wiktionary sequester In law, sequestration may refer to Sequestration law , the seizure of property Jury sequestration , the isolation of a jury in order to ensure they are not prejudiced by external contact In Scottish law, the term for bankruptcy In U.S. law, a procedure by which an automatic spending cut is triggered, introduced to the federal budget in 1985 by the Gramm Rudman Hollings Balanced Budget Act most recently implemented in the Budget Control Act of 2011 In certain cases of public health risk, protective sequestration refers to measures taken to protect a small, defined, and still healthy population from an epidemic or pandemic In science, sequestration may refer to Carbon sequestration , the process of removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere Biological processes in which an organism accumulates a compound or tissue, as in bile acid sequestrant pulmonary sequestration pyrrolizidine alkaloid sequestration Enclosing a metal ion by one or more polydentate ligands as in a chelate complex A procedure in particle physics of isolating different types of physical processes or different particle species by separating them geometrically in additional dimensions of space, as advocated by scientists such as Lisa Randall slightly reworded from original needs a better target article As a proper name, Sequester may refer to Sequester band , a Canadian heavy metal band Vibius Sequester , a 4th or 5th century author Disambig Category Legal terms de Sequester fr S questration ru uk ... more details
Jury sequestration is the isolation of a jury to avoid accidental or deliberate tainting. ref name DefSequester cite web title Definition of Sequester work The Free Dictionary url http legal dictionary.thefreedictionary.com sequester publisher Farlex accessdate 19 January 2012 ref Although sequestration is rare, publicity surrounding a trial and interested parties may interfere with juror objectivity a judge may order that a jury be sequestered in order to prevent others from tampering with members of the jury through undue persuasion, threats, or bribes. ref name DefSequestration cite web title Definition of Sequestration work The Free Dictionary url http legal dictionary.thefreedictionary.com sequestration publisher Farlex accessdate 19 January 2012 ref References Reflist Category Juries Category Legal terms law stub ... more details
Infobox disease Name Pulmonary sequestration Image Pulmonary sequestration 001.jpg Caption DiseasesDB ... 2628 eMedicine mult eMedicine2 radio 585 MeshID D001998 A pulmonary sequestration also known as a bronchopulmonary sequestration or cystic lung lesion , is a medical condition wherein a piece of tissue ... cough. Diagnosis Bronchopulmonary sequestration Bronchopulmonary sequestration BPS is a rare congenital ... of all congenital pulmonary malformations , making it an extremely rare disorder. Sequestration s are classified anatomically . Intralobar sequestration ILS in which the lesion is located within a normal lobe anatomy lobe and lacks its own visceral pleura . Extralobar sequestration ELS in which the mass ... artery celiac , splenic , or renal arteries . Intralobar sequestration The intralobar variety accounts ... cava , azygous vein , or right atrium heart atrium may occur. Two thirds of the time, the sequestration ... lower lobe. Unlike extralobar sequestration, it is rarely associated with other developmental abnormalities ... that sequestrations become infected when bacteria migrate through the pores of Kohn or if the sequestration is incomplete. Extralobar sequestration The extralobar variety accounts for 25 ... venous drainage. CT CT scans have 90 accuracy in the diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration. The most ... T1 weighted spin echo SE images may help in the diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration by demonstrating ... to have a pulmonary sequestration removed can leads to a number of complications. These include Hemorrhage ... the sequestration is removed after birth via surgery. In most cases this surgery is safe and effective ... get their blood supply from the thoracic aorta . intrapulmonary sequestration drains via pulmonary veins, extra pulmonary sequestration drains to the IVC Sources cite journal author Truitt AK, Carr ... 41 893 896 cite journal author Savic B, Birtel FJ, Tholen W, Funke HD, Knoche R. title Lung sequestration ... Pulmonary Sequestration journal Annals of Thoracic Surgery year 1998 pages 65 1144 6 pmid 9564949 ... more details
Sequestration is the act of removing, separating, or seizing anything from the possession of its owner under process of law for the benefit of creditor s or the state. ref name EB Cite EB1911 short 1 wstitle sequestration ref Etymology The Latin sequestrare , to set aside or surrender, a late use, is derived from sequester, a depositary or trustee, one in whose hands a thing in dispute was placed until the dispute was settled this was a term of Roman jurisprudence cf. Digest L. 16,115 . By derivation it must be connected with sequi , to follow possibly the development in meaning may be follower, attendant, intermediary, hence trustee. In English sequestered means merely secluded, withdrawn. ref name EB Sequestration, the act of removing, separating or seizing anything from the possession of its owner, particularly in law, of the taking possession of property under process of law for the benefit of creditors or the state. Citation needed date March 2010 England In law, the term sequestration has many applications thus it is applied to the act of a belligerent power which seizes the debts due from its own subject to the enemy power to a writ directed to persons, sequestrators, to enter on the property of the defendant and seize the goods. ref name EB Church of England There are also two specific and slightly different usages in term of the Church of England to the action of taking ... is issued to the bishop, and he issues the sequestration order to the church wardens who collect the profits and satisfy the demand. Similarly when a benefice is vacant the church warden s take out sequestration ... Scottish Law In the Scots law of bankruptcy the term sequestration is used of the taking of the bankrupt ... 2010 12 10 ref See also The Parliamentary Sequestration Committee set up in 1643 to Sequestrate Cavalier ... Attribution 1911 wstitle sequestration volume 24 page 659 External links http www.ancestry.com learn ... Sequestration law Category Legal terms de Sequester Recht kk pl Sekwestr pt ... more details
orphan date May 2008 Protective sequestration is a public health term that refers to measures taken to protect a small, defined, and still healthy population from an epidemic or pandemic before the infection reaches that population. Given the extraordinary nature of these measures, they should be considered, if at all, only under exceptional circumstances 1 implementation is feasible, 2 the measures can be enforced, and voluntary compliance of the sequestered population is highly likely, and 3 the sequestered population and or the work they perform merits this effort and justifies the use of these measures. The term protective sequestration was coined by Howard Markel and his colleagues, in their paper that described the successes and failures of several communities in the United States in their attempts to shield themselves from the 1918 1920 so called Spanish Influenza pandemic during the second wave of that pandemic September December 1918 . ref See Howard Markel, Alexandra M. Stern, J. Alexander Navarro, Joseph R. Michalsen, Arnold S. Monto, and Cleto DiGiovanni, Jr., Nonpharmaceutical Influenza Mitigation Strategies, US Communities, 1918 1920 Pandemic, Emerging Infectious Diseases , vol. 12, no. 12 December 2006 available at http www.cdc.gov ncidod eid vol12no12 06 0506.htm. ref The term protective sequestration avoids the use of the word quarantine, which, in public health, refers to the voluntary or enforced detention of a person who, because of actual or possible contact with a person carrying an infectious agent, may have acquired that agent and be capable of passing it along to others. The duration of the quarantine period is determined by the incubation period of the infection ... that contributed to the rare successes of protective sequestration were the following. First, the community .... Fifth, protective sequestration measures remained in effect for the duration of the risk. An advantage of protective sequestration is that it shields selected people from infection and possibly ... more details
Carbon sequestration is the capture of carbon dioxide chem CO 2 and may refer specifically to The process ... and reservoirs, such as by chemical weathering of rocks. Carbon sequestration describes long term storage ... from the atmosphere through biological, chemical or physical processes. Some anthropogenic sequestration ... article.php?articleID 3774&categoryID 147 Dead link date May 2010 ref chem CO 2 sequestration ... artificial capture and sequestration of industrially produced chem CO 2 using subsurface Saline water ... fertilization could lock up carbon on the seabed. Biosequestration or carbon sequestration through ... sequestration. Peat production Peat bogs are a very important carbon store. By creating new bogs ... sequestration as soil can act as an effective carbon sink offsetting as much as 20 of 2010 ... sequestration practices may have positive effects on soil , air, and water quality, be beneficial ... of soil sequestration can be reversed. If the soil is disrupted or tillage practices are abandoned, the soil becomes a net source of greenhouse gases. Typically after 15 to 30  years of sequestration ... affect the costs of carbon sequestration including soil quality, transaction costs and various externalities ... 17827109 p 807, 790 793. ref ref Environmental Co Benefits of Sequestration Practices. 2006. 1 June 2009. http www.epa.gov sequestration co benefits.html ref ref cite journal author Lal, R. title Soil Carbon Sequestration Impacts on Global Climate Change and Food Security journal Science volume 304 ... Duration for Projects. US Environmental Protection Agency. 2006. 1 June 2009 http www.epa.gov sequestration ... sequestration potential in other technologies, such as biochar. Citation needed date September ... content 3 1 1 pmc 2266747 title Carbon sequestration via wood burial author Ning Zeng ... May 2010 ref Landfills also represents a physical method of sequestration. Biochar burial Main Biochar ..., J., Rondon, M. title Bio char sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems a review journal Mitigation ... more details
wikify date August 2009 expert subject multiple Environment Ecology date July 2009 Carbon sequestration ... over longer periods. Terrestrial carbon sequestration is not only of interest in those countries ... sequestration projects CSP have been developed targeted at reducing carbon fluxes primarily through ... and Forestry LULUCF Smith 2004 ref Smith, P. 2004. Carbon sequestration in croplands the potential ... al. 2006 ref Lehmann, J., Gaunt, J. and Rondon, M. 2006. Bio char Sequestration in Terrestrial Ecosystems ... by increased carbon sequestration in the soil. Biology and Fertility of Soils 27 3 230&ndash ... several features of carbon sequestration reflected in the discourses of science biogeochemistry , social ... spectroscopy results from the field and implications for carbon sequestration. URL http www.netl.doe.gov ... Carbon Sequestration in terrestrial ecosystem a status report on Research and development R & D Progress ... of carbon fluxes and assessment of carbon sequestration Different methods such as closed chamber ... methodologies for assessment of carbon sequestration Jacobs n.d. . Nature of sequestration ... Sequestration Research and Development, Office of Fossil fuel Fossil Energy and Office of Science URL http www.fe.doe.gov programs sequestration publications 1999 rdreport index.html Consulted 10 ... Resources Reports 96 Soil carbon sequestration for land management. FAO, Rome 2001. ref . However, CS ... , enhancement of carbon sequestration and conservation of biodiversity through land use change ..., A., and Liu, D. 1993. Carbon sequestration in tropical Asia an assessment of technically suitable ... for carbon sequestration The potential capacity for different TEs to sequester carbon is highly ... rates. The most common methods to increase the sequestration rate in terrestrial ecosystems are reforestation ... on carbon sequestration capacity t C ha 1 yr 1 in dry lands and tropical areas. class wikitable border ... 0.2&ndash 3.1 1 billion Source Lal 1999 FAO 2001 Methods of terrestrial carbon sequestration Forested ... more details
Image cslflogo.jpg thumb right CSLF logo. The Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum CSLF is an international initiative to advance carbon capture and storage CCS technology. The Forum is a Ministerial level organization that includes 23 member countries and the European Commission ref http www.cslforum.org pressroom publications pr poland 101209.pdf ref . Membership is open to national governmental entities that are significant producers or users of fossil fuel and that have a commitment to invest resources in research, development and demonstration activities in carbon dioxide capture and storage technologies. CSLF also recognizes that stakeholders, those organizations that are affected by and can affect the goals of CSLF, form an essential component of CSLF activities. The CSLF Charter, signed in June 2003, organized the CSLF by creating a Policy Group, which governs the overall framework and policies of the CSLF, a Technical Group, which reviews the progress of collaborative projects and makes recommendations to the Policy Group on any needed actions, and an administrative Secretariat, which organizes CSLF meetings, coordinates communications among CSLF Members, and acts as a clearinghouse of information. In July 2005, the G8 Summit endorsed the CSLF in its Plan of Action on Climate Change, Clean Energy and Sustainable Development, and identified it as a medium of cooperation and collaboration with key developing countries in dealing with greenhouse gases. ref http www.number10.gov.uk Page7882 Gleneagles Plan of Action ref Similar designations were also made in bilateral activities that include the joint statement of the U.S. European Union Summit on Energy Security, Energy Efficiency, Renewables and Economic Development, ref http ec.europa.eu external relations us sum04 07 joint statement energy security.pdf U.S. European Union Summit on Energy Security, Energy Efficiency ... links http www.cslforum.org Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum Category Climate change organizations ... more details
Pyrrolizidine alkaloid sequestration by insect s is done for Defense in insects defense and mating purposes. Various species of insects have been known to utilize molecular compounds from plants for their own defense and even as their pheromone s or precursors to their pheromones. A few Lepidoptera have been found to sequester chemicals from plants which they retain throughout their life and Arctiidae is no exception to this strategy. ref name reddy2004 citation author Reddy, G.V.P., and A. Guerrero date 2004 title Interactions of insect pheromones and plant semiochemicals journal TRENDS in Plant Science volume 5 pages 253 261 doi 10.1016 j.tplants.2004.03.009 pmid 15130551 issue 5 ref Starting in the mid twentieth century researchers investigated various members of Arctiidae, and how these insects sequester pyrrolizidine alkaloid s PAs during their life stages, and utilize these chemicals as adults for pheromones or pheromone precursors. PAs are also used by members of the Arctiidae for defense against predators throughout the life of the insect. ref name boppre1989 citation author Boppre, M date 1990 title Lepidoptera and Pyrrolizidine alkaloids exemplification of complexity in chemical ecology journal Journal of Chemical Ecology volume 16 issue 1 pages 165 185 doi 10.1007 BF01021277 ref Pyrrolizidine alkaloids are a group of chemicals produced as secondary plant metabolites, all of which contain a pyrrolizidine nucleus. This nucleus is made up of two pyrrol rings bonded by one carbon and one nitrogen. There are two forms in which PAs can exist and will readily interchange between a pro toxic free base form, also called a tertiary amine , or in a non toxic form of N oxide . ref citation author Hartmann, T. and D. Ober date 2000 title Biosynthesis and metabolism of pyrrolizidine alkaloids in plants and specialized insect herbivores journal Topics in Current Chemistry publisher Springerlink place Berlin issn 03401022 volume 209 pages 207 243 doi 10.1007 3 540 48146 X ... more details
The NatCarb geoportal provides access to geospatial information and tools concerning carbon sequestration in the United States. External links http www.natcarb.org NatCarb, National Carbon Sequestration Geoportal http www.netl.doe.gov publications carbon seq atlas index.html National Energy Technology Laboratory http www.netl.doe.gov technologies carbon seq partnerships partnerships.html Carbon Sequestration Regional Partnerships References Carr, T.R., P.M. Rich, and J.D. Bartley. 2007. The NATCARB geoportal linking distributed data from the Carbon Sequestration Regional Partnerships. Journal of Map and Geography Libraries Geoscapes , Special Issue on Department of Energy DOE Geospatial Science Innovations . In Press. Category Carbon dioxide science stub ... more details
Slash and char is an alternative to slash and burn that has a lesser effect on the Environment biophysical environment . It is the practice of charring the biomass resulting from the slashing, instead of burning it as in the slash and burn practice. In that context, charcoal can be made by numerous and varied methods, from Charcoal History the simplest an earth cover on the pile of wood, with strategically placed vents to the most sophisticated a modern plant that recuperates and recycles strictly all exhaust gases . See also biomass , explaining some of these methods and advantages. Slash and char offers considerable benefits to the environment when compared to slash and burn . It results in the creation of biochar , which can then be mixed with biomass such as crop residue s, food waste , manure and or other, and buried in the soil to bring about the formation of terra preta . Terra preta is one of the richest soils on the planet and the only one known to regenerate itself, although precisely how this happens is hotly debated within the scientific community. It moreover sequesters considerable quantities of CO2 sequestration carbon in the safest and most beneficial fashion, as opposite to the negative effects of the slash and burn . Switching to slash and char can sequester up to 50 of the carbon in a highly stable form. ref Lehmann Biochar sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems, supra note 11 at 407 If this woody aboveground biomass were converted into biochar by means of simple kiln techniques and applied to soil, more than 50 of this C would be sequestered in a highly stable form. ref The nascent carbon trading market that sponsors CO2 sequestration projects, could therefore help supplement the farmers income while supporting a decrease in the pace of deforestation and the development of a more sustainable agriculture . See also Biochar Carbon trading CO2 sequestration CO2 sequestration Slash and burn Biomass Terra preta External links http www.biochar.org joo ... more details
Wikify date September 2010 Jury stress or juror stress refers to the physical and mental tension that affects members of Jury juries . Its causes include exhaustion , Jury sequestration sequestration , the mountain of evidence, and the desire to do the right thing. ref cite book title Nolo s Plain English Law Dictionary last Hill first Gerald authorlink coauthors Kathleen Hill, Nolo Firm year 2009 publisher Nolo location isbn 1413310370, 9781413310375 page 239 pages url http books.google.com books?id FG9X 8LNT1IC&lpg PA239&dq 22JURY 20STRESS 22&pg PA239 v onepage&q 22JURY 20STRESS 22&f false accessdate September 3, 2010 ref References reflist Further reading http articles.latimes.com 1995 09 22 news mn 48687 1 jury service Jury Category Occupational safety and health Category Stress ... more details
In 1643, near the start of the English Civil War , Parliament set up two committees the Sequestration Committee which confiscated the estates of the Royalists who fought against Parliament, and the Committee for Compounding with Delinquents which allowed Royalists whose estates had been Sequestration law sequestrated , to compound for their estates pay a fine and recover their estates if they pledged not to take up arms against Parliament again. The size of the fine they had to pay depended on the worth of the estate and how great their support for the Royalist cause had been. ref http www.nationalarchives.gov.uk palaeography pdf doc 17.pdf Document 17 State Papers Committee for Compounding with Delinquents document relating to Francis Choke, of Avington, Berkshire, dated 1646 Catalogue reference SP 23 193 folio 825 The National Archives ref To administer the process of sequestration, a sequestration committee was established in each county. If a local committee sequestrated an estate they usually let it and the income was used to the best advantage of the State . ref name Riordan O Riordan, Christopher 1987 . http www.gyford.com archive 2009 04 28 www.geocities.com englishrevolution noye.htm The story of a gentleman s house in the English Revolution , Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society, vol. 38 1987 , pp.165 7. ref If a delinquent wished to recover his estate he had to apply to the Committee for Compounding with Delinquents based in London, ref name Riordan ref In a paternalistic society most of the property sequestrated was owned by men. ref as the national Sequestration Committee was absorbed by the Committee for Compounding in 1644. ref http www.nationalarchives.gov.uk catalogue RdLeaflet.asp?sLeafletID 227&j 1 State Papers Domestic The Commonwealth ... 181 210 Cambridge University Press. Sequestration Committee Books and Papers http www.nationalarchives.gov.uk ... Archives . Sequestration Committee, 1643 1650 Covering dates 1643 1653 Committee for Compounding ... more details
The Anderton Baronetcy , of Lostock in the County of Lancaster, was a title in the Baronetage of England . It was created on 8 October 1677 for Francis Anderton of Lostock Hall Gatehouse Lostock Hall in the parish of Bolton le Moors , Lancashire. The Andertons of Lostock were descended from the ancient family of Euxton Hall, near Chorley, Lancashire. They acquired Lostock by marriage in the 13th century. They were a devout Roman Catholic family and their estate was lost by sequestration law sequestration in 1615 due to recusancy but was restored after the English Reformation to Francis Anderton the first Baronet. The third, fourth, fifth and sixth Baronets were brothers. On the death of the third Baronet, his heir, his brother Lawrence, a Benedictine order Benedictine monk succeeded to the Baronetcy but relinquished his claim to the Lostock estate. However his younger brother Francis, a Jacobitism Jacobite , was convicted of High Treason for his part in the Battle of Preston 1715 and the estate was again lost by sequestration. Lawrence returned from France, renounced his Catholicism and successfully reclaimed the estate. Francis was pardoned and on his death succeeded to the Baronetcy but he did not recover the estate which passed to his sister and her husband. The Baronetcy became extinct on the death of Sir Francis in 1760. Anderton Baronets, of Lostock 1677 Sir Francis Anderton, 1st Baronet c. 1628 1678 Sir Charles Anderton, 2nd Baronet 1657 1691 Sir Charles Anderton, 3rd Baronet 1677 1705 Sir James Anderton, 4th Baronet 1678 1710 Sir Laurence Anderton, 5th Baronet c. 1680 1724 Sir Francis Anderton, 6th Baronet 1680 1760 See also Anderton family Lostock, Bolton Lostock References http www.british history.ac.uk report.aspx?compid 53052 A History of the County of Lancaster Vol 5 1911 pp295 299 from British History Online Rayment bt date March 2012 Use dmy dates date March 2012 DEFAULTSORT Anderton Category Baronetcies Category Extinct baronetcies ... more details
Klaus Lackner is a professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University and co founder of http www.grestech.com Global Research Technologies in Tucson , AZ. Lackner pioneered the concept of carbon dioxide air capture as a means for climate change mitigation , i.e. abating emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Trained as a Theoretical physics theoretical physicist , he has made a number of contributions to the field of Carbon Capture and Storage since 1995, including early work on the Carbon sequestration sequestration of carbon dioxide in silicate minerals and zero emission power plant design. His current work includes the use of tracers in geological carbon storage, power plant modeling, carbon capture membranes for use at high temperatures, gravitational carbon storage, advanced fossil fuel technologies, scaling and automation, among others. ref http engineering.columbia.edu web faculty content klaus s lackner ref Lackner is currently the director of the The Earth Institute Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy LCSE Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy at the Earth Institute . He is also known for a Self replicating machine Lackner Wendt Auxon replicators self replicating machine scheme, joint work with Christopher Wendt . Professor Lackner is also teaching Carbon Capture & Sequestration CCS Technologies at RES The School for Renewable Energy Science in Iceland. References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Lackner, Klaus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Lackner, Klaus Category Year of birth missing living people Category Living people Category Geoengineers Category Columbia University faculty http unesdoc.unesco.org images 0019 001906 190645e.pdf Synthetic trees Katerina Markelova meets Klaus Lackner , in Chemistry and life , The UNESCO Courier , January March, 2011, p. 33 academic bio stub eu Klaus Lackner ... more details
for FY 1991 through 1995. Requires enforcement to be implemented through sequestration applied in the following ... the President to invoke sequestration within 15 calendar days after the Congress ends a session to eliminate a budget year breach within any category. Establishes a procedure for within session sequestration. Sets forth the methods of adjusting discretionary spending limits. Sets forth sequestration ... and restores the sequestered amounts. Revises the timetable for sequestration reports and orders. Suspends sequestration procedures in the event of war or low growth. The act has since been extended ... more details
Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen lang no Geofysisk institutt, UiB is a marine research facility located in Bergen , Norway . Founded in 1917 by Bj rn Helland Hansen , the institute studies the field of oceanography dealing with the variation patterns of the weather in the North Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Norway. Within recent years, focus has been increasing put on geophysics and environmental research. The research activities at the Institute spans a wide range of areas from small scale measurement of turbulence up to studies of the large scale ocean currents, from local air and noise pollution up to studies of global scale climate change . Specific areas of research focus on the Norwegian Current , the West Spitsbergen Current and the Norwegian Sea . Shifts and fluctuations in these currents are closely monitored, as they are thought to be indicators for an ongoing climate change. Recent research has included carbon sequestration CO2 sequestration and related matters dealing with Carbon capture and storage .The current Director of the institute is Dr. Peter M. Haugan . External links http web.gfi.uib.no index e.html Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen Category University of Bergen Category Environment of Norway Category Oceanographic institutions Category 1917 establishments in Norway ... more details
protein Name ATPase, Ca transporting, cardiac muscle, slow twitch 2 caption image width HGNCid 812 Symbol ATP2A2 AltSymbols ATP2B, DAR EntrezGene 488 OMIM 108740 RefSeq NM 001681 UniProt P16615 PDB ECnumber 3.6.3.8 Chromosome 12 Arm q Band 23 LocusSupplementaryData q24 ATP2A2 is an ATPase associated with Darier s disease and Acrokeratosis verruciformis . This gene encodes one of the SERCA Ca 2 ATPases, which are intracellular pumps located in the sarcoplasmic or endoplasmic reticula of muscle cells. This enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of ATP coupled with the translocation of calcium from the cytosol to the sarcoplasmic reticulum lumen, and is involved in calcium sequestration associated with muscular excitation and contraction. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms. External links MeshName ATP2A2 protein, human biochem stub ATPases ... more details
this page is a redirect basically to reversible or irreversible Post translational regulation refers to the Regulation of gene expression control of the levels of active protein. There are several forms. ref name Schumannnat. 2006 cite book author1 Wolfgang Schumann author2 Wolfgang Schumann Prof. Dr. rer. nat. title Dynamics of the bacterial chromosome structure and function url http books.google.com books?id pG7RgDra9lQC&pg PA266 accessdate 26 December 2010 year 2006 publisher Wiley VCH isbn 9783527304967 pages 266 ref It is performed either by means of reversible events Post translational modifications , such as Phosphorylation or sequestration or by means of irreversible events proteolysis . References reflist MolBioGeneExp Molecular Biology Category Gene expression Category Posttranslational modification fr R gulation post traductionnelle ... more details
, P., 2001, Coal bed methane enhancement with CO sub 2 sub sequestration worldwide potential ..., Sequestration of carbon dioxide in coal seams Journal of Energy and Environmental Research, v ... Conference on Carbon Sequestration, 2001 . References Reflist Category Coal technology Category ... more details
Conservation Innovation Grants were provided for in a new component of EQIP enacted in the 2002 farm bill P.L. 107 171, Sec. 2301 . This component provides an unspecified portion of EQIP funds for competitive matching grants of up to 50 for innovative approaches to conservation. Examples of such approaches specified in the statute include market systems for pollution reduction, promoting carbon sequestration in soils, and leveraging these funds with money from other sources to promote environmental accomplishments in connection with agricultural production. References CRS article Report for Congress Agriculture A Glossary of Terms, Programs, and Laws, 2005 Edition url http ncseonline.org nle crsreports 05jun 97 905.pdf author Jasper Womach Category United States Department of Agriculture ... more details
Merge Geoengineering date December 2009 Enhanced weathering refers to chemical approach to geoengineering involving land or ocean based techniques. Examples of land based enhanced weathering techniques are in situ carbonation of silicates. Ultramafic rocks, for example, have the potential to store 500 years worth of CO2 production according to one estimate. Ocean based techniques involve alkalinity enhancement, such as, grinding, dispersing and dissolving limestone, silicates, or calcium hydroxide to address ocean acidification and CO2 sequestration. Enhanced weathering is considered as one of the least expensive of geoengineering options. Category Geoengineering ... more details
Unreferenced date October 2006 Sir Edward Waldegrave, 1st Baronet c. 1568 &ndash c. 1650 was an England English soldier and Cavalier during the English Civil War and a grandson of Edward Waldegrave Sir Edward Waldegrave . Waldegrave had sat in the Parliament of England English Parliament for Sudbury UK Parliament constituency Sudbury in the 1580s and was knighted by James I of England King James I in 1607. In 1643, he was made a baronet by Charles I of England King Charles I , but the Rump Parliament later declared the creation invalid and it only became effective after the English Restoration . Though aged over seventy when civil war broke out in 1642, Waldegrave commanded a royalist horse regiment in Cornwall and secured the passage through Saltash against the Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex 3rd Earl of Essex s troops, being twice unhorsed but eventually taking forty Roundhead prisoners. His fortune later turned however, when the Royalists were defeated he was forced to pay 50,000 approximately 3,700,000 in early 2000s terms in Fine penalty fines and Sequestration law sequestration s and died soon after. Start box S reg en bt Succession box title Earl Waldegrave Baronet br of Hever Castle before New Creation after Sir Henry Waldegrave, 2nd Baronet Henry Waldegrave years 1643&ndash c. 1650 End box DEFAULTSORT Waldegrave, Sir Edward 1st Baronet Category 1560s births Category 1650s deaths Category Baronets in the Baronetage of England Category Cavaliers Category Waldegrave family Edward Waldegrave, 1st Baronet, Sir Category People of the Tudor period Category 16th century English people Category 17th century English people ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Argos is a secreted protein that is an inhibitor of the epidermal growth factor receptor EGFR pathway in Drosophila melanogaster . ref M. Freeman, C. Klambt, C. S. Goodman, G. M. Rubin, Cell 69, 963 1992 ref ref R. Schweitzer, R. Howes, R. Smith, B. Z. Shilo, M. Freeman, Nature 376, 699 1995 ref The name derives from the phenotype of mutant flies with eye defects and refers to Argus Panoptes . The mechanism by which Argos attenuates the EGFR pathway is by sequestration of ligand and not by direct interaction with the receptor. ref cite doi 10.1038 nature02840 ref Argos binds to the epidermal growth factor domain of the Drosophila ligand Spitz protein Spitz and prevents its interaction with the EGFR. Argos represents the first example of ligand sequestration as a mechanism of inhibition in the ErbB EGFR family. Crystallographic studies ref cite doi 10.1038 nature06978 ref reveal that Argos does not contain an EGF domain as originally expected. Rather, Argos is composed of 3 separate domains that have homology to one another, termed the Argos domain. The Argos domain has features in common with the three finger toxin fold that is found in a number of proteins including TGF beta receptor s and the urokinase receptor urokinase uPA receptor . Thus, the EGF decoy receptor Argos shares structural homology to receptors from the TGF beta and uPA families. A yet to be discovered human Argos may be found among related structures. The structure of Argos in complex with an EGFR ligand can be found at the Protein Data Bank under code http www.rcsb.org pdb explore explore.do?structureId 3C9A 3C9A . See also EGFR inhibitor References references Category Proteins protein stub ... more details