- Hémony, Pierre (Dutch bell founder)
carillon: …with the founders François and Pierre Hémony of the Netherlands. They were the first to tune the bells with precision, especially with regard to a bell’s inner tuning (i.e., of the partial tones that make up a bell’s complex sound), and thus to put fully into practice the results of…
- hemophilia (pathology)
hemophilia, hereditary bleeding disorder caused by a deficiency of a substance necessary for blood clotting (coagulation). In hemophilia A, the missing substance is factor VIII. The increased tendency to bleeding usually becomes noticeable early in life and may lead to severe anemia or even death.
- hemophilia A (pathology)
blood disease: Hemophilia: …most common form of hemophilia, hemophilia A, is caused by the absence of the coagulation protein factor VIII (antihemophilic globulin). Of persons with hemophilia, approximately 85 percent have factor VIII deficiency. The next most common form of hemophilia, hemophilia B, is due to deficiency of factor IX (plasma thromboplastin component,…
- hemophilia B (pathology)
blood disease: Hemophilia: …most common form of hemophilia, hemophilia B, is due to deficiency of factor IX (plasma thromboplastin component, or PTC). Both factor VIII deficiency and factor IX deficiency have signs and symptoms that are indistinguishable. Spontaneous bleeding into joints, giving rise to severe chronic arthritis, is a common problem among persons…
- Hemophilus (bacteria genus)
Haemophilus, genus of bacteria that, though often coccobacillus, vary widely in shape in the family Pasteurellaceae. All species of Haemophilus are strict parasites of warm-blooded animals, including humans—where they occur particularly in the mouth, upper respiratory tract, and intestinal tract;
- Hemophilus influenzae (bacteria)
cephalosporin: …have proven effective against gonorrhea, Haemophilus influenzae, and the abscesses caused by Bacteroides fragilis. The ability of many cephalosporin derivatives to penetrate the cerebral spinal fluid makes them effective in treating meningitis.
- Hemophilus pertussis (bacterium)
whooping cough: …is caused by the bacterium Bordetella pertussis.
- hemopiezometer (medicine)
Sir William Maddock Bayliss: …the development of an improved hemopiezometer (a device for measuring blood pressure). Observation of intestinal movements led to their discovery of the peristaltic wave, a rhythmic contraction that forces forward the contents of the intestine.
- hemopneumothorax (pathology)
hemothorax: …cavity, the condition is called hemopneumothorax. This condition generally is caused by a penetrating chest wound or occasionally by rupture of the lung or esophagus. Surgical exploration is often required.
- hemopoiesis (biochemistry)
blood cell formation, continuous process by which the cellular constituents of blood are replenished as needed. Blood cells are divided into three groups: the red blood cells (erythrocytes), the white blood cells (leukocytes), and the blood platelets (thrombocytes). The white blood cells are
- hemoprotein (biochemistry)
cytochrome: Hemoproteins are proteins linked to a nonprotein, iron-bearing component. It is the iron (heme) group attached to the protein that can undergo reversible oxidation and reduction reactions, thereby functioning as electron carriers within the mitochondria (the organelles that produce energy for the cell through cellular…
- hemoptysis (pathology)
tuberculosis: The course of tuberculosis: …to cough up blood (hemoptysis). Tubercular lesions may spread extensively in the lung, causing large areas of destruction, cavities, and scarring. The amount of lung tissue available for the exchange of gases in respiration decreases, and if untreated the patient will die from failure of ventilation and general toxemia…
- hemorrhage (pathology)
hemorrhage, Escape of blood from blood vessels into surrounding tissue. When a vessel is injured, hemorrhage continues as long as the vessel remains open and the pressure in it exceeds the pressure outside of it. Normally, coagulation closes the vessel and stops the bleeding. Uncontrolled
- hemorrhagic disease (pathology)
Ebola: …a severe and often fatal viral hemorrhagic fever. Outbreaks in primates—including gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans—and domestic pigs have been recorded. The disease is characterized by extreme fever, rash, and profuse hemorrhaging. In humans, ebolaviruses cause fatality
- hemorrhagic disease of the newborn (medical disorder)
nutritional disease: Vitamin K: …against a condition known as hemorrhagic disease of the newborn. Vitamin K deficiency is rare in adults, except in syndromes with poor fat absorption, in liver disease, or during treatment with certain anticoagulant drugs, which interfere with vitamin K metabolism. Bleeding due to vitamin K deficiency may be seen in…
- hemorrhagic fever (pathology)
viral hemorrhagic fever, any of a variety of highly fatal viral diseases that are characterized by massive external or internal bleeding or bleeding into the skin. Other symptoms vary by the type of viral hemorrhagic fever but often include fever, malaise, muscle aches, vomiting, and shock. Most
- hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (pathology)
hantavirus: …first group is known as hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). These illnesses typically develop within 1 to 2 weeks of exposure (sometimes later) and are characterized by acute fever, severe headache, blurred vision, and nausea. Severe forms, such as those involving Dobrava virus or Hantaan virus, can result in…
- hemorrhagic joint disease (pathology)
joint disease: Hemorrhagic joint diseases: Hemarthrosis (bleeding into the joints) is a major complication of hemorrhagic disorders. Aside from the life-threatening episodes of bleeding, it constitutes the principal disability arising from the hemophilias. Most persons with these clotting defects are affected and usually within the first years…
- hemorrhagic nephroso-nephritis (pathology)
hantavirus: …illnesses to be characterized was Korean hemorrhagic fever (also called hemorrhagic nephroso-nephritis), recognized during the Korean War (1950–53). Korean hemorrhagic fever is fatal in 5 to 15 percent of cases. It is caused by the Hantaan virus and is carried by the striped field mouse (Apodemus agrarius), a type of…
- hemorrhagic stroke (medical condition)
hematoma: An intracerebral hematoma (also called intraparenchymal hematoma or hemorrhagic stroke) occurs when blood pools within the tissues of the brain; trauma and high blood pressure are common causes.
- hemorrhagic telangiectasia (medical disorder)
Osler-Rendu-Weber disease, hereditary disorder characterized by bleeding from local capillary malformations. In Osler-Rendu-Weber disease, capillaries in the fingertips and around the oral and nasal cavities are enlarged and have unusually thin walls; they are easily broken by accidental bumping or
- hemorrhoid (disease)
hemorrhoid, mass formed by distension of the network of veins under the mucous membrane that lines the anal channel or under the skin lining the external portion of the anus. A form of varicose vein, a hemorrhoid may develop from anal infection or from increase in intra-abdominal pressure, such as
- hemosiderin (biochemistry)
respiratory disease: Immunologic conditions: …accumulation of the iron-containing substance hemosiderin in the lung tissues. The lung may also be involved in a variety of ways in the disease known as systemic lupus erythematosus, which is also believed to have an immunologic basis. Pleural effusions may occur, and the lung parenchyma may be involved. These…
- hemostasis (physiology)
bleeding and blood clotting: Significance of hemostasis: The evolution of high-pressure blood circulation in vertebrates has brought with it the risk of bleeding after injury to tissues. Mechanisms to prevent bleeding (i.e., hemostatic mechanisms) are essential to maintain the closed blood-circulatory system. Normal hemostasis is the responsibility of a complex system…
- hemostat (medical instrument)
surgery: Present-day surgery: …achieved by use of the hemostat, a clamp with ratchets that grasps blood vessels or tissue; after application of hemostats, suture materials are tied around the bleeding vessels. Absorbent sterile napkins called sponges, made of a variety of natural and synthetic materials, are used for drying the field. Bleeding may…
- hemothorax (pathology)
hemothorax, collection of a bloody fluid in the pleural cavity, between the membrane lining the thoracic cage and the membrane covering the lung. Hemothorax may result from injury or surgery, especially when there has been damage to the larger blood vessels of the chest wall. Other disorders that
- hemotoxin (biology)
venom: Hemotoxins affect the blood or blood vessels: some destroy the lining of the smaller blood vessels and allow blood to seep into the tissues, producing local or widespread hemorrhages, while others render the blood less coagulable or cause abnormally rapid clotting, leading to circulatory collapse…
- hemovanadin (biochemistry)
coloration: Hemovanadin: Pale-green pigment, hemovanadin, is found within the blood cells (vanadocytes) of sea squirts (Tunicata) belonging to the families Ascidiidae and Perophoridae. The biochemical function of hemovanadin, a strong reducing agent, is unknown.
- hemozoin (biochemistry)
artemisinin: mosquitoes—contain insoluble iron called hemozoin. Hemozoin is formed within schizonts as they feed on hemoglobin in the cytoplasm of human red blood cells. Artemisinin contains a peroxide group that reacts with hemozoin, and this reaction is suspected to result in the production of radicals that attack parasite proteins, thereby…
- hemp (plant)
hemp, (Cannabis sativa), plant of the family Cannabaceae cultivated for its bast fibre or its edible seeds. Hemp is sometimes confused with the cannabis plants that serve as sources of the drug marijuana and the drug preparation hashish. Although all three products—hemp, marijuana, and
- hemp broomrape (plant)
broomrape: Major species: Hemp broomrape (Orobanche ramosa), also known as branched broomrape, is a noxious pest around the world and can cause significant losses if crops are heavily infested. Especially common in tomatoes, hemp broomrape can parasitize a variety of vegetable crops, and its tiny seeds are usually…
- hemp dogbane (plant, Apocynum species)
Indian hemp, (species Apocynum cannabinum), North American plant of the dogbane family Apocynaceae (order Gentianales). It is a branched perennial that grows up to 1.5 m (5 feet) tall and has smooth opposite leaves and small greenish white flowers. Indians used the fibres from the stem to make
- hemp family (plant family)
Cannabaceae, the hemp family (order Rosales), containing about 11 genera and about 170 species of plants. Its members are distributed nearly worldwide, many occurring throughout temperate parts of the Northern Hemisphere. Older authorities included the two genera Cannabis and Humulus in the
- hemp system (hoist)
stagecraft: Flying systems: …into two types: rope-set, or hemp, systems and counterweight systems. The rope-set system normally has three or more ropes attached to a metal pipe, called a batten, above the stage. The ropes pass over loft blocks on the grid above the stage. Then, at the side of the stage house,…
- Hempel, Carl Gustav (American philosopher)
Carl Gustav Hempel was a German-born American philosopher, formerly a member of the Berlin school of logical positivism, a group that viewed logical and mathematical statements as revealing only the basic structure of language, but not essentially descriptive of the physical world. Hempel attended
- Hempstead (New York, United States)
Hempstead, town (township), Nassau county, New York, U.S. Situated in the west-central part of Long Island, it comprises 22 incorporated villages and 34 unincorporated communities. The city of Long Beach fronts the Atlantic Ocean just south of Hempstead town. The land tract was purchased from the
- Hempstead Branch (New York, United States)
Mineola, village, mainly in North Hempstead town (township) with a small section in Hempstead town, and seat (1898) of Nassau county, Long Island, southeastern New York, U.S. It was settled in the 17th century by English and Dutch inhabitants of Connecticut who crossed Long Island Sound; it was
- Hemsterhuis, Franciscus (Dutch philosopher)
Hemsterhuis, Franciscus was a Dutch philosopher and aesthetician whose works influenced the German Romantic thinkers Johann Gottfried von Herder, Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi, and Friedrich Holderlin. He sought to coordinate Rationalism and sensationalism, holding that all things in the perceptible
- Hemsworth, Chris (Australian actor)
Chris Hemsworth is an Australian actor who came to fame for his role as Thor in several Marvel Cinematic Universe movies. Hemsworth’s mother was an English teacher and his father a social-services counselor; his two brothers, Luke Hemsworth and Liam Hemsworth, also became actors. The family moved
- Hemsworth, Christopher (Australian actor)
Chris Hemsworth is an Australian actor who came to fame for his role as Thor in several Marvel Cinematic Universe movies. Hemsworth’s mother was an English teacher and his father a social-services counselor; his two brothers, Luke Hemsworth and Liam Hemsworth, also became actors. The family moved
- Hemū (Indian ruler)
Akbar: Early life: …places, including Delhi itself, to Hemu, a Hindu minister who claimed the throne for himself. But on November 5, 1556, a Mughal force defeated Hemu at the Second Battle of Panipat (near present-day Panipat, Haryana state, India), which commanded the route to Delhi, thus ensuring Akbar’s succession.
- Hemudu (ancient site, China)
China: 5th millennium bce: …Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), the Hemudu site in northern Zhejiang has yielded caldrons, cups, bowls, and pot supports made of porous, charcoal-tempered black pottery. The site is remarkable for its wooden and bone farming tools, the bird designs carved on bone and ivory, the superior carpentry of its pile dwellings…
- hen (bird)
chicken: Natural history: …or roosters) and females (hens) are known for their fleshy combs, lobed wattles hanging below the bill, and high-arched tails. In some roosters, the tail can extend more than 30 cm (12 inches) in length.
- Hen Egg (decorative egg [1885])
Peter Carl Fabergé: …first egg, known as the Hen Egg, which Alexander III commissioned as a gift for his wife, Empress Maria Fyodorovna. The Hen Egg was an extravagant extension of the tradition of exchanging decorated eggs for Russian Orthodox Easter. Its unadorned white enamel shell housed a yellow-gold yolk, which opened to…
- hen fish (fish)
sea hen, fish, a species of lumpsucker
- hen harrier (bird)
northern harrier, (Circus cyaneus), common name for the best-known harrier
- hen of the woods (fungus)
Polyporales: The edible hen of the woods (P. frondosus), which grows on old trees and stumps, produces a cluster of grayish mushrooms with two or three caps on a stalk; the undersides of the caps are porous. The sulfur mushroom, P. (Laetiporus) sulphureus, a common shelflike fungus that…
- Hen, Llywarch (Welsh poet)
Celtic literature: The Middle Ages: …poems associated with the name Llywarch Hen are the verse remains of at least two sagas composed toward the middle of the 9th century by unknown poets of Powys, whose basic material was the traditions associated with the historical Llywarch and Heledd, sister to Cynddylan ap Cyndrwyn. In these, it…
- hen-and-chickens (plant)
hen-and-chicks, any of a number of succulent plants of the genera Echeveria and Sempervivum, in the family Crassulaceae; members of the latter genus are commonly known as houseleeks. Many of these plants are popularly called hen-and-chicks because of the way new plantlets develop in a cluster
- hen-and-chicks (plant)
hen-and-chicks, any of a number of succulent plants of the genera Echeveria and Sempervivum, in the family Crassulaceae; members of the latter genus are commonly known as houseleeks. Many of these plants are popularly called hen-and-chicks because of the way new plantlets develop in a cluster
- Henan (province, China)
Henan, sheng (province) of north-central China. The province stretches some 300 miles (480 km) from north to south and 350 miles (560 km) east to west at its widest point. It is bounded to the north by the provinces of Shanxi and Hebei, to the east by Shandong and Anhui, to the west by Shaanxi, and
- Henana (Nestorian theologian)
School of Nisibis: …undermined by the administration of Ḥenānā (c. 570–c. 609), who preferred Origen (a Christian theologian who flourished in the early 3rd century) to Theodore of Mopsuestia, the recognized Nestorian authority. Ḥenānā’s views led to a revolt by students, and the director required royal support to maintain his position.
- Henanfu (China)
Luoyang, city, northwestern Henan sheng (province), east-central China. It was important in history as the capital of nine ruling dynasties and as a Buddhist centre. The contemporary city is divided into an east town and a west town. Luoyi (present-day Luoyang) was founded in the mid-11th century
- Hénault, Jean-François (French official)
Marie de Vichy-Chamrond, marquise du Deffand: …Marquise de Lambert, Voltaire, and Jean-François Hénault, president of the Parlement of Paris, with whom she lived on intimate if not always friendly terms until his death in 1770. When she set up her own salon, she attracted scientists, writers, wits, and all who were of any consequence in the…
- henbane (plant)
henbane, (Hyoscyamus niger), highly toxic plant of the nightshade family (Solanaceae), native to Eurasia and naturalized throughout much of the world. The dried leaves of henbane, and sometimes those of Egyptian henbane (H. muticus) and white henbane (H. albus), yield three medicinal
- Henbury Craters (meteorite craters, Northern Territory, Australia)
Henbury Craters, group of 13 meteorite craters in a desert area 8 mi (13 km) west-southwest of Henbury, Northern Territory, central Australia, within the Henbury Meteorite Conservation Park. The craters, recognized in 1931, lie in an area of 0.5 sq mi (1.25 sq km) and are distributed in a
- Hench, Philip Showalter (American physician)
Philip Showalter Hench was an American physician who with Edward C. Kendall in 1948 successfully applied an adrenal hormone (later known as cortisone) in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. With Kendall and Tadeus Reichstein of Switzerland, Hench received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
- Hënchak (Armenian political organization)
Armenian Genocide: Armenians in Eastern Anatolia: …formed two revolutionary parties called Hënchak (“Bell”) and Dashnaktsutyun (“Federation”) in 1887 and 1890. Neither one gained wide support among Armenians in Eastern Anatolia, who largely remained loyal and hoped instead that sympathizers in Christian Europe would pressure the Ottoman Empire to implement new reforms and protections for Armenians. The…
- Henchard, Michael (fictional character)
Michael Henchard, fictional character, a well-to-do grain merchant with a guilty secret in his past who is the protagonist of the novel The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) by Thomas
- Hencke, Karl Ludwig (German astronomer)
Karl Ludwig Hencke was an amateur astronomer who found the fifth and sixth minor planets to be discovered. Professional astronomers had largely given up the search for asteroids in 1816, when four were known. Hencke, a post office employee who eventually became postmaster, began his systematic
- Hendee’s woolly monkey (primate)
woolly monkey: The yellow-tailed, or Hendee’s, woolly monkey (Oreonax flavicauda) is very different from Lagothrix and is not closely related, hence its classification as a separate genus. This species has silky mahogany-coloured fur, a whitish nose, and a yellow stripe on the underside of the tail. It is…
- Henderson (Nevada, United States)
Henderson, city, Clark county, southeastern Nevada, U.S., midway between Las Vegas and Boulder City. It was established in 1942 in the desert below Clark Mountain to provide housing for the employees of a government-constructed magnesium plant and was named for U.S. Senator Charles Belknap
- Henderson (Kentucky, United States)
Henderson, city, seat of Henderson county, northwestern Kentucky, U.S., on a bluff overlooking the Ohio River, 7 miles (11 km) south of Evansville, Indiana. The town site, around Red Banks (settled 1784), was laid out in 1797 by the Transylvania Land Company and named for its promoter, Richard
- Henderson (North Carolina, United States)
Henderson, city, seat (1881) of Vance county, northern North Carolina, U.S., about 45 miles (70 km) northeast of Raleigh. The area was settled by Germans, Scots, and Scotch-Irish in the early 1700s, and the town was laid out in 1840 and named for Chief Justice Leonard Henderson of the state’s
- Henderson process (printing)
photoengraving: Other methods: The Henderson process, sometimes referred to as “direct transfer,” or “inverse halftone,” gravure, has won some acceptance in the printing of packaging materials. Retouched continuous-tone positives are used in preparation of halftone negatives and, by a contact-printing operation, halftone positives. These positives show dot size variations…
- Henderson the Rain King (novel by Bellow)
Henderson the Rain King, seriocomic novel by Saul Bellow, published in 1959. The novel examines the midlife crisis of Eugene Henderson, an unhappy millionaire. The story concerns Henderson’s search for meaning. A larger-than-life 55-year-old who has accumulated money, position, and a large family,
- Henderson, Alexander (Scottish minister)
Alexander Henderson was a Scottish Presbyterian clergyman primarily responsible for the preservation of the presbyterian form of church government in Scotland. He was influential in the defeat of the English king Charles I during the Civil War of 1642–51. In 1612 Henderson was nearly prevented from
- Henderson, Arthur (British statesman)
Arthur Henderson was one of the chief organizers of the British Labour Party. He was Britain’s secretary of state for foreign affairs from June 1929 to August 1931 and won the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1934. An iron molder at Robert Stephenson’s locomotive works and foundry in Newcastle upon Tyne,
- Henderson, Bobby (founder of Pastafarianism)
Flying Spaghetti Monster: …Monster began in 2005, when Bobby Henderson, a recent physics graduate of Oregon State University, sent a letter to the Kansas Board of Education, which was debating the inclusion of intelligent design theories in high school classes on evolution. The letter, which parodied the reasoning used to argue a scientific…
- Henderson, Cam (American basketball coach)
basketball: U.S. high school and college basketball: …the zone defense, developed by Cam Henderson of Marshall University in West Virginia, later became an integral part of the game.
- Henderson, Charles Belknap (United States senator)
Henderson: Senator Charles Belknap Henderson (1873–1954). Inactivated at the close of World War II when the plant was closed, the project was later bought by the state, and the magnesium-producing facilities were taken over by private companies.
- Henderson, Douglas (American radio personality)
Jocko Henderson: For seven years beginning in the mid-1950s, Douglas (“Jocko”) Henderson commuted daily between Philadelphia, where he broadcast on WDAS, and New York City, where his two-hour late-evening Rocket Ship Show on WLIB was a particularly wild ride. “Hey, mommio, hey, daddio,” he announced, “this is…
- Henderson, Fletcher (American musician)
Fletcher Henderson was an American musical arranger, bandleader, and pianist who was a leading pioneer in the sound, style, and instrumentation of big band jazz. Henderson was born into a middle-class family; his father was a school principal and his mother a teacher, and he studied piano as a
- Henderson, Fletcher Hamilton, Jr. (American musician)
Fletcher Henderson was an American musical arranger, bandleader, and pianist who was a leading pioneer in the sound, style, and instrumentation of big band jazz. Henderson was born into a middle-class family; his father was a school principal and his mother a teacher, and he studied piano as a
- Henderson, Florence (American actress)
The Brady Bunch: …sons, marries Carol Martin (Florence Henderson), the mother of three girls. They combine their households in a four-bedroom house in an unnamed suburb of Los Angeles. The main cast included the Brady boys, Greg (Barry Williams), Peter (Christopher Knight), and Bobby (Mike Lookinland); the girls, Marcia (Maureen McCormick), Jan…
- Henderson, Florence Agnes (American actress)
The Brady Bunch: …sons, marries Carol Martin (Florence Henderson), the mother of three girls. They combine their households in a four-bedroom house in an unnamed suburb of Los Angeles. The main cast included the Brady boys, Greg (Barry Williams), Peter (Christopher Knight), and Bobby (Mike Lookinland); the girls, Marcia (Maureen McCormick), Jan…
- Henderson, James Fletcher (American musician)
Fletcher Henderson was an American musical arranger, bandleader, and pianist who was a leading pioneer in the sound, style, and instrumentation of big band jazz. Henderson was born into a middle-class family; his father was a school principal and his mother a teacher, and he studied piano as a
- Henderson, Jocko (American radio personality)
Jocko Henderson: For seven years beginning in the mid-1950s, Douglas (“Jocko”) Henderson commuted daily between Philadelphia, where he broadcast on WDAS, and New York City, where his two-hour late-evening Rocket Ship Show on WLIB was a particularly wild ride. “Hey, mommio, hey, daddio,” he announced, “this is…
- Henderson, Lawrence Joseph (American biochemist)
Lawrence Joseph Henderson was a U.S. biochemist, who discovered the chemical means by which acid–base equilibria are maintained in nature. Henderson spent most of his career at Harvard Medical School (1904–42), where he was professor of biological chemistry (1919–34) and chemistry (1934–42). Soon
- Henderson, Lydia (New Zealand author)
Oceanic literature: Early writings: …Davis, a Cook Islander, and Lydia Henderson, his New Zealand-born wife. Like their earlier autobiography, Doctor to the Islands (1954), it was written in English. The novel, which deals with the cultural conflict between Pacific and Western values in an imaginary land called Fenua Lei, has more in common with…
- Henderson, Mary (American author)
Mary Henderson Eastman was a 19th-century American writer whose work on Native Americans, though coloured by her time and circumstance, was drawn from personal experience of her subjects. In 1835 Mary Henderson, the granddaughter of Commodore Thomas Truxtun, a hero of the naval war with France,
- Henderson, Richard (American pioneer)
Nashville: History: …behind the area’s settlement was Richard Henderson, a North Carolina jurist who in 1775 acquired most of middle Tennessee and Kentucky in the Transylvania Purchase from the Cherokee. In 1779 he sent a party under James Robertson to investigate the Cumberland Valley. They settled at French Lick and were joined…
- Henderson, Richard (British biologist)
Richard Henderson is a Scottish biophysicist and molecular biologist who was the first to successfully produce a three-dimensional image of a biological molecule at atomic resolution using a technique known as cryo-electron microscopy. Henderson’s refinement of imaging methods for cryo-electron
- Henderson, Rickey (American baseball player)
Rickey Henderson is a professional baseball player who in 1991 set a record for the most stolen bases in major league baseball and in 2001 set a record for the most career runs scored. Henderson was an All-American running back in football as a high school athlete in Oakland, California. He chose
- Henderson, Rickey Henley (American baseball player)
Rickey Henderson is a professional baseball player who in 1991 set a record for the most stolen bases in major league baseball and in 2001 set a record for the most career runs scored. Henderson was an All-American running back in football as a high school athlete in Oakland, California. He chose
- Henderson, Robert (Scottish author)
Robert Henryson was a Scottish poet, the finest of early fabulists in Britain. He is described on some early title pages as the schoolmaster of Dunfermline—probably at the Benedictine abbey school—and he appears among the dead poets in William Dunbar’s Lament for the Makaris, which was printed
- Henderson, Sir Nevile Meyrick (British statesman)
Sir Nevile Meyrick Henderson was a British ambassador in Berlin (1937–39) who was closely associated with Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s policy of appeasement toward Nazi Germany. Some observers believed that he was more influential in implementing the appeasement policy than Chamberlain
- Henderson, Sylvia (New Zealand writer)
Sylvia Ashton-Warner was a New Zealand educator and writer of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. In the field of education, she became known for her innovative work in adapting traditional British teaching methods to the special needs of Maori children. Her aim was peace and communication between two
- Henderson, Thomas (Scottish astronomer)
Thomas Henderson was a Scottish astronomer who, as royal astronomer at the Cape of Good Hope (1831–33), made measurements that later allowed him to determine the parallax of a star (Alpha Centauri). He announced his findings in 1839, a few months after both German astronomer Friedrich Bessel and
- Henderson-Hasselbach equation (biochemistry)
Lawrence Joseph Henderson: …systems, now known as the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, is of fundamental importance to biochemistry.
- Hendon Aerodrome (building, London, United Kingdom)
Royal Air Force Museum: …World War I at the Hendon Aerodrome in northwestern London.
- Hendra, Tony (British writer and actor)
This Is Spinal Tap: Cast: Assorted Referencesdiscussed in biographyrole of
- Hendricks, Barkley L. (American artist)
Barkley L. Hendricks was an American portrait artist who depicted the lives of ordinary Black men and women in paintings in the style and on the scale of those of the Old Masters, whose work he encountered in Europe as a young man. His bold, experimental works were inspired by popular music,
- Hendricks, Barkley Leonnard (American artist)
Barkley L. Hendricks was an American portrait artist who depicted the lives of ordinary Black men and women in paintings in the style and on the scale of those of the Old Masters, whose work he encountered in Europe as a young man. His bold, experimental works were inspired by popular music,
- Hendricks, Christina (British-American actress)
Mad Men: …head secretary, Joan Holloway (Christina Hendricks). While the show generated many of its story lines from the lively dynamics of the office, it also focused intently on the domestic sphere and specifically on Don’s wife, Betty (January Jones), who superficially embodied the ideal of the mid-century suburban housewife.
- Hendricks, Thomas A (vice president of United States)
Thomas A. Hendricks was a long-time Democratic Party politician and the 21st vice president of the United States (March 4–November 25, 1885) in the administration of President Grover Cleveland. Hendricks was the son of John Hendricks, a farmer and a deputy surveyor of lands, and Jane Thomson. His
- Hendricks, Thomas Andrews (vice president of United States)
Thomas A. Hendricks was a long-time Democratic Party politician and the 21st vice president of the United States (March 4–November 25, 1885) in the administration of President Grover Cleveland. Hendricks was the son of John Hendricks, a farmer and a deputy surveyor of lands, and Jane Thomson. His
- Hendrickson, Susan (American archaeologist and paleontologist)
Sue: …American marine archaeologist and paleontologist Susan Hendrickson, the scientist for whom the specimen is named, as she searched the property with American paleontologist Peter Larson.
- Hendrik Verwoerd Dam (dam, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: From the Gariep (formerly Hendrik Verwoerd) Dam the Orange swings to the northwest to its confluence with the Vaal River. The Vaal, which rises in Eastern Transvaal province, flows west through the major population and industrial core of South Africa before turning south and joining the Orange…
- Hendrik Verwoerd Reservoir (reservoir, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: …at the head of the Gariep (formerly Hendrik Verwoerd) Reservoir.