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CSIC stands for Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, which is a Spanish national research council. It is not a state or city, but a scientific institution in Spain.
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Sonejo Superior de Investigaciones CientÃ_ficas (CSIC) is an institute that specializes in creating new fundamental and applied knowledge in materials of high technological impact. The institution was founded in December 1986 and belongs to the Area of Science.
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The University of the West Indies is ranked 1391st in the world according to: Cybermetrics Lab (2007). Global Ranking of Top Universities for each country. CINDOC-CSIC, Madrid, Spain http://www.webometrics.info/Webometrics%20library/Primeras%20jul07.pdf
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There aren't really different types of CPU, but there are some major differences between CPUS. Like Bus Sizes - we have 32 & 64 bits. Some support SSE, SSE2 and SSE3. But there are different processor architectures which you are probably talking about. There are SPARC, IA64, X86, X64, IBM Cell and more.
I believe the 3 types of CPUs being requested are:
CISC: Complex Instruction Set Computers
RISC: Reduced instruction Set Computers
MISC: Minimal Instruction Set Computers
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An international team of scientists recently announced the discovery of a new species of blind deep-sea crab whose legs are covered with long, pale yellow hairs. This crab was first observed in March 2005 by marine biologists using the research submarine Alvin to explore hydrothermal vents along the Pacific-Antarctic ridge, south of Easter Island. Because of its hairy legs, this animal was nicknamed the "Yeti crab," after the fabled Yeti, the abominable snowman of the Himalayas.This drawing shows the Yeti crab that was collected by scientists on the Pacific-Antarctic ridge. The drawing was created by scientific illustrator Karen Jacobson, who worked with the scientists on board the research ship Atlantis.
Image: (c) 2005 Karen Jacobsen ISSI
The Yeti crab was discovered during the Easter Microplate expedition to the southeast Pacific, led by MBARI scientist Bob Vrijenhoek. The primary goal of this expedition was to learn how bottom-dwelling animals from one deep-sea hydrothermal vent are able to colonize other hydrothermal vents hundreds or thousands of miles away. Vrijenhoek and his team were addressing this question by comparing the DNA of animals at hydrothermal vents in different parts of the Pacific Ocean.
During one Alvin dive, marine biologist Michel Segonzac, from Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer (IFREMER) in France, noticed an unusually large (15-cm-long) crab with hairy arms lurking on the seafloor. Segonzac asked the Alvin pilots to collect this crab and bring it back to the surface.
The researchers saw more of these unusual crabs during subsequent Alvin dives. Most of the crabs were living at depths of about 2,200 meters (7,200 feet) on recent lava flows and areas where warm water was seeping out of the sea floor. According MBARI biologist Joe Jones, "Many of the crabs were hiding underneath or behind rocks---all we could see were the tips of their arms sticking out."
After returning to shore, researchers Segonzac and Jones worked with Enrique Macpherson from the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones CientÃficas (CSIC) in Spain to identify the crab they had collected. They found that the crab was not only a new species (which they named Kiwa hirsuta), but an entirely new family (Kiwaidae). The Yeti crab is a distant relative to the hermit crabs commonly seen lurking in tide pools.This map shows the locations of hydrothermal vents along the Pacific-Antarctic ridge that scientists explored during the Easter Microplate expedition. The vent sites are indicated by black dots with labels indicating their latitudes.
Image: (c) 2005 MBARI
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