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Inproceedings Reference The distribution and dynamics of suspended particulate matter in Belgian coastal waters derived from AVHRR imagery
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Proceedings Reference The Drana marshes: a question of survival for the European population of Anser erythropus.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference The Durbuy Anticline: a top geoheritage site in the UNESCO Global Geopark Famenne-Ardenne, Belgium.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2024
Inproceedings Reference The Earliest Bats from Europe
Chiroptera is one of the few modern mammal orders for which no fossil record has been associated with the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum that happened 55.8 million years ago. With the exception of complete skeletons from the early Middle Eocene of the Messel Formation in Germany and the late Early Eocene Green River Formation in Wyoming, all early bats are only represented by isolated elements, mainly teeth and fragmentary jaws, making the diversity and taxonomic affinities more difficult to establish. Here we revise all of the Early Eocene bats from Europe based on dental features, including digitally reconstructed teeth using micro-CT scanning technology of some complete skeletons. The diversity of European early bats is composed of the families Onychonycteridae, Icaronycteridae, Archaeonycteridae, Palaeochiropterygidae, and some of undetermined affinities. Dental features and synapomorphies of each family are characterized for the first time. The earliest bats are dated from the early Early Eocene and are all of small size with lower molars less than 1.3 mm in length. They are represented by: Eppsinycteris anglica from Abbey Wood, east London, England, an onychonycterid with reduced lower p4 and long molars; Archaeonycteris? praecursor from Silveirinha, Portugal, an archaeonycterid with long postcristid on wide lower molars; a new archaeonycterid genus and species from Meudon, North France with long trigonid and shorter postcristid on wide lower molars. These results indicate that the diversity of European Early Eocene bats is higher than previously recognized and that diversification began early in the Early Eocene.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Proceedings Reference The Early Carboniferous progymnosperm Protopitys: new data on vegetative and fertile structures and on its geographic distribution.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference The Early Holocene Humid Period in N Arabia – proxy evidence from a unique varved lake record
There is growing interest in deciphering the hydroclimatic dynamics on the Northern Arabian Peninsula during and after the Early Holocene Humid Period (EHHP) as a key for better understanding the role of climate in driving neolithisation and the evolution of new lifestyles in the poorly studied Arabian Desert. However, our knowledge about the magnitude, timeframe and sources of increased moisture in Northern Arabia during the EHHP is limited due to a lack of robust proxy data. Here we provide the first high-resolution and precisely dated multi-proxy reconstruction of the hydroclimatic variability during the EHHP for northern Arabia, retrieved from annually laminated (varved) sediments of the Tayma palaeolake record. We found pronounced seasonal variability during the lake’s evolution, which we reconstructed through micro-facies analyses of the varved sediments. Changing lake water evaporation and the lake-internal productivity was inferred using stable oxygen and carbon isotope compositions (δ18O and δ13C) of carbonates. The compound-specific hydrogen isotope composition of plant-wax n-alkanes (δDwax) was used as a proxy for changing moisture supply. Our robust age model is well constrained by a floating varve chronology anchored through 14C dating of pollen concentrates and the well-dated ‘S1’ cryptotephra. Our results show that slightly wetter conditions started at Tayma at ca. 9300 yrs BP. The highest moisture availability was only achieved during a ca. 600 years lasting deep-lake phase from ca. 8500 to 7900 yrs BP, when varves formed in the lake. This implies that the EHHP was comparably short in northern Arabia. Furthermore, we found a complex regional hydrological pattern during the EHHP on centennial time-scales, which we discuss with respect to alternative moisture sources and mechanisms that led to the observed hydroclimatic signature at Tayma. This study is a contribution to the research project “CLEAR – Holocene Climatic Events of Northern Ara- bia” (https://clear2018.wordpress.com/).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018
Inproceedings Reference The early medieval Brussel’s landscape: the archaeobotanical contribution to the study of dark earth.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Proceedings Reference The effect of pile driving on harbour porpoises in Belgian waters.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference The effect of the increase of temperature on the structure of dormant aquatic microfauna: perspectives for climate change. 
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022
Article Reference The effects of reproductive mode and multiple invasions on speciation in ancient lake ostracods: comparative molecular genetics of Baikalian Cytherissa
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications