Maíz. El estudio de los materiales mexicanos en su totalidad muestra una variabilidad inmensa... se halla en todo el material un gran número de formas en transición” N. N. Kuleshov, 1930 Botánico Ruso El concepto y la categoría de raza es de gran utilidad como sistema de referencia rápido para comprender la variación de maíz, para organizar el material en las colecciones de bancos de germoplasma y para su uso en el mejoramiento (McClintock 1981, Wellhausen 1988), así como para describir la diversidad a nivel de paisaje (Perales y Golicher 2011). Sin embargo, cada raza puede comprender numerosas variantes diferenciadas en formas de mazorca, color y textura de grano, adaptaciones y diversidad genética.
En América Latina se han descrito cerca de 220 razas de maíz (Goodman y McK. Bird. 1977), de las cuales 64 (29%) se han identificado, y descrito en su mayoría, para México (Anderson 1946, Wellhausen et. al. 1951, Hernández y Alanís 1970, Ortega 1986, Sánchez 1989, Sánchez et al. 2000). Kentucky Digital Library. California Digital Newspaper Collection. Libros y artículos. New Mexico Digital Collections Hosted by the University of New Mexico Libraries. Índice de autores. UNAM IIH - Estudios de Historia Novohispana. Primeros Libros. Parallel Histories: Spain, the United States, and the American Frontier Home / Historias Paralelas: España, Estados Unidos y la Frontera Americana. About the Project Parallel Histories: Spain, the United States, and the American Frontier is a bilingual, multi-format English-Spanish digital library site that explores the interactions between Spain and the United States in America from the fifteenth to the early nineteenth centuries.
A cooperative effort between the National Library of Spain, the Biblioteca Colombina y Capitular of Seville and the Library of Congress, the project is part of the Library of Congress Global Gateway initiative to build digital library partnerships with national libraries around the world. Parallel Histories: Spain, the United States, and the American Frontier is part of the Library of Congress' Global Gateway project to establish cooperative digital libraries with national libraries around the world. The site of the National Library of Spain, The Library of Congress’ partner in this project, is located at Acerca del Proyecto.
Global Gateway: World Culture & Resources (Library of Congress) :::Bandos de la Ciudad de México::: New Mexico State University Library | Celebrating New Mexico Statehood. Border Heritage Center - Otis A Aultman Photo Collection. By 1911 El Paso was a gathering place for many of the main personalities of the Mexican Revolution (Francisco Madero, Francisco (Pancho) Villa, Pascual Orozco) and after the shooting began, many American newsmen also flocked to El Paso to cover the event. Aultman was a man in the right place at the right time. He photographed the battle of Casas Grandes, the first battle of Juárez in May 1911, and the Orozco rebellion in 1912. He was a favorite of Pancho Villa, who called Aultman "Banty Rooster" because he was only 5'4" tall. Aultman worked for the International News Service and Pathé News and experimented with cinematography. During the early years of the revolution Aultman's studio on San Francisco Street was a gathering place for both local and out-of-town reporters and photographers, as well as soldiers of fortune.
After the military part of the revolution was over, Aultman settled down to a conventional career as a commercial photographer. Mary A. Bibliography: Larry A. MÉXICO. UN SIGLO EN IMÁGENES. CONTENIDO. Benson Latin American Collection | University of Texas Libraries. Ernesto Cardenal Papers: Selected Materials on Display Wednesday, December 7, 2016 to Monday, May 15, 2017 Ernesto Cardenal conducting mass in Solentiname, Nicaragua, 1974 The opening of the Ernesto Cardenal Papers at the Benson Latin American Collection was celebrated on November 15, 2016, with a poetry reading by the Nicaraguan luminary himself, preceded by a panel discussion among scholars of literature, religion, and political science. But although the “main event” has come and gone, the presence of Cardenal’s rich and multifaceted archive at The University... Read More LULAC Materials on Display for Hispanic Heritage Month Tuesday, September 27, 2016 to Monday, October 31, 2016 Image: First LULAC Convention, Corpus Christi, May 1929.
HNDM.