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Science and technology articles needing translation from French Wikipedia

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Cyanistes caeruleus
species of bird
Carrion Crow
species of bird
Eurasian Wryneck
species of bird
European Herring Gull
species of bird
Talpa europaea
species of mammal
Piero della Francesca
Italian painter and mathematician (c. 1416–1492)
Messier 71
Globular cluster in the constellation Sagitta
Urtica urens
species of plant
Cephalanthera longifolia
species of plant
Alaotra Grebe
species of bird
Tatooine
Tatooine ( ) is a fictional desert planet that appears in the Star Wars franchise. It is a beige-colored, desolate world orbiting a pair of binary stars, and inhabited by human settlers and a variety of other life-forms. The planet was first seen in the original 1977 film Star Wars and has been seen or mentioned in a substantial number of Star Wars theatrical films and television series since.
Q1120151
galaxy
Argynnis pandora
species of butterfly
Jean-Baptiste Charcot
French scientist (1867-1936)
Monotropa
Monotropa is a genus of four species of herbaceous perennial flowering plants. The genus was formerly classified in the family Monotropaceae and presently classified in Ericaceae. They are native to temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere and are generally rare. Unlike most plants, they do not have chlorophyll and therefore are non-photosynthetic; they are myco-heterotrophs that obtain food through parasitism on subterranean fungi. Because they do not need any sunlight to live, they can live in very dark sites such as the floor of deep forest. The name "Monotropa" is Greek for "one turn"
Teredinidae
The shipworms, also called teredo worms or simply teredo (, via Latin ), are marine bivalve molluscs in the family Teredinidae, a group of saltwater clams with long and soft bodies. They are notorious for boring into (and commonly eventually destroying) wood that is immersed in seawater, including such structures as wooden piers, docks, and ships; they drill passages by means of a pair of very small shells ("valves") borne at one end, with which they rasp their way through. They are sometimes called "termites of the sea". Carl Linnaeus assigned the common name Teredo to the best-known genus of
Minitel
Minitel, officially known as TELETEL, was an interactive videotex online service accessible through telephone lines. It was the world's first and most successful mass-market online service prior to the World Wide Web. It was developed in Cesson-Sévigné, Brittany, by government-owned France Télécom.
Tricholoma portentosum
species of fungus
French National Institute of Health and Medical Research
The ' (Inserm', ) is the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research.
Self-Portrait as Bacchus
painting by Caravaggio
Anders Sparrman
Swedish naturalist (1748-1820)
Plecotus macrobullaris
species of mammal
AgroParisTech, Paris-Saclay University
AgroParisTech (; officially Institut national des sciences et industries du vivant et de l’environnement, or Paris Institute of Technology for Life, Food and Environmental Sciences) is a French higher education institution, known as a grande école. It is a constituent member of the Paris-Saclay University. It was founded on January 1, 2007, by the merger of three life sciences grandes écoles (INA P-G, ENGREF and ENSIA).
Melitaea trivia
species of insect
Palingenia longicauda
largest mayfly species in Europe
Boloria aquilonaris
species of insect
videotex
thumb|Videotex example screen showing its graphics capabilities, 1978. As in teletext, predefined, fixed-width graphics characters in multiple colors could be used to create an image. thumb|Minitel was perhaps the most successful videotex service worldwide, using this terminal, .
Orlaya grandiflora
species of plant
Gagea spathacea
species of plant
Gilchrist–Thomas process
metallurgical process
Hylobius
thumb|right|200px|Hylobius abietis
Psiloxylon mauritianum
Psiloxylon mauritianum (known locally as "bois bigaignon") is a species of flowering plant, the sole species of the genus Psiloxylon. It is endemic to the Mascarene Islands (Mauritius and Réunion) in the Indian Ocean.
Melitaea aurelia
species of insect
Centrolene robledoi
species of amphibian
Centrolene quindianum
species of amphibian
Giovanni Battista Balbis
Italian botanist and politician (1765-1831)
Jacques Daléchamps
French botanist (1513-1588)
Mammillaria albicoma
species of plant
Colias hecla
species of butterfly
Elona quimperiana
species of gastropod
Tetrix tenuicornis
species of insect
Calycopis
Calycopis is a genus of butterflies in the family Lycaenidae. Massively split up by Kurt Johnson in 1991, most modern authors consider the changes proposed at that time to be unjustified. Most of the species of this genus are found in the Neotropical realm and others in the Nearctic realm.
Myotis crypticus
species of bats
Maurice Lugeon
Swiss geologist (1870-1953)
Euchloe tagis
species of insect
St. Joseph's Church
church building in Seine-Maritime, in France
Cupido lacturnus
species of insect
Alstonia boonei
species of plant
Fenneropenaeus merguiensis
species of crustacean
Hyloscirtus staufferorum
species of amphibian
Stenocercus ochoai
species of reptile
Brevianta
Brevianta is a genus of butterflies in the family Lycaenidae. The species of this genus are found in the Neotropical realm.
high-voltage switch
switch used for high-voltage applications.
Polyommatus golgus
species of insect
Pseudophilotes panoptes
species of insect
Nemesia simoni
species of arachnid
Coal mine Arthur de Buyer
mine in France
Mondia whitei
species of plant
Lysandra hispana
species of insect
Vampyrellidae
The family Vampyrellidae is a subgroup of the order Vampyrellida (or Aconchulinida) within the supergroup Rhizaria. Based on molecular sequence data, the family currently comprises the genus Vampyrella, and maybe several other vampyrellid amoebae (e.g. Gobiella). The cells are naked and characterised by radiating, filose pseudopodia (also referred to as filopodia) and an orange colouration of the main cell body.