Academic literature on the topic 'Pindone'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pindone"

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Fisher, Penny, Samantha Brown, and Jane Arrow. "Pindone residues in rabbit tissues: implications for secondary hazard and risk to non-target wildlife." Wildlife Research 42, no. 4 (2015): 362. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr15019.

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Context Pindone is used to control rabbits in Australia and New Zealand, but the secondary non-target risks presented by pindone-poisoned rabbits are poorly known. Aims We aimed to generate new data on residual concentrations of pindone in poisoned rabbits for use in a review of the secondary poisoning risks posed to non-target animals in New Zealand. Methods Laboratory rabbits were offered pellet bait containing 0.25 g kg–1 pindone in three trials to simulate a range of bait uptake scenarios: single exposure and low or high chronic exposure. Residual pindone concentrations measured in body tissues of laboratory rabbits that had ingested known exposures of pindone were compared with those in wild rabbit carcasses collected after three pindone-baiting operations. Residues in the faeces of some laboratory rabbits were also measured. Key results Highest concentrations of pindone residues were in the liver and fat tissue of poisoned rabbits, with consistently lower concentrations in muscle tissue. A dose–response relationship between pindone exposure and liver residue concentrations was found only at the highest chronic exposures. Rabbit carcasses collected after field-baiting operations had generally higher pindone residue concentrations than did laboratory rabbits that had ingested known lethal amounts of bait. Unmetabolised pindone was excreted in rabbit faeces. Conclusions The occurrence of the highest residual pindone concentrations in rabbit liver was consistent with the known tissue distribution of anticoagulants in mammals; however, the co-occurrence of similar-range pindone concentrations in rabbit fat has not been previously described. Re-ingestion of soft faecal pellets (caecotrophy) in rabbits that have eaten pindone bait may function as a secondary exposure to increase or prolong their oral exposure to pindone. Some rabbits poisoned following field pindone-baiting operations are likely to have consumed well in excess of a lethal amount of bait. Implications Concentrations of residual pindone in fat and liver of poisoned rabbits suggest that secondary poisoning hazard to some non-target predators and scavengers is high. The lack of field-based assessments of the non-target impacts of pindone is a marked information gap that needs to be addressed.
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Twigg, Laurie E., Garry S. Gray, Marion C. Massam, et al. "Evaluation of bait stations for control of urban rabbits." Wildlife Research 28, no. 3 (2001): 299. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr99114.

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The acceptability of four different bait station designs (drum, slab, tyre, corrugated iron) to rabbits was tested in the field using unpoisoned oat bait. The drum (200 L, cut longitudinally) and the raised concrete slab (60 × 60 cm) designs were the most acceptable to rabbits. The raised tyre design was unacceptable, and this was supported by later field efficacy trials that compared the drum and tyre designs using 1080 One-shot oats. The efficacy of three of these designs (drum, slab, tyre) against ‘urban’ rabbits was assessed more fully using pindone oat bait. The tyre stations were again found to have little impact on rabbit numbers. With the exception of one drum site where pindone bait stations were totally ineffective, the proportional reductions in rabbit numbers for the remaining sites were similar between the drum (69%, n = 3) and slab (70%, n = 5) designs. However, the slab design provided much easier access to bait by non-target species (particularly birds), and we therefore recommend that the drum design would be the best bait station for controlling rabbits. The overall proportional reduction in rabbit numbers achieved with pindone bait stations was 48% (range 0–80%, n = 13), which is less than that usually achieved during broadacre control programs with pindone (60–90+%). In addition, these kills took 30–60 days to achieve, and as rabbit damage still occurred over this period, the use of pindone bait stations did not always result in damage mitigation or, ultimately, an economic benefit. Some potential problems associated with the use of pindone bait stations, such as the possibility of the development of ‘resistance’ to pindone bait and the risk to non-target species, are also discussed. The combined use of track counts and a ‘digs’ index proved a reliable indicator of changes in rabbit abundance.
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Martin, GR, WE Kirkpatrick, DR King, ID Robertson, PJ Hood, and JR Sutherland. "Assessment of the Potential Toxicity of an Anticoagulant, Pindone (2-Pivalyl-1,3-Indandione), to Some Australian Birds." Wildlife Research 21, no. 1 (1994): 85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9940085.

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The sensitivity of a number of avian species to the rabbit poison pindone (2-pivalyl-1,3-indandione) was investigated using increase of prothrombin time (PT) as an index of poisoning. Daily dose levels of pindone were 0.25 mg/kg for eagles, 4.0 mg/kg for magpies and 5.0 mg/kg for pigeons, parrots and ducks. Considerable species variation in response was observed, and within each species there was considerable individual variation in response to pindone. The PTs of magpies and ducks increased to approximately twice baseline levels. Significant elevations (4- to 7-fold) occurred in parrots, pigeons and eagles. Clinical symptoms were observed in only one species, the wedge-tailed eagle. Results of dosing trials indicate that all species tested are theoretically at risk of pindone poisoning, although the risk to some species is minimised by factors such as population size, food availability and bait placement.
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Freeman, AB, GJ Hickling, and CA Bannock. "Response of the Skink Oligosoma Maccanni (Reptilia: Lacertilia) to Two Vertebrate Pest-Control Baits." Wildlife Research 23, no. 4 (1996): 511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9960511.

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The attractiveness of two vertebrate pest-control baits (non-toxic RS5 and Pindone-impregnated AgTech) to captive skinks (Oligosoma maccanni) was assessed with timelapse video and feeding trials in New Zealand. 0. maccanni were attracted to both bait types. When dry, pindone baits were more palatable than RS5 baits. However, when wet the palatability of both baits increased and was similar. Bait size had no significant effect on palatability. Lizards ate an average of 0.01 g of RS5 bait or 0.02 g of Agtech Pindone bait, over two days. On the basis of published susceptibility data, it is unlikely that this level of consumption would expose skinks to lethal doses of these vertebrate pest toxins. Potential sublethal effects of such doses require further study.
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Eason, CT, and SE Jolly. "Anticoagulant Effects of Pindone in the Rabbit and Australian Bushtail Possum." Wildlife Research 20, no. 3 (1993): 371. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9930371.

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The anticoagulant and toxic effect of the rodenticide pindone were compared in the rabbit and the Australian brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Six possums and six rabbits were dosed orally with 25mg kg-1 pindone, and another five possums were dosed with 100mg kg-1 pindone. Blood samples were taken before dosing and 6 days after dosing. In rabbits, the mean haematocrit was reduced from 0.41 to 0.14, the one-stage prothrombin time increased from 7.1 to more than 120 s, and activated partial prothrombin time increased from 26.1 to more than 180 s. These parameters were unchanged in the possums that received 25mg kg-1. In possums that received 100mg kg-1 the one-stage prothrombin time increased from 41.9 to 80.0 s and the activated partial prothrombin time increased from 30.2 to 103.9 s. The haematocrit was unchanged. Half the rabbits died with extensive haemorrhaging within 6 days, but there was no haemorrhaging or mortality in the possums in either dose group.
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Fisher, Penny, Samantha Brown, and Jane Arrow. "Welfare Impacts of Pindone Poisoning in Rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus)." Animals 6, no. 3 (2016): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6030019.

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SAITO, Shizuka, Satoru NEMOTO, and Rieko MATSUDA. "Determination of Pindone in Agricultural Products by LC-MS/MS." Food Hygiene and Safety Science (Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi) 52, no. 4 (2011): 237–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3358/shokueishi.52.237.

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Eason, CT. "The Acute Toxicity of Cholecalciferol to the European Rabbit, Oryctolagus Cuniculus." Wildlife Research 20, no. 2 (1993): 173. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9930173.

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The toxicity of cholecalciferol in the rabbit was evaluated as part of an assessment of alternative toxins to sodium monofluoroacetate (1080) and pindone for large-scale rabbit control in the South Island of New Zealand. After a dose-ranging study spanning the known LD50 values for other mammals (up to 400 mg kg-1) an acute toxicity study established an LD50 of 9mg kg-1 and LD95 of 18mg kg-1 for the rabbit, which proved very susceptible to cholecalciferol.
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JOLLY, SE, CT EASON, C. FRAMPTON, and RC GUMBRELL. "The anticoagulant pindone causes liver damage in the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula)." Australian Veterinary Journal 71, no. 7 (1994): 220. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-0813.1994.tb03407.x.

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SAITO, Shizuka, Takatoshi SAKAI, Satoru NEMOTO, and Rieko MATSUDA. "Determination of Pindone in Animal Products, Fishery Products, and Honey by LC-MS/MS." Food Hygiene and Safety Science (Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi) 52, no. 5 (2011): 294–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.3358/shokueishi.52.294.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pindone"

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Hummel, Pascale. "La syntaxe de Pindare /." Louvain : Paris : Peeters ; Société pour l'information grammaticale, 1993. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb355714341.

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Retter, Andreas. "Das Prooimion von Pindars siebter Olympischer Ode : Versuch einer integrierenden Lösung von Bezugsproblemen /." Innsbruck : Institut für Sprachen und Literatur der Universität Innsbruck, 2002. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb40018307v.

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Sotiriou, Margarita. "Pindarus Homericus : Homer-Rezeption in Pindars Epinikien /." Göttingen : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1998. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb39182435p.

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Ndour, Sophie. "La Médecine chez Eschyle et chez Pindare." Lille 3 : ANRT, 1990. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37608410q.

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Ndour, Sophie. "La médecine chez Eschyle et chez Pindare." Paris 4, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA040437.

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L'étude de la médecine chez Eschyle et chez Pindare aborde tous les domaines médicaux reconnus comme tels à leur époque: l'anatomie et la physiologie, la théorie de la génération, les maladies, les médecins et les soins. Il ressort de cette étude que deux médecines parallèles existent encore dans la première moitié du Ve siècle avant J. -C. L'une est rationnelle, l'autre religieuse: la seconde prédomine largement sur la première. En effet, les deux poètes pensent que certaines maladies dont l'étiologie demeure obscure, sont provoquées par une divinité irritée. Cependant, ils admettent aussi que des maladies ou des plaies puissent avoir une cause naturelle. Toutefois, les seuls médecins habilités à soigner et à guérir les blessés et les malades et évoqués par Eschyle et Pindare, sont des dieux ou leurs descendants directs. Pour traiter ce sujet, les deux poètes emploient généralement des termes courants qui ne relèvent pas nécessairement d'un vocabulaire médical spécifique. Certes, de rares termes médicaux provenant peut-être d'un lexique médical ionien dont il ne reste plus aucune trace de nos jours, apparaissent chez Eschyle d'une manière sporadique<br>The study of medicine in Aeschylus and Pindar’s works deals with every medical field accepted as such at that time: anatomy and physiology, the theory of generation, diseases, physicians and medical treatments. From this study, the fact emerges that two parallel types of medicine still existed through the first half of fifth century before Christ. One is rational, the other is religious: the latter preveals over the former. Indeed, both poets think that some diseases, the etiology of which remains obscure, are determined by angry divinity. Nevertheless, they admit that illness or wounds may have natural causes. However, the only physicians able to cure or provide treatments to the wounded and the sick are the gods or their direct lineage. To deal with the subject, both poets tend to use words in common usage which do not necessarily fall within a specific medical terminology. Admittingly, some rare medical terms probably borrowed from an Ionian medical vocabulary which has been totally eradicated by now, appear sporadically in Aeschylus' works
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Wissel, Silke. "Spatial distribution of the rodent population at Boundary Stream Mainland Island and determination of the efficacy of different baits used for rodent control." Lincoln University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10182/1082.

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Poison operations are a widely used technique for rodent control in the indigenous forests of New Zealand. This study examined the bait-take and rat monitoring data obtained for continuous poison operations at Boundary Stream Mainland Island (BSMI), Hawke’s Bay, between 1996 and 2007. Since the beginning of the Mainland Island project at BSMI in 1996, 800 ha of indigenous forest have been treated with an ‘Integrated Pest Management’ approach, in which rodents (primarily ship rats) have been targeted by consecutive ground poison operations. The aim of the intensive pest control was to allow the ecosystem to recover and provide a safe environment for threatened native bird species to recover or be re-introduced. Another important aim of this pest control is to provide experience and expert knowledge in management techniques especially applicable to the protection of indigenous habitat on the New Zealand mainland. This research study had two main aims: to identify spatial patterns of the rodent population at BSMI and to determine the efficacy of the different rodenticides applied for their control. The distribution of the rodent population was investigated by spatial analysis of bait-take across the reserve and through time. Visualisation of high and low bait-take areas revealed that there was a noticeable reinvasion from adjacent unmanaged native forests, but not markedly from exotic forest or pasture. Reinvasion from small and isolated adjacent forests ceased to be noticeable consistently after approximately four years of the poison operation, while a large scenic native reserve, as well as a narrow part of the treatment area surrounded by many native bush patches, were continuously affected by reinvasion through the entire project time. Bait-take was visibly higher after the bait had either been removed, or left in the field unserviced, over winter. No consistent areas of no bait-take were identified. Further statistical analysis of bait-take data revealed that bait-take was higher in bait stations within 150 m of the treatment edge than interior bait stations. Bait-take in broadleaf/tawa/podocarp forest was significantly higher than in kamahi/kanuka/rewarewa, beech and cloud-cap forest. The second aim of the study was to determine the efficacy of the various bait types with different active ingredients used during the operation. Rat monitoring data, namely rat tracking indices (RTI) obtained from tracking tunnels, were statistically modelled using Generalised Linear Models. Diphacinone cereal pellets (Pestoff® 50D, 0.05g/kg diphacinone) obtained the lowest RTI, followed by pindone cereal pellets (Pindone Pellets®, 0.5g/kg pindone), brodifacoum cereal pellets (Pestoff® 20p and Talon®, 0.02 g/kg brodifacoum), coumatetralyl paste (Racumin®, 0.375 g/kg) and diphacinone bait blocks (Ditrac®, 0.05 g/kg). Cereal pellet baits worked better than any other bait type used at this location. Season had no statistically significant effect on either RTI or bait-take estimates. The overall goal of the poison operation to decrease rat numbers, and to maintain low levels, has been met. However, the results of this study suggest that baiting needs to be done continuously and over the entire treatment area. Edge bait stations – particularly next to adjacent native forests – should be prioritised to target reinvading rodents. Poisons presented in cereal pellet baits should be preferred to other bait types. Both pindone and brodifacoum showed very good results, as well as diphacinone in cereal pellet baits.
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Gallet, Bernard. "Recherches sur l'ambiguité dans la poésie de Pindare." Lille 3 : ANRT, 1989. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37613771r.

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Briand, Michel. "Pindare : ombres et lumières : études lexicales et sémantiques." Nice, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990NICE2022.

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Pindare, poète de la lumière, poète "obscur" : ce jugement est discutable. La lumière grecque et ignée ; briller, voir et brûler sont analogues ; et la réflexion culturelle et stylistique doit soutenir l'analyse linguisitique. Les valeurs concrètes et abstraites de phaos ("lumière diurne", "éclat glorieux") interviennent dans les réseaux phoniques, sémantiques et poétiques du texte figuratif. Son groupe lexical (phaennos, phaino, phaneros), comme aglaos et liparos, lient la lumière diffuse aux notions de gloire, parole, bonheur, richesse, sacré. Mais argos, aigla, lampo, aktis évoquent une combustion vive, un rayonnement coloré. Nux, melas et skia partagent des connotations de phaos, contrairement aux ténèbres et noirceur chtoniennes, notamment skotos. On trouve aussi souvent des teintes lumineuses, à valeur dynamique, matérielle, sensorielle, mythique, rituelle ou maral efortes, notamment leukos, xanthos, poikilos. Le caractère substantiel des notations visuelles apparait dans leurs supports : métaux (or, bronze) ; astres, météores ; feu, flammes, fumée. Ces images forment cinq groupes : lumière diurne, diffuse, harmonieuse ; rayonnement vif ou trouble ; éclat flamboyant ; ombre, nuit, noirceur ; ténèbres. Poète de la lumière,Pindare évoque aussi couleurs, matières, ombres, éclats et feux. Son oeuvre, alliant tradition et création, rigueur et vigueur, figuration et réalisme, n'est pas "obscur"<br>Pindar's reputation, as "obscure" poet of the light, needs discussion. The greek light is fire ; seeing, shinning and burning are similar ; and linguistic analysis must rely upon culture and style references the concrete and abstract values of phaos ("day-light" and "glorious brightness") occur simultaneously through the sound, meaning and style system of the figurative text. Its lexical family (phaennos, phaino, phaneros) like aglaos and liparos, relate diffuse light to glory, voice, happiness, wealth, divinity. But argos, aigla, lampo, aktis refer to vivid combustion or colored radiation. Nux, melas and skia share connotations with phaos, which words like skotos, meaning "deep darkness" or "chtonian blackness" don't. Pindar often emphasizes gleaming colours, expressing movements, matters, feelings, myth, rite and ethics, like leukos, xanthos, poikilos. Their physical supports show the substantial nature of those visual notes : metal (gold, bronze) ; stars, meteorology ; fire, flames, smoke. All these images make five groups : harmonious day-light ; vivid or dim radiation ; shining fire ; shade ; night, blackness ; gloom. Poet of the light,Pindar also shows colours ; matters, shades, gleams and fires. Combining traditions and creativity, strictness and strength, fantasy and realism, his works are not "obscure"
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Gallet, Bernard. "Recherches sur l'ambiguite dans la poesie de pindare." Paris 4, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA040106.

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Le texte des epinicies de pindare contient parfois des ambiguites litterales volontaires, ou sont exploitees la polysemie de certains mots et les diverses possibilites d'agencement syntaxique a l'interieur d'un meme vers. Il s'agit d'ambiguites objectives, consistant dans la superposition de deux sens distincts qui, sauf exception, ne peuvent etre exprimes que par deux traductions differentes. Naturellement enclin a user de jeux verbaux et de dissimulations sur lesquelles il attire lui-meme notre attention, pindare est influence ici par une conception hermetique du langage qui traduit peut-etre l'influence des oracles. Les ambiguites apparaissent dans les passages de transition et les maximes, ou le contexte n'assure plus la discrimination entre les divers sens des termes polysemiques. Elles ont pour but de dissimuler des idees interessantes pour le destinataire de l'ode ou les connaisseurs en poesie, mais irrecevables dans un texte compose pour servir de support a une representation musicale et choregraphique, donnee devant un vaste public. Les ambiguites citees comme exemples expriment des preoccupations professionnelles (le probleme du salaire est evoque parfois de facon humoristique), mais d'autres themes peuvent etre abordes par le meme procede. Certaines d'entre elles (pythiques i, 81 sq. Et ix, 76 sq. ) reposent sur une syllepse (au sens rhetorique) entre le mot usuel kairos et le terme technique kairos ("tresse regulatrice", qui joue un role capital dans le tissage sur metier vertical). Chez pindare (mais aussi eschyle, euripide et platon. . . ), d'autres emplois difficiles de kairos sont elucides par l'hypothese d'un rapport avec le terme technique, ce qui tend a confirmer que le mot usuel en est issu directement, avec changement d'accent<br>The text of pindar's epinician odes occasionally reveals deliberate literal ambiguities in which the polysemy of certain particular words as well as the various possibilities of syntactic arrangement within one and the same poetic line have been exploited. These are objective ambiguities, consisting in the superimposition of two distinct meanings which, except in rare occurrences, can only be expressed in two different translations. Naturally inclined to use verbal puns or hidden meanings, to which he himself draws our attention, pindar was induced to this by a hermetic conception of language, itself possibly influenced by the oracles. The ambiguities appear in transitional passages and maxims, in which the context can no longer be trusted to suggest which sense may be assigned to polysemic terms. Their purpose is to conceal ideas that may be of interest to the recipient of the ode or connoisseurs in poetry, but are inappropriate in a text intended to serve as the medium of a musical and choreographic work performed in front of a large audience. The ambiguities quoted as examples express professional concerns (the problem of a fee is occasionally alluded to in a humorous manner), but other subjects also happen to be approached through the same device. Some of these ambiguities (pythian odes i,81 sq. And ix, 76 sq. ) are based on a syllepsis (in a rhetorical sense) of the everyday word kairos and the technical term kairos (i. E. Chainedspacing cord, which plays a vital part in warp-weighted loom weaving). In pindar (as well as in aeschylus, euripides and plato. . . ) other controversial uses of kairos are elucidated by hypothesizing a relationship with the technical term, which tends to confirm that the everyday word is in direct descent from it, with a change in accentuation
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Mader, Walter. "Die Psaumis-Oden Pindars : O. 4 und O. 5 /." Innsbruck : Wagner, 1990. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb35595832t.

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Books on the topic "Pindone"

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Qamar, Ajnalvi. Pindare. Maktaba-al-Quraish, 1990.

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Froidefond, Christian. Lire Pindare. Société des études classiques, 1989.

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Pindan khawhar. T.S. Khupchong, 2014.

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Hummel, Pascale. La syntaxe de Pindare. Edition Peeters, 1993.

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Les banquets chez Pindare. Department of Religious Studies, Theology and Classical Philology, University of Gothenburg, 2008.

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Pindare et les pindarismes. Philologicum, 2011.

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No, Ŭi-il. Pindae podan naayaji. Saengmyŏng ŭi Malssŭmsa, 1991.

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NEMA, Theodorou. Trikala Kalambaka-Meteora-Pindos. Kyriakidii, 1987.

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Pindar and Saint-John Perse 1887-1975, eds. Saint-Leger Leger traducteur de Pindare. Gallimard, 1986.

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Ygaunin, Jean. Pindare et les poètes de la célébration. Minard, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pindone"

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Laurot, Bernard. "Poséidon chez Pindare, Bacchylide et Eschyle." In Recherches sur les Rhétoriques Religieuses. Brepols Publishers, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.rrr-eb.4.00377.

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Nianiou-Obeidat, I., and G. N. Iconomou-Petrovich. "Commercial Micropropagation of sideritis Clandestina (Mt. Taygetos), origanum Vulgare Subsp. hirtum (Mt. Olympos), melissa Officinalis (Mt. Pindos), and mentha Longifolia (Mt. Pindos)." In Progress in Botanical Research. Springer Netherlands, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-5274-7_123.

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Knight, Daniel M. "Ships in the sky: maritime mythistories in the Pindos Mountains 1." In The Culture of Ships and Maritime Narratives. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315165684-6.

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Jones, G., A. H. F. Robertson, and J. R. Cann. "Genesis and Emplacement of the Supra-Subduction Zone Pindos Ophiolite, Northwestern Greece." In Ophiolite Genesis and Evolution of the Oceanic Lithosphere. Springer Netherlands, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-3358-6_39.

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Briand, Michel. "Le texte et le commentaire comme montages : les citations dans les scholies anciennes à Pindare." In Pragmatique du commentaire. Brepols Publishers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.ash.5.114314.

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Vassilaki, Ekaterini. "L’éloge des dieux, de la terre et des hommes dans les odes siciliennes de Pindare: le cas de Déméter et Perséphone." In L'hymne antique et son public. Brepols Publishers, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.rrr-eb.4.00405.

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Tsoukalas, N., K. Papaspyropoulos, and R. Koutsi. "Water tracing test of the Ag. Taxiarches spring (South Achaia, Peloponnese, Greece). Infiltration of the Olonos-Pindos geotectonic unit, Upper Cretaceous-Paleocenic carbonate rocks." In Advances in the Research of Aquatic Environment. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-19902-8_56.

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Unger, Thomas A. "Pindone." In Pesticide Synthesis Handbook. Elsevier, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-081551401-5.50703-6.

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"PINDONE." In Groundwater Chemicals Desk Reference. CRC Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420009132-342.

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Le Meur, Nadine. "Les odes hippiques de Pindare." In Les hippodromes et les concours hippiques dans la grèce antique. École française d’Athènes, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.efa.6552.

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Conference papers on the topic "Pindone"

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Martillano, Dennis A., Al Fahad D. Chowdhury, John Chrisostom M. Dellosa, Abigail A. Murcia, and Rafael Jose P. Mangoma. "PINDOTS." In ICEEL 2018: 2018 2nd International Conference on Education and E-Learning. ACM, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3291078.3291106.

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Rustini, Rustini, and Lila Muliani. "Potential of Pindang Bandeng as The Betawi-Tionghoa Acculturation Food Iconic Product." In 1st International Conference on Science and Technology in Administration and Management Information, ICSTIAMI 2019, 17-18 July 2019, Jakarta, Indonesia. EAI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.17-7-2019.2303410.

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Puspita, Wedya, Wahyu Sukartiningsih, and Andi Mariono. "The Effect of Pindan Gonnung Traditional Game Toward Cognitive and Rough Motoric Development in Kindergarten." In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Education Innovation (ICEI 2018). Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icei-18.2018.19.

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4

Sulistiani and Rini Handayani. "Application biopreservatives produced by lactic acid bacteria (LAB) for preservation boiled-salted (pindang) tuna (Euthynnus affinis Cantor, 1849)." In INVENTING PROSPEROUS FUTURE THROUGH BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH AND TROPICAL BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT: Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Biological Science. Author(s), 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5050156.

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Chrysafis, Irene, Giorgos Mallinis, Georgios Korakis, and Eleni Dragozi. "Forest diversity estimation using Sentinel-2 and RapidEye imagery: a case study of the Northern Pindos National Park." In Seventh International Conference on Remote Sensing and Geoinformation of the Environment (RSCy2019), edited by Giorgos Papadavid, Kyriacos Themistocleous, Silas Michaelides, Vincent Ambrosia, and Diofantos G. Hadjimitsis. SPIE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2533661.

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Foss, C. A. "Investigation of a Co-sourced Magnetic and AGG Anomaly Pair - An Example from the Falcon Pindan Survey, West Australia." In Near Surface Geoscience 2016 - First Conference on Geophysics for Mineral Exploration and Mining. EAGE Publications BV, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201602094.

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Avakaw, Syarhey M. "Method to determine a detection capability of the die-to-database mask inspection system in regard to pinhole and pindot defects." In 19th European Conference on Mask Technology for Integrated Circuits and Microcomponts, edited by Uwe F. W. Behringer. SPIE, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.515104.

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