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Keywords: Iroquois
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Journal Article
Ryan M Brown and others
Biology of Reproduction, Volume 106, Issue 5, May 2022, Pages 1000–1010, https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioac015
Published: 09 February 2022
... of the Iroquois homeobox transcription factor family, IRX3 and IRX5, exhibited distinct and dynamic expression profiles in the developing ovary to promote oocyte and follicle survival. Elimination of each gene independently caused subfertility, but with different breeding pattern outcomes. Irx3 KO...
Journal Article
Bongki Kim and others
Biology of Reproduction, Volume 81, Issue Suppl_1, 1 July 2009, Page 38, https://doi.org/10.1093/biolreprod/81.s1.38
Published: 01 July 2009
..., and 3 other genes, Fto, Fts, and Ftm. Homozygous embryos die early in development (E10.5-E14.5) because of severe malformation of the developing brain and loss of left-right asymmetry. The Iroquois homeobox family has been shown to be critical for axis and pattern formation during the development...
Journal Article
Manuel Irimia and others
Molecular Biology and Evolution, Volume 25, Issue 8, August 2008, Pages 1521–1525, https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msn109
Published: 09 May 2008
... rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: [email protected] 2008 Abstract Vertebrate and Drosophila Iroquois genes are organized in clusters of 3 genes sharing blocks of conserved regulatory sequences. Here, we report a 3-gene cluster in the basal, preduplicative...
Journal Article
Kathleen A. Earle
Social Work Research, Volume 22, Issue 2, June 1998, Pages 89–99, https://doi.org/10.1093/swr/22.2.89
Published: 01 June 1998
..., time since last mental health visit, education, and religion. This study raises further questions for study and provides some limited information for people who treat American Indian clients. American Indian cultural diversity Haudenosaunee Iroquois mental health Cultural diversity and mental...
Chapter
Published: 28 September 2000
.... After 1770, a new middle ground formed between the Mississippi River and the Appalachians. Burr's experience with Indians was in the North, where the Iroquois Confederacy had broken apart during the Revolutionary War in a civil conflict contemporary to that between Whigs and Tories. Mohawks led...
Chapter
Published: 26 April 2012
... sovereignty and India law. It discusses the Iroquois Confederacy which adopted rules of governance in what became known as the Haudenosaunee Constitution, or the Great Law of Peace. Articles of Confederation Constitution Diplomacy Bailyn Bernard Tribal sovereignty Blackstone Hobbes Wilson James Great...
Chapter
Published: 01 September 2008
...This introductory chapter first sets out the purpose of the book, which is to address a significant problem in the historical anthropology of Six Nations Iroquois (or Haudenosaunee) peoples, namely the scholarly interpretation of eighteenth-century Iroquois society. The book argues...
Chapter
Published: 01 May 2015
... Americans is taken a step further into the paranormal as members of the Mohawk nation transform into loups-garou or werewolves. The lycanthropic behaviour eventually distils down to a single figure, La-Linotte-Qui-Chante, an Iroquois woman and werewolf who marries a French corporal...
Chapter
Published: 20 October 2017
... Contamination Anthropology Indigenous Studies Mohawk Haudenosaunee Iroquois On a sunny afternoon in August, I sat in a coffee shop on Cornwall Island with Brenda, who has been active in movements and organizations around health and the environment in Akwesasne for decades. She had been part of the efforts...
Chapter
Published: 25 September 2018
...Over time, Natives and settlers not only came to appreciate the political implications of treaties but also learned to manipulate each other’s legal concepts. Craig Yirush shows the Iroquois’ skill at sequentially deploying indigenous and English concepts during negotiations with delegates from...
Chapter
Published: 25 September 2018
...Gallman and Taylor take up murder at the boundary zones between the Iroquois and British settlers and between Spanish Florida and the Lower Creeks and Seminoles. Despite contrasts between the legal systems of the empires—civil law and inquisitorial procedure on the Spanish side, common law...
Chapter
Published: 05 April 2012
...This chapter considers the relationship of Hudson Valley Indians with the English and Iroquois. From the 1670s onward, Hudson Valley Indians increasingly had to accept the reality of some degree of foreign domination of their homeland, both by the English and the Iroquois. These partners tended...
Chapter
Published: 04 October 2012
...This chapter examines a variety of Native American oral performances, beginning with the Condolence Rites of the Iroquois. The Rites of Condolence, performed upon the death of one of the fifty chiefs of the Iroquois League, include chants rehearsing the history of the League and conclude...
Chapter
Published: 15 March 2020
...This chapter looks at how the new governor of Canada, Marquis de Denonville, summoned military man Henri Tonti to Quebec to discuss plans to attack the problematic Iroquois, who continued to attack French settlements. After returning to Starved Rock, Tonti dispatched agents to the Illinois, Miami...
Chapter
Published: 17 December 2018
...Chapter 2 analyzes competing aesthetic traditions in the copious letters, journals, and tracts produced by missionaries to the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois; Six Nations) Confederacy in the second half of the eighteenth century. In their interactions with missionaries, Haudenosaunee nations adhered...
Chapter
Published: 20 August 2010
...This chapter reflects on humming, which usually implies rhythm—the rhythm of the body in motion. It argues that humming, which involves the voice and is usually sung, moves in and out of understandable language and often works in tandem with body movement. Humming is evident in Iroquois ritual...
Chapter
Published: 12 October 2018
..., the first superior, published an account of an expedition accompanying a hunting band of Montagnais (Innu). Other detailed accounts include Jean de Brebeuf’s mission to the Huron (Wendat). In the eighteenth century, Lafitau published a treatise comparing “American Savages”, particularly the Iroquois among...
Chapter
Published: 15 December 2022
... of Iroquois history and culture that has shaped New Yorkers’ conception of self. In sum, they made it possible for New Yorkers to think first of the Haudenosaunee, above all other Native American nations, as the focal point of an effort to find the indigenous “part of our national soul.” In New York’s...
Chapter
Published: 15 December 2022
...Figure C.1 Photograph of the Red Jacket Peace Medal on display at the Seneca-Iroquois National Museum. Photograph by Hayden Haynes. Seneca-Iroquois National Museum and Onöhsagwë:de’ Cultural Center. On May 17, 2021, the Red Jacket Peace Medal was repatriated by the Buffalo History Museum...
Chapter
Published: 07 April 2016
... Iroquois Grand Settlement of 1701, the adoption of horses on the Great Plains, and two places that experienced the less common but better-known situation of living with permanent European settlers: the Rio Grande valley and southern New England. Chickasaws colonial period de Soto Hernando disease...