Search results for "feature"

showing 10 items of 4091 documents

Rare earth elements distribution in seawater and suspended particulate of the Central Mediterranean Sea

2004

Rare earth element (REE) content in suspended and dissolved phases from the Strait of Sicily (Central Mediterranean Sea) has been measured. Vertical profiles of several dissolved REEs along the water column reflect the 3-D oceanographic features of the studied area and identifies the different water masses present there. Shale-normalized REE distribution patterns and derived parameters calculated for the suspended particulate show different atmospheric dust-surface inputs and their interactions with seawater. Finally, combined information from [La/Yb]N, ratios, REE/La ratios and Eu anomalies measured in the suspended particulate suggest an important contribution of volcanic materials from t…

Suspended particulategeographyWater massgeography.geographical_feature_category2300EcologyRare-earth elementGeochemistryMineral dustParticulatesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicStrait of SicilyOceanographyWater columnMediterranean seaVolcanoRare earth elementGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesSeawaterEarth and Planetary Sciences (all)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyGeneral Environmental ScienceChemistry and Ecology
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The Role of Fire in Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations

2019

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations do not mention Fire as a key factor in achieving an environmentally-friendly human society. This paper reviews the key aspects of the impact of fire that make it necessary to update the SDGs. Upon reviewing the scientific literature, it was found that fire has been part of the Earth System for the last 400 million years, and that it is part of biogeochemical cycles. From a geological perspective, fire shaped the current Earth System. Humans have used fire in the last million years as hunter-gatherers, and the last Pleistocene period evolved with the presence of fire. Since the Neolithic revolution, humankind spread the use of fi…

Sustainable developmentBiogeochemical cyclegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybusiness.industryEphemeral keynaturelcsh:AsustainabilityShrublandEarth system sciencesocietyDisturbance (ecology)AgricultureEnvironmental protectionSustainabilityforest firesEnvironmental sciencelcsh:General WorkshumansbusinessTERRAenVISION 2019
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Conclusion: Towards Sustainable Development in the Philippines?

2017

For many years, the Philippine archipelago, as we hope to have shown throughout this book, has suffered from many ills, some related to its geography and natural environment, some to its major demographic trends, many also from its social, economic and political structures and choices and its early insertion within a globalized economy. Resources have been depleted or severely damaged (forests, soils, water, coral reefs, mangroves, fisheries). Environmental losses may be linked to extensive factors (economic and population growth) as well as intensive factors (unequal distribution and access to market resources) (Montes and Lim 1996). Everything is linked, such as climate change and poverty…

Sustainable developmentClimate change and povertyGeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPovertybusiness.industryDevelopment economicsArchipelagoSustainabilityClimate changeDistribution (economics)Population growthbusiness
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Measuring the Sustainability of Transportation Infrastructures Through Comparative Life Cycle and Energy Assessment

2020

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was adopted at the United Nations Sustainable Development Summit on 25 September 2015. It addresses people, planet and prosperity needs and particularly focuses on transport systems that must be 1) Sustainable. 2) Quality and resilient. 3) Safe. 4) Affordable and accessible. The Research Project PRIN USR342 focuses on similar concepts and the expected outputs are 3 paving solutions (made with recycled materials and sustainable technologies), 4 sets of modules (software), and 2 platforms. In this view, the objective of this study is the identification of the best pavement technology in terms of energy and environmental performance. To this aim a LC…

Sustainable developmentgeographySummitgeography.geographical_feature_categorymedia_common.quotation_subjectPrincipal (computer security)Environmental economicsSustainabilityProduction (economics)Quality (business)BusinessProsperityLife-cycle assessmentmedia_common
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Comoros: Language Situation

2006

The Union of Comoros comprises three of the four islands of the Comorian archipelago, which is situated halfway between the East African coast and the northern tip of Madagascar. Official languages are French, Arabic, and Comorian, the latter of which is the everyday language of the people. Comorian is a Bantu language closely related to Swahili that can be subdivided into different dialects: Ngazija/Shingazija on Grande Comore, Ndzwani/Shindzwani on Anjouan, and Shimwali on Moheli.

SwahiliGeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryArabicAnthropologyEveryday languageSituatedArchipelagolanguageBantu languagesAncient historylanguage.human_language
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“The drops which fell from Shakespear’s Pen”: Hamlet in Contemporary Fiction

2012

Questions of gender, ethnicity and sexuality have all been raised by novelists intent on rewriting Shakespeare from the position of what have been seen as cultural margins. While discussions of such rewritings are ongoing, few concerted efforts have been made to trace a pattern in the treatment of Shakespearean allusion and adaptation at the hands of British and American writers of the literary mainstream. The present essay sets out to investigate the way in which three such writers —Ian McEwan, Graham Swift, and John Updike— employ allusion to/adaptations of Hamlet in their novels and what their respective stances reveal about their understanding of their role as canonical writers.

SwiftEmbryologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEthnic groupHuman sexualitylcsh:PR1-9680HamletAllusionMainstreamAdaptationHamlet (place)media_commoncomputer.programming_languageLiteraturegeographylcsh:English languagegeography.geographical_feature_categoryAllusionbusiness.industryShakespeare WilliamFellCell BiologyArtlcsh:English literatureTrace (semiology)lcsh:PE1-3729AnatomyContemporary fictionbusinessFilología InglesacomputerDevelopmental Biology
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Molecular inference of a Late Pleistocene diversification shift inNigellas. lat. (Ranunculaceae) resulting from increased speciation in the Aegean ar…

2009

Aim To infer the temporal course and geographical mode of speciation in Mediterranean/Southwest Asian Nigella s. lat. Location Mediterranean Basin, Aegean archipelago. Methods Phylogenies for Nigella L. and Garidella L. (= Nigella s. lat.) were obtained from maximum-likelihood analyses of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences. Diversification through time was analysed by log lineages-through-time (LTT) plots and survival analyses. Relative node age estimates were regressed against the degree of sympatry between sister clades to infer the predominant mode of geographical speciation in Nigella s. lat. Results The Late Pleistocene radiation of the Nigella arvensis complex in the Aegean r…

Sympatrygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologyBiogeographyAllopatric speciationLate MioceneBiologybiology.organism_classificationNigellaMediterranean BasinGenetic algorithmArchipelagoEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Biogeography
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Formalized classification of ephemeral wetland vegetation (Isoëto-Nanojuncetea class) in Poland (Central Europe)

2021

Formalized classification of the class Isoëto-Nanojuncetea has not been performed in Poland. We used 69,562 relevés stored in Polish Vegetation Database. Based on the literature and expert knowledge we selected 63 diagnostic species for the Isoëto-Nanojuncetea class. Unequivocal classification was applied in this work according to Cocktail method. A set of formal definitions was established using a combination of logical operators of total cover of species in case of high-rank syntaxa while sociological species groups and cover of particular species were used for logical formulas describing class, alliances and associations. An Expert System was prepared and applied to classify the whole da…

Syntaxonomical revisionDistribution (economics)WetlandPlant ScienceEcosystem ScienceDistributionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySet (abstract data type)Radioliongeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceWetland vegetationEphemeral keyRPlant communityEleocharitionGeneral MedicineVegetationClass (biology)MedicineVerbenionGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesbusinessCartographyPeerJ
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Urban monitoring using multi-temporal SAR and multi-spectral data

2006

In some key operational domains, the joint use of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and multi-spectral sensors has shown to be a powerful tool for Earth observation. In this paper, we analyze the potentialities of combining interferometric SAR and multi-spectral data for urban area characterization and monitoring. This study is carried out following a standard multi-source processing chain. First, a pre-processing stage is performed taking into account the underlying physics, geometry, and statistical models for the data from each sensor. Second, two different methodologies, one for supervised and another for unsupervised approaches, are followed to obtain features that optimize the urban rela…

Synthetic aperture radarEarth observationFeature selectionStatistical modelcomputer.software_genreData setData acquisitionArtificial IntelligenceSignal ProcessingStandard algorithmsComputer Vision and Pattern RecognitionData miningcomputerSoftwareMulti-sourcePattern Recognition Letters
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Integration of SAR Data Into Monitoring of the 2014–2015 Holuhraun Eruption, Iceland: Contribution of the Icelandic Volcanoes Supersite and the Futur…

2018

We report how data from satellite and aerial synthetic aperture radar (SAR) observations were integrated into monitoring of the 2014–2015 Holuhraun eruption in the Bárðarbunga volcanic system, the largest effusive eruption in Iceland since the 1783–84 Laki eruption. A lava field formed in one of the most remote areas in Iceland, after the propagation of a ∼50 km-long dyke beneath the Vatnajökull ice cap, where the Bárðarbunga caldera is located. Due to the 6 month duration of the eruption, mainly in wintertime, daily monitoring was particularly challenging. During the eruption, the European volcanological project FutureVolc was ongoing, allowing collaboration of many European experts on vol…

Synthetic aperture radargeographyVolcanic hazardsHoluhraun eruptiongeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesvolcano monitoringFutureVolcIcelandBárðarbunga volcanoSAR data010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesEffusive eruptionLava fieldVolcanoGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesCalderaSatellitelcsh:QGeohazardlcsh:ScienceGeologySeismology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesFrontiers in Earth Science
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