Home About us Contact | |||
Chemical Differences (chemical + difference)
Selected AbstractsChemical Differences Are Observed in Children's Versus Adults' Latent Fingerprints as a Function of Time,JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES, Issue 2 2010Kimone M. Antoine B.S. Abstract:, The identification of aged latent fingerprints is often difficult, especially for those of children. To understand this phenomenon, the chemical composition of children's versus adults' latent fingerprints was examined over time using Fourier transform infrared microscopy. Hierarchical cluster analysis revealed that children's and adults' prints were distinguishable for up to 4 weeks after deposition, based on differences in sebum composition. Specifically, adults had a higher lipid content than children, but both decreased over time, attributable to the volatility of free fatty acids. The aliphatic CH3, aliphatic CH2, and carbonyl ester compositions changed differently in adults versus children over time, consistent with higher cholesterol and cholesteryl esters in children's prints and wax esters and glycerides in adults' prints. Thus, fingerprint composition changes with time differently in children versus adults, making it a sensitive metric to estimate the age of an individual, especially when the age of the print is known. [source] Trends in aquatic macrophyte species turnover in Northern Ireland , which factors determine the spatial distribution of local species turnover?GLOBAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2004Einar Heegaard ABSTRACT Aim, The study examined qualitative predictions of ecological theories in relation to the spatial distribution of species turnover of aquatic macrophytes, through the following parameters: (1) distance between lakes (2) chemical conditions of the lakes (3) chemical differences between the lakes, and (4) the lake size. Location, 562 lakes dispersed throughout Northern Ireland were analysed. Methods, To obtain species turnover estimates independent of richness, the average distance between focal lakes and their five nearest neighbours in ordination space (DCA) was standardized by the species richness in a Generalized Additive Model (GAM). The relationships between species turnover and ecological (chemical condition, chemical difference, distance between lakes, and lake-size) and geographical parameters (latitude, longitude, and altitude) were analysed using GAM. Results, The results indicate that the pattern in species turnover is a combination of the chemical conditions and the distance between the lakes, including the interaction term. The effects of chemical heterogeneity and lake size parameters were both positive but weak. In general, increased distance and decreased ionic concentration contribute to increased turnover. The influence of distance on species turnover is strongest at low and high altitude, and at mid-elevation the species turnover is mainly driven by the chemical conditions. Towards the north there is an increasing influence of distance, whereas in the south the chemical conditions have their strongest influence. Conclusions, There is a need for components from several established ecological theories to explain the spatial trends in species turnover within Northern Ireland. Central theories in this particular study are the population/metapopulation dynamics, the continuum concept, and the species-pool concept. [source] Technical basis for narcotic chemicals and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon criteria.ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 8 2000Abstract A method is presented for developing water quality criteria (WQC) for type I narcotic chemicals in general and PAHs in particular. The criteria can be applied to any individual or mixture of narcotic chemicals using only the chemical's octanol-water partition coefficient KOW. It is derived from a database of LC50s comprising 156 chemicals and 33 species, including fish, amphibians, arthropods, mollusks, polychaetes, coelenterates, and protozoans. A target lipid model is proposed that accounts for variations in toxicity due to differing species sensitivities and chemical differences. The model is based on the idea that a target lipid is the site of action in the organism. Further, it is assumed that target lipid has the same lipid-octanol linear free energy relationship for all species. This implies that the slope of the log(LC50),log(KOW) relationship is the same for all species. However, individual species may have varying target lipid body burdens that cause toxicity. The target lipid LC50 body burdens derived from concentration data in the water only are compared to measured total lipid LC50 body burdens for five species. They are essentially equal, indicating that the target lipid concentration is equal to the total extracted lipid concentration. The precise relationship between partitioning in target lipid and octanol is established. The species-specific body burdens are used to determine the WQC final acute value, i.e., the 95-percentile level of protection. An acute-to-chronic ratio is used to compute the body burden corresponding to the WQC final chronic value, which is the procedure used to derive the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency water quality criteria. The criteria are expressed either as dissolved concentrations in the water column or as tissue concentrations. [source] Provenance and microprobe assays of phyllite-tempered ceramics from the uplands of central ArizonaGEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 2 2008David R. Abbott The ceramics in use across a broad upland zone of central Arizona during the early Classic period (ca. A.D. 1100,1300) were characterized by a lack of mineralogical variability; nearly all of the clay containers were tempered with one rock type, phyllite. Consequently, nearly all of the upland pottery is assigned to a single pottery type, Wingfield Plain. This compositional uniformity has frustrated ceramic provenance studies, and, as a result, little has been learned previously about the organization of ceramic production and exchange in the upland territory. There are, however, considerable and interpretable chemical differences in the phyllite-tempered wares, as shown with microanalyses of the temper fragments and pottery clay fractions with an electron microprobe. The chemical patterning is useful for investigating issues pertaining to the upland zone, including the organization of ceramic manufacture, community arrangements, and pottery transactions during a time of prevalent hostilities in central Arizona. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] Trends in aquatic macrophyte species turnover in Northern Ireland , which factors determine the spatial distribution of local species turnover?GLOBAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2004Einar Heegaard ABSTRACT Aim, The study examined qualitative predictions of ecological theories in relation to the spatial distribution of species turnover of aquatic macrophytes, through the following parameters: (1) distance between lakes (2) chemical conditions of the lakes (3) chemical differences between the lakes, and (4) the lake size. Location, 562 lakes dispersed throughout Northern Ireland were analysed. Methods, To obtain species turnover estimates independent of richness, the average distance between focal lakes and their five nearest neighbours in ordination space (DCA) was standardized by the species richness in a Generalized Additive Model (GAM). The relationships between species turnover and ecological (chemical condition, chemical difference, distance between lakes, and lake-size) and geographical parameters (latitude, longitude, and altitude) were analysed using GAM. Results, The results indicate that the pattern in species turnover is a combination of the chemical conditions and the distance between the lakes, including the interaction term. The effects of chemical heterogeneity and lake size parameters were both positive but weak. In general, increased distance and decreased ionic concentration contribute to increased turnover. The influence of distance on species turnover is strongest at low and high altitude, and at mid-elevation the species turnover is mainly driven by the chemical conditions. Towards the north there is an increasing influence of distance, whereas in the south the chemical conditions have their strongest influence. Conclusions, There is a need for components from several established ecological theories to explain the spatial trends in species turnover within Northern Ireland. Central theories in this particular study are the population/metapopulation dynamics, the continuum concept, and the species-pool concept. [source] Comparison of Assays for Metmyoglobin Reducing Ability in Beef Inside and Outside Semimembranosus MuscleJOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 3 2002L.M. Sammel ABSTRACT: The relationships of 6 assays for metmyoglobin (Metmb) reducing ability to color stability and the chemical differences between the inside (ISM) and outside (OSM) beef semimembranosus (SM) muscle after 5 or 14 d storage were investigated. The ISM had less (p < 0.05) color stability than the OSM regardless of time post mortem, and both muscle portions were more color-stable when stored for 5 d rather than 14 d. Among the assays, aerobic reducing ability correlated best with visual color scores (r =,0.58) and Metmb accumulation (r =,0.61) in the SM. The ISM had less reducing ability than the OSM, which can be attributed partially to lower oxygen consumption rate and NAD concentrations (p < 0.05). [source] Direct exposure electron ionization mass spectrometry and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry techniques to study organic coatings on archaeological amphoraeJOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY (INCORP BIOLOGICAL MASS SPECTROMETRY), Issue 5 2005Maria Perla Colombini Abstract Two different analytical approaches, direct exposure electron ionization mass spectrometry (DE-MS) and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS), were compared in a study of archaeological resinous materials. DE-MS was found to be an efficient fingerprinting tool for the fast screening of organic archaeological samples and for providing information on the major components. GC/MS appeared to be more efficient in unravelling the sample composition at a molecular level, despite the long analysis time and the need for a wet chemical pretreatment. Both procedures were applied to characterize the organic material present as coatings in Roman and Egyptian amphorae. DE-MS successfully identified abietanic compounds, hence a diterpenic resinous material could be identified and its degree of oxidation assessed. GC/MS enabled us to identify dehydroabietic acid, 7-oxodehydroabietic acid, 15-hydroxy-7-oxodehydroabietic acid, 15-hydroxydehydroabietic acid, retene, tetrahydroretene, norabietatriene, norabietatetraene and methyl dehydroabietate. These oxidized and aromatized abietanes provided evidence that the amphorae examined were waterproofed with a pitch produced from resinous wood of plants from the Pinaceae family. The chemometric evaluation of the GC/MS data highlighted significant chemical differences between the pitches found in the two archaeological sites, basically related to differences in the production techniques of the materials and in their degradation pathways. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Properties modification of PET vascular prosthesesJOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 5 2009W. Chaouch Abstract Aging mechanisms have been investigated on polyethylene terephthalate (PET) fibres extracted from various vascular prostheses in order to identify the different modifications of the material's degradation. NMR spectroscopy provides a comprehensive view of chemical structures of macromolecules. Examination of a series of PET fibres showed significant chemical differences between the virgin prostheses and the explants, especially for diethylene glycol (DEG) and cyclic oligomeric groups. These analyses revealed that PET failures in vascular prostheses are susceptible to hydrolysis during in vivo stay. We also extended this 1H NMR technique to determine the hydroxyl and carboxyl end-group concentrations. In order to validate the 1H NMR results, complementary techniques , chemical titration and classical viscosimetry , were used. The obtained results showed an increase in end-group concentrations and a decrease of the viscosity averaged macromolecular weight (M,) for the explants. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Sulfide-rich metallic impact melts from chondritic parent bodiesMETEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, Issue 5 2010Devin L. SCHRADER We compare them with the H-metal meteorite, Lewis Cliff 88432. Phase diagram analyses suggest that SaW 005, MET 00428, and HOW 88403 were liquids at temperatures above 1350 °C. Tridymite in HOW 88403 constrains formation to a high-temperature and low-pressure environment. The morphology of their metal-troilite structures may suggest that MET 00428 cooled the slowest, SaW 005 cooled faster, and HOW 88403 cooled the quickest. SaW 005 and MET 00428 contain H-chondrite like silicates, and SaW 005 contains a chondrule-bearing inclusion that is texturally and compositionally similar to H4 chondrites. The compositional and morphological similarities of SaW 005 and MET 00428 suggest that they are likely the result of impact processing on the H-chondrite parent body. SaW 005 and MET 00428 are the first recognized iron- and sulfide-rich meteorites, which formed by impact on the H-chondrite parent body, which are distinct from the IIE-iron meteorite group. The morphological and chemical differences of HOW 88403 suggest that it is not from the H-chondrite body, although it likely formed during an impact on a chondritic parent body. [source] Resistant macromolecules of extant and fossil microalgaePHYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH, Issue 4 2004Gerard J. M. Versteegh SUMMARY The occurrence and composition of macromolecular resistant walls of microalgae and their fossil macromolecular counterparts are reviewed. To date, several algal groups have been identified to produce fossilizable biomacromolecules. Only two biosynthetic pathways seem to be responsible for this, of which the acetate/malate pathway used by Chlorophyta, Eustigmatophyta and Dinophyta is considered to lead to a series of closely related resistant biomacromolecules, called algaenans. Algaenans consist of a network of predominantly linear carbon chains. A different, as yet unidentified, pathway is used by the Dinophyta to produce the aromatic walls of their cysts. The poly-ketide or acetogenic pathway may have been responsible for resorcinol-based algae or bacteria-derived microfossils of the acritarch Gloeocapsamorpha prisca, either through synthesis of the biomacromolecule or through a third pathway, the post-mortem polymerization of its resorcinol lipids. The postmortem polymerization of lipids also appears to be responsible for the formation of fatty acid-based macromolecules in Eocene dinoflagellate-shaped remains from Pakistan. Finally, there is a clear need for elucidating the chemical differences between the biomacromolecules produced by the algae and their fossil analogs in the sediments. This notably applies to the release and condensation of aliphatic and aromatic moieties both at normal and at elevated temperature and pressure conditions. [source] CHARACTERIZATION OF CORAL RED SLIPS ON GREEK ATTIC POTTERY,ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 3 2009M. S. WALTON Samples of red and black gloss from Greek Attic pottery of the late sixth to fifth centuries bc were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM and FIB/STEM). The focus of the study was the chemical and microstructural characterization of the red gloss that was first produced during this period. Two groupings of red gloss were revealed. One red was found to be compositionally similar to the black glosses (labelled ,LCM coral red'). The other red showed more significant chemical differences, such as higher calcium and magnesium, in comparison to the black (labelled ,HCM coral red'). The existence of two chemically distinct reds,otherwise identical in colour and texture,suggests that there was more than one source of clay available to the Attic potters for producing red. [source] Mycenaean pottery from the Argolid and Achaia,a mineralogical approach where chemistry leaves unanswered questionsARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 2 2002A. Hein The chemical classification of Mycenaean pottery from the Northern Peloponnese by neutron activation analysis (NAA) resulted in two groups with very similar chemical compositions assigned to production centres in the Argolid and in Achaia, respectively. The statistical separation of these two groups on the basis only of their chemical composition was difficult, and not clear-cut for all of the examined samples. A complementary mineralogical examination by X-ray diffraction (XRD) of some selected samples indicated differences in the mineralogical composition, which confirmed the determined chemical differences. Furthermore, a clay sample was examined, which showed a composition similar to that of the pottery. [source] New potent and selective inhibitors of anandamide reuptake with antispastic activity in a mouse model of multiple sclerosisBRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, Issue 1 2006Alessia Ligresti We previously reported that the compound O-2093 is a selective inhibitor of the reuptake of the endocannabinoid anandamide (AEA). We have now re-examined the activity of O-2093 in vivo and synthesized four structural analogs (O-2247, O-2248, O-3246, and O-3262), whose activity was assessed in: (a) binding assays carried out with membranes from cells overexpressing the human CB1 and CB2 receptors; (b) assays of transient receptor potential of the vanilloid type-1 (TRPV1) channel functional activity (measurement of [Ca2+]i); (c) [14C]AEA cellular uptake and hydrolysis assays in rat basophilic leukaemia (RBL-2H3) cells; (d) the mouse ,tetrad' tests (analgesia on a hot plate, immobility on a ,ring', rectal hypothermia and hypolocomotion in an open field); and (e) the limb spasticity test in chronic relapsing experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (CREAE) mice, a model of multiple sclerosis (MS). O-2093, either synthesized by us or commercially available, was inactive in the ,tetrad' up to a 20 mg kg,1 dose (i.v.). Like O-2093, the other four compounds exhibited low affinity in CB1 (Ki from 1.3 to >10 ,M) and CB2 binding assays (1.3
| |