- Malabo (national capital, Equatorial Guinea)
Malabo, capital of Equatorial Guinea. It lies on the northern edge of the island of Bioko (or Fernando Po) on the rim of a sunken volcano. With an average temperature of 77 °F (25 °C) and an annual rainfall of 75 inches (1,900 mm), it has one of the more onerous climates in the Bight of Biafra
- malabsorption (pathology)
digestive system disease: Malabsorption: Malabsorption occurs when the small intestine is unable to transport broken-down products of digestive materials from the lumen of the intestine into the lymphatics or mesenteric veins, where they are distributed to the rest of the body. Defects in transport occur either because the…
- malabsorption syndrome (pathology)
digestive system disease: Malabsorption: Malabsorption occurs when the small intestine is unable to transport broken-down products of digestive materials from the lumen of the intestine into the lymphatics or mesenteric veins, where they are distributed to the rest of the body. Defects in transport occur either because the…
- malabsorption test (medicine)
malabsorption test, any of a group of noninvasive medical procedures used to diagnose abnormalities associated with poor absorption of nutrients. Malabsorption of nutrients can result from surgical alterations or physiological disturbances of the gastrointestinal tract. For example, the removal of
- Malacañang Palace (palace, Manila, Philippines)
Malacañang Palace, the official residence and office of the president of the Philippines, located in the San Miguel neighbourhood of Manila. The main building is a strikingly elegant villa in the Spanish colonial style, stretching picturesquely along the Pasig River’s northern bank. Outside are
- Malacanthidae (fish)
tilefish, any of about 40 species of elongated marine fishes in the family Malacanthidae (order Perciformes), with representatives occurring in tropical and warm temperate seas. Malacanthidae is formally divided into the subfamilies Malacanthinae and Latilinae; however, some taxonomists consider
- malacate (spindle)
maguey: …hard spindle known as a malacate is used to spin fairly fine yarn from the maguey and related hard fibres.
- Malacca (Malaysia)
Melaka, town and port, Peninsular (West) Malaysia, on the Strait of Malacca, at the mouth of the sluggish Melaka River. The city was founded about 1400, when Paramesvara, the ruler of Tumasik (now Singapore), fled from the forces of the Javanese kingdom of Majapahit and found refuge at the site,
- Malacca (state, Malaysia)
Indonesia: Muslim kingdoms of northern Sumatra: …to the better-protected harbour of Malacca on the southwest coast of the Malay Peninsula. Javanese middlemen, converging on Malacca, ensured the harbour’s importance.
- Malacca, Strait of (strait, Asia)
Strait of Malacca, waterway connecting the Andaman Sea (Indian Ocean) and the South China Sea (Pacific Ocean). It runs between the Indonesian island of Sumatra to the west and peninsular (West) Malaysia and extreme southern Thailand to the east and has an area of about 25,000 square miles (65,000
- Malacca, sultanate of (Malay dynasty, southeast Asia)
sultanate of Malacca, (1403?–1511), Malay dynasty that ruled the great entrepôt of Malacca (Melaka) and its dependencies and provided Malay history with its golden age, still evoked in idiom and institutions. The founder and first ruler of Malacca, Paramesvara (died 1424, Malacca), a Sumatran
- Malachi (Hebrew prophet)
biblical literature: Malachi: ” The Book of Malachi, the last of the Twelve (Minor) Prophets, was written by an anonymous writer called Malachi, or “my messenger.” Perhaps written from about 500–450 bce, the book is concerned with spiritual degradation, religious perversions, social injustices, and unfaithfulness to the Covenant.…
- Malachi, The Book of (Old Testament)
The Book of Malachi, the last of 12 books of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) that bear the names of the Minor Prophets, grouped together as the Twelve in the Jewish canon. The author is unknown; Malachi is merely a transliteration of a Hebrew word meaning “my messenger.” The book consists of six
- malachite (mineral)
malachite, a minor ore but a widespread mineral of copper, basic copper carbonate, Cu2CO3(OH)2. Because of its distinctive bright green colour and its presence in the weathered zone of nearly all copper deposits, malachite serves as a prospecting guide for that metal. Notable occurrences are at
- malachite green (drug and dye)
malachite green, triphenylmethane dye used medicinally in dilute solution as a local antiseptic. Malachite green is effective against fungi and gram-positive bacteria. In the fish-breeding industry it has been used to control the fungus Saprolegnia, a water mold that kills the eggs and young fry.
- malachite green G (drug and dye)
brilliant green, a triphenylmethane dye of the malachite-green series (see malachite green) used in dilute solution as a topical antiseptic. Brilliant green is effective against gram-positive microorganisms. It has also been used to dye silk and wool. It occurs as small, shiny, golden crystals
- Małachowski, Stanisław (Polish statesman)
Stanisław Małachowski was a Polish statesman who presided over Poland’s historic Four Years’ Sejm, a constituent Diet that met in 1788–92. The son of Jan Małachowski, the royal grand chancellor, Małachowski was named marshal (speaker) of the Sejm (Diet) in 1788. He was the prime force behind a
- Malachy, St (Irish archbishop)
St. Malachy ; canonized 1190; feast day November 3) was a celebrated archbishop and papal legate who became a dominant figure of church reform in 12th-century Ireland. A fraudulent prophecy concerning the succession of popes was falsely ascribed to him in the 16th century. Malachy was educated at
- Malaclemys terrapin (turtle)
terrapin, (Malaclemys terrapin), a term formerly used to refer to any aquatic turtle but now restricted largely, though not exclusively, to the diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) of the turtle family Emydidae. Until the last third of the 20th century, the word terrapin was used commonly in
- Malacochersus tornieri (reptile)
turtle: Form and function: …the major exception being the pancake tortoise (Malacochersus tornieri) of southeastern Africa. The pancake tortoise lives among rocky outcroppings, where its flat shell allows it to crawl into crevices to rest. Once in a crevice, the pancake tortoise can inflate its lungs, thus expanding the shell and lodging itself so…
- Malaconotidae (bird)
bush-shrike, any of certain African shrike
- Malacopsylloidea (flea superfamily)
flea: Annotated classification: Superfamily Malacopsylloidea All fleas in this superfamily are found on rodents. 2 families, Malacopsyllidae and Rhopalopsyllidae. Rod of the lateral sclerites of the mesothorax (mesopleural rod) not forked; anterior tentorial arm present in head; no genal combs (spines on the anteroventral border of head) or pronotal…
- Malacoptila panamensis (bird)
puffbird: The white-whiskered puffbird (M. panamensis) has the interesting habit of plugging the entrance to its nest burrow with green leaves at night.
- Malacorhynchus membranaceus (bird)
anseriform: Anatomy: …in the shovelers and the pink-eared duck (Malacorhynchus membranaceus), the lamellae becoming extremely fine, enabling particles as small as diatoms to be taken from the surface film. The blue duck (Hymenolaimus malacorhynchos) has a rounded, expanded tip to the bill, which probably protects it when poking around sharp pebbles. The…
- Malacosoma (insect)
tent caterpillar moth, (genus Malacosoma), any of a group of moths in the family Lasiocampidae (order Lepidoptera) in which the larvae (caterpillars) spin huge, tent-shaped communal webs in trees, are often brightly coloured, and can defoliate forest, fruit, and ornamental trees. The adults are
- Malacosoma americanum (insect)
tent caterpillar moth: The eastern tent caterpillar moth Malacosoma americanum of eastern North America deposits its eggs on a tree in midsummer. The egg mass appears as a shiny, tarlike band on a branch. The following spring the eggs hatch, and the larvae migrate to a fork in the…
- Malacosoma disstria (insect)
tent caterpillar moth: The forest tent caterpillar moth M. disstria is common in the southern United States.
- Malacostraca (crustacean)
malacostracan, any member of the more than 29,000 species of the class Malacostraca (subphylum Crustacea, phylum Arthropoda), a widely distributed group of marine, freshwater, and terrestrial invertebrates. Lobsters, crabs, hermit crabs, shrimp, and isopods are all malacostracan crustaceans.
- malacostracan (crustacean)
malacostracan, any member of the more than 29,000 species of the class Malacostraca (subphylum Crustacea, phylum Arthropoda), a widely distributed group of marine, freshwater, and terrestrial invertebrates. Lobsters, crabs, hermit crabs, shrimp, and isopods are all malacostracan crustaceans.
- Malacothamnus (plant)
mallow: Chaparral mallows (Malacothamnus species), a group of shrubs and small trees, are native to California and Baja California. The Carolina mallow (Modiola caroliniana) is a weedy, creeping wild flower of the southern United States.
- maladaptive thinking (psychology)
mental disorder: Cognitive psychotherapy: …based on the premise that maladaptive thinking causes and maintains emotional problems. Maladaptive thinking may refer to a belief that is false and rationally unsupported—what Ellis called an “irrational belief.” An example of such a belief is that one must be loved and approved of by everyone in order to…
- Malade imaginaire, Le (play by Molière)
The Imaginary Invalid, comedy in three acts by Molière, produced in 1673 and published in 1674 as Le Malade imaginaire. It was also translated as The Hypochondriac. Molière wrote the play while ill, and he collapsed during his own performance of the title role, that of Argan, a hypochondriac who
- Maladies de la mémoire, Les (work by Ribot)
Théodule-Armand Ribot: …Maladies de la mémoire (1881; Diseases of Memory), constitutes the most influential early attempt to analyze abnormalities of memory in terms of physiology.
- maladies mentales, considérées sous les rapports médical, hygiénique, et médico-légal, Des (work by Esquirol)
Jean-Étienne-Dominique Esquirol: His Des maladies mentales, considérées sous les rapports médical, hygiénique, et médico-légal (1838) has been called the first modern treatise on clinical psychiatry, and it remained a basic text for 50 years. Esquirol anticipated modern views in his suggestion that some mental illnesses may be caused by…
- Maladjusted (album by Morrissey)
the Smiths: …impressive Southpaw Grammar (1995) and Maladjusted (1997), testified to a growing homoerotic obsession with criminals, skinheads, and boxers, a change paralleled by a shift in the singer’s image from wilting wallflower to would-be thug sporting sideburns and gold bracelets. A seven-year hiatus followed, and fans and critics warmly greeted the…
- Maladzyechna (Belarus)
Maladzyechna, city, northwestern Belarus, northwest of Minsk. The city achieved eminence after becoming a railway junction at the end of the 19th century, and from 1939 until 1960 it served as a provincial centre (except during World War II, when much of it was destroyed). It is a centre of diverse
- Málaga (province, Spain)
Málaga, provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain, on the Mediterranean coast. Its northern half lies on the Andalusian plain, while its southern half is mountainous and rises steeply from the coast, along which there is a narrow strip of
- Málaga (wine)
Málaga, sweet, usually red, fortified wine that originated in the southern Spanish Mediterranean coastal province from which it takes its name. The term may also be applied generically to any of a variety of heavy, sweet red wines, including certain kosher wines served at Jewish celebrations. The
- Málaga (Spain)
Málaga, port city, capital of Málaga provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain. The city lies along a wide bay of the Mediterranean Sea at the mouth of the Guadalmedina River in the centre of the Costa del Sol. It was founded by the
- Málaga Cathedral (cathedral, Málaga, Spain)
Málaga: The cathedral, in the centre of the old city, was begun in 1528 on the site of a mosque; the interior, main facade, and one of the towers were completed in 1782, but the second tower remains unfinished. Other important churches are those of Santo Cristo…
- Malagarasi River (river, Tanzania)
Malagarasi River, river in west Tanzania that rises near the north end of Lake Tanganyika. It flows about 250 miles (450 km) in a northeast, southeast, and west circular course through extensive swamps to exit through highland country back to the
- Malagasy civet (mammal)
fossa: …to its confusion with the Malagasy civet, or fanaloka, Fossa fossa.
- Malagasy languages
Malagasy languages, a cluster of languages spoken on Madagascar and adjacent islands and belonging to the Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) family of languages. The various Malagasy dialects are all closely related, having diversified only in the last 2,000 years when Madagascar was settled by an
- Malagasy mouse (mammal)
Muridae: …dendromurines, and Malagasy rats and mice). Also unresolved are the affinities of subfamilies containing only one genus (mouselike hamsters, the maned rat).
- Malagasy narrow-striped mongoose (mammal)
mongoose: Natural history: The Malagasy narrow-striped mongoose (Mungotictis decemlineata) exhibits the same behaviour but lies on its side and uses all four feet to toss the egg.
- Malagasy peoples
Malagasy peoples, complex of about 20 ethnic groups in Madagascar. The largest group is the Merina, who primarily inhabit the central plateau. The second-largest group is the Betsimisaraka, who live generally in the east. The third is the Betsileo, who inhabit the plateau around Fianarantsoa.
- Malagasy rat (mammal)
Muridae: …rats and mice, dendromurines, and Malagasy rats and mice). Also unresolved are the affinities of subfamilies containing only one genus (mouselike hamsters, the maned rat).
- Malagasy Republic
Madagascar, island country lying off the southeastern coast of Africa. Madagascar is the fourth largest island in the world, after Greenland, New Guinea, and Borneo. Although located some 250 miles (400 km) from the African continent, Madagascar’s population is primarily related not to African
- Malahide Castle (castle, Ireland)
Dublin: Malahide Castle was founded in the 12th century. Because of its proximity to the capital city, the region was the scene of sporadic fighting in the troubled years between 1914 and 1922, and gunrunning by nationalists took place at Howth in June 1914.
- Malāḥin, al- (work by Ibn Durayd)
Ibn Durayd: …etymology of Arab names, and al-Malāḥin (“Ambiguities of Speech”), a book of ambivalent words for the use of persons forced to swear. Ibn Durayd was also a gifted poet.
- Malaita (island, Solomon Islands)
Malaita, volcanic island in the country of Solomon Islands, southwestern Pacific Ocean. It lies 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Guadalcanal across Indispensable Strait. The island is about 115 miles (185 km) long and 22 miles (35 km) across at its widest point. It is densely forested and mountainous,
- Malak Ṭāʾūs (Yazīdī deity)
Yazīdī: The chief divine being is Malak Ṭāʾūs (“Peacock Angel”), who is worshipped in the form of a peacock. Malak Ṭāʾūs has often been identified by outsiders with the Judeo-Christian figure of Satan, causing the Yazīdīs to be inaccurately described as Devil worshippers. An important role in Yazīdī worship is played…
- Malak: An African Political Poem (poetry by Oculi)
Okello Oculi: Malak: An African Political Poem was published in 1976. Oculi’s nonfiction works included Nigerian Alternatives (1987) and Discourses on African Affairs: Directions and Destinies for the 21st Century (1997).
- Malaka (state, Malaysia)
Indonesia: Muslim kingdoms of northern Sumatra: …to the better-protected harbour of Malacca on the southwest coast of the Malay Peninsula. Javanese middlemen, converging on Malacca, ensured the harbour’s importance.
- Malakal (South Sudan)
Malakal, town, northeastern South Sudan. It lies along the right bank of the White Nile River just below the latter’s confluence with the Sobat River, 430 miles (690 km) south of Khartoum. A ferry service on the Sobat River originates from Malakal, which also has a domestic airport. Pop. (2008
- Malakbel (Semitic god)
Malakbel, West Semitic sun god and messenger god, worshiped primarily in the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra; he was variously identified by the Greeks with Zeus and with Hermes and by the Romans with Sol. His name may have been of Babylonian origin, and he was considered the equivalent of the
- Malakhov (fortress, Sevastopol, Ukraine)
Crimean War: …successful French assault on the Malakhov, a major strongpoint in the Russian defenses, the Russians blew up the forts, sank the ships, and evacuated Sevastopol. Secondary operations of the war were conducted in the Caucasus and in the Baltic Sea.
- Malakoff (France)
Malakoff, town, a southwestern industrial suburb of Paris, Hauts-de-Seine département, Île-de-France région, north-central France. Malakoff has an electrical-engineering school, and electrical equipment, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and precision instruments are manufactured there. The town was
- Malakoff, Aimable-Jean-Jacques Pélissier, Duke de (marshal of France)
Aimable-Jean-Jacques Pélissier, duc de Malakoff was a French general during the Algerian conquest and the last French commander in chief in the Crimean War. Educated at the military schools of La Flèche and Saint-Cyr, Pélissier was commissioned as an artillery second lieutenant in 1815. After brief
- Malakula (island, Vanuatu)
Malakula, volcanic island, the second largest island (781 square miles [2,023 square km]) of Vanuatu, in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is 58 miles (94 km) long by 27 miles (44 km) wide and lies about 20 miles (32 km) south of Espiritu Santo, across the Bougainville (Malo) Strait. Its central
- Malakunanja II (archaeological site, Northern Territory, Australia)
Madjedbebe, rock shelter archaeological site in Northern Territory, Australia, that archaeological evidence suggests is among the oldest Aboriginal sites on the continent, with an estimated age of more than 50,000 years. Madjedbebe is located on the western edge of the Arnhem Land plateau about 25
- Malala Fund (nonprofit organization)
Malala Yousafzai: Shooting and Nobel Peace Prize: About the same time, the Malala Fund was established by the Vital Voices Global Partnership to support education for all girls around the world.
- Malala’s Magic Pencil (work by Yousafzai)
Malala Yousafzai: Shooting and Nobel Peace Prize: …also wrote the picture book Malala’s Magic Pencil (2017), which was based on her childhood. In 2014 she became the youngest person to win the Liberty Medal, awarded by the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia to public figures striving for people’s freedom throughout the world. Nominated for the Nobel Peace…
- Malalas, John (Byzantine chronicler)
John Malalas was a Byzantine chronicler of Syrian origin. Malalas’ Chronographia in 18 books is a compilation of history from the Creation certainly to 565, perhaps to 574, but the single extant manuscript ends with events of 563. The greater part of it stresses the importance of Antioch and has a
- Malam Zaki (Fulani leader)
Katagum: 1809 by Ibrahim Zakiyul Kalbi (also known as Malam [Scholar] Zaki), a warrior in the Fulani jihad (holy war) who in 1812 besieged and destroyed Ngazargamu (115 mi [185 km] east-northeast), the capital of the Bornu kingdom. After his victory, Malam Zaki (who was named sarkin [“king…
- Malāmatīyah (Ṣūfism)
Malāmatīyah, a Ṣūfī (Muslim mystic) group that flourished in Sāmānid Iran during the 8th century. The name Malāmatīyah was derived from the Arabic verb laʾma (“to be ignoble,” or “to be wicked”). Malāmatī doctrines were based on the reproach of the carnal self and a careful watch over its
- malambo (dance)
Latin American dance: The Southern Cone: …based on the fandango) and malambo (a man’s solo dance with improvised footwork).
- Malamud, Bernard (American author)
Bernard Malamud was an American novelist and short-story writer who made parables out of Jewish immigrant life. Malamud’s parents were Russian Jews who had fled tsarist Russia. He was born in Brooklyn, where his father owned a small grocery store. The family was poor. Malamud’s mother died when he
- Malamute (breed of dog)
Alaskan Malamute, sled dog developed by the Malemiut people of Alaska, from whom it takes its name. The Alaskan Malamute is a strongly built dog, with a broad head, erect ears, and a plumelike tail carried over its back. Its thick coat is usually gray and white or black and white, the colors
- Malan, Daniel F. (South African politician)
Daniel F. Malan was a statesman and politician who formed South Africa’s first exclusively Afrikaner government and instituted the policy of apartheid (the enforced segregation of nonwhites from whites). Malan was educated at Victoria College, Stellenbosch, and at the University of Utrecht, Neth.,
- Malan, Daniel François (South African politician)
Daniel F. Malan was a statesman and politician who formed South Africa’s first exclusively Afrikaner government and instituted the policy of apartheid (the enforced segregation of nonwhites from whites). Malan was educated at Victoria College, Stellenbosch, and at the University of Utrecht, Neth.,
- Malan, François Stephanus (South African politician)
François Stephanus Malan was a politician who was a leader of the moderate Dutch political parties in South Africa. He was a constant supporter of political rights for Africans. Malan was a leader of the Afrikaner Bond (a political party of Dutch South Africans) and editor (1895) of its newspaper.
- Malanchuk, Valentyn (Soviet government official)
Ukraine: Ukraine under Shcherbytsky: …significant occurred in October 1972: Valentyn Malanchuk, who had previously conducted ideological work in the nationally highly charged Lviv region, was appointed secretary for ideology. A purge in 1973–75 removed almost 5 percent of the CPU members from party rolls.
- Malang (city and regency, Indonesia)
Malang, kota (city) and kabupaten (regency), East Java (Jawa Timur) propinsi (or provinsi; province), Indonesia. Malang is located on a plateau between Mount Kawi (8,697 feet [2,651 metres]) and the Tengger Mountains and enjoys a comfortable climate. Its population is predominantly Javanese with a
- Malange (Angola)
Malanje, town, north-central Angola. The town developed in the mid-19th century as an important feira (open-air market) on the country’s principal plateau, between Luanda—now the country’s capital, 250 miles (400 km) to the west—and the Cuango valley, inhabited by Mbundu peoples, 125 miles (200 km)
- malanggan style (art)
malanggan style, one of the most sophisticated styles of carving in the South Pacific Islands, with a technical virtuosity, vocabulary of fantastic motifs, and range of colour unique in Oceanic art. Although malanggan carvings have been found in other areas of Melanesia, they are indigenous to
- Malania anjouanae (fish)
coelacanth: …in 1952 a second (named Malania anjouanae but not separable from Latimeria) was obtained near the Comoros Islands. Numerous others have been caught in that area. It was later discovered that these fishes were well known to the islanders, who considered the flesh edible when dried and salted; the rough…
- Malanje (Angola)
Malanje, town, north-central Angola. The town developed in the mid-19th century as an important feira (open-air market) on the country’s principal plateau, between Luanda—now the country’s capital, 250 miles (400 km) to the west—and the Cuango valley, inhabited by Mbundu peoples, 125 miles (200 km)
- Malankara Syrian Orthodox Church
Christianity: Oriental Orthodoxy: …and All the East, the Malankara (Indian) Syrian Orthodox Church, the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church. With the exception of the Eritrean church, which was granted autocephaly in 1998, these churches were largely out of contact with the other main branches of Christianity from the…
- Malankarese Catholic Church (church, India)
Malankarese Catholic Church, an Antiochene-rite member of the Eastern Catholic church, composed of former members of the Syrian Orthodox (Jacobite) Church of Kerala, India, who united with Rome in 1930. The Syrian Orthodox Church came into existence in 1653, when the Christians of St. Thomas—as the
- Malapa Caves (archaeological site, South Africa)
Lee Berger: …a fossil-hunting expedition to the Malapa Caves in the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage site near Johannesburg, Berger’s nine-year-old son, Matthew, discovered a fossilized jawbone and collarbone belonging to a juvenile male hominin; Berger noted the mix of primitive and modern characteristics in one of the specimen’s canine teeth. Shortly…
- Malaparte Theater Company (American theater company)
Ethan Hawke: He cofounded the Malaparte Theater Company in New York City in 1991, and he made his Broadway debut in Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull a year later. After Malaparte dissolved in 2000, Hawke returned to Broadway in Henry IV (2003) and in Tom Stoppard’s sprawling The Coast of Utopia…
- Malaparte, Curzio (Italian writer)
Curzio Malaparte was a journalist, dramatist, short-story writer, and novelist, one of the most powerful, brilliant, and controversial of the Italian writers of the fascist and post-World War II periods. Malaparte was a volunteer in World War I and then became active in journalism. In 1924 he
- malapropism (speech)
malapropism, verbal blunder in which one word is replaced by another similar in sound but different in meaning. Although William Shakespeare had used the device for comic effect, the term derives from Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s character Mrs. Malaprop, in his play The Rivals (1775). Her name is
- Malapterurus electricus (fish)
electric catfish, any of about 18 widely distributed freshwater catfish species native to tropical Africa belonging to two genera (Malapterurus and Paradoxoglanis) of the family Malapteruridae. The best known of this group is M. electricus, a thickset fish with six mouth barbels and a single fin
- malar bone (anatomy)
zygomatic bone, diamond-shaped bone below and lateral to the orbit, or eye socket, at the widest part of the cheek. It adjoins the frontal bone at the outer edge of the orbit and the sphenoid and maxilla within the orbit. It forms the central part of the zygomatic arch by its attachments to the
- Mälar, Lake (lake, Sweden)
Lake Mälaren, lake in eastern Sweden, located just west of Stockholm, which lies at the lake’s junction with Salt Bay, an arm of the Baltic Sea. At one time Lake Mälaren was a bay of the Baltic, and seagoing vessels using it were able to sail far into the interior of Sweden. Because of movements of
- Mälaren, Lake (lake, Sweden)
Lake Mälaren, lake in eastern Sweden, located just west of Stockholm, which lies at the lake’s junction with Salt Bay, an arm of the Baltic Sea. At one time Lake Mälaren was a bay of the Baltic, and seagoing vessels using it were able to sail far into the interior of Sweden. Because of movements of
- malaria (pathology)
malaria, serious relapsing infection in humans, characterized by periodic attacks of chills and fever, anemia, splenomegaly (enlargement of the spleen), and often fatal complications. It is caused by one-celled parasites of the genus Plasmodium that are transmitted to humans by the bite of
- Malaria Vaccine Initiative (international organization)
malaria: Malaria through history: …Initiative on Malaria and the Malaria Vaccine Initiative, were established to support the fight against malaria. Some of these programs aim to fund a broad range of malaria research, whereas others aim to fund ongoing malaria control efforts in endemic areas. These control efforts, which are the focus of antimalarial…
- Malaspina Family (Italian family)
Malaspina Family, feudal family powerful in northern Italy in the Middle Ages. Descended from Marquis Oberto I, who was created count palatine by the Holy Roman emperor Otto I, the family at first controlled Tuscany, eastern Liguria, and the March of Lombardy. Early in the 11th century the Este,
- Malaspina Glacier (glacier, Alaska, United States)
Malaspina Glacier, segment of the St. Elias Mountains glacier system, west of Yakutat Bay in southeastern Alaska, U.S. The most extensive individual ice field in Alaska, it flows for 50 miles (80 km) along the southern base of Mount St. Elias, is more than 1,000 feet (300 metres) thick, and covers
- Malaspina, Conrad (Italian noble)
heraldry: The nature and origins of heraldic terminology: …II, for example, granted to Conrad Malaspina an augmentation of a chief of the empire, thereby adding an eagle displayed sable to the Malaspina arms of per fess gules and or overall a thorn branch vert with five flowers argent in pale.
- Malasseziales (order of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Order Malasseziales Symbiotic on skin of animals but can become pathogenic, mainly affecting dogs and cats; asexual; rapidly budding yeasts with thick cell walls, colonies range in colour from cream to yellow, brown, or orange; conidia are globose to elliptical-shaped; example genus is Malassezia. Order Microstromatales
- Malate (district, Manila, Philippines)
Manila: City layout: …the south shore, Ermita and Malate are choice residential districts and the sites of hotels and embassies. The districts to the southeast are generally middle-income residential areas.
- malate (chemical compound)
metabolism: Regeneration of oxaloacetate: …product of reaction [45] is malate.
- malate dehydrogenase (enzyme)
metabolism: Regeneration of oxaloacetate: …type of reaction, catalyzed by malate dehydrogenase in reaction [46], also occurred in step [40] of the cycle. The formation of oxaloacetate completes the TCA cycle, which can now begin again with the formation of citrate [38].
- malate synthase (enzyme)
metabolism: Anaplerotic routes: …in a reaction catalyzed by malate synthase, with acetyl coenzyme A; the products of this reaction are coenzyme A and malate (reaction [53]).
- Malaterra, Goffredo (Italian historian)
eclipse: Medieval European: …Italy during the 11th century, Goffredo Malaterra records an eclipse of the Sun that, even though it caused alarm to some people, was evidently regarded by others as no more than a practical inconvenience:
- Malatesta Family (Italian family)
Malatesta Family, Italian family that ruled Rimini, south of Ravenna, in the European Middle Ages and led the region’s Guelf (papal) party. Originating as feudal lords of the Apennine hinterland, the family became powerful in Rimini in the 13th century, when Malatesta da Verucchio (d. 1312)