-
species name,
caldus, is
derived from the
Latin word for warm or hot,
denoting this species' love of a warm environment.
Thiobacillus caldus was reclassified...
-
Roman calendar. At the time it was
known as the Year of the
Consulship of
Caldus and
Ahenobarbus (or, less frequently, year 660 Ab urbe condita) and the...
- and/or iron oxidation:
Acidithiobacillus albertensis,
Acidithiobacillus caldus,
Acidithiobacillus cuprithermicus,
Acidithiobacillus ferri****, Acidithiobacillus...
-
Gaius Coelius Caldus was a
consul of the
Roman Republic in 94 BC
alongside his
colleague Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus. In 107 BC,
Coelius Caldus was elected...
-
Coelius Caldus, the
consul of 94 BC.
Gaius Coelius C. f. C. n.
Caldus,
consul in 94 BC, a
novus homo and
minor orator.
Lucius Coelius C. f. C. n.
Caldus, septemvir...
-
Ahenobarbus Succeeded by
Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus and
Gaius Coelius Caldus Personal details Born 140 BC Rome Died
September 91 BC (aged 48–49) Political...
-
Caldimicrobium Species: C. rimae
Binomial name
Caldimicrobium rimae Miroshnichenko et al. 2009 Type
strain DS, DSM 19393, VKM B-2460
Synonyms Caldus autotrophi****...
- is from
Latin calidus,
sometimes already in
classical Latin shortened to
caldus,
meaning "warm", as this is the
source of
Spanish caldo, with the senses...
- Gr**** γαρδούμιον (gardoúmion) in turn
derives from
Latin caldumen; from
caldus or
calidus 'warm, hot'.
According to Gr****
linguist and
philologist Georgios...
- et al.,
Religions of Rome, p. 238. The
cognomen is uncertain, and may be
Caldus. A
quaestor in 50 BC.
Michael C. Alexander,
Trials in the Late
Roman Republic...