tazo




 
  Teny nalaina : tazo

1838Ellis William : History of Madagascar
takila II.384
... the arrival at the capital of Mr. Hovenden ... as printer, with press, types, and the requisite printing materials. But within two days of his arrival with his family at Tananarivo, they were seized with the Malagasy fever, and on the 15th of December, to the deep affliction of the members of the Mission, Mr. Hovenden died.

1897Lentonnet (Lieutenant-Colonel) : Carnet de campagne du Lt-Colonel Lentonnet
1895/06/04
takila 59
Les fièvres s'aggravent. Aujourd'hui est mort le soldat Mohamed ben Abekri, à la suite d'un accès pernicieux. Pauvre grand diable, il a bien souffert pendant deux jours. De ma tente entr'ouverte, j'apercevais ce malheureux se contorsionner à l'ambulance toute proche.

American Geophysical Union
2008/12
The GLOBE Program is currently collaborating with students, educators, scientists, health department officials, and government officials in Madagascar to develop a program that combines existing GLOBE protocols for measuring atmospheric and water quality parameters with a new protocol for collecting and identifying mosquito larvae at the genus (Anopheles and non-Anopheles) level. There are dozens of Anopheles species and sub-species that are adapted to a wide range of micro-environmental conditions encountered in Madagascar's variable climate. Local data collection is essential because mosquitoes typically spend their entire lives within a few kilometers of their breeding sites. The GLOBE Program provides an ideal framework for such a project because it offers a highly structured system for defining experiment protocols that ensure consistent procedures, a widely dispersed network of observing sites, and a centralized data collection and reporting system. Following a series of training activities in 2005, students in Madagascar are now beginning to collect data. Basic environmental parameters and first attempts at larvae collection and identification are presented. Results from this project can be used to increase public awareness of malaria, to provide new scientific data concerning environmental impacts on mosquito breeding, and to provide better information for guiding effective mitigation strategies [D. Brooks]