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Inbook Reference A review of the Gravettian collections from the excavation of Maisières "Canal" (Prov. of Hainaut, Belgium). A combined study of fossil and non-fossil animal resources for alimentary and technical exploitation
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2020
Article Reference Dracograllus trukensis sp. nov. (Draconematidae: Nematoda) from a Seagrass Bed (Zostera spp.) in Chuuk Islands, Micronesia, Central Western Pacific Ocean
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference In memoriam Dr A.C. van Bruggen, 1929-2016
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Book review (Delanoye et al., 2015)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Philippe Dautzenberg (1849–1935) and his time, towards the reconstruction of an ancient science network
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference L'atelier gallo-romain de pierres à aiguiser de Le Châtelet-sur-Sormonne (Ardennes, France) : mise à profit de matières premières lithiques locales et diffusion régionale des outils.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference À la recherche des meules romaines dans un paysage dépourvu de ressources lithiques. Premier bilan d'une analyse multidisciplinaire dans le Civitas Menapiorum (Belgique
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Early Byzantine fish consumption and trade revealed by archaeoichthyology and isotopic analysis at Sagalassos, Turkey
We document the dietary and economic role of fish at Sagalassos, a town in ancient Pisidia (southwest Turkey) for the Early Byzantine period (c. 550 – 700 CE) through a detailed analysis of animal bones and stable isotopes. The role of fish in the diet is quantified, for the first time, based on large samples of sieved remains retrieved during the excavation of a number of spaces in an urban residence. The table and kitchen refuse from the mansion shows that fish was a regular part of the diet. However, past isotopic work focused on human individuals excavated in the city’s necropolises, slightly postdating the faunal remains examined, did not reflect this consumption of aquatic food. The studied assemblage comprises at least 12 different fish taxa, including five marine species, a Nilotic fish and six Anatolian freshwater species. Since the origin of the freshwater fishes could not be unambiguously determined by zoogeography alone, we analyzed carbon, nitrogen and sulphur stable isotope ratios in archaeological fish bones from Sagalassos as well as in bones of modern fish collected at different sites in Turkey. We show that most freshwater fish, i.e., all cyprinid species, came from Lake Eğirdir. No evidence was found for fish from the local Aksu River basin. The exact origin of pike, which account for 3% of all freshwater fish, could not be directly determined due to a shortage of modern comparative data. Using the data obtained on the provenance of the fish, the ancient trade routes possibly used in the Early Byzantine period are reconstructed using a combination of archaeological, numismatic and historical data on past commercial relations.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023
Article Reference A scanning electron microscope technique for studying the sclerites of Cichlidogyrus
The genus Cichlidogyrus (Monogenea: Ancyrocephalidae) includes more than 90 species, most of which are gill parasites of African cichlid fishes. Cichlidogyrus has been studied extensively in recent years, but scanning electron microscope (SEM) investigations of the isolated hard parts have not yet been undertaken. In this paper, we describe a method for isolating and scanning the sclerites of individual Cichlidogyrus worms. Twenty-year old, formol-fixed specimens of Cichlidogyrus casuarinus were subjected to proteinase K digestion in order to release the sclerites from the surrounding soft tissues. SEM micrographs of the haptoral sclerites and the male copulatory organ are presented. The ability to digest formol-fixed specimens makes this method a useful tool for the study of historical museum collections.
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Inproceedings Reference Advances in high-resolution paleoclimate reconstructions using growth experiments, age modelling and clumped isotope analyses
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021