- Calleria (Peru)
Pucallpa, city, eastern Peru. It lies on the Ucayali River in the hot, humid Amazonian rain forest. Although the community dates from the early colonial era (1534), it remained isolated until 1945, when the Lima-Pucallpa highway, 526 miles (846 km) long, was completed. Pucallpa can be reached by
- Calles, Plutarco Elías (president of Mexico)
Plutarco Elías Calles was a Mexican military and political leader who modernized the revolutionary armies and later became president of Mexico. He was the founder of the National Revolutionary Party (Partido Nacional Revolucionario; PNR), which became the major Mexican political party (renamed in
- Calleva Atrebatum (Roman town, United Kingdom)
Silchester: …important Roman British town of Calleva Atrebatum, a node of the Roman road system in Britain. Most of the antiquities recovered from the site are in the Reading Museum; the local Calleva Museum illustrates the life of the Roman town. Pop. (2001) 918; (2011) 921.
- Calley, William (United States army officer)
My Lai Massacre: Massacre at My Lai: William Calley, was inserted a short distance to the west of a sub-hamlet known locally as Xom Lang but marked as My Lai (4) on U.S. military maps.
- Calley, William L. (United States army officer)
My Lai Massacre: Massacre at My Lai: William Calley, was inserted a short distance to the west of a sub-hamlet known locally as Xom Lang but marked as My Lai (4) on U.S. military maps.
- Calliactis (sea anemone)
sea anemone: …single anemone of the genus Calliactis on the snail shell it uses as a “house.” When the hermit crab grows too large for its shell, it moves to a new one, transplanting the anemone to the new shell. Similarly, the hermit crab Eupagurus prideauxi and the sea anemone Adamsia palliata…
- Callianassa (crustacean)
perciform: Interspecific relationships: …upon holes dug by the ghost shrimp (Callianassa) for a home and is unable to live without its help. Other gobies are known to share holes with burrowing worms, pea crabs, and snapping shrimps.
- Callias (Greek statesman [5th century BCE])
Callias was a diplomat and a notable member of one of the wealthiest families of ancient Athens. Callias is usually credited with negotiating the peace treaty of 450/449 between the Greeks and the Persians—called the Peace of Callias. This treaty officially concluded the long but intermittent
- Callias (Greek statesman [4th century BCE])
Callias was an Athenian who was ridiculed by the comic poets for his youthful extravagance; later in life, he was a successful military commander and diplomat. The grandson of the diplomat Callias, he was the butt of jokes in the plays of Aristophanes and other poets and was attacked by the orator
- Callias, Peace of (ancient Greece-Persia [450/449 BCE])
ancient Iran: Artaxerxes I to Darius III: An advantageous peace (the Peace of Callias) with Athens was signed in 448 bc, whereby the Persians agreed to stay out of the Aegean and the Athenians agreed to leave Asia Minor to the Achaemenids. Athens broke the peace in 439 in an attack on Samos, and in its…
- Callicebus (primate)
titi, (genus Callicebus), any of about 20 species of small arboreal monkeys that have long furred tails and are found in South American rainforests, especially along the Amazon and other rivers. Titis have long, soft, glossy fur and rather flat, high faces set in small, round heads. Even the
- callichthyid armoured catfish (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Callichthyidae (callichthyid armoured catfishes) 2 longitudinal series of overlapping bony plates. Herbivorous aquarium fishes. South and Central America. 8 genera, about 177 species. Family Loricariidae (suckermouth armoured catfishes) Sucking mouth; 3 or 4 rows of bony scutes. Herbivorous aquarium fishes. Central and South America.
- Callichthyidae (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Callichthyidae (callichthyid armoured catfishes) 2 longitudinal series of overlapping bony plates. Herbivorous aquarium fishes. South and Central America. 8 genera, about 177 species. Family Loricariidae (suckermouth armoured catfishes) Sucking mouth; 3 or 4 rows of bony scutes. Herbivorous aquarium fishes. Central and South America.
- Callicles (Greek politician)
Plato: Early dialogues of Plato: Callicles praises the man of natural ability who ignores conventional justice; true justice, according to Callicles, is this person’s triumph. In the Hippias Minor, discussion of Homer by a visiting Sophist leads to an examination by Socrates, which the Sophist fails, on such questions as…
- Callicrates (Greek architect)
Callicrates was an Athenian architect who designed the Temple of Athena Nike on the Athenian Acropolis and, with Ictinus, the Parthenon. It is known from an inscription of 449 bc (the year of the signing of peace with Persia) that the Senate commissioned Callicrates to construct a temple to Athena
- Callide Valley (valley, Queensland, Australia)
Callide Valley, valley in eastern Queensland, Australia, a southeast-northwest corridor extending for 70 miles (110 km) west of the Calliope Range. Its principal settlement is Biloela. Cotton, grains, and dairy pastures are irrigated from subartesian sources and dams on the seasonal Callide Creek.
- Callières, François de (French diplomat and author)
François de Callières was a French diplomat and author whose book De la manière de négocier avec les souverains (1716; The Practice of Diplomacy) was considered a model introduction to the subject of diplomacy. Between 1670 and 1700 Callières was sent on many diplomatic missions, notably as a
- Calliergon (plant genus)
bryophyte: Ecology and habitats: …of the genera Drepanocladus and Calliergon. These mosses also build up a moss mat that, through organic accumulation of its own partially decomposed remains, alters the acidity of the site and makes it attractive to the formation of Sphagnum peatland.
- Calligrammes (work by Apollinaire)
Calligrammes, collection of poetry by Guillaume Apollinaire, published in French in 1918. The poems in the collection reflect Apollinaire’s experiences as a soldier during World War I as well as his association with the Parisian art world. The collection is especially noted for its pattern poetry,
- Calligrammes: Poems of Peace and War (work by Apollinaire)
Calligrammes, collection of poetry by Guillaume Apollinaire, published in French in 1918. The poems in the collection reflect Apollinaire’s experiences as a soldier during World War I as well as his association with the Parisian art world. The collection is especially noted for its pattern poetry,
- calligraphy
calligraphy, the art of beautiful handwriting. The term may derive from the Greek words for “beauty” (kallos) and “to write” (graphein). It implies a sure knowledge of the correct form of letters—i.e., the conventional signs by which language can be communicated—and the skill to make them with such
- Callimachus (Greek poet and scholar)
Callimachus was a Greek poet and scholar, the most representative poet of the erudite and sophisticated Alexandrian school. Callimachus migrated to Alexandria, where King Ptolemy II Philadelphus of Egypt gave him employment in the Library of Alexandria, the most important such institution in the
- Callimachus (Greek sculptor)
Callimachus was a Greek sculptor, perhaps an Athenian, reputed to have invented the Corinthian capital after witnessing acanthus leaves growing around a basket placed upon a young girl’s tomb. Although no sculptures by Callimachus survive in the original, he was reported to have carved the golden
- Callimachus (Athenian military commander)
Battle of Marathon: …broken by a civil official, Callimachus, who decided in favour of an attack. Four of the generals then ceded their commands to the Athenian general Miltiades, thus effectively making him commander in chief.
- Callimico goeldii (primate)
marmoset: …“true” marmosets, the tamarins, and Goeldi’s monkey (Callimico goeldi). Also called Goeldi’s marmoset, this species is found only in the western Amazon River basin. Black in colour and maned, it differs from other marmosets in that it possesses a third set of molars and does not bear twins. Though Goeldi’s…
- Callinago (people)
Central American and northern Andean Indian: Traditional culture patterns: …farming; among those were the Antillean Carib, Chocó, Ciboney, and Motilón.
- Callinectes (crustacean)
blue crab, (genus Callinectes), any of a genus of crustaceans of the order Decapoda (phylum Arthropoda), particularly Callinectes sapidus and C. hastatus, common edible crabs of the western Atlantic coast that are prized as delicacies. Their usual habitat is muddy shores, bays, and estuaries. The
- Callinectes sapidus (crustacean)
crab: Economic importance: …America, the blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) of the Atlantic coast and the Dungeness crab (Cancer magister) of the Pacific coast. In the Indo-Pacific region the swimming crabs, Scylla and Portunus, related to the American blue crab, are among the most important sources of seafood. Commercially valuable anomurans are the…
- calling (sport)
hunting: Hunting methods: …hunting waterfowl, with or without calling. It is called flighting in Great Britain. Hunting by calling involves waiting in hiding and making imitative noises by voice or with a call mechanism to attract the game. Game birds so hunted include ducks and geese, hunted from blinds near which decoys are…
- Calling All Cars (radio program)
radio: Police and detective dramas: …its debut on radio with Calling All Cars, which was broadcast from November 1933 to September 1939 over the West Coast stations of CBS. The series was written and directed by William N. Robson, who would later become one of radio’s most renowned talents, and depicted actual crime stories, which…
- Calling All Stations (album by Genesis)
Genesis: …record with the 1997 release Calling All Stations. This proved to be the group’s final studio album, however, as a 2007 reunion tour, with Collins back as lead vocalist, did not lead to any new material. Genesis was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010.
- calling crab (crustacean)
fiddler crab, any of the approximately 65 species of the genus Uca (order Decapoda of the subphylum Crustacea). They are named “fiddler” because the male holds one claw, always much larger than the other, somewhat like a violin. Both claws in the female are relatively small. In males, claws can be
- Calling Myself Home (poetry by Hogan)
Linda Hogan: Her first collection of poetry, Calling Myself Home, was published the same year.
- Calling of St. Matthew, The (painting by Caravaggio)
Caravaggio: The Contarelli Chapel and other church commissions of Caravaggio: The subjects prescribed were The Calling of St. Matthew and The Martyrdom of St. Matthew. Caravaggio used his by-now-established method, setting both episodes in the present day and painting directly from live models posed in mise-en-scènes of his own devising. He set the subject of Christ calling Matthew, the…
- Calling the Doves (picture book by Herrera)
Juan Felipe Herrera: …his picture books for children, Calling the Doves/El canto de las palomas (1995), which won the 1997 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award for children’s literature written by new children’s book authors. Calling the Doves is a bilingual telling of the author’s nomadic childhood among migrant farmworkers. His books of poetry…
- Callinicum, Battle of (Byzantine history)
ancient Iran: Intermittent conflicts from Yazdegerd I to Khosrow I: the Byzantine general Belisarius at Callinicum (531) with the support of al-Mundhir II of Al-Ḥīrah. Earlier in his reign he had moved away from the Zoroastrian church and favoured Mazdakism, a new socioreligious movement that had found support among the people. The crown prince, Khosrow, however, was an orthodox Zoroastrian;…
- Callinicus (Seleucid ruler)
Seleucus II Callinicus was the fourth king (reigned 246–225) of the Seleucid dynasty, son of Antiochus II Theos. Antiochus II repudiated his wife Laodice (Seleucus’ mother) and married Ptolemy’s daughter Berenice, but by 246 bc Antiochus had left Berenice in order to live again with Laodice and
- Callinicus Of Heliopolis (Greek architect)
Callinicus Of Heliopolis was an architect who is credited with the invention of Greek fire, a highly incendiary liquid that was projected from “siphons” to enemy ships or troops and was almost impossible to extinguish. Born in Syria, Callinicus was a Jewish refugee who was forced to flee the Arabs
- Callinus (Greek poet)
Callinus was a Greek elegiac poet, the few surviving fragments of whose work reflect the troubled period when Asia Minor was invaded by the Cimmerians, a race originating in what was later South Russia. The longest fragment is an appeal to young men to cast off their cowardly sloth and prepare to
- Callionymidae (fish)
dragonet, any of about 40 species of marine fishes constituting the family Callionymidae (order Perciformes), found in warm temperate or tropical areas, particularly in the Indo-Pacific region. Dragonets characteristically have large and elongated fins, large, flattened heads, and small gills that
- Calliope (rocket launcher)
rocket and missile system: Barrage rockets: Army was the Calliope, a 60-tube launching projector for 4.5-inch rockets mounted on a Sherman tank. The launcher was mounted on the tank’s gun turret, and both azimuth (horizontal direction) and elevation were controllable. Rockets were fired in rapid succession (ripple-fired) to keep the rockets from interfering with…
- Calliope (Greek Muse)
Calliope, in Greek mythology, according to Hesiod’s Theogony, foremost of the nine Muses; she was later called the patron of epic poetry. At the behest of Zeus, the king of the gods, she judged the dispute between the goddesses Aphrodite and Persephone over Adonis. In most accounts she and King
- calliope (musical instrument)
calliope, in music, a steam-whistle organ with a loud, shrill sound audible miles away; it is used to attract attention for circuses and fairs. It was invented in the United States about 1850 by A.S. Denny and patented in 1855 by Joshua C. Stoddard. The calliope consists of a boiler that forces
- Callipepla californica (bird)
quail: …California, or valley, quail (Callipepla californica) and Gambel’s, or desert, quail (Lophortyx gambelii). Both species have a head plume (larger in males) curling forward.
- Callipepla squamata (bird)
quail: …scaled, or blue, quail (Callipepla squamata). Grayish, with scaly markings and a white-tipped crest, it is the fastest quail afoot, with running speeds measured at 24 km (15 miles) per hour. The mountain, or plumed, quail (Oreortyx pictus), gray and reddish with a long straight plume, is perhaps the…
- calliper (measurement instrument)
caliper, measuring instrument that consists of two adjustable legs or jaws for measuring the dimensions of material parts. The calipers on the right side of the illustration have an adjusting screw and nut and are known as spring calipers, while those on the left are an illustration of firm-joint
- Calliphlox amethystina (bird)
hummingbird: In Calliphlox amethystina, one of the tiniest species, the male has a wing-beat rate of about 80 per second; the female, which is larger, beats her wings at a rate of about 60 times per second. The ruby-throated hummingbird has a wing-beat rate of about 70…
- Calliphora
blow fly: bluebottle (Calliphora) flies are distinguished by their distinctive coloration and loud buzzing flight. These flies commonly infest carrion or excrement, and the larvae of some species infest and may even kill sheep. The black blow fly (Phormia regina) is another widely distributed species with similar…
- Calliphoridae (insect)
blow fly, (family Calliphoridae), any member in a family of insects in the fly order, Diptera, that are metallic blue, green, or black in colour and are noisy in flight. With an average size of 8–10 mm (0.3–0.4 inch), they are slightly larger than houseflies but resemble them in habits. Among the
- Callipolis (Turkey)
Gallipoli, seaport and town, European Turkey. It lies on a narrow peninsula where the Dardanelles opens into the Sea of Marmara, 126 miles (203 km) west-southwest of Istanbul. An important Byzantine fortress, it was the first Ottoman conquest (c. 1356) in Europe and was maintained as a naval base
- Callippus (Greek astronomer)
calendar: Complex cycles: …cycle was improved by both Callippus and Hipparchus. Callippus of Cyzicus (c. 370–300 bce) was perhaps the foremost astronomer of his day. He formed what has been called the Callippic period, essentially a cycle of four Metonic periods. It was more accurate than the original Metonic cycle and made use…
- Callirhipidae (insect family)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Callirhipidae 9–27 mm in length; found in warm regions worldwide. Family Chelonariidae About 50 species in tropics of Asia and America. Family Cneoglossidae 1 genus (Cneoglossa); small; neotropical distribution.
- Callirhoe involucrata (plant)
mallow: …ornamental shrub from South America; poppy mallow (Callirhoe involucrata), a hairy perennial, low-growing, with poppy-like reddish flowers; and Indian mallow, also called velvetleaf (Abutilon theophrasti), a weedy plant. Chaparral mallows (Malacothamnus species), a group of shrubs and small trees, are native to California and Baja California. The Carolina mallow (Modiola…
- Callirrhoë (Greek mythology)
Alcmaeon: …and, forgetting his wife, married Callirrhoë, the daughter of the river god. Callirrhoë coveted the necklace, and Alcmaeon, having returned to get it from his wife, was killed by Arsinoë’s brothers (Phegeus’s sons). On Alcmaeon’s death, Callirrhoë prayed that her two young sons might grow to manhood at once and…
- Calliste (island, Greece)
Thera, island, southernmost island of the Cyclades (Modern Greek: Kykládes) group, southeastern Greece, in the Aegean Sea, sometimes included in the Southern Sporades group. It constitutes a dímos (municipality) within the South Aegean (Nótio Aigaío) periféreia (region). Geologically, Thera is the
- Callistemon (plant genus)
Callistemon, genus of shrubs and trees, of the family Myrtaceae, native to Australia. They have spikes of showy flowers and are commonly called bottlebrushes. The plants are often cultivated outdoors in western North America and in colder regions in greenhouses. C. lanceolatus (sometimes C.
- Callistemon citrinus (plant)
Callistemon: …flowers and are commonly called bottlebrushes. The plants are often cultivated outdoors in western North America and in colder regions in greenhouses. C. lanceolatus (sometimes C. citrinus), one of the most commonly cultivated species, grows from 3 to 6 m (10 to 20 feet) tall and has lance-shaped leaves and…
- Callistemon lanceolatus (plant)
Callistemon: …flowers and are commonly called bottlebrushes. The plants are often cultivated outdoors in western North America and in colder regions in greenhouses. C. lanceolatus (sometimes C. citrinus), one of the most commonly cultivated species, grows from 3 to 6 m (10 to 20 feet) tall and has lance-shaped leaves and…
- Callistephus chinensis (plant)
China aster, (Callistephus chinensis), herbaceous plant of the aster family (Asteraceae, also called Compositae), many cultivated varieties of which are longtime garden favourites. The native species from China is 75 cm (2.5 feet) tall, with white to violet flowers having yellow centres. The
- Callisthenes of Olynthus (Greek historian)
Callisthenes of Olynthus was an ancient Greek historian best known for his influential history of Greece. Callisthenes was appointed to attend Alexander the Great as historian of his Asiatic expedition on the recommendation of his uncle Aristotle, who was Alexander’s former tutor. In 327 bc
- Callisto (satellite of Jupiter)
Callisto, outermost of the four large moons (Galilean satellites) discovered around Jupiter by the Italian astronomer Galileo in 1610. It was probably also discovered independently that same year by the German astronomer Simon Marius, who named it after Callisto of Greek mythology. Callisto is a
- Callisto (Greek mythology)
Callisto, in Greek mythology, a nymph, or else a daughter of either Lycaon of Arcadia or of Nycteus or Ceteus. Callisto was one of the goddess Artemis’ huntress companions and swore to remain unwed. But she was loved by Zeus and, in several variations of the legend, was turned into a she-bear
- Callistomys pictus (mammal)
American spiny rat: General characteristics: …the other extreme is the painted tree rat (Callistomys pictus), whose whitish body has a wide, glossy black stripe on the neck and head and a saddle pattern extending from the shoulders and across the upper arms over the back and rump; its black hairy tail is tipped with white…
- Callistos (patriarch of Constantinople)
Callistus was the patriarch of Constantinople, theologian, and hagiographer, an advocate of a Byzantine school of mystical prayer that he upheld by the authority of his office and by his writings. A monk of Mount Athos, Callistus became a disciple of the method of prayer known as Hesychasm. He was
- Callistus (patriarch of Constantinople)
Callistus was the patriarch of Constantinople, theologian, and hagiographer, an advocate of a Byzantine school of mystical prayer that he upheld by the authority of his office and by his writings. A monk of Mount Athos, Callistus became a disciple of the method of prayer known as Hesychasm. He was
- Callistus I, Saint (pope)
St. Callixtus I ; feast day October 14) was the pope from about 217 to 222, during the schism of St. Hippolytus, the church’s first antipope. Little was known about Callixtus before the discovery of Philosophumena by Hippolytus, a work that is in part a pamphlet directed against him. Callixtus was
- Callistus II (pope)
Callixtus II was the pope from 1119 to 1124. A son of Count William I of Burgundy, he was appointed archbishop of Vienne, in Lower Burgundy, in 1088. He became well known as a spokesman of a reform party within the church and as a foe of the policy of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V. When Pope
- Callistus III (pope)
Callixtus III was the pope from 1455 to 1458. As a member of the Aragonese court, he reconciled King Alfonso V with Pope Martin V, who appointed Callixtus bishop of Valencia in 1429. Pope Eugenius IV made him a cardinal in 1444. As a compromise between the influential Colonna and Orsini families of
- Callistus III (antipope)
Callixtus (III) was an antipope from 1168 to 1178, who reigned with the support of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa. Callixtus was elected antipope as Paschal III’s successor, in opposition to Pope Alexander III. He was Frederick’s protégé until the Treaty of Anagni (1176), which ended
- Callithrix (primate genus)
marmoset: The “true” marmosets (genus Callithrix) have short lower canine teeth (short-tusked), whereas marmosets with relatively long lower canines (long-tusked) are known as tamarins (genera Saguinus and Leontopithecus). The two species of pygmy marmosets (C. pygmaea and C. niveiventris) are the smallest “true” marmosets. They live in the rainforests of…
- Callithrix jacchus (mammal)
marmoset: The common marmoset (C. jacchus) lives in the scrub forest (caatinga) of northeastern Brazil. Weighing 400 grams (14 ounces), it is about 15–25 cm (6–10 inches) long, excluding the 25–40-cm (10–16-inch) tail. The marbled brown-and-white fur is dense and silky, and there are white tufts on…
- Callithrix pygmaea (monkey)
marmoset: The two species of pygmy marmosets (C. pygmaea and C. niveiventris) are the smallest “true” marmosets. They live in the rainforests of the Amazon River’s upper tributaries. The length of the head and body of these species is about 14 cm (6 inches), and the tail is somewhat longer.…
- Callithyia (Greek mythology)
Io, in Greek mythology, daughter of Inachus (the river god of Argos) and the Oceanid Melia. Under the name of Callithyia, Io was regarded as the first priestess of Hera, the wife of Zeus. Zeus fell in love with her and, to protect her from the wrath of Hera, changed her into a white heifer. Hera
- Callitrichidae (primate)
marmoset, (family Callitrichidae), any of numerous species of small long-tailed South American monkeys. Similar in appearance to squirrels, marmosets are tree-dwelling primates that move in a quick jerky manner. Claws on all the digits except the big toe aid them in scampering along branches, where
- Callitris (plant, genus Callitris)
cypress pine, (genus Callitris), genus of 15 species of coniferous shrubs and trees in the cypress family (Cupressaceae). Cypress pines are native to Australasia and grow best in arid localities. The wood is often attractively marked and is resistant to termite attack. Tannin, sandarac resin, and
- Callitris columellaris (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: …of the genus are the Murray River pine, or white cypress pine (Callitris columellaris), found throughout Australia; the black cypress pine (C. endlicheri) of eastern Australia, locally also called black pine, red pine, and scrub pine; the Port Macquarie pine, or stringybark (C. macleayana), of southeastern Australia; and the common…
- Callitris endlicheri (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: …columellaris), found throughout Australia; the black cypress pine (C. endlicheri) of eastern Australia, locally also called black pine, red pine, and scrub pine; the Port Macquarie pine, or stringybark (C. macleayana), of southeastern Australia; and the common cypress pine (C. preissii) of southern Australia, often shrubby near the seacoast, with…
- Callitris macleayana (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: …pine, and scrub pine; the Port Macquarie pine, or stringybark (C. macleayana), of southeastern Australia; and the common cypress pine (C. preissii) of southern Australia, often shrubby near the seacoast, with one subspecies called slender pine and another known as turpentine pine. Most of these timber trees are about 25…
- Callitris preissii (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: …of southeastern Australia; and the common cypress pine (C. preissii) of southern Australia, often shrubby near the seacoast, with one subspecies called slender pine and another known as turpentine pine. Most of these timber trees are about 25 metres (about 80 feet) tall, but the Port Macquarie pine, also planted…
- Callitris rhomboidea (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: Timber from the Oyster Bay pine (C. rhomboidea), a coastal tree of eastern and southern Australia, usually 9 to 15 metres (29.5 to 49 feet) tall, is used for local construction. C. sulcata, endemic to New Caledonia, is listed as an endangered species by the IUCN Red List…
- Callitris sulcata (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: C. sulcata, endemic to New Caledonia, is listed as an endangered species by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
- Callitroga americana (insect)
blow fly: The true screwworm (Cochliomyia hominivorax; formerly, Callitroga americana) and the secondary screwworm (Callitroga macellaria) develop in decaying flesh in surface wounds of domestic animals and occasionally of humans, and the larvae may attack living tissue as well. Each female deposits about 200 to 400 eggs near an open…
- Callitroga macellaria (insect)
blow fly: …and the secondary screwworm (Callitroga macellaria) develop in decaying flesh in surface wounds of domestic animals and occasionally of humans, and the larvae may attack living tissue as well. Each female deposits about 200 to 400 eggs near an open wound. The larvae burrow into the tissue, drop to…
- Callixtus (antipope)
Callixtus (III) was an antipope from 1168 to 1178, who reigned with the support of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa. Callixtus was elected antipope as Paschal III’s successor, in opposition to Pope Alexander III. He was Frederick’s protégé until the Treaty of Anagni (1176), which ended
- Callixtus I, St. (pope)
St. Callixtus I ; feast day October 14) was the pope from about 217 to 222, during the schism of St. Hippolytus, the church’s first antipope. Little was known about Callixtus before the discovery of Philosophumena by Hippolytus, a work that is in part a pamphlet directed against him. Callixtus was
- Callixtus II (pope)
Callixtus II was the pope from 1119 to 1124. A son of Count William I of Burgundy, he was appointed archbishop of Vienne, in Lower Burgundy, in 1088. He became well known as a spokesman of a reform party within the church and as a foe of the policy of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V. When Pope
- Callixtus III (pope)
Callixtus III was the pope from 1455 to 1458. As a member of the Aragonese court, he reconciled King Alfonso V with Pope Martin V, who appointed Callixtus bishop of Valencia in 1429. Pope Eugenius IV made him a cardinal in 1444. As a compromise between the influential Colonna and Orsini families of
- Callixylon (fossil plant genus)
Devonian Period: Plants: … are known, and trunks of Archaeopteris up to 1.8 metres (6 feet) in diameter are present in Upper Devonian deposits of the eastern United States and the Donets Basin of Russia and Ukraine. These trunks apparently were carried by water to their current positions.
- Callophyllis (genus of red algae)
Callophyllis, genus of about 60 species of red algae, the largest group in the family Kallymeniaceae, widely distributed in the world’s oceans and known for their brilliant red to purple colour. Carola (Callophyllis variegata), harvested off the southern coast of Chile, is a popular edible seaweed.
- Callophyllis variegata (red algae)
Callophyllis: Carola (Callophyllis variegata), harvested off the southern coast of Chile, is a popular edible seaweed.
- Callorhinchidae (chondrichthyan fish)
chondrichthyan: Annotated classification: Family Callorhinchidae (elephant fish) Hoe-shaped proboscis. Size to about 1.3 metres (about 4 feet). 1 genus (Callorhinchus) with 3 species, which may eventually prove to be identical. Restricted to cool temperate and boreal latitudes of Southern Hemisphere; generally taken in rather shallow water, sometimes entering estuaries and…
- Callorhinus ursinus (mammal)
fur seal: The northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) is a migratory inhabitant of northern seas, breeding in summer on the Pribilof, Komandor (Commander), and other islands. Prized for its chestnut-coloured underfur, it is a gregarious, vocal animal that feeds on fish and other marine animals. The adult male…
- callosal disconnection syndrome (pathology)
split-brain syndrome, condition characterized by a cluster of neurological abnormalities arising from the partial or complete severing or lesioning of the corpus callosum, the bundle of nerves that connects the right and left hemispheres of the brain. Although it is not fully understood whether the
- Callosamia promethea (insect)
saturniid moth: Major species: The promethea moth (Callosamia promethea)—also called spicebush moth because the larvae feed on spicebush, sassafras, lilac, and related plants is a common North American saturniid moth. The female moth is maroon in color, and the male is dark brown. The cocoon, formed inside a leaf, is…
- callosity (dermatology)
callus, in dermatology, small area of thickened skin, the formation of which is caused by continued friction, pressure, or other physical or chemical irritation. Calluses form when mild but repeated injury causes the cells of the epidermis (the outermost layer of the skin) to become increasingly
- Callot, Jacques (French artist)
Jacques Callot was a French printmaker who was one of the first great artists to practice the graphic arts exclusively. His innovative series of prints documenting the horrors of war greatly influenced the socially conscious artists of the 19th and 20th centuries. Callot’s career was divided into
- callous (osteology)
callus, in osteology, bony and cartilaginous material forming a connecting bridge across a bone fracture during repair. Within one to two weeks after injury, a provisional callus forms, enveloping the fracture site. Osteoblasts, bone-forming cells in the periosteum (the bone layer where new bone is
- callous (dermatology)
callus, in dermatology, small area of thickened skin, the formation of which is caused by continued friction, pressure, or other physical or chemical irritation. Calluses form when mild but repeated injury causes the cells of the epidermis (the outermost layer of the skin) to become increasingly
- Callovian Stage (stratigraphy)
Callovian Stage, uppermost of the four divisions of the Middle Jurassic Series, representing all rocks formed worldwide during the Callovian Age, which occurred between 166.1 million and 163.5 million years ago during the Jurassic Period. The Callovian Stage overlies the Bathonian Stage and
- Calloway, Cab (American composer and singer)
Cab Calloway was an American bandleader, singer, and all-around entertainer known for his exuberant performing style and for leading one of the most highly regarded big bands of the swing era. After graduating from high school, Calloway briefly attended a law school in Chicago but quickly turned to