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Inproceedings Reference The medicinal use of plants during the middle ages and early modern times evidence from archaeobotany and the early herbal literature
During the Middle Ages and early modern times plants species of different families were not only appreciated as aromatic plants and spices in culinary preparations, but also used treating various health problems and illnesses. They were applied in form of teas and other preparations, treating stomach and intestinal problems, inflammations and eye-illnesses. Various plants were used against intestinal parasites. Some of these species are well known garden plants, most probably cultivated as spices and for their medicinal properties. In contrast to the medicinal use of aromatic plants cultivated in gardens, the use of collected wild plants for medical treatment is still less considered and the archaeobotanical records are less frequently interpreted as evidence of medicinal use. We are comparing the written evidence of the use of wild plants in early medicinal tracts, herbals and spice books with archaeobotanical records from medieval and early modern plant assemblages. Which of the wild plants were used according to the written sources and which criteria should be applied while suggesting that plants in the archaeobotanical record may have been used?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference The Meio 1498 earthquake and tsunami: driving force of abrupt environmental change in the Hamana floodplain, Shizuoka prefecture, Japan
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference The Meio 1498 earthquake and tsunami: driving force of abrupt environmental change in the Hamana floodplain, Shizuoka prefecture, Japan
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications / Pending Duplicate Bibliography Entries
Inproceedings Reference The meiofauna paradox unresolved: Cryptic speciation in Gyratrix hermaphroditus (Kalyptorhynchia, Platyhelminthes).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference The Meselson effect in Darwinula stevensoni?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference The Meselson effect in Darwinula stevensoni?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference The Meselson effect in the ancient asexual Darwinula stevensoni (Crustacea, Ostracoda)?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference The micropreparation of a juvenile marine turtle from the Ypresian of Belgium
Several years ago, amateur palaeontologist Michel Girardo collected a block of clay (25x20x18cm) encasing a partially visible small turtle shell, at the Durieux brickyard of Ghlin (Mons Basin). The Clay of Ghlin is stratigraphically important because it belongs to the early Ypresian Mont-Heribu Member of the Kortrijk Clay Formation, representing one of the earliest marine, mid-neritic, depositional environments of the Ypresian in the Mons Basin. The fossil itself is 15x9cm and consists of a full carapace with all plates in connection, half of the marginal plates, and a crushed part of the head. The preservation is very good and the bones suffered almost no displacement during or after burial. Unfortunately, after excavation and during decades of storage, the block of clay had dried and shrunk, leading to stress deformation of the fragile thin bones and to pyrite oxidation. Thin coats of Paraloid B-72 glue were applied before any work. The block was carefully reduced using chisels and hammer. The separated chunks of clay were then disaggregated in water and sieved, resulting in the recovery of shark teeth and fish bones. The preparation of the specimen was done almost exclusively under stereomicroscope. Air scribes could not be used, only small carbide needles. Well-preserved long bones from the shoulder girdle were found during the work. The clay's shrinkage permitted to separate completely the carapace from the substrate. A well-preserved plastron was in this way discovered and almost all vertebrae were found to be still attached to the vertebral plates. All this precise and slow work produced a very fine and well-preserved marine juvenile specimen, presenting a maximum of details, much more than could be guessed when the specimen was received. This will be quite helpful for the identification of this specimen and for comparison with typical Belgian Thanetian-Ypresian turtles such as Erquelinnesia, Eochelone and other Pancheloniidae. This work is a contribution to network project BR/121/A3/PALEURAFRICA of the Belgian Science Policy Office.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Proceedings Reference The Middle Ages archaeobotanical data in Wallonia (southern Belgium): a review
Since the spring of 2011, a multidisciplinary team of bioarchaeology was established at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (IRSNB-KBINS). This team collaborates with the Public Service of Wallonia (SPW) and works on all “preventive archaeological sites” excavated in Wallonia (Southern Belgium). The majority of sites studied since the beginning of the implementation of this new service are dated to the medieval period. For several years, archaeobotanical studies were conducted more specific in Wallonia but rarely combined with other scientific studies and published. The purpose of this presentation is to review all existing archaeobotanical data for the medieval period in the Wallonia region and add those recently made by the new collaborations between archaeobotanists of the Institute (including seeds and fruit studies, wood charcoals studies, pollens studies and so one...). We can thus have an overview of the status and the nature of vegetation cover during this period of history and we can also have an approach of plant species harvested and consumed by medieval populations of current southern Belgium.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference The Middle Devonian succession in the Dinant Synclinorium.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications