marinelexicon:About: Difference between revisions
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<strong>Marine Lexicon</strong> | <strong>Marine Lexicon</strong> | ||
[[ | [[Image:EEA_grants@2x-300x210.png|200px |link=https://eeagrants.org |alt=Alt text|EEA Grants]][[Image:LOGO CHAM 2018 Lettering.png|150px|link=http://www.cham.fcsh.unl.pt |alt=Alt text|CHAM – Centre for the Humanities]][[File:Logo UiB.jpg|100px |link=https://www.uib.no/en/universitymuseum]][[File:logo NIFU.jpg|250px |link=https://www.nifu.no/en/]] | ||
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Marine Lexicon is a cooperation initiative between Portugal and Norway, funded by [https://eeagrants.org/ EEA Grants] and [http://www.cham.fcsh.unl.pt/ CHAM – Centre for the Humanities], aiming at the construction of a thesaurus of European common names of marine mammals (cetaceans, seals and sea lions, and sirenians), symbolic elements (sea monsters, hybrid beings, folklore creatures) represented in the early modern age (15th-18th centuries) and place names related to the exploitation of marine mammals.<br /> | Marine Lexicon is a cooperation initiative between Portugal and Norway, funded by [https://eeagrants.org/ EEA Grants] and [http://www.cham.fcsh.unl.pt/ CHAM – Centre for the Humanities], aiming at the construction of a thesaurus of European common names of marine mammals (cetaceans, seals and sea lions, and sirenians), symbolic elements (sea monsters, hybrid beings, folklore creatures) represented in the early modern age (15th-18th centuries) and place names related to the exploitation of marine mammals.<br /> | ||
Browse our thesaurus or visit the project's website at: http://marinelexicon.fcsh.unl.pt/. | Browse our thesaurus [[Main Page|here]] or visit the project's website at: http://marinelexicon.fcsh.unl.pt/. |
Revision as of 13:12, 26 January 2021
Marine Lexicon
File:Logo UiB.jpgFile:Logo NIFU.jpg
Marine Lexicon is a cooperation initiative between Portugal and Norway, funded by EEA Grants and CHAM – Centre for the Humanities, aiming at the construction of a thesaurus of European common names of marine mammals (cetaceans, seals and sea lions, and sirenians), symbolic elements (sea monsters, hybrid beings, folklore creatures) represented in the early modern age (15th-18th centuries) and place names related to the exploitation of marine mammals.
Browse our thesaurus here or visit the project's website at: http://marinelexicon.fcsh.unl.pt/.