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IKEA naming system logic
nancyfriedman.typepad.com
 
Scandinavian seals hit by deadly virus : Nature News
www.nature.com
An unknown virus killed more than 2,300 seals around the Scandinavian coast this summer, local scientists reported last week. The death toll, currently about 14% of the population, is likely to rise further, they say. The virus attacks the seals' respiratory systems. They suffocate in their own mucus, and most die offshore. Scientists have recently seen breathing difficulties in some small dolphins in the area, suggesting the virus may also be infecting that species.
 
Is primary health care progressing in Europe?
R K Salmela
Scandinavian journal of social medicine 15 (3), 117-22 (1987)
Posted by salmelar (who is an author) to PHC Scandinavia on Sat May 26 2007 at 11:55 UTC | info | related
 
Ny sida 2
www.artdata.slu.se
The Swedish Taxonomy Initiative - A project aiming at describing 50 000 Swedish multicellular species
 
Phylogeography of Y-chromosome haplogroup I reveals distinct domains of prehistoric gene flow in Europe.
Phylogeography of Ychromosome haplogroup I reveals distinct domains of prehistoric gene flow in europe
Siiri Rootsi et al.
American journal of human genetics. 75 (1), 128-37 (Jul 2004)
To investigate which aspects of contemporary human Y-chromosome variation in Europe are characteristic of primary colonization, late-glacial expansions from refuge areas, Neolithic dispersals, or more recent events of gene flow, we have analyzed, in detail, haplogroup I (Hg I), the only major clade of the Y phylogeny that is widespread over Europe but virtually absent elsewhere. The analysis of 1,104 Hg I Y chromosomes, which were identified in the survey of 7,574 males from 60 population samples, revealed several subclades with distinct geographic distributions. Subclade I1a accounts for most of Hg I in Scandinavia, with a rapidly decreasing frequency toward both the East European Plain and the Atlantic fringe, but microsatellite diversity reveals that France could be the source region of the early spread of both I1a and the less common I1c. Also, I1b*, which extends from the eastern Adriatic to eastern Europe and declines noticeably toward the southern Balkans and abruptly toward the periphery of northern Italy, probably diffused after the Last Glacial Maximum from a homeland in eastern Europe or the Balkans. In contrast, I1b2 most likely arose in southern France/Iberia. Similarly to the other subclades, it underwent a postglacial expansion and marked the human colonization of Sardinia approximately 9,000 years ago.

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