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Inproceedings Reference Angiostrongylus chabaudi natural infection in wild caufght gastropods
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023 OA
Inproceedings Reference Animal consumption and herding practices during the early Middle Ages across the modern city of Huy (Belgium)
Since the 1990s, the modern town of Huy, located at the borders of the river Meuse (Liege province, Belgium), has undergone several preventive archaeological excavations in the context of urban development. Each of these excavations brought to light numerous traces of human activity, mainly from the mediaeval period. A publication project aims to bring together the numerous data collected over the last 30 years through this substantial fieldwork, which leads to close cooperation of many specialised disciplines, including archaeozoology. A major effort invested in the study of the ceramics made it possible to provide a fine chronological phasing allowing a more in-depth diachronic analysis. The rich archaeological material uncovered includes more than 50,000 animal remains, both collected by hand and by sieving. Although the fauna[ material collected ranges chronologically from the late Roman period to the early modern period, we will focus mainly on remains attributed to the Early and High Middle Ages, periods that are well represented. The sites analysed are scattered on both banks of the river, some of them are present close to the primitive core of the town, while others represent peripheral craft areas. The study of these different settlements makes it possible to illustrate the food practices and meat supply strategies since the redeployment of the core of human occupation in the early mediaeval period.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022
Inproceedings Reference Animaux, plantes et société en Gaule romaine. Un bilan des recherches archéozoologiques et carpologiques sur la période romaine en Wallonie
L’objectif de cette communication est de dresser un bilan des recherches archéozoologique et carpologique menées sur les sites romains de Wallonie. L’exposé présentera tout d’abord l’inventaire des données archéozoologiques et carpologiques disponibles pour les différentes provinces de Wallonie. Cet inventaire sera discuté en fonction de la nature des sites, de leur chronologie, des méthodes de collecte des vestiges, du type d’information bioarchéologique disponible et des questions de recherche abordées. Les principaux apports à la connaissance de l’exploitation animale et végétale par l’homme, en Gaule romaine, seront ensuite illustrés par des études de cas. Au terme de ce bilan, nous formulerons des recommandations et proposerons une série de pistes à explorer pour les recherches futures.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Ant differential response to nutrient addition in an Andean forest.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Misc Reference Ant mosaics in neotropical forests and elsewhere. . In XXII Simposio de Mirmecologia, 18-22 October, pp. 76, Ilhéus, Bahia, Brasil.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Ant mosaics in tropical forests
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Misc Reference Ant-termite interactions in New Guinea coconut plantations.
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Inproceedings Reference Antarctic micrometeorites as a resource to complement the current Solar System inventory: the case of 16O-poor cumulate porphyritic cosmic spherules
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023
Inproceedings Reference Anthropogenic and environmental controls of barchan dune dynamics in Qatar
Barchan dunes are crescentic aeolian landforms of loose, mostly well-sorted sand with a convex side directed upwind and two horns pointing downwind. Their migration is mainly controlled by sand supply, dune size, wind patterns, vegetation cover and human impact. In Qatar, their distribution is limited to the southeastern part of the peninsula, where they play an important role for tourism and camping activities among locals. We investigate the variability of dune migration in Qatar over a time period of 50 years using high-resolution satellite and aerial imagery. We then explore its relation to the regional Shamal wind system (NNW–SSE), teleconnection patterns, and limitations in sand supply associated with the transgression of the Arabian Gulf, which explain the fact that Qatar is gradually being stripped from aeolian landforms with a remaining dune population in the southeast. Strong size-dependent differences in migration rates of individual dunes as well as significant decadal variability on a dune-field scale are detected, the latter closely correlating with summer Shamal activity. The summer Shamal itself is mainly driven by pressure differences between the stationary anticyclone over the eastern Mediterranean and the established summer heat low over Iran and adjacent areas. It seems to be related to the intensity of the North Atlantic Oscillation and the Indian Summer Monsoon, in particular during years of relatively strong (weak) summer Shamals. High uncertainties associated with the extrapolation of migration rates back into the Holocene, however, do not permit further refining of the timing of the loss of sand supply and the onset of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level (RSL) highstand. For the youngest phase considered in this study (2006–2015), human impact has significantly accelerated dune migration under a more or less stable Shamal regime through systematic sand mining and excessive vehicle traffic upwind of the core study area, which started in 2007.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018
Inproceedings Reference Antibodies against arboviruses in Mastomys natalensis from Tanzania
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2024