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Inproceedings Reference Primoptynx, un hibou pas comme les autres
Avec plus d’un an de retard suite à la crise COVID (Anthropocène supérieur), nous présentons ici un squelette partiel d’un hibou fossile de grande taille qui entretemps a déjà été publié (Mayr et al., 2020). Ce retard n’est toutefois pas réellement préjudiciable étant donné que le spécimen a été découvert il y a déjà plus de 30 ans dans les couches du Wasatchien moyen (Wa-3) de la Formation de Willwood à McCullough Peaks, au Wyoming (USA), permettant ainsi de le dater entre 54,5 et 55,0 Ma (début de l’Eocène inférieur). Le spécimen inclut la majorité des os postcraniens d’un des strigiformes fossiles les plus complets du Paléogène. Primoptynx poliotaurus mesurait environ 50 centimètres de long, taille comparable à Hedwig, le harfang des neiges de Harry Potter, et appartient à un groupe de hiboux proche de la famille éteinte des Protostrigidae, bien que ne partageant pas avec ces derniers la morphologie dérivée du tibiotarse. Les pattes de Primoptynx sont différentes de celles des strigidés actuels (hiboux et chouettes). Les hiboux ont aujourd'hui quatre doigts avec des griffes de même taille pour attraper des proies relativement petites, et les tuer avec le bec. Primoptynx a les premier et second doigts plus longs, comme on le voit chez les éperviers, buses, aigles et autres membres de la famille des Accipitridae. Ces deux doigts plus développés sont utilisés pour épingler les proies, qui sont dès lors percées par les serres. Primoptynx était donc un hibou qui chassait comme un aigle, des mammifères de taille moyenne. Ce fossile montre, avec d’autres découvertes, que durant l’Eocène inférieur il y avait déjà une certaine diversité de strigiformes, de différentes tailles, qui occupaient diverses niches écologiques. Le succès des hiboux allait de pair avec celui des mammifères, devenus très diversifiés à l’Eocène inférieur. L'extinction ultérieure de Primoptynx et d'autres proto-hiboux pourrait être due à l'émergence d'oiseaux de proie diurnes à l'Éocène supérieur. Financements Cette étude a été menée dans le cadre du projet BR/121/A3/PalEurAfrica, financé par la Politique Scientifique Fédérale Belge. Références Mayr G., Gingerich P.D. & Smith T., 2020. Skeleton of a new owl from the early Eocene of North America (Aves, Strigiformes) with an accipitrid-like foot morphology. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 40(2):e1769116. https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2020.1769116.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021
Article Reference Processing a whale skeleton: a big challenge.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference C source code Progress in paleoearthquake and paleotsunami research along the Nankai Trough following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake
In the wake of the devastating 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, the Central Disaster Management Council of the Japanese Cabinet Office issued new guidance for assessing seismic hazards in Japan. Before 2011, seismic hazard assessment relied on source models developed from knowledge of a small number of well-documented historical earthquakes. Less well-known historical earthquakes, including the AD 869 Jōgan Sanriku earthquake, were largely disregarded as their seismic intensities or tsunami heights could not be reconciled with the chosen seismic sources. Following the unexpectedly large size of the Tōhoku earthquake, the Cabinet Office advocated renewed investigation of earthquake and tsunami occurrence over historical and longer timescales, with a particular focus on defining the largest possible magnitudes. The new guidelines pay close attention to the Nankai Trough, the subduction zone where the Philippine Sea Plate dives beneath the Eurasian Plate. The Nankai Trough faces the densely populated and highly industrialised coastline of south central Japan and harbours a widely-known seismic gap along its eastern Tōkai segment. A full-length rupture of the Nankai Trough, including the Tōkai segment, could produce an earthquake with a magnitude approaching that of the 2011 event, with tsunami travel times to the closest shorelines of less than 30 minutes. Here, we review geological evidence for past earthquakes and tsunamis along the Nankai Trough. This evidence comes from a wide variety of sources, including uplifted marine terraces, turbidites, liquefaction features, subsided marshes and tsunami deposits in coastal lakes and lowlands. Examining papers published before and after 2011, we investigate the impact of the new Cabinet Office guidelines on attempts to understand the magnitude and recurrence of these events. We summarise current knowledge of the largest paleoearthquakes and paleotsunamis and make recommendations for further investigations of this highly critical subduction zone.
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Inproceedings Reference Progressive increase in organic-matter burial and preservation from the "Weissert" event to the Faraoni event in Umbria-March (Central-Italy)
1. Abstract The Cretaceous experienced several Oceanic Anoxic Events (or OAEs). Anoxia in these events is indicated by deposits of black shales, enriched in organic matter (OM) compared to the layers below and above, strong carbon isotope perturbations, often with a negative excursion at the onset of the OAEs followed by a positive excursion, and concentration of redox-sensitive trace-elements (RSTE) (Baudin & Riquier 2014). Considered to be the earliest Cretaceous OAE (Baudin & Riquier, 2014), the Faraoni level is a short event first defined in the late Hauterivian sections of the Umbria-Marche Apennines (Cecca et al. 1994). It presents black shales enriched in OM with high concentrations of RSTE but lacks an important positive δ13C excursion (Baudin & Riquier, 2014). This event follows the “Weissert” event, a ca. 2.3 million year carbon isotope perturbation event taking place during the late Valanginian-early Hauterivian (Sprovieri et al. 2006). This latter event is not considered to be an OAE, as anoxia indicators such as RSTE high concentrations or OM-rich layers are not observed at least in the western Tethys (Westermann et al. 2010). In order to link those two seemingly opposite events, sections of Late Valanginian to Early Barremian age were studied in the Umbria-Marche Apennines, Italy. Lesser magnitude black shale preceding the Faraoni level were identified. They were correlated in two sections using magnetostratigraphy (Fig. 1). Rock-Eval and palynofacies analyses reveal that they are part of a longer-term trend of increased organic matter preservation and burial. In the black shales this is hinted by a progressive increase of total organic carbon (TOC) content, of the hydrogen index (HI), and by increasingly better preserved amorphous organic matter (AOM) towards the Faraoni level (Fig.1). This increase starts in the upper part of the M5n magnetochron. This is coeval with an increase in mercury concentration interpreted to be due to volcanic activity that was measured among others in the Bosso section (Charbonnier et al., 2018). Palaeoenvironmental differences between the Bosso and Frontone sections is shown by differences in palynomorphs and in organic matter preservation, and by the presence of slumps found in Frontone only. Figure 1 : synthetic log of the Bosso and Frontone sections, with magnetostratigraphy and Rock Eval 6 results (TOC and HI) 2. References Baudin, F. & Riquier, L., 2014. The Late Hauterivian Faraoni ‘Oceanic Anoxic Event’: An Update. Bulletin de La Société Géologique de France, 185, 6, 359‑77. Cecca, F., Marini, A., Pallini, G., Baudin, F., & Begouen, V., 1994. A guide level of the uppermost Hauterivian (Lower Cretaceous) in the pelagic succession of Umbria Marches Apennines (Central Italy): the Faraoni level, Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia, 99, 4. Sprovieri, M., Coccioni, R., Lirer, F., Pelosi, N. & Lozar F., 2006. Orbital Tuning of a Lower Cretaceous Composite Record (Maiolica Formation, Central Italy). Paleoceanography, 21, 4. Westermann, S., Föllmi, K.B., Adatte, T., Matera, V., Schnyder, J., Fleitmann, D., Fiet, N., Ploch, I. & Duchamp-Alphonse S., 2010. The Valanginian δ13C Excursion May Not Be an Expression of a Global Oceanic Anoxic Event. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 290, 1‑2, 118‑31. Charbonnier, G., Godet, A., Bodin, S., Adatte, T. & Föllmi, K. B. 2018. Mercury anomalies, volcanic pulses, and drowning episodes along the northern Tethyan margin during the latest Hauterivian-earliest Aptian. Palaeogeography. Palaeoclimatoly. Palaeoecology.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018
Misc Reference Project IBISCA: Distribution of ants in a Panamanian rainforest.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Unpublished Reference Project RAVen: Validating radar technologies to study near- and offshore bird migration
The Belgian part of the North Sea is part of a very important seabird migration route through the Southern North Sea, which makes it an ideal area to study bird migration. Because of its shape, this part of the North Sea acts as a migration bottleneck, concentrating birds during migration. This study aims at cross-validating bird detection by meteorological and bird radars, mainly focusing on offshore and coastal migration, and suggesting refinements to the bird detection algorithms of both weather and dedicated bird radars. The Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium (RMI) uses three C-band weather radars for meteorological observations, one of which is located in Jabbeke, at only a few kilometers from the Belgian coast. The Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS) has installed a Merlin bird radar (DeTect Inc.) on an offshore platform at 25km from the coast, to study the impact of offshore wind farms. The Merlin radar system consists of two identical radar antennas, one scanning in the horizontal pane and one in the vertical. They are operating at a range of 7.4km and 1.85km respectively, thus providing high resolution data. The measurements of the bird radar and the weather radar in Jabbeke are overlapping, which offers a unique situation to cross-validate the data of both types of radar and to extrapolate the high resolution data of the bird radar to the wider spatial scale of the weather radar. RBINS and RMI are joining forces in a two year project called RAVen (RAdar registrations of bird migration Validation through an interdisciplinary approach). It runs until mid-September 2018 and is funded by the Belgian Science Policy. First results (from spring 2016) already show a good correlation between the number of birds detected by both radars.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference Promoting DNA barcoding in Belgium through the BeBoL network
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Promoting DNA barcoding in Belgium through the BeBoL network
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications / Pending Duplicate Bibliography Entries
Inproceedings Reference Prospection géophysique non-invasive dans la grotte de Bruniquel (Tarn-et-Garonne, France)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference Prospectivity mapping of critical raw material at the continental scale - a part of the FRAME project
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2020