Search results for "Demise"

showing 10 items of 15 documents

2500 Years of European Climate Variability and Human Susceptibility

2011

Climate variations influenced the agricultural productivity, health risk, and conflict level of preindustrial societies. Discrimination between environmental and anthropogenic impacts on past civilizations, however, remains difficult because of the paucity of high-resolution paleoclimatic evidence. We present tree ring-based reconstructions of central European summer precipitation and temperature variability over the past 2500 years. Recent warming is unprecedented, but modern hydroclimatic variations may have at times been exceeded in magnitude and duration. Wet and warm summers occurred during periods of Roman and medieval prosperity. Increased climate variability from similar to 250 to 6…

010506 paleontology010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMeteorologyClimate Changemedia_common.quotation_subjectLast MillenniumCollapseClimatic ProcessesClimate changeCivilizationHistory 18th CenturyHistory 21st Century01 natural sciencesTreesHistory 17th CenturyQuercusReconstructionsDendrochronologyHumansAgricultural productivityEpidemicsRoman Warm PeriodSeriesHistory AncientHoloceneHistory 15th Century0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmedia_commonMultidisciplinaryDroughtHoloceneTemperatureRecordsAgricultureHistory 19th CenturyDemiseHistory 20th Century15. Life on landHistory MedievalRoman EmpireEuropeGeographyHistory 16th Century13. Climate actionAfricaSeasonsPhysical geographyProsperityScience
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Geoarchaeology as a tool to understand ancient navigation in the northern Persian Gulf and the harbour history of Siraf

2020

International audience; Historical texts and archaeological studies attest to the maritime and trade importance of the Persian Gulf since the Sassanid Empires. Nonetheless, there is a paucity of data regarding ancient navigation and the reasons for a shift in m aritim e trade from the western (e.g. Shatt-al-Arab) to eastern (Siraf) Persian Gulf by the Abbasid dynasty. For som e scholars, Siraf was occupied between 360 and 977 CE, after which tim e an earthquake en-trained the dem ise of the city. However, it is unclear when Siraf was founded and how natural navigation conditions changed for ocean-going vessels in harbours of the NW Persian Gulf. To address this knowledge gap, we here presen…

010506 paleontologyArcheologyPersian GulfSirafCoastal geographyHiatusSiraf Geoarchaeology Persian Gulf Shamal winds Coastal geomorphology Relative sea level01 natural sciencesNatural (archaeology)0601 history and archaeology14. Life underwaterShamalGeoarchaeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencescomputer.programming_language060102 archaeologyGeoarchaeology06 humanities and the artsDemiseArchaeologyCoastal geomorphologyCoastal erosionGeography13. Climate actionRelative sea levelHarbour[SDE]Environmental SciencesShamal windscomputer
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Community replacement of neritic carbonate organisms during the late Valanginian platform demise: a new record from the Provence Platform.

2012

24 pages; International audience; The Valanginian is marked by amajor platform demise inducing a hiatus in the northern Tethyan neritic carbonate record from the top of the lower Valanginian to the lower Hauterivian. New biostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic data from the Ollioules section (Provence Platform, southern France) are presented here, demonstrating that a large part of the upper Valanginian is preserved in an inner platform environment. The thick, upper Valanginian, aggrading carbonate succession is observed in an aborted rift domain, implying relatively low subsidence. In this context, a relatively long-term sea-level rise was required to sustain a keep-up style of carbonate p…

010506 paleontologyCarbonate platformPlatform demiseContext (language use)010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography[ SDU.STU.ST ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Stratigraphy01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPaleontology14. Life underwaterEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesRiftOllioules sectionTerrigenous sedimentCarbon isotopePaleontologySubsidencePhosphoruschemistryNeritic communitiesClastic rockValanginian[SDU.STU.ST]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/StratigraphyCarbonateGeologyMarine transgression
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Missing the Forest for the Trees: Why Cognitive Science Circa 2019 Is Alive and Well

2019

International audience; Núñez and colleagues (2019) chronicle in extraordinary detail the "demise" of cognitive science, as it was first defined in the late 1970s. The problem is that their account, however accurate, misses the forest for the trees. Cognitive science circa 2019 is alive and well; it just has not followed the path anticipated by its founders over 40 years ago.

Cognitive scienceCognitive scienceLinguistics and LanguageHistoryMultidisciplinaryCognitive Neuroscience05 social sciences[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDemise050105 experimental psychologyHuman-Computer Interaction03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInterdisciplinaryArtificial IntelligencePath (graph theory)0501 psychology and cognitive sciences030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Relations entre les variations climatiques, les perturbations du cycle du carbone et les crises de la production carbonatée : application au Crétacé …

2011

The Early Cretaceous is punctuated by carbon cycle perturbations, associated with organic matter burial episodes and carbonate production crises. These events coincide with short-term cooling (<1Ma), yet the mechanisms are still unclear, because of low resolution in sea surface temperature reconstructions. Recent climatic models suggest that carbonate-platform-collapse events may trigger a short-term ocean cooling episode (Donnadieu et al., accepted). In order to establish relations between climates and carbonate productions, we performed stratigraphic, palaeoecologic and geochemical analyses on Valanginian sediments from the La Charce-Vergol and the Ollioules sections (South-East France) a…

Crise des plates-formes carbonatéesValanginienShort term coolingAptienValanginianCarbonate platform demiseClimat[SDU.STU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth SciencesAptianClimate-carbonate production interaction[ SDU.STU ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth SciencesInteraction production carbonatée-climat
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The Power of Affiliation: Dynastic Blood, Artificial Kinship and Legitimation Strategies. The Case of the Della Rovere Dukes of Urbino*

2021

After the Montefeltro dynasty’s demise in 1508, the Della Rovere family assumed power in the geo-strategically and culturally important Duchy of Urbino. The first dynasty of papal nephews able to p...

Cultural StudiesLinguistics and LanguageHistorySelf-fashioningHistoryLiterature and Literary TheoryVisual Arts and Performing ArtsDemiseLanguage and LinguisticsGenealogyNephew and niecePower (social and political)LegitimationKinshipDuchyItalian Studies
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Death and Transfiguration : The Late Kim Jong-il Aesthetic in North Korean Cultural Production

2016

This article assesses the official music scene in Pyongyang over a span of five dramatic years, surveying how changes in the field of music from 2009 to 2014 mirrored and in some cases presaged North Korean dynastic succession and political consolidation. The article draws upon a new abundance of performance data on North Korean musical groups, data which we argue is important but has largely been ignored or mischaracterized heretofore. The central crisis dealt with in the article is the decline and demise of Kim Jong-il, the architect of North Korea’s musical culture. In his final years, Kim Jong-il assented to the creation of a new leading musical group known as the Unhasu Orchestra, prom…

Cultural Studiesta520media_common.quotation_subjectWishArt historyMusicalKim Jong-il050105 experimental psychologyNorth KoreaPoliticsdeathta6160501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonLiteraturetransfigurationCultural sectormusiikkielämäbusiness.industry05 social sciences050301 educationArtDemisekuolemaPohjois-Koreabusiness0503 educationMusicPopular Music and Society
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Post‐Soviet Reform in Latvia: Early Progress and Future Prospects

1992

After the rapid and dramatic demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, 15 newly autonomous republics are restructuring their economies after decades of central Communist planning. The three Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia had successful market‐oriented economies during more than two decades of independence between World Wars I and II and were comparatively strong performers within the USSR after being occupied in 1940. A case study of Latvia looks at the historic factors and political issues which are shaping the current reform process. A contrast of state‐run, collective and private enterprises is used to illustrate the rapid changes which now place Latvia at the forefront among p…

DeregulationPoliticsRestructuringmedia_common.quotation_subjectPolitical sciencePolitical economyDevelopment economicsDemiseSoviet unionGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceIndependenceCommunismmedia_commonJournal of Economic Studies
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Scientific ethos and the cinematic zombie outbreak : science in fictional narratives

2015

Public anxiety about emerging biothreats is evident in the recent glut of popular entertainment where the demise, or near demise, of humankind is imagined to be the result of a new infectious pathogen against which science has no existing vaccine or cure. This article examines the figure of the scientist in such fictional narratives and what these characterizations indicate about public attitudes toward science in our contemporary world. It focuses in particular on the image of the scientist as clumsy naïve, immoral experimenter, heroic savior, and self-reflexive ethical agent.

EthosEntertainmentMultidisciplinaryHistory and Philosophy of ScienceAestheticsZombieNarrativeDemiseSociologyEpistemology
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The Palaeoanthropocene – The beginnings of anthropogenic environmental change

2013

Abstract As efforts to recognize the Anthropocene as a new epoch of geological time are mounting, the controversial debate about the time of its beginning continues. Here, we suggest the term Palaeoanthropocene for the period between the first, barely recognizable, anthropogenic environmental changes and the industrial revolution when anthropogenically induced changes of climate, land use and biodiversity began to increase very rapidly. The concept of the Palaeoanthropocene recognizes that humans are an integral part of the Earth system rather than merely an external forcing factor. The delineation of the beginning of the Palaeoanthropocene will require an increase in the understanding and …

Global and Planetary Changeeducation.field_of_studyEcologyEnvironmental changeLand useEcologyEarth sciencePopulationBiodiversitySubsistence agricultureDemiseEarth system scienceGeographyAnthropoceneEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)educationAnthropocene
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