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Article Reference Seafood on the Belgian market: do you get what you are paying for?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference Barcoding organisms and tissues of policy concern: experiences from three years of BopCo
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference DNA barcoding for forensics: experiences from three years of BopCo
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference DNA barcoding to identify invasive alien species targeted by EU policies
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference Identification of disease vectors from foreign deployment sites of the Belgian armed forces using DNA-based technologies
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference A DNA-based approach to validate the identification of exotic mosquito species in Belgium
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference DNA barcoding and identification of intermediate slug hosts in the framework of an epidemiological survey in Germany
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference Vertebrate Palaeoecology of the Pisco Formation (Miocene, Peru): Glimpses into the Ancient Humboldt Current Ecosystem
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021
Article Reference Path and site effects deduced from merged transfrontier internet macroseismic data of two recent M4 earthquakes in NW Europe using a grid cell approach.
The online collection of earthquake reports in Europe is strongly fragmented across numerous seismological agencies. This paper demonstrates how collecting and merging online institutional macroseismic data strongly improves the density of observations and the quality of intensity shaking maps. Instead of using ZIP code Community Internet Intensity Maps, we geocode individual response addresses for location improvement, assign intensities to grouped answers within 100 km2 grid cells, and generate intensity attenuation relations from the grid cell intensities. Grid cell intensity maps are less subjective and illustrate a more homogeneous intensity distribution than communal ZIP code intensity maps. Using grid cells for ground motion analysis offers an advanced method for exchanging transfrontier equal-area intensity data without sharing any personal information. The applicability of the method is demonstrated on the felt responses of two clearly felt earthquakes: the 8 September 2011 ML 4.3 (Mw 3.7) Goch (Germany) and the 22 May 2015 ML 4.2 (Mw 3.7) Ramsgate (UK) earthquakes. Both events resulted in a non-circular distribution of intensities which is not explained by geometrical amplitude attenuation alone but illustrates an important low-pass filtering due to the sedimentary cover above the Anglo-Brabant Massif and in the Lower Rhine Graben. Our study illustrates the effect of increasing bedrock depth on intensity attenuation and the importance of the WNW–ESE Caledonian structural axis of the Anglo-Brabant Massif for seismic wave propagation. Seismic waves are less attenuated – high Q – along the strike of a tectonic structure but are more strongly attenuated – low Q – perpendicular to this structure, particularly when they cross rheologically different seismotectonic units separated by crustal-rooted faults.
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Article Reference Visualizing Cross-Sectional Data in a Real-World Context
If you could fly around your research results in three dimensions, wouldn’t you like to do it? Combining the capabilities of an open-source drawing tool with Google Earth maps allows researchers/geologists to visualize real-world cross-sectional data in three dimensions. Any spatial model displaying research results can be exported to a vertical figure to enable the results to be visualized spatially.
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications