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1 ce displays, tool use, culture, hunting, and warfare).
2 d as a category A Select Agent of biological warfare.
3 ense competition between societies-primarily warfare.
4  youths (~17 to 28) took charge of interclan warfare.
5 red as potential agents for bioterrorism and warfare.
6 llus that is a powerful agent for biological warfare.
7 xcellent proxy for the intensity of internal warfare.
8 wireless power transfer, and electromagnetic warfare.
9 ntial weapon for bioterrorism and biological warfare.
10 earning to power politics and intercommunity warfare.
11 ged attacks, a strategy still used in modern warfare.
12 ed international standards of conduct during warfare.
13 ur ability to test collapse theories tied to warfare.
14  defense, quorum sensing and inter-bacterial warfare.
15 d kungas for use in diplomacy, ceremony, and warfare.
16 ce, Glowacki provides a fresh perspective on warfare.
17 emonstrating an overt vector for information warfare.
18  half, to the lowest level in the history of warfare.
19 capacity for humans to engage in large-scale warfare.
20 s, emphasizing the role of class struggle or warfare.
21 pogenic climate change or nuclear/biological warfare.
22 ng how enzymes can be co-opted for microbial warfare.
23 quality over long periods of time, including warfare.
24 technology opens new pathways for biological warfare.
25 for pathogenicity and belowground biological warfare.
26  also serve as countermeasures to biological warfare.
27 astoralists currently engaged in small-scale warfare.
28 distribution in the absence of punishment or warfare.
29 mentally transformed long-range mobility and warfare(1).
30 otulinum toxin, and aflatoxin for biological warfare; 200 bombs and 25 ballistic missiles laden with
31                        Data from precolonial warfare, 501 recent wars, and 129 customary court sessio
32 specialization(4), cooperation(5) and cyclic warfare(6-8).
33 state conflicts, unconventional or guerrilla warfare against established governments, and stateless t
34 otulinum, Vaccinia virus, and one biological warfare agent (BWA) simulant, Bacillus thuringiensis kur
35 mits is observed in the analysis of chemical warfare agent (CWA) degradation products in environmenta
36 termine oxidation products of three chemical warfare agent (CWA) related phenylarsenic compounds from
37 pectrometer (IM(tof)MS) to detect a chemical warfare agent (CWA) simulant from aerosol samples.
38 fication of single particles of the chemical warfare agent (CWA) simulants at each laser fluence used
39  spectrometer (IM(tof)MS) to detect chemical warfare agent (CWA) simulants from both aqueous- and gas
40                         Aerosolized chemical warfare agent (CWA) simulants trimethyl phosphate, dimet
41                        Detection of chemical warfare agent (CWA) simulants, illicit drugs, and explos
42             Ion mobility spectra of chemical warfare agent (CWA) stimulant dimethyl methylphosphonate
43 ic oxidative decontamination of the chemical warfare agent (CWA) sulfur mustard (HD, bis(2-chlororeth
44  using fixed sampling times for the chemical warfare agent (CWA) surrogate compound, diisopropyl meth
45 t, similar to Lewisite, a potential chemical warfare agent and an environmental contaminant.
46 bons and the high-speed analysis of chemical warfare agent and explosive markers.
47 agnostic reagents for a potential biological warfare agent and hold promise as scaffolds for the deve
48  time and label free detection of biological warfare agent and provide an opportunity to make miniatu
49 tigated compounds include an intact chemical warfare agent and structurally related molecules, hydrol
50 CE-based method for the analysis of chemical warfare agent degradation products in agent neutralizati
51  been developed for the analysis of chemical warfare agent degradation products in reaction masses us
52 al monitoring and to chemical and biological warfare agent detection.
53 lysis, environmental testing, and biological warfare agent detection.
54 d as a life-threatening potential biological warfare agent due to its high virulence, transmission, m
55 tly, a new class of reactivators of chemical warfare agent inhibited acetylcholinesterase (AChE) with
56  Lewisite is a potent arsenic-based chemical warfare agent known to induce painful cutaneous inflamma
57 ng the hydrolysis of the very toxic chemical warfare agent mustard (bis(2-chloroethyl)sulfide) in the
58 ilized insecticide paraoxon and the chemical warfare agent sarin.
59 ld increase in activity against the chemical warfare agent simulant dimethyl-4-nitrophenyl phosphate
60 or the trace analysis in air of the chemical warfare agent simulant methyl salicylate (1.24 ppb) and
61  of adsorption and decomposition of chemical warfare agent simulants on Zr-based MOFs open new opport
62                      Using a set of chemical warfare agent simulants with nominally the same reduced
63 morphine), organic salts, peptides, chemical warfare agent simulants, and other small organic compoun
64 y related precursor ions, including chemical warfare agent simulants, fentanyls and other opioids, am
65                  Data are given for chemical warfare agent simulants, methyl salicylate, and dimethyl
66 ity for NPPMP, the analogue for the chemical warfare agent soman.
67                Incorporation of the chemical warfare agent sulfur mustard (SM) produces a covalent ad
68 t precursors of the extremely toxic chemical warfare agent sulfur mustard and classified, respectivel
69  positive and negative ions with VX chemical warfare agent surrogates representing the amine (triethy
70 oxic and environmentally persistent chemical warfare agent VX (O-ethyl S-2-(diisopropylamino)ethyl me
71 n S (P-S bond), an analogue for the chemical warfare agent VX.
72 ction and characterization of the biological warfare agent, B. anthracis, the causative agent of anth
73  enterotoxin B (SEB), a potential biological warfare agent, is a potent superantigen that contributes
74 d by aerosol and has been developed as a bio-warfare agent, making it an important pathogen to study
75 from exposure to a pesticide, paraoxon and a warfare agent, VX.
76 global health threat and possible biological warfare agent.
77 en recently considered a possible biological warfare agent.
78  plant toxin used as a poison and biological warfare agent; shiga toxin is a homologue expressed by p
79  are examined as decontaminants for chemical warfare agents (CWA).
80 ganophosphorus chemicals, including chemical warfare agents (CWAs) and insecticides, are acutely toxi
81  toxic substances in air, including chemical warfare agents (CWAs) and toxic industrial chemicals (TI
82 ation of toxic chemicals, including chemical warfare agents (CWAs) and toxic industrial chemicals (TI
83 r an incident with suspected use of chemical warfare agents (CWAs) has occurred, fast and reliable de
84 enic chemicals that originated from chemical warfare agents (CWAs) have been detected and identified
85  The recent alleged use of A-series chemical warfare agents (CWAs) highlights the urgent need to bett
86          The threat associated with chemical warfare agents (CWAs) motivates the development of new m
87 0%) efficiently decomposes adsorbed chemical warfare agents (CWAs) on microporous activated carbons u
88  agents, a class of extremely toxic chemical warfare agents (CWAs), have remained a threat to humanit
89 or the mitigation of the effects of chemical warfare agents (CWAs), including sensing, catalysis and
90 ics, it has not yet been applied on chemical warfare agents (CWAs).
91 rbent design for protection against chemical warfare agents (organophosphorus nerve agents, blisterin
92 anophosphorus (OP) insecticides and chemical warfare agents act primarily by inhibiting acetylcholine
93 s, which are common constituents of chemical warfare agents and agricultural pesticides.
94  including organophosphorus (OP) pesticides, warfare agents and drugs, are AChE reversible or irrever
95 he symptoms of diseases caused by biological warfare agents and have Critical Incident Stress Debrief
96 nism may link vaccination against biological warfare agents and later ill health, but the risks of il
97 , identification, and validation of chemical warfare agents and other small-molecule analytes present
98 termeasure against organophosphorus chemical warfare agents and pesticides is warranted.
99       A series of ~20 drugs, V-type chemical warfare agents and pesticides, simulating toxic unknowns
100 asensitive detection of different biological warfare agents and their markers in different matrices.
101                     A wide range of chemical warfare agents and their simulants are catalytically dec
102         Most of the organophosphate chemical warfare agents are a mixture of two stereoisomers at the
103  protection and treatment so that biological warfare agents are never used.
104 in-the-field detection of traces of chemical warfare agents as well as to differentiate between the r
105 who had witnessed the demolition of chemical warfare agents at the Khamisiyah site in Iraq had a grea
106                                     Chemical warfare agents containing phosphonate ester bonds are am
107    The threat of terrorists using biological warfare agents has received increased attention in recen
108 etection of multiple simulants of biological warfare agents have been developed.
109 -2 outbreak and the alarming use of chemical warfare agents highlight the necessity to produce effici
110 stable immunoassays for the detection of bio warfare agents in complex matrices.
111 ection scheme for the analysis of biological warfare agents is demonstrated using Bacillus globigii s
112 trumentation to accurately detect biological warfare agents such as B. anthracis, emergency responder
113 apture and catalytic degradation of chemical warfare agents such as sarin and sulfur mustard using me
114 ovide here a primer on 10 classic biological warfare agents to increase the likelihood of their being
115  that range from the detection of biological warfare agents to pharmaceutical screening.
116 risk that is posed by microbes as biological warfare agents using the basic principles of microbial c
117                                     Chemical warfare agents were demolished by US soldiers at Khamisi
118 se for the screening of explosives, chemical warfare agents, and illicit drugs.
119 hosphates, including pesticides and chemical warfare agents, at rates approaching the diffusion contr
120          Titration curves for two biological warfare agents, Bacillus anthracis and Yersinia pestis,
121 ction of narcotics, explosives, and chemical warfare agents, drift tube ion mobility spectrometry rel
122 rmaceutical compounds, detection of chemical warfare agents, environmental hygiene technology, prelim
123 l organophosphorus (OP) pesticides, chemical warfare agents, lubricants, and plasticizers, leading to
124 ntal remediation, detoxification of chemical warfare agents, photocatalytic energy conversions, and e
125 tification of the three potential biological warfare agents, ricin, staphylococcal enterotoxin B, and
126 y and accurately detect potential biological warfare agents, such as Bacillus anthracis, causal agent
127                           Among the chemical warfare agents, the extremely toxic nerve agent VX (O-et
128 technique for the identification of chemical warfare agents, toxic chemicals, or explosives in air.
129  monitoring degradation products of chemical warfare agents, with advantages of speed/warning, effici
130 n of organophosphate pesticides and chemical warfare agents.
131 iable identification of potential biological warfare agents.
132 ted organophosphorus pesticides and chemical warfare agents.
133 rrorism responses to biological and chemical warfare agents.
134 on of agricultural insecticides and chemical warfare agents.
135 anophosphate-based insecticides and chemical warfare agents.
136 sites that produce the compounds as chemical warfare agents.
137 ddition, these toxins are suspected chemical warfare agents.
138 nerve agent is one of the deadliest chemical warfare agents.
139 n of toxic industrial chemicals and chemical warfare agents.
140 in the catalytic decontamination of chemical warfare agents.
141 hemicals including insecticides and chemical warfare agents.
142 e agents), and blistering and incapacitating warfare agents.
143 racteristics for the destruction of chemical warfare agents.
144 ong veterans potentially exposed to chemical warfare agents; 2) compare the findings of factor analys
145  of veterans potentially exposed to chemical warfare agents; however, veterans who had witnessed the
146 phates have been adapted for use as chemical warfare agents; the most well-known are GA, GB, GD, GF,
147 rganophosphorus (OP) pesticides and chemical warfare agents; therefore, they warrant exploration.
148 d with individuals exposed to high-intensity warfare alone, those exposed to both high-intensity warf
149                                          The warfare among microbial species as well as between patho
150                                   We studied warfare among the Turkana, a politically uncentralized,
151                                     We did a warfare analysis laboratory exercise using evidence-base
152           Horse domestication revolutionized warfare and accelerated travel, trade, and the geographi
153 ocin peptides are weapons of inter-bacterial warfare and belong to the larger group of antimicrobial
154 is one of the deadliest agents of biological warfare and bioterrorism.
155  alone, those exposed to both high-intensity warfare and chemical weapons were at higher risk for lif
156 arfare, those exposed to both high-intensity warfare and chemical weapons were at higher risk for lif
157 d Sardasht (both high-intensity conventional warfare and chemical weapons).
158 g individuals exposed to both high-intensity warfare and chemical weapons, prevalence rates for lifet
159 bial natural products exploited in bacterial warfare and chemotherapeutic trials.
160 shapes other mechanisms, including bacterial warfare and cross-feeding, to define microbiome composit
161 etion system (T6SS) is a weapon of bacterial warfare and host cell subversion.
162                The recent worldwide surge of warfare and hostilities exposes increasingly large numbe
163               Vaccination against biological warfare and multiple routine vaccinations were associate
164                        In humans, success in warfare and other collective conflicts depends on both f
165        SWCC are trained to execute high-risk warfare and reconnaissance missions typically operating
166 ury is an all-too-common outcome from modern warfare and sport, and lacks a reproducible model for as
167 ical agents have been used as instruments of warfare and terror for thousands of years to produce fea
168 rol and Prevention as a potential biological warfare and terrorism agent.
169                     The threat of biological warfare and the emergence of new infectious agents sprea
170  of peaceful societies, historical trends of warfare and violence, and cooperation say otherwise.
171 warfare), Rabat (high-intensity conventional warfare), and Sardasht (both high-intensity conventional
172  then, the use of horses for transportation, warfare, and agriculture, as well as selection for desir
173 cal weapon, biological terrorism, biological warfare, and biowarfare.
174 ological terrorism, bioterrorism, biological warfare, and biowarfare.
175 cal weapon, biological terrorism, biological warfare, and biowarfare.
176 cal weapon, biological terrorism, biological warfare, and biowarfare.
177 ular systems involved in secretion, defense, warfare, and gene transfer.
178 effectors, the recently recognised small RNA warfare, and genomic aspects of secondary metabolite bio
179 onse to natural disasters, to the ravages of warfare, and most recently, to medical response after te
180 tions in the formation of complex societies, warfare, and regulation.
181 red the balkanization of polities, increased warfare, and the asynchronous disintegration of polities
182                                 Conflict and warfare are central but also disputed themes in discussi
183 gies of psychological survival during active warfare are not clearly understood.
184          At the center of this host-pathogen warfare are proteins called effectors that are delivered
185 ring the Persian Gulf War, Iraq's biological warfare arsenal probably would have been militarily inef
186 caused by additionally structurally distinct warfare arsenicals including diphenylchlorarsine (DPCA),
187 ut provides a striking example of asymmetric warfare as well as a bacterial equivalent to the trappin
188 rus (OP) nerve agents were used for chemical warfare, assassination, and attempted murder of individu
189 mical sample collectors following a chemical warfare attack (CWA).
190 ober 2001, the first disseminated biological warfare attack was perpetrated on American soil.
191 nic fungi and their hosts engage in chemical warfare, attacking each other with toxic products of sec
192 ments in favour and against the existence of warfare before the development of sedentary societies.
193         Furthermore, Turkana norms governing warfare benefit the ethnolinguistic group, a population
194 dcontinental socio-political instability and warfare between 1250-1350 CE corresponded with drier pos
195               One hypothesis is that intense warfare between groups favored altruism within groups, a
196                    The engineering of active warfare between microbial species establishes a framewor
197 ict have made humans resourceful not only at warfare but also at peacemaking.
198  found among those exposed to high-intensity warfare but not to chemical weapons (31%, 8%, 26%, and 1
199                   Exposure to high-intensity warfare but not to chemical weapons was also significant
200  action problem exists not only in offensive warfare, but also in defensive situations.
201 at toxin plasmid transfer is feasible during warfare, but the resulting transconjugants remain rare.
202 h in the same way in offensive and defensive warfare: by strong leadership, discipline, rewards and p
203 ed to deter Iraq from reacquiring biological warfare capability and must take steps to develop a mult
204 ed by the release of chemical and biological warfare (CBW) agents, detection of airborne pathogens is
205 d broader societal impacts of Classic period warfare, clarify the war statement's meaning and show th
206 oli secrete colibactin during interbacterial warfare, concomitantly exposing the host to an increasin
207 ironmental remediation of pesticide/chemical warfare contaminated areas.
208 tants, suggesting indiscriminate or targeted warfare contrary to international humanitarian law and p
209  their precursors as defined by the chemical warfare convention treaty verification were used in this
210 ribed by Schedule 1, 2, or 3 of the Chemical Warfare Convention treaty verification, was used in this
211 ribed by Schedule 1, 2, or 3 of the Chemical Warfare Convention treaty verification, were used in thi
212 ng investigated for the sourcing of chemical warfare (CW) agents and their starting materials that ma
213 flight mass spectrometer to analyze chemical warfare (CW) degradation products from aqueous environme
214 cal roles of fungal secondary metabolites in warfare, defence and development.
215 nd drug screening to chemical and biological warfare detection, inexpensive, rapid-readout, portable
216  that endows a long-term benefit in pathogen warfare due to the developmental activation of mobile ge
217 of divalent Hg(II) to volatile Hg(0)), (iii) warfare (e.g., conversion of arsenite to highly toxic tr
218 at the Maya engaged in tactics akin to total warfare earlier and more frequently than previously thou
219 ntal factors, such as chemical or biological warfare exposure, were considered.
220  weapons of terror as well as instruments of warfare for mass destruction.
221 ploration of new niches, and engage in group warfare for niche dominance.
222 tional aspects (major battles, techniques of warfare, geopolitical strategies, etc.), curiously, the
223                      Among the low-intensity warfare group, the corresponding rates were 8%, 2%, 18%,
224 6), compared with those in the low-intensity warfare group.
225                                   Biological warfare has been renounced by 140 nations, primarily for
226                                   Biological warfare has evolved from the crude use of cadavers to co
227    The new reality of biologic terrorism and warfare has ignited a debate about whether to reintroduc
228             Classic period (250-950 CE) Maya warfare has largely been viewed as ritualized and limite
229 ia Yersinia pestis as an agent of biological warfare have highlighted the need for a safe, efficaciou
230    Although helping facilitate this chemical warfare, HK II via its mitochondrial location also suppr
231  bioterrorism, biological agents, biological warfare, hospital preparedness, disaster management, and
232             This analysis supports a 'trench warfare' hypothesis, in which advances and retreats of r
233 tral Pan would not have engaged in intensive warfare if we consider bonobo behavior, but modern human
234 rizontal gene transfer can reshape bacterial warfare in a way that benefits a weapon gene and strains
235 sociation with indigenous solar religion and warfare in Mexico may have led to its suppression after
236  2004 of 153 civilians in 3 towns exposed to warfare in northwestern Iran: Oshnaviyeh (low-intensity
237 evolutionized transport, communications, and warfare in prehistory, yet the identification of early d
238 assic explanation for the prevalence of such warfare in some human societies is leadership by self-se
239                            The importance of warfare in the evolution of human social behavior remain
240                          Evidence of violent warfare in the Terminal Classic period (800-950 CE) is i
241  emphasised group-level competition, such as warfare, in moulding human cooperation and sociality.
242 rstanding mortality that results from modern warfare, in which 90% of casualties are civilian, and id
243                                              Warfare intensity, in turn, depended on the spread of hi
244                                    Bacterial warfare is a fascinating topic for ecology and evolution
245                         Exposure to chemical warfare is an extreme traumatic event that has long-last
246         To evaluate whether participation in warfare is associated with reproductive benefits, we pre
247                                     Tactical warfare is considered a driver of the evolution of human
248             The origin of human violence and warfare is controversial, and some scholars contend that
249                    The history of biological warfare is difficult to assess because of a number of co
250 f the types of injuries that occur in modern warfare is essential to plan operations and maintain a h
251              Often seen as a dividing force, warfare is in fact another catalyst of culture contact.
252 of cells that actually lyse during bacterial warfare is unknown.
253 veal the importance of tracing the events of warfare, its psychosocial consequences, and the distinct
254 in these three major mechanisms of bacterial warfare lead to an unbalanced community that is dominate
255 l use of Y. pestis as an agent of biological warfare mean that plague still poses a threat to human h
256 sistent with balanced-polymorphism or trench-warfare models of host-parasite coevolution.
257  were exposed either to urban violence or to warfare more than a decade earlier.
258 stence was investigated for several chemical warfare nerve agent degradation analytes on indoor surfa
259                  The persistence of chemical warfare nerve agent degradation analytes on surfaces is
260 ormation during the hydrolysis of a chemical warfare nerve agent simulant over a polyoxometalate cata
261 Organophosphorus compounds, such as chemical warfare nerve agents and pesticides, are known to cause
262 on against multiple lethal doses of chemical warfare nerve agents in vivo.
263 therapeutic against the toxicity of chemical warfare nerve agents.
264 has investigated the effects of violence and warfare on individuals' well-being, mental health, and i
265 s--bacteria, viruses, or toxins--as tools of warfare or terrorism has led to measures to deter their
266 n clinical medicine as well as in biological warfare or terrorism incidents.
267  the greatest concern from a bioterrorism or warfare perspective, potentially capable of causing mass
268                      From a bioterrorism and warfare perspective, these agents are likely to cause ma
269 is membrane are the instruments of microbial warfare, playing key roles in microbial pathogenesis, vi
270 tion assays to demonstrate that intraspecies warfare presents a significant barrier to strain coexist
271 evidence of interpersonal violence and early warfare presents important insights into conflict in pas
272 odern reincarnation of the Soviet biological warfare program.
273 nt and proliferation of offensive biological warfare programs.
274 Iran: Oshnaviyeh (low-intensity conventional warfare), Rabat (high-intensity conventional warfare), a
275 plied to the direct detection of 13 chemical warfare related compounds, including sarin, and compared
276 : narcotic/psychotropic substances, chemical warfare-related compounds and dual-use items.
277  the nature and broader consequences of Maya warfare remain poorly understood.
278 0, shotguns and M-16s were adopted into Enga warfare, setting off some 15 years of devastation as you
279 tic activity for the breakdown of a chemical warfare simulant (dimethyl-4-nitrophenyl phosphate, DMNP
280 -chloroethyl ethyl sulfide (CEES, a chemical warfare simulant of mustard gas).
281                   IMS data of three chemical warfare simulants, dimethyl methylphosphonate, triethyl
282 quisition dimensions on IMS data of chemical warfare simulants.
283               This simple act of nutritional warfare, starving the invader of an essential element, i
284 ential to be integrated into many electronic warfare systems.
285 d intelligence gathering, a major biological warfare terrorist attack can be prevented, the history o
286                      Lanchester, Aircraft in Warfare, the Dawn of the Fourth Arm].
287 oviding fast transportation and transforming warfare, the horse had an impact on human history with n
288                With the threat of biological warfare, the U.S.
289  about the physical consequences of chemical warfare, there is a paucity of information about the lon
290 ed with individuals exposed to low-intensity warfare, those exposed to both high-intensity warfare an
291  aerosolized for use as a potential biologic warfare threat agent.
292 te the Gulf War defeat, the Iraqi biological warfare threat has not been extinguished.
293 hough its toxicity makes BoNT/A a biological warfare threat, its biologic activity makes it an increa
294  we develop an ecological model of bacterial warfare to understand the impacts of horizontal gene tra
295                 In this population, internal warfare unites multiple communities, and co-unokais stra
296 as toxins for functions related to bacterial warfare, virulence, and secretion.
297 h of past foraging people, and evidence that warfare was part of the repertoire of inter-group relati
298 y for extreme territorial-based violence and warfare, whilst also engaging in the strong affiliative
299 olecules (bacteriocins) for their continuous warfare with other microorganisms.
300 e rule, and the cessation of Ptolemaic state warfare with their great rival, the Seleukid Empire.

 
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