- Leopardus wiedii (mammal)
margay, (Leopardus wiedii), small cat (family Felidae) that ranges from South through Central America and, rarely, into the extreme southern United States. Little is known about the habits of the margay. It lives in forests and presumably is nocturnal, feeding on small prey such as birds, frogs,
- Leopold and Loeb (American murderers)
Nathan Freudenthal Leopold, Jr., and Richard Albert Loeb were infamous Chicago murderers of 1924, who confessed to the kidnapping and murder of 14-year-old Robert (Bobby) Franks for an “intellectual” thrill. Pleading guilty, the men were defended in a bench trial by famed lawyer Clarence Darrow,
- Leopold Anton Johann Sigismund Joseph Korsinus Ferdinand, Count von Berchtold (Austro-Hungarian foreign minister)
Leopold, Graf von Berchtold was an Austro-Hungarian foreign minister whose ultimatum to Serbia (July 23, 1914) was followed (August 1) by the outbreak of World War I. A wealthy landowner in Hungary and Moravia, Berchtold, through marriage, became one of the richest men in Austria-Hungary. He
- Leopold Filips Karel Albert Meinrad Hubertus Maria Miguel (king of Belgium)
Leopold III was the king of the Belgians, whose actions as commander in chief of the Belgian army during the German conquest of Belgium (1940) in World War II aroused opposition to his rule, eventually leading to his abdication in 1951. The son of Albert I and his consort Elisabeth of Bavaria,
- Leopold George Christiaan Frederik (king of Belgium)
Leopold I was the first king of the Belgians (1831–65), who helped strengthen the nation’s new parliamentary system and, as a leading figure in European diplomacy, scrupulously maintained Belgian neutrality. The fourth son of Francis, duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Leopold served with the allies
- Leopold I (prince of Anhalt-Dessau)
Leopold I was a prince of Anhalt-Dessau, Prussian field marshal and reformer and inventor of the iron ramrod; he founded the old Prussian military system that, generally unchanged until 1806, enabled Frederick II the Great to propel Prussia to the position of a European power. Beginning his
- Leopold I (duke of Austria)
Austria: Accession of the Habsburgs: …Frederick I (the Fair) and Leopold I, managed to maintain control. Frederick stood for election as German king (as Frederick III), and for the next several years the Habsburg countries had to support the cost of the war with his rival, Louis IV of Bavaria, until 1322, when Frederick was…
- Leopold I (margrave of Austria)
House of Babenberg: Leopold I of Babenberg became margrave of Austria in 976. The Babenbergs’ power was modest, however, until the 12th century, when they came to dominate the Austrian nobility. With the death of Duke Frederick II in 1246, the male line of the Babenbergs ended, and…
- Leopold I (Holy Roman emperor)
Leopold I was the Holy Roman emperor during whose lengthy reign (1658–1705) Austria emerged from a series of struggles with the Turks and the French to become a great European power, in which monarchical absolutism and administrative centralism gained ascendancy. Leopold, the second son of
- Leopold I (king of Belgium)
Leopold I was the first king of the Belgians (1831–65), who helped strengthen the nation’s new parliamentary system and, as a leading figure in European diplomacy, scrupulously maintained Belgian neutrality. The fourth son of Francis, duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Leopold served with the allies
- Leopold II (king of Belgium)
Leopold II was the king of the Belgians from 1865 to 1909. Keen on establishing Belgium as an imperial power, he led the first European efforts to develop the Congo River basin, making possible the formation in 1885 of the Congo Free State, annexed in 1908 as the Belgian Congo and now the
- Leopold II (grand duke of Tuscany)
Leopold II was the last reigning grand duke of Tuscany (ruled 1824–59). Succeeding his father, Ferdinand III, on June 18, 1824, Leopold continued liberal administrative, judicial, and educational reforms and improved the transportation system. After the election (1846) of the popular and democratic
- Leopold II (Holy Roman emperor)
Leopold II was the Holy Roman emperor from 1790 to 1792, one of the most capable of the 18th-century reformist rulers known as the “enlightened despots.” The third son of the Habsburg Maria Theresa and the emperor Francis I, Leopold succeeded his father as duke of Tuscany when his eldest brother
- Leopold II (Babenberg margrave)
Austria: Early Babenberg period: …influenced the next Babenberg margrave, Leopold II, to abandon Henry’s cause. As a result, Henry roused the Bohemian duke Vratislav II against him, and in 1082 Leopold II was defeated near Mailberg, his territories north of the Danube devastated. The Babenbergs, however, managed to survive these setbacks. Meanwhile, the cause…
- Léopold II, Lac (lake, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Lake Mai-Ndombe, lake in western Congo (Kinshasa), east of the Congo River and south-southeast of Lake Tumba. It covers approximately 890 square miles (2,300 square km) and is about 80 miles (130 km) long and up to 25 miles (40 km) wide. It empties south through the Fimi River into the Kasai.
- Leopold II, Lake (lake, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Lake Mai-Ndombe, lake in western Congo (Kinshasa), east of the Congo River and south-southeast of Lake Tumba. It covers approximately 890 square miles (2,300 square km) and is about 80 miles (130 km) long and up to 25 miles (40 km) wide. It empties south through the Fimi River into the Kasai.
- Leopold III (ruler of Babenberg)
Austria: Early Babenberg period: Under Leopold III (1095–1136) the history of the Babenbergs reached its first culmination point. In the struggle between emperor and pope, Leopold avoided taking sides until a consensus had built up among the German princes that it was Emperor Henry IV who stood in the way…
- Leopold III (duke of Austria)
house of Habsburg: Austria and the rise of the Habsburgs in Germany: …the brothers Albert III and Leopold III of Austria agreed on a partition (Treaty of Neuberg, 1379): Albert took Austria, and Leopold took Styria, Carinthia, and Tirol.
- Leopold III (king of Belgium)
Leopold III was the king of the Belgians, whose actions as commander in chief of the Belgian army during the German conquest of Belgium (1940) in World War II aroused opposition to his rule, eventually leading to his abdication in 1951. The son of Albert I and his consort Elisabeth of Bavaria,
- Leopold IV (duke of Austria)
Austria: Early Babenberg period: …Welfs, on his half brother, Leopold IV. After the latter’s untimely death, Henry II Jasomirgott succeeded to the rule of Austria and Bavaria.
- Leopold Lodewijk Filips Maria Victor (king of Belgium)
Leopold II was the king of the Belgians from 1865 to 1909. Keen on establishing Belgium as an imperial power, he led the first European efforts to develop the Congo River basin, making possible the formation in 1885 of the Congo Free State, annexed in 1908 as the Belgian Congo and now the
- Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau (prince of Anhalt-Dessau)
Leopold I was a prince of Anhalt-Dessau, Prussian field marshal and reformer and inventor of the iron ramrod; he founded the old Prussian military system that, generally unchanged until 1806, enabled Frederick II the Great to propel Prussia to the position of a European power. Beginning his
- Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Prince (Prussian prince)
Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen was a Prussian candidate for the Spanish throne. He was a member of the Swabian line of the Hohenzollern dynasty and the brother of Carol I of Romania. Chancellor Otto von Bismarck and Spain’s de facto leader, Juan Prim (1814–70), persuaded the reluctant
- Leopold of Köthen (German prince)
Johann Sebastian Bach: The Weimar period: …as musical director to Prince Leopold of Köthen, which was confirmed in August 1717. Duke Wilhelm, however, refused to accept his resignation—partly, perhaps, because of Bach’s friendship with the duke’s nephews, with whom the duke was on the worst of terms. About September a contest between Bach and the famous…
- Leopold V (duke of Austria)
flag of Austria: …stripe, is attributed to Duke Leopold V in the late 12th century. Legend has it that King Henry VI granted him that shield because the duke’s tunic was drenched in blood, except for the white area beneath his belt, after the Battle of Ptolemais in 1191 in the Holy Land.…
- Leopold VI (duke of Austria)
Austria: Later Babenberg period: His brother Leopold VI, the most outstanding member of the family, then took over as sole ruler (1198–1230). This was a time of great prosperity for the Babenberg countries. In imperial politics Leopold VI again took sides with the Hohenstaufen, backing Philip of Swabia. In church matters…
- Leopold’s Diploma (Transylvanian history)
Diploma Leopoldinum, decree issued in October 1690 by Leopold I, Holy Roman emperor and king of Hungary (1658–1705), after the Ottoman Turks had been driven from central Hungary in 1686. The decree established the political status and the freedoms of Transylvania, notably the freedom of observance
- Leopold, Aldo (American environmentalist)
Aldo Leopold was an American environmentalist whose book A Sand County Almanac (1949) was read by millions and strongly influenced the budding environmental movement. (Read E.O. Wilson’s Britannica essay on mass extinction.) After attending Yale University, Leopold worked for the U.S. Forest
- Leopold, Carl Gustaf af (Swedish poet)
Carl Gustaf af Leopold was a Swedish court poet in the service of the enlightened monarch Gustav III. After study at Uppsala and Greifswald, Leopold began his career in 1792 with skillful articles and polemical essays propagating the rational ideas of the Enlightenment and parrying the criticism of
- Leopold, Isaiah Edward (American actor)
Ed Wynn was an American comedian and actor in vaudeville, theatre, and motion pictures and on radio and television. He was also a producer, author, and songwriter. Wynn made his professional debut with the Thurber-Nasher Repertoire Company in Norwich, Conn., in 1902 and acquired the nickname of the
- Leopold, Jan Hendrik (Dutch poet)
Jan Hendrik Leopold was a poet whose unique expression and masterly technique set him apart from other heirs to the Dutch literary renaissance of the 1880s. His poetry is often wistful and melancholy in mood, conveying a desolating solitude of spirit that was probably accentuated by his deafness;
- Leopold, Nathan F., Jr. (American murderer)
Leopold and Loeb: The murderers and their victim: Leopold attended the University of Michigan as an undergraduate at age 15, eventually transferring to the University of Chicago, where he graduated at 18. He then enrolled in the university’s law school. Loeb also attended the University of Michigan, and he graduated at 17, following…
- Leopold, Nathan Freudenthal, Jr. (American murderer)
Leopold and Loeb: The murderers and their victim: Leopold attended the University of Michigan as an undergraduate at age 15, eventually transferring to the University of Chicago, where he graduated at 18. He then enrolled in the university’s law school. Loeb also attended the University of Michigan, and he graduated at 17, following…
- Leopold, Rand Aldo (American environmentalist)
Aldo Leopold was an American environmentalist whose book A Sand County Almanac (1949) was read by millions and strongly influenced the budding environmental movement. (Read E.O. Wilson’s Britannica essay on mass extinction.) After attending Yale University, Leopold worked for the U.S. Forest
- Léopold-Georges-Chrétien-Frédéric (king of Belgium)
Leopold I was the first king of the Belgians (1831–65), who helped strengthen the nation’s new parliamentary system and, as a leading figure in European diplomacy, scrupulously maintained Belgian neutrality. The fourth son of Francis, duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Leopold served with the allies
- Leopold-Louis-Philippe-Marie-Victor (king of Belgium)
Leopold II was the king of the Belgians from 1865 to 1909. Keen on establishing Belgium as an imperial power, he led the first European efforts to develop the Congo River basin, making possible the formation in 1885 of the Congo Free State, annexed in 1908 as the Belgian Congo and now the
- Léopold-Philippe-Charles-Albert-Meinrad-Hubertus-Marie-Miguel (king of Belgium)
Leopold III was the king of the Belgians, whose actions as commander in chief of the Belgian army during the German conquest of Belgium (1940) in World War II aroused opposition to his rule, eventually leading to his abdication in 1951. The son of Albert I and his consort Elisabeth of Bavaria,
- Leopoldinia pulchra (plant)
palm: Ecology: …or river margins (Astrocaryum jauari, Leopoldinia pulchra) where competition is limited.
- Leopoldovna, Anna (regent of Russia)
Anna was the regent of Russia (November 1740–November 1741) for her son, the emperor Ivan VI. A niece of Empress Anna (reigned 1730–40), Anna Leopoldovna married a nephew of the Holy Roman emperor Charles VI in 1739 and gave birth to a son, Ivan (Aug. 2 [Aug. 13], 1740), who was named heir to the
- Leopoldstadt (district, Vienna, Austria)
Vienna: Layout and architecture: Leopoldstadt (district II) was the area allotted in 1622 to the Jews, who lived there until 1938. In this district is the famous 3,200-acre (1,295-hectare) Prater, formerly the hunting and riding preserve of the aristocracy but since 1766 a public park whose amenities include a…
- Léopoldville (national capital, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Kinshasa, largest city and capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It lies about 320 miles (515 km) from the Atlantic Ocean on the south bank of the Congo River. One of the largest cities of sub-Saharan Africa, it is a special political unit equivalent to a Congolese region, with its own
- leopon (mammal)
lion: Classification and distribution: …leopard and a lioness, a leopon. The cat known as the mountain lion (see puma), however, is a New World member of the genus Puma.
- Leosthenes (Greek mercenary)
Lamian War: …commander was the Athenian mercenary Leosthenes, who seized Thermopylae and kept a Macedonian army under Antipater blockaded in the city of Lamía until the spring of 322, when the arrival of Macedonian reinforcements from Asia forced them to raise the siege. Antipater retreated to Macedonia to regroup, but Leosthenes had…
- Léotard, Jules (French acrobat)
circus: Acts of skill: …invented by the French acrobat Jules Léotard in 1859. That same year another Frenchman, Jean-François Gravelet (stage name “Blondin”), crossed Niagara Falls on a tightrope. These events excited public interest in the work of the aerial gymnast and acrobat. By the turn of the 20th century, acrobatic acts had grown…
- Leotichiidae (insect family)
heteropteran: Annotated classification: Family Leotichiidae Structure suggestive of Saldidae but distinguished by strong median ridge on pronotum; habits unlike Hebridae; one of the two known species (both from southeastern Asia) occurs in caves. Suborder Geocorisae Trichobothria either present on abdomen or absent from both abdomen and head; antennae longer…
- Leotiomycetes (class of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Class Leotiomycetes Parasitic on plants, especially fruits; thin-walled, inoperculate asci, generally with amyloid apical rings; includes mildews; contains 5 orders. Order Cyttariales Parasitic on plants, causes gall formation, especially on beech trees; spherical, dimpled ascocarps that are yellow to orange
- Leotychidas (king of Sparta)
Leotychides was a Spartan king of the Eurypontid family and a successful military commander during the Greco-Persian wars. In 491 he acceded to the throne held by his cousin, Demaratus, after the coruler (Sparta having a dual kingship), Cleomenes I, had bribed the Delphic oracle to declare
- Leotychides (king of Sparta)
Leotychides was a Spartan king of the Eurypontid family and a successful military commander during the Greco-Persian wars. In 491 he acceded to the throne held by his cousin, Demaratus, after the coruler (Sparta having a dual kingship), Cleomenes I, had bribed the Delphic oracle to declare
- Leovigild (king of the Visigoths)
Leovigild was the last Arian ruler in Visigothic Spain, who did much to restore the extent and power of the Visigothic kingdom. Brother of King Athanagild (d. 567), Leovigild succeeded (568) to that part of the Visigothic kingdom that lay south of the Pyrenees. Another brother, Liuva, ruled in
- LEP (device)
colliding-beam storage ring: …particle accelerators such as the Large Electron-Positron (LEP) collider at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva and the Tevatron at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Illinois.
- LEP (French education)
lycée: …the vocational upper-secondary school (LEP; lycée d’enseignement professionel), which offers a range of technical-vocational studies that give access to corresponding studies in higher education. Students entering the LEP choose courses of study leading to one of 30 or so technical baccalauréats.
- Lepadidae (crustacean)
barnacle: …(stalked) forms include the common goose barnacle (genus Lepas), found worldwide on driftwood. Acorn barnacles, also called rock barnacles, are sessile (not stalked); their symmetrical shells tend to be barrellike or broadly conical. This group includes Balanus, responsible for much of the fouling of ships and harbour structures. Wart barnacles,…
- Lepadomorpha (crustacean)
cirripede: Annotated classification: …and 4 extant (Heteralepadomorpha, Iblomorpha, Lepadomorpha, and Scalpellomorpha), the 3 best-known characterized below. Order Sessilia (operculate or sessile barnacles) Late Jurassic?, Cretaceous to present; capitulum relatively rigid; cemented directly to the substratum; supporting an operculum of 2 or 3 movable plates, or 2 to 3 pairs of movable plates; transient
- Lepage, Robert (Canadian writer, director, designer, and actor)
Robert Lepage is a Canadian writer, director, designer, and actor known for his highly original stage and film productions, which often drew together disparate cultural references and unconventional media. Lepage was raised in a working-class family in Quebec City. He graduated in 1978 from the
- Lepanto (poem by Chesterton)
G.K. Chesterton: …shown in the stirring “Lepanto” (1911). When it was not uproariously comic, his verse was frankly partisan and didactic. His essays developed his shrewd, paradoxical irreverence to its ultimate point of real seriousness. He is seen at his happiest in such essays as “On Running After One’s Hat” (1908)…
- Lepanto, Battle of (1571)
Battle of Lepanto, (October 7, 1571), naval engagement in the waters off southwestern Greece between the allied Christian forces of the Holy League and the Ottoman Turks during an Ottoman campaign to acquire the Venetian island of Cyprus. The battle marked the first significant victory for a
- Lepas (crustacean genus)
cirripede: Diversity and distribution: …plates, as in Pollicipes and Lepas, respectively. Goose barnacles are probably the most commonly observed pedunculate cirripedes.
- Lepas anatifera (crustacean)
cirripede: Importance to humans: …for he named the genus Lepas (“Shellfish”) and the local species L. anatifera and L. anserifera (“duck-bearing” and “goose-bearing,” respectively), and these pedunculate barnacles continue to be called goose barnacles.
- Lepas anserifera (crustacean)
cirripede: Importance to humans: anatifera and L. anserifera (“duck-bearing” and “goose-bearing,” respectively), and these pedunculate barnacles continue to be called goose barnacles.
- Lepautre, Antoine (French architect)
Antoine Le Pautre was a French Baroque architect. Born into a family of architects and decorators, Le Pautre was appointed architect to the king’s buildings in 1644. He then designed the Chapelle de Port-Royal (begun 1646), an austere building that suited Jansenist sobriety. He was commissioned in
- Lepautre, Pierre (French architect)
Western architecture: France: Pierre Lepautre, working under Hardouin-Mansart on the interiors of the Château de Marly (1679), invented new decorative ideas that became the Rococo. Lepautre changed the typical late 17th-century flat arabesque, which filled a geometrically constructed panel, to a linear pattern in relief, which was enclosed…
- Lepchā (people)
Lepchā, people of eastern Nepal, western Bhutan, Sikkim state, and the Darjeeling district of West Bengal in India. They number about 46,000 (11,000 in India; 25,000 in Sikkim; and 10,000 in Bhutan). They are thought to be the earliest inhabitants of Sikkim, but have adopted many elements of the
- Lepcis Magna (ancient city, Libya)
Leptis Magna, largest city of the ancient region of Tripolitania. It is located 62 miles (100 km) southeast of Tripoli on the Mediterranean coast of Libya. Lying 2 miles (3 km) east of what is now Al-Khums (Homs), Leptis contains some of the world’s finest remains of Roman architecture. It was
- leper colony
leprosy: History: …patient, frequently in large “leper colonies.” Perhaps the most famous colony was at Kalaupapa, on the island of Molokai, Hawaii, where the Belgian priest Father Damien served leprosy patients who had been forcibly relocated to the isolated community. In 1894 the Louisiana Leper Home was established near Carville, Louisiana,…
- Leperditicopida (crustacean)
crustacean: Annotated classification: †Order Leperditicopida Cambrian to Devonian. †Order Beyrichicopida Silurian to Carboniferous. Subclass Myodocopa Order Myodocopida Silurian to present; antennal notch in shell; 5 pairs of
- Lepethymnus, Mount (mountain, Lesbos, Greece)
Lésbos: The principal peak, Mount Lepethymnus (Áyios Ilías), reaches 3,176 feet (968 meters). The original vegetation is well preserved west of the town of Kalloní. The major population center is around Mytilene on the southeast coast.
- Lepiceridae (insect family)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Lepiceridae (toadlet beetles) A few Central American species. Family Sphaeriusidae (minute bog beetles) Less than 1 mm in length; 1 genus; a few widespread species. Family Torridincolidae (torrent beetles)
- Lepidagathis (plant genus)
Acanthaceae: (150), Blepharis (130), Lepidagathis (100), Hygrophila (100), Thunbergia (90), and Dyschoriste (80). The small genus Avicennia contains at least eight species of ecologically important mangroves.
- Lepidina (work by Pontano)
Giovanni Pontano: …which the most important are Lepidina, a charming account of the wedding between a river god and a nymph, with a distinctly Neapolitan flavour, and a collection called De amore coniugali, a warm and personal series of poems on the joys and sorrows of family life. Pontano wrote Latin as…
- Lepidium (plant genus)
peppergrass, (genus Lepidium), genus of some 230 species of herbs of the mustard family (Brassicaceae). Peppergrass species are distributed throughout the world, and many are common lawn and field weeds. Some are cultivated as salad plants for their peppery piquant leaves, and a number are
- Lepidium campestre (herb, Lepidium campestre)
peppergrass: Major species: Pepperwort, or field pepper (L. campestre), is a widespread weed originally native to Europe. It has hairy arrowlike stem leaves and once was marketed under the name of mithridate pepperwort as an antidote to poisons.
- Lepidium intermedium (plant)
peppergrass: Major species: Lentejilla, or little lentil (L. armoracia), is native to Europe but has naturalized in Mexico, where it is used as a folk medicine. Pepperwort, or field pepper (L. campestre), is a widespread weed originally native to Europe. It has hairy arrowlike stem leaves and once…
- Lepidium meyenii (plant)
maca, (Lepidium meyenii), herbaceous plant of the mustard family (Brassicaceae), cultivated for its edible rootlike storage organ. The plant is native to the Andes Mountains of central Peru, where it grows at elevations roughly between 4,000 and 4,500 metres (13,000 and 14,800 feet). It is
- Lepidium sativum (plant)
cress: Common garden cress, or peppergrass (Lepidium sativum), a fast-growing, often weedy native of western Asia, is also widely grown, especially in its curl-leaved form, and the seedlings are used as a garnish. Cress seedlings, used in sandwiches and salads, usually come from white mustard (Sinapis alba).…
- Lepidium virginicum (plant)
peppergrass: Major species: Virginia peppergrass (L. virginicum), spread throughout North America, sometimes is known as canary grass because its seed stalks are fed to cage birds. Its leaves are used in salads.
- Lepidobotryaceae (plant family)
Celastrales: Lepidobotryaceae: Lepidobotryaceae is a small family of two genera and two or three species of trees, Lepidobotrys staudtii being known from East Africa and Ruptiliocarpon caracolito growing in Central and South America. They have simple two-ranked leaves that are jointed at the base of the…
- Lepidobotrys staudtii (tree)
Celastrales: Lepidobotryaceae: …or three species of trees, Lepidobotrys staudtii being known from East Africa and Ruptiliocarpon caracolito growing in Central and South America. They have simple two-ranked leaves that are jointed at the base of the blade and have small paired leafy structures, or stipels, as well as ordinary stipules where the…
- Lepidocaris rhyniensis (fossil crustacean)
branchiopod: Evolution and paleontology: The Lipostraca contains only Lepidocaris rhyniensis, from the Rhynie cherts of Scotland. This minute branchiopod is preserved so well that fine details of its limbs can be seen. Its structure is better known than that of any other fossil crustacean. It is even possible to deduce its method of…
- Lepidochelys kempii (reptile)
Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Environmental costs: …2013 showed that the endangered Kemp’s ridley sea turtle was likely severely affected, as its preferred foraging territory was within the area damaged by the spill. It was estimated that up to 65,000 imperiled turtles had died during 2010 alone, mostly as a result of oil contamination. It was also…
- Lepidochelys olivacea (turtle)
sea turtle: Physical features and feeding habits: Adult and juvenile olive ridleys (Lepidochelys olivacea) are also largely pelagic, but they are known to frequent coastal regions such as bays and estuaries. The olive ridley and its relative, the Kemp’s ridley sea turtle (L. kempii), are small with wide rounded shells. As adults, both species have…
- lepidocrocite (mineral)
goethite: …name was originally applied to lepidocrocite [γ-FeO(OH)], a less common mineral with the same chemical composition as goethite but with a different crystal structure. In goethite, oxygen and hydroxyl anions are closely packed in hexagonal arrays, while in lepidocrocite they are arranged in cubic arrays; in both structures, however, iron…
- Lepidodendrales (fossil plant order)
lycophyte: Annotated classification: †Order Lepidodendrales Extinct tree lycophytes, therefore capable of secondary growth; heterosporous, with some strobili (cones) forming seedlike structures; about 6 genera, including Lepidodendron and Sigillaria. Order Lycopodiales (club mosses)
- Lepidodendron (fossil plant genus)
Lepidodendron, extinct genus of tree-sized lycopsid plants that lived during the Carboniferous Period (about 359 million to 299 million years ago). Lepidodendron and its relatives—Lepidophloios, Bothrodendron, and Paralycopodites—were related to modern club mosses. They grew up to 40 metres (130
- Lepidoderma albohirtum (insect)
sugarcane: Pests: …greatest crop losses is the grayback beetle in its larval stage. Effective grub control is obtained by applying the insecticide benzene hexachloride after the young cane plant has germinated and stooled, though this chemical has been banned in many countries. Sugarcane can be protected against wireworms by applying insecticides when…
- lepidolite (mineral)
lepidolite, the most common lithium mineral, basic potassium and lithium aluminosilicate; a member of the common mica group. It is economically important as a major source of lithium. Because it is one of the few minerals containing appreciable amounts of rubidium, it is useful in determining
- lepidophagy (animal behavior)
perciform: Feeding behaviour: …an African cichlid that practices lepidophagy, the eating of scales plucked from other fishes.
- Lepidophloios (fossil plant genus)
Lepidodendron: Lepidodendron and its relatives—Lepidophloios, Bothrodendron, and Paralycopodites—were related to modern club mosses. They grew up to 40 metres (130 feet) in height and 2 metres (about 7 feet) in diameter. During their juvenile stages, these plants grew as unbranched trunks with a shock of long, thin leaves that…
- Lepidoptera (insect)
lepidopteran, (order Lepidoptera), any of about 180,000 species of butterflies, moths, and skippers. This order of insects is second in size only to Coleoptera, the beetles. Because of their day-flying habits and bright colours, the butterflies are more familiar than the chiefly night-flying and
- lepidopteran (insect)
lepidopteran, (order Lepidoptera), any of about 180,000 species of butterflies, moths, and skippers. This order of insects is second in size only to Coleoptera, the beetles. Because of their day-flying habits and bright colours, the butterflies are more familiar than the chiefly night-flying and
- Lepidosaphes ulmi (insect)
oystershell scale, (Lepidosaphes ulmi), a species of insect in the armoured scale family, Diaspididae (order Homoptera), that is found on woody plants and secretes a hard, tough protective covering that resembles a miniature oystershell. Despite its small size, the oystershell scale can inflict
- Lepidosauria (reptile subclass)
reptile: Annotated classification: Subclass Lepidosauria (lepidosaurians) Upper Jurassic to present. Two orders. No teeth on parasphenoid; teeth attached superficially to upper and lower jaws; parietal eye in parietal; transverse cloacal opening. Order Rhynchocephalia (Sphenodontida) (tuatara) Middle Triassic to present. Three families, about 20 genera, but
- lepidosaurian (reptile subclass)
reptile: Annotated classification: Subclass Lepidosauria (lepidosaurians) Upper Jurassic to present. Two orders. No teeth on parasphenoid; teeth attached superficially to upper and lower jaws; parietal eye in parietal; transverse cloacal opening. Order Rhynchocephalia (Sphenodontida) (tuatara) Middle Triassic to present. Three families, about 20 genera, but
- Lepidosiren paradoxa (fish)
lungfish: Size range and distribution: The South American species, Lepidosiren paradoxa, reaches a length of 1.25 metres (about 4 feet).
- Lepidosirenidae (fish family)
lungfish: Annotated classification: Family Lepidosirenidae 4 gill clefts; body length growing to about 1.25 metres (about 4 feet). 1 living species (Lepidosiren paradoxa). Family Protopteridae 5 gill clefts; body length to 1.8 metres (about 6 feet). 1 genus (Protopterus), 4 living species.
- Lepidosireniformes (fish order)
fish: Annotated classification: Order Lepidosireniformes (South American and African lungfishes) 2 families, 2 genera, and 5 species. Fish classification has undergone major revisions in recent years, and further modifications can be expected in the future. Ichthyologists frequently disagree on major as well as minor concepts of
- Lepidothamnus laxifolius (plant)
conifer: Diversity of size and structure: Other conifers, such as the pygmy pine (Lepidothamnus laxifolius) of New Zealand, the smallest conifer, are always shrubby and may mature as shorter plants (less than 8 centimetres [3.15 inches] in height) than the pygmy cypress, but with greater spread.
- Lepidozamia (plant genus)
Lepidozamia, genus of two species of cycads in the family Zamiaceae, endemic to the eastern coast of Australia. The plant can form a substantial trunk that is clothed by a persistent leaf base. The rachis (central axis) of the pinnately compound leaves is strongly thickened on the underside. The
- Lepidurus arcticus (crustacean)
branchiopod: Distribution and abundance: …Branchinecta paludosa and the notostracan Lepidurus arcticus are regularly found in small pools of the Arctic tundra regions. These pools are temporary in the sense that they freeze solid in winter. A few species in these groups are found in permanent lakes.
- Lepidus, Marcus Aemilius (Roman senator [died circa 77 BCE])
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus was a Roman senator who attempted unsuccessfully to overthrow the constitution imposed by the dictator Sulla. Although he had supported Sulla’s rise to power and became wealthy in the Sullan proscriptions, Lepidus was elected consul for 78 with the help of Pompey, despite
- Lepidus, Marcus Aemilius (Roman statesman [died 152 BCE])
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus was a Roman statesman who held the highest offices of the republic. As ambassador to Greece, Syria, and Egypt in 200, he delivered to Philip V at Abydos the Senate’s ultimatum warning Macedonia not to make war on any Greek state. Consul in 187 and 175, censor in 179,