon Wavelet Method for Pricing American Options under Two-Factor Stochastic Volatilities and Stochastic Interest Rate." Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society 2020 (April 9, 2020): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8531959.

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In the paper, the pricing of the American put options under the double Heston model with Cox–Ingersoll–Ross (CIR) interest rate process is studied. The characteristic function of the log asset price is derived, and thereby Bermuda options are well evaluated by means of a state-of-the-art Shannon wavelet inverse Fourier technique (SWIFT), which is a robust and highly efficient pricing method. Based on the SWIFT method, the price of American option can be approximated by using Richardson extrapolation schemes on a series of Bermudan options. Numerical experiments show that the proposed pricing method is efficient, especially for short-term American put options.
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Maciel, Cleber Daniel de Goes, Juliano Guilherme Sapia, Philipp Naoki Yokoyama Kondo, Welinton Lucas S. Benites, Jhonny Anderson Antunes Pereira, Vanice Ester Wesz Birck, and Alexon Ferreira da Silva. "Seletividade e eficácia dos herbicidas Kapina® e Kapina Plus® no controle de tiririca em gramas bermuda e esmeralda." Revista Brasileira de Herbicidas 12, no. 1 (April 10, 2013): 39. http://dx.doi.org/10.7824/rbh.v12i1.234.

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O uso de herbicidas em gramados é uma técnica promissora, desde que atendida precauções quanto à seletividade. Com objetivo de avaliar a seletividade e eficácia dos herbicidas Kapina® e Kapina Plus® no controle de tiririca (Cyperus flavus e Cyperus rotundus) em gramas Bermuda (Zoysia japonica) e Esmeralda (Cynodon dactylon), dois experimentos foram conduzidos em casa-de-vegetação. As aplicações foram realizadas com pulverizador pressurizado a CO2, utilizando taxa de aplicação de 250 L ha-1. Kapina® e Kapina Plus®, a partir de 750 mL ha-1, apresentaram excelente controle de C. flavus e C. rotundus; assim como seletividade satisfatória para as gramas esmeralda e bermudas. Kapina Plus®, a partir de 750,0 mL ha-1, além da ação herbicida, também apresentou viabilidade como regulador do crescimento e desenvolvimento vegetativo da grama esmeralda.
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Olson, Storrs L., and Peter A. Meylan. "A Second Specimen of the Pleistocene Bermuda Tortoise, Hesperotestudo bermudae Meylan and Sterrer." Chelonian Conservation and Biology 8, no. 2 (December 2009): 211–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2744/ccb-0766.1.

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26

Knap, Anthony H., Thomas D. Sleeter, and Idwal Wyn Hughes. "CASE HISTORY: THE GROUNDING OF THE M/T TIFOSO, 1983—A TEST OF BERMUDA'S CONTINGENCY PLAN." International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings 1985, no. 1 (February 1, 1985): 289–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.7901/2169-3358-1985-1-289.

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ABSTRACT On January 20, 1983, the Liberian-registered 138,823 dwt vessel M/T Tifoso stranded on the northeast reef line of the Island of Bermuda at 32°28′25″ N, 64°46′08″ W. The ship was in ballast and contained approximately 450 tons of No. 6 fuel oil and 300 tons of No. 2 fuel oil and lubricating oil. Bermuda had developed an oil spill contingency plan in 1980, but this incident was the first major threat to the island's marine environment and the first test of the plan. This paper outlines the events leading to the spill, the state of readiness of a small island with a tourist-based economy, the contingency plan, and the response. Due to a previous arrangement with the U. S. government, the U. S. Coast Guard Atlantic Strike Team responded with equipment and personnel. Using additional equipment and personnel based on Bermuda and also U.S. Coast Guard pumps, most of the bunkered oil was removed (approximately 470 tons) and contained within 48 hours of grounding. Because of the existence of the contingency plan, previous training of Bermudians by the U.S. Coast Guard, and the rapid action of the Coast Guard strike team, an effective response was achieved. Approximately 20 tons of oil were spilled from the flooded engine room when the vessel was refloated. However, due to fortuitous weather conditions, no oil reached Bermuda's shores.
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Outerbridge, ME, J. Davenport, and AF Glasspool. "Distribution, population assessment and conservation of the endemic Bermuda killifishes Fundulus bermudae and Fundulus relictus." Endangered Species Research 3 (2007): 181–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/esr003181.

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28

Courtney, Travis A., Theodor Kindeberg, and Andreas J. Andersson. "Coral calcification responses to the North Atlantic Oscillation and coral bleaching in Bermuda." PLOS ONE 15, no. 11 (November 11, 2020): e0241854. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241854.

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The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has been hypothesized to drive interannual variability in Bermudan coral extension rates and reef-scale calcification through the provisioning of nutritional pulses associated with negative NAO winters. However, the direct influence of the NAO on Bermudan coral calcification rates remains to be determined and may vary between species and reef sites owing to implicit differences in coral life history strategies and environmental gradients across the Bermuda reef platform. In this study, we investigated the connection between negative NAO winters and Bermudan Diploria labyrinthiformis, Pseudodiploria strigosa, and Orbicella franksi coral calcification rates across rim reef, lagoon, and nearshore reef sites. Linear mixed effects modeling detected an inverse correlation between D. labyrinthiformis calcification rates and the winter NAO index, with higher rates associated with increasingly negative NAO winters. Conversely, there were no detectable correlations between P. strigosa or O. franksi calcification rates and the winter NAO index suggesting that coral calcification responses associated with negative NAO winters could be species-specific. The correlation between coral calcification rates and winter NAO index was significantly more negative at the outer rim of the reef (Hog Reef) compared to a nearshore reef site (Whalebone Bay), possibly indicating differential influence of the NAO as a function of the distance from the reef edge. Furthermore, a negative calcification anomaly was observed in 100% of D. labyrinthiformis cores in association with the 1988 coral bleaching event with a subsequent positive calcification anomaly in 1989 indicating a post-bleaching recovery in calcification rates. These results highlight the importance of assessing variable interannual coral calcification responses between species and across inshore-offshore gradients to interannual atmospheric modes such as the NAO, thermal stress events, and potential interactions between ocean warming and availability of coral nutrition to improve projections for future coral calcification rates under climate change.
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Sheitman, Brian B. "Managing Metabolic Abnormalities in the Psychiatrically Ill: A Clinical Guide for Psychiatristsedited by Richard A. Bermudes, M.D., Paul E. Keck, M.D., and Susan L. McElroy, M.D.; Arlington, Virginia, American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc., 2006, 326 pages, $49 softcover." Psychiatric Services 58, no. 7 (July 2007): 1018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/ps.2007.58.7.1018.

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30

Garrett, Brian. "Bermudez on Self-Consciousness." Philosophical Quarterly 53, no. 210 (January 2003): 96–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9213.00300.

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31

YOSHINAKA, TAKASHI. "‘Perhaps’ in Marvell's ‘Bermudas’." Seventeenth Century 13, no. 1 (March 1998): 22–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0268117x.1998.10555439.

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32

Silva, Clíssia Barboza da, Kathia Fernandes Lopes Pivetta, César Augusto Victorino Melo de Oliveira, Marilsa Aparecida Rodrigues, and Roberval Daiton Vieira. "Teste de envelhecimento acelerado para avaliação do potencial fisiológico de sementes de grama-bermuda." Revista Brasileira de Sementes 32, no. 2 (June 2010): 102–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0101-31222010000200012.

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A utilização de sementes para formação de gramados esportivos e ornamentais tem assumido grande importância no Brasil, principalmente pelo baixo custo em relação à formação por placas de tapetes naturais. As "bermudas" [Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers] são as principais gramas utilizadas na formação de campos esportivos e, dentre os problemas enfrentados, destaca-se a dificuldade de estabelecimento adequado da cultura, fato que exige a utilização de sementes de alto potencial fisiológico, de modo a permitir rápida emergência e desenvolvimento das plantas. Assim, estudaram-se procedimentos para a condução do teste de envelhecimento acelerado para determinar o potencial fisiológico de sementes dessa espécie, incluindo a avaliação da eficiência do uso de solução saturada de NaCl como alternativa para a realização do teste. Para tanto, cinco lotes de sementes foram submetidos aos testes de germinação, emergência de plântulas e envelhecimento acelerado (períodos de 48, 72 e 96 h, a 41 e 45 ºC, com e sem o uso de solução saturada de NaCl). O experimento foi conduzido em delineamento inteiramente casualizado. O envelhecimento acelerado com o uso de solução saturada de NaCl, dentre os procedimentos estudados, é o método mais adequado para avaliação do potencial fisiológico de sementes de grama-bermuda, sendo que a combinação 45 ºC/48 h é eficiente para a classificação dos lotes em diferentes níveis de vigor.
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33

Olson, Storrs L., and Paul J. Hearty. "Predation as the primary selective force in recurrent evolution of gigantism in Poecilozonites land snails in Quaternary Bermuda." Biology Letters 6, no. 6 (June 16, 2010): 807–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2010.0423.

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During the last half million years, pulses of gigantism in the anagenetic lineage of land snails of the subgenus Poecilozonites on Bermuda were correlated with glacial periods when lower sea level resulted in an island nearly an order of magnitude larger than at present. During those periods, the island was colonized by large vertebrate predators that created selection pressure for large size and rapid growth in the snails. Extreme reduction in land area from rising seas, along with changes in ecological conditions at the onset of interglacial episodes, marked extinction events for large predators, after which snails reverted to much smaller size. The giant snails were identical in morphology during the last two glacials when the predators included a large flightless rail Rallus recessus (marine isotope stages (MIS) 4-2) and a crane Grus latipes and a duck Anas pachysceles (MIS 6). In a preceding glacial period (MIS 10), when the fauna also included the tortoise Hesperotestudo bermudae , the snails were not only large, but the shells were much thicker, presumably to prevent crushing by tortoises. Evolution of Poecilozonites provides an outstanding example of dramatic morphological change in response to environmental pressures in the absence of cladogenesis.
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34

Connell, John. "Bermuda." Round Table 86, no. 341 (January 1997): 37–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00358539708454342.

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35

St Jane, M., and T. C. Richardson. "Bermuda." Trusts & Trustees 13, no. 8 (June 25, 2007): 310–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tandt/ttm054.

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36

Komansky, H. M., H. McIntosh, and D. Kessaram. "Bermuda." Trusts & Trustees 14, no. 6 (June 16, 2008): 429–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tandt/ttn060.

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37

McInnis, D. "The Apples in Marvell's 'Bermudas'." Notes and Queries 54, no. 4 (December 1, 2007): 418–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjm218.

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38

Kornblith, Hilary. "Reply to Bermudez and Bonjour." Philosophical Studies 127, no. 2 (January 2006): 337–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11098-005-5005-3.

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39

Brataas, Delilah Bermudez. "Re-posing the Question." Early Modern Culture Online 7 (January 22, 2020): i—xiii. http://dx.doi.org/10.15845/emco.v7i1.2972.

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40

Torronteguy, Marco Aurélio Antas. "Resenha nacional." Revista de Direito Sanitário 16, no. 2 (October 30, 2015): 253. http://dx.doi.org/10.11606/issn.2316-9044.v16i2p253-257.

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41

Merello, Ida. "Lola Bermudez, Une machine textuelle, Faustroll." Studi Francesi, no. 153 (LI | III) (December 1, 2007): 689. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/studifrancesi.9632.

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42

Conlin, Michael V. "Bermuda Tourism:." Journal of Travel & Tourism Marketing 1, no. 4 (June 11, 1993): 99–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j073v01n04_06.

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43

Powledge, Tabitha M. "Revisiting Bermuda." Genome Biology 4 (2003): spotlight—20030311–01. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-spotlight-20030311-01.

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44

Munk, Walter H. "Bermuda shadow." Atmosphere-Ocean 29, no. 2 (June 1991): 183–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07055900.1991.9649402.

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45

Bolton, Sharon C., and Maeve Houlihan. "Bermuda Revisited?" Work and Occupations 37, no. 3 (August 2010): 378–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0730888410375678.

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This article charts changing power relations within customer services, focusing on frontline service sector managers (FLSSMs): what they do and how they do it. Although increasingly ghostlike in the sociology of customer service work, the FLSSM is a mediator of the often divergent interests of employees, senior management, and customers. Drawing on Kanter’s notion of power failure in management circuits, the article depicts a series of “triangle dramas” drawn from a variety of frontline settings that show how managers can be denied access to “lines of power.” The analysis questions the expectation that FLSSMs have sufficient power to resolve customer dissatisfactions or address structural failings.
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46

Phillippy, Patricia. "Bermuda High." Missouri Review 8, no. 3 (1985): 97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mis.1985.0077.

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47

Yoshinaka, T. "Another Religio-Political Note on Marvell's 'Bermudas'." Notes and Queries 49, no. 3 (September 1, 2002): 343–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nq/49.3.343-a.

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48

Yoshinaka, Takashi. "Another Religio‐Political Note on Marvell's ‘Bermudas’." Notes and Queries 49, no. 3 (September 1, 2002): 343–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nq/490343a.

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49

Liu, Guofan, and Kent D. Kobayashi. "Effect of Shade on the Growth of Four Turfgrasses." HortScience 31, no. 4 (August 1996): 649d—649. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.31.4.649d.

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Four turfgrasses (Z-3, Seashore Paspalum, Common Bermuda, and Tif dwarf Bermuda) were grown outdoors in pots under different shade conditions (0%, 30%, and 50% shade) from August to December 1995. Dry weight of clippings taken every two weeks was determined. Turfgrass growth in the three shade treatments were significantly different, and the growth of the turfgrasses were highly significantly different. In the 0% and 30% shade treatments, Common Bermuda and Seashore Paspalum grew similarly, and their dry weights were significantly greater than those of Z-3 and Tif dwarf Bermuda. However, under 50% shade, only Seashore Paspalum grew significantly greater than the others. Comparing growth among the shade treatments for each turfgrass, we found no significantly differences. Only Common Bermuda grew significantly less under 50% shade than under 0% and 30% shade. Common Bermuda is good for golf courses because of its fast growth and attractiveness. Seashore Paspalum can be used for home lawns because of its vigorous growth and shade tolerance. Z-3 turfgrass, an attractive new variety for home lawns, despite its slow growth, is tolerant of different shade conditions.
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FENG, QIAN, and CORNELIS W. OOSTERLEE. "COMPUTING CREDIT VALUATION ADJUSTMENT FOR BERMUDAN OPTIONS WITH WRONG WAY RISK." International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Finance 20, no. 08 (December 2017): 1750056. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s021902491750056x.

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We study the impact of wrong way risk (WWR) on credit valuation adjustment (CVA) for Bermudan options. WWR is modeled by a dependency between the underlying asset and the intensity of the counterparty’s default. Two WWR models are proposed, based on a deterministic function and a CIR-jump (CIRJ) model, respectively. We present a nonnested Monte Carlo approach for computing CVA–VaR and CVA–expected shortfall (ES) for Bermudan options. By varying correlation coefficients, we study the impact of credit quality and WWR on the optimal exercise boundaries and CVA values of Bermudan products. Stress testing is performed.
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