Search results for "Ebro Basin"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Preliminary palaeontological data from the Loma Negra section (Bardenas Reales de Navarra, Lower-Middle Miocene)

2013

En este trabajo se da a conocer una nueva localidad fosilífera de la Formación Tudela (Navarra). Esta formación está compuesta por facies palustres, lacustres y aluviales distales, que representan el relleno del sector occidental- central de la Cuenca del Ebro durante el Rambliense y el Aragoniense (Mioceno inferior-medio). Basado en el estudio de los restos fósiles de micromamíferos, la nueva localidad fosilífera se sitúa bioestratigráficamente en la zona D del Aragoniense. Los datos paleoecológicos obtenidos de los micromamíferos indican que el ambiente debió ser húmedo y la temperatura templada. En lo que respecta a la zona palustre, los ostrácodos, carofitas y gasterópodos definirían un…

Cuenca del EbroCarofitasEbro BasinAragonienseMicromamíferosMicromammalsOstracodsPaleontologiaOstrácodosVertebrats fòssilsAragonianCharophytes
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Rodents and insectivores from the Lower Miocene (Agenian and Ramblian) of the Tudela Formation (Ebro Basin, Spain)

2012

The rodent and insectivore faunas of Agenian and Ramblian age from the Tudela Formation (Ebro Basin, Spain) are described. Four of the localities (CH1, CA1, CC1 and CA2) contain rodent remains of Agenian age (local zone Y), and three (CA3, CA3B and CA4) of Ramblian age (local zones Z and A). Typical Agenian taxa include Armantomys cf. bijmai (CH1), Eucricetodon cf. gerandianus (CA1), Peridyromys turbatus, Simplomys aff. aljaphi and Armantomys daamsi (CA2) and Eucricetodon aff. aquitanicus (CC1). On the other hand, some typical Ramblian taxa are Armantomys cf. parsani (CA3), Ligerimys aff. magnus and Pseudotheridomys sp. (CA4) and Prodryomys cf. brailloni (CA3B). The faunas are characterized…

Cuenca del EbroEbro BasinRodentbiologyEcologyMiocenoStratigraphyFaunaEspañaM1GeologyInsectivoreRodentiaInsectivoraMioceneStructural basinMN2Cuenca EbroMN3Taxonbiology.animalSpecies richnessFormación Tudela
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Pesticides in the Ebro River basin: Occurrence and risk assessment

2016

In this study, 50 pesticides were analyzed in the Ebro River basin in 2010 and 2011 to assess their impact in water, sediment and biota. A special emphasis was placed on the potential effects of both, individual pesticides and their mixtures, in three trophic levels (algae, daphnia and fish) using Risk Quotients (RQs) and Toxic Units (TUs) for water and sediments. Chlorpyrifos, diazinon and carbendazim were the most frequent in water (95, 95 and 70% of the samples, respectively). Imazalil (409.73 ng/L) and diuron (150 ng/L) were at the highest concentrations. Sediment and biota were less contaminated. Chlorpyrifos, diazinon and diclofenthion were the most frequent in sediments (82, 45 and 2…

Diazinon010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLiquid chromatography – Mass spectrometryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisDrainage basin010501 environmental sciencesEcotoxicologyToxicology01 natural sciencesDaphniachemistry.chemical_compoundWater Pollution ChemicalEbro basingeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyFishesBiotaGeneral MedicineBiotaPollution6. Clean waterChlorpyrifosEnvironmental chemistryEnvironmental MonitoringMonitoringAlgaeRisk AssessmentToxic UnitsRiversAlgaeAnimalsPesticides0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMixture toxicitygeographyfungiPesticide ResiduesSedimentPesticidebiology.organism_classificationFishDaphniachemistrySpain13. Climate actionRisk quotientEnvironmental scienceBenzimidazolesCarbamatesWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental Pollution
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Holocene history of Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Mill.) woodlands in the Ebro Basin (NE Spain). Climate-biased or human-induced?

2020

Abstract This paper reviews the past distribution of Aleppo pine woodlands in the Ebro Basin, Northeastern Iberia, from the Mesolithic to Modern times based on wood charcoal data. The aim is to detail the chronological timing and the drivers explaining the long-term presence of Aleppo pine woodlands and associated thermophilous flora. The available charcoal data support the early spread of Pinus halepensis during the Mesolithic (ca. 9000 cal BP) accompanied by Mediterranean trees and shrubs like Quercus sp. evergreen, Juniperus sp., Arbutus unedo, Pistacia lentiscus, Rhamnus/Phillyrea, Cistaceae, and Rosmarinus officinalis, as a local response to global climate change in the Early Holocene.…

0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climate010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyPaleontologyForestryAnthropizationWoodlandEvergreenbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesbiogeography; Ebro basin; human impact; paleoclimate; Pinus halepensis; wood charcoal analysisShrublandDeciduousAleppo PineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHolocene0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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