Search results for "Cave"

showing 10 items of 606 documents

Chilocoris laevicollis Horváth, 1919, and Ch. umbricola Linnavuori, 1993—two trogloxenic burrower bugs recorded for the first time in Gabon (Central …

2016

First country records of two burrower bugs, Chilocoris laevicollis, and Ch. umbricola (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from Gabon (Central Africa) are presented. The study was based on the specimens collected by Dr. V. Aellen, a well-known Swiss speleologist, taken from two caves near Lastoursville in the Gabonese Republic. Diagnostic characters for both recorded species are provided, and data on their biology and distribution are summarized.

HemipteraHeteropteraAfrotropical Regioncavesfirst country recordsCydnidaeZootaxa : A mega-journal for zoological taxonomists in the world
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Aportaciones hidrogeológicas al estudio arqueológico de los orígenes de la Edad del Bronce de La Mancha: la cueva monumentalizada de Castillejo del B…

2014

Estudios recientes indican que las motillas, asentamientos de la Edad del Bronce de La Mancha, pudieron ser las más antiguas captaciones de agua subterránea en la Península Ibérica. Pero ¿por qué no existen motillas en el Campo de Montiel, territorio ubicado tradicionalmente en esta área cultural? En Castillejo del Bonete, sitio arqueológico situado en esa comarca, existe una cueva que fue utilizada y sellada durante la Prehistoria Reciente. Se presenta ahora la primera investigación paleohidrogeológica interdisciplinar en La Mancha, que ha analizado manantiales y niveles de agua subterránea del acuífero de Campo de Montiel, así como el interior de la sima de Castillejo del Bonete. Las conc…

HidrologíaArcheologyMonumento TumularPenínsula IbéricaWellLate PrehistoryArqueologíaPrehistoryCaveBronze AgeCalizasAcuíferoGeologíalcsh:CC1-960Monumental BarrowCalizaAcuiferoPenínsula ibéricageographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPrehistoria recienteHolocenePozoPrehistoria RecientePrehistoriaMonumento tumularChalcolithicLimestoneArchaeologyAcuíferosMotillaArchaeologylcsh:ArchaeologyHolocenoAquiferCC1-960Iberian PeninsulaTrabajos de Prehistoria
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Trans-sarcolemmal proteins situated central to the subsarcolemmal region

2002

Trans-sarcolemmal proteins located inside, within, and outside of the muscle fibre plasma membrane fall into two categories, the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex (DGC) and non-DGC-related proteins, e.g. dysferlin, caveolin, dystrobrevins and syntrophins. Mutational defects are responsible for their immunohistochemical absence or reduction giving rise to certain muscular dystrophies. In other neuromuscular disorders, i.e. inflammatory, metabolic, and neurogenic processes, transarcolemmal proteins are well preserved. Unlike desmin and plectin, which form a honeycomb-type network across the muscle fibre and a subsarcolemmal layer, trans-sarcolemmal proteins are not expressed central to the subs…

HistologySarcolemmabiologyAutophagyVacuolePlectinPathology and Forensic MedicineCell biologyDysferlinNeurologyBiochemistryCrystallinPhysiology (medical)Caveolinbiology.proteinDesminNeurology (clinical)Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology
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Palaeogenomics of Upper Palaeolithic to Neolithic European hunter-gatherers

2023

Acknowledgements: The authors thank G. Marciani and O. Jöris for comments on archaeology; C. Jeong, M. Spyrou and K. Prüfer for comments on genetics; M. O’Reilly for graphical support for Fig. 5 and Extended Data Fig. 9; the entire IT and laboratory teams at the Department of Archaeogenetics of MPI-SHH for technical assistance; M. Meyer and S. Nagel for support with single-stranded library preparation; K. Post, P. van Es, J. Glimmerveen, M. Medendorp, M. Sier, S. Dikstra, M. Dikstra, R. van Eerden, D. Duineveld and A. Hoekman for providing access to human specimens from the North Sea (The Netherlands); M. D. Garralda and A. Estalrrich for providing access to human specimens from La Riera (S…

HistoryAncient dnaInteractionsCave/45/23AdmixtureSettore BIO/08 - Antropologia/631/208/457/631/181/276160 Other humanitiesContaminationHumansHuntingPalaeogenomicsPopulation-structureArchaeology ; Biological anthropology ; Evolutionary genetics ; Population geneticsHistory AncientHuman evolutionDiversityOccupationMultidisciplinary/45Genome HumanarticlePaleontologyLast glacial maximumHuman GeneticsGene PoolGenomics/631/181/19/2471PleistoceneEuropeGenomic transformationsArchaeology/631/181/2474AnthropologyHunter-gatherersGenome sequence
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New chronology for Ksâr ‘Akil (Lebanon) supports Levantine route of modern human dispersal into Europe

2015

Modern human dispersal into Europe is thought to have occurred with the start of the Upper Paleolithic around 50,000-40,000 y ago. The Levantine corridor hypothesis suggests that modern humans from Africa spread into Europe via the Levant. Ksâr 'Akil (Lebanon), with its deeply stratified Initial (IUP) and Early (EUP) Upper Paleolithic sequence containing modern human remains, has played an important part in the debate. The latest chronology for the site, based on AMS radiocarbon dates of shell ornaments, suggests that the appearance of the Levantine IUP is later than the start of the first Upper Paleolithic in Europe, thus questioning the Levantine corridor hypothesis. Here we report a seri…

HistorygastropodHuman MigrationPhorcus turbinatusNew ChronologySocial SciencesOxygen IsotopesAncient historyAncientradiometric datinglaw.inventionModern human dispersalPaleolithicCavelawZooarcheologyHumansPhorcus turbinatusskeletonCarbon RadioisotopeshumanRadiocarbon datingAmino AcidsLebanonUpper paleolithicgeographyfossilMultidisciplinarygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyChronology; Modern human dispersal; Near east; Upper paleolithic; Zooarcheology; Africa; Amino Acids; Bayes Theorem; Carbon Radioisotopes; Europe; History Ancient; Humans; Lebanon; Oxygen Isotopes; Stereoisomerism; Human Migration; Multidisciplinary; Medicine (all)Medicine (all)articleBayes TheoremStereoisomerismchronologybiology.organism_classificationArchaeologypopulation dispersalEuropepriority journalAfricaNear eastUpper PaleolithicmaxillaBiological dispersalhypothesisAurignacianChronologyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Microstratigraphy of the Magdalenian sequence at Cendres Cave (Teulada-Moraira, Alicante, Spain): Formation and diagenesis

2013

Abstract This microstratigraphic study of the Magdalenian sequence in the Cendres Cave (Teulada-Moraira, Alicante, Spain) shows the detailed evolutionary history of the deposit, revealing a wide variety of pedosedimentary (formation and diagenesis), biogenic and anthropic processes. The sequence begins with Cendres XII, culturally attributed to the Early and Middle Magdalenian, with high probability (95%) dating placing it between 19,270 and 16,530 cal BP with some chronological hiatus. It was formed from biogenic sedimentation associated with bat guano mainly of an insectivorous type, and from anthropic sedimentation related to occupation floors made up of highly complex plant beds with tr…

Horizon (geology)geographyPaleontologySequence (geology)geography.geographical_feature_categoryCaveGuanoSolifluctionMagdalenianGelifluctionGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesDiagenesisQuaternary International
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Overland Flow Times of Concentration for Hillslopes of Complex Topography

2016

The time of concentration is an important parameter for predicting peak discharge at the basin outlet and for designing urban infrastructure facilities. In studying the hillslope response, employing hydraulic equations of flow, the shape of the hillslope geometry has often been assumed as rectangular and planar. However, natural hillslopes have complex topographies whose shapes are characterized by irregularly spaced contour lines. Recently, kinematic wave time of concentration has been derived for rectangular and curved parallel hillslopes. This paper extends this work to hillslopes of complex planform geometry, considering the degree of divergence or convergence of the hillslope. The exte…

HydrologyComplex topography0208 environmental biotechnologyUrban infrastructure02 engineering and technologyStructural basinAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)020801 environmental engineeringSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliSurface runoffGeomorphologyTime of concentrationGeologyHillslope hydrology Overland flow Convergent and divergent hillslopes Concave and convex profileWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural Engineering
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Monitoring Bunker Cave (NW Germany): A prerequisite to interpret geochemical proxy data of speleothems from this site

2011

Summary Monitoring cave environments is important to understand processes in karst systems. If stalagmites from a specific cave are used as archives of past climate variability, a quantitative understanding of the soil–karst–speleothem system is crucial. The monitoring program performed in Bunker Cave (NW Germany), which includes monthly collection of climatological data as well as air and water samples from the cave and the overlying soil since 2006, is a prerequisite for the interpretation of speleothem data from the cave in terms of climate variability. The results show that Bunker Cave is a homogeneously ventilated cave with rather low pCO2 values of 580–1200 ppmv, which lacks strong se…

HydrologygeographyInfiltration (hydrology)geography.geographical_feature_categoryCaveδ18OSpeleothemAquiferStalagmiteKarstMonitoring programGeologyWater Science and TechnologyJournal of Hydrology
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Sensitivity of Bunker Cave to climatic forcings highlighted through multi-annual monitoring of rain-, soil-, and dripwaters

2017

The last two decades have seen a considerable increase in studies using speleothems as archives of past climate variability. Caves under study are now monitored for a wide range of environmental parameters and results placed in contextwith speleothemdata. The present study investigates trends froma seven year longmonitoring of Bunker Cave, northwestern Germany, in order to assess the hydraulic response and transfer time of meteoric water fromthe surface to the cave. Rain-, soil-, and dripwaterwere collected fromAugust 2006 to August 2013 at a monthly to bimonthly resolution and their oxygen and hydrogen isotope composition wasmeasured. Furthermore, drip rates were quantified. Due to differe…

Hydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesδ18OSpeleothemF700GeologyF80015. Life on landF600010502 geochemistry & geophysicsAtmospheric temperatureKarst01 natural sciencesF900Infiltration (hydrology)Cave13. Climate actionGeochemistry and PetrologyNorth Atlantic oscillationMeteoric waterGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Vergleich der Wertigkeit von Magnetresonanztomographie und Computertomographie bei Patienten mit Nelson-Syndrom

1992

The hypophyses of 13 patients with Nelson syndrome following bilateral adrenalectomy were examined by MRI and CT. Diffuse enlargement of the hypophysis was demonstrated in 8 patients by CT and in 9 by MRI. Compared with CT, MRI provides better demonstration of tumour development, such as abnormal convexity of the cranial margin of the hypophysis (MRI 4/13, CT 1/13), displacement of the infundibulum (MRI 4/13, CT 0/13) or optic chiasm (MRI 2/13, CT 0/13). MRI also provides diagnostically important differentiation between scar tissue and recurrence of tumour following hypophysectomy (MRI 1/3, CT 0/3) and more accurate demonstration of infiltration of the cavernous sinus (MRI 4/13, CT 2/13). C…

Hypophysectomybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentOptic chiasmNelson SyndromeInfundibulummedicine.anatomical_structureTumour developmentCavernous sinusmedicineRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingBilateral adrenalectomyTomographyNuclear medicinebusinessRöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren
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