PAULA REAL Martes, 20 julio 2021, 00:11
valencia. El próximo sábado dará comienzo Verano Misión , una iniciativa organizada por la delegación de misiones del Arzobispado con la que ocho seminaristas y un delegado diocesano, todos ellos valencianos, partirán hacia la selva amazónica de Perú en colaboración misionera. Años atrás los voluntarios habían trabajado en varios colegios de Lima. En 2020 no se pudo realizar debido a la pandemia, pero este año llegarán por primera vez al Vicariato Apostólico de Requena al que la Archidiócesis de Valencia ayuda desde hace cuatro años. Los lugares son: la parroquia San José Obrero, en el pueblo de Jenaro Herrera, donde relevarán temporalmente a los franciscanos; Orellana, donde acudirán dos seminaristas; y el pueblo Flor de Punga, donde acudirán otros tres seminaristas.
El cura que fingió ser traficante de órganos para salvar a un niño
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Selva misteriosa-Una joya del cómic peruano con homenaje a su madre rescatada por Planeta
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Praying mantises with their angular features, huge eyes and centaur posture often seem a bit alien. But researchers have recently found one mantis species that takes this otherworldly quality to the next level: Females of this species have an inflatable pheromone gland that protrudes from the back of the abdomen like a green, Y-shaped balloon.
This odd organ is unlike anything seen in mantises before, researchers report online April 21 in the
Journal of Orthoptera Research.
In October 2017, herpetologist Frank Glaw was moving through the nighttime rainforest in Amazonian Peru at the Panguana research station, searching for amphibians and reptiles. His flashlight passed over a brown, leaf-mimicking mantis (
A team of Tulane University biomedical engineering students has been selected as a semi-finalist in the 11
Team CerFix will join 35 student teams from national and international universities as they present low-cost technologies they have designed to address global health challenges in settings with limited resources. Three finalists will be selected to compete in a live virtual finale on March 26. The competition is sponsored by the Rice 360º Institute for Global Health.
Team CerFix, consisting of Emma Chapel, Katherine Mattingly, Madeline Tallman and Sydney Siegmeister, developed the device as part of a capstone design course required of all biomedical engineering seniors. They described it as an “efficient, intuitive tool to effectively visualize the cervix and screen for precancerous and cancerous lesions” among women living in low-resourced rural communities along the Amazon River in Peru.