Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

You are here: Home
4783 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type



































New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Article Reference The Archaeology, Architecture and Afterlife of the Odeion of Ancient Sagalassos
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2024
Inbook Reference Différences sexuelles des teneurs en zinc et en strontium dans les ossements humains de quelques échantillons médiévaux de Belgique (résultats préliminaires)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Inbook Reference Comportements alimentaires de trois populations médiévales belges : apports de la biogéochimie isotopique
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inbook Reference Apport des analyses chimiques d'ossements à la connaissance des régimes alimentaires au Moyen Âge
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Les massifs de l’Argentièrois du Mésolithique au début de l’Antiquité: au croisement des données archéologiques et paléoenvironnementales en haute montagne (Hautes-Alpes, parc national des Ecrins)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Les Ecrins : un territoire d’altitude dans le context des Alpes occidentales de la Préhistoire récente à l’âge du Bronze (Hautes-Alpes, France).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Les sondages mécaniques à Hermalle-sous-Argenteau : méthodologie et premiers résultats
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference Reconstitution des conditions de formation de la tourbe des périodes Atlantique ancien à Subatlantique ancien dans la tourbière ombrotrophe du Misten (Est de la Belgique) sur la base d’analyses à haute résolution des pollens, des thécamoebiens et de la gé
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Article Reference Octet Stream Making sense of variation in sclerochronological stable isotope profiles of mollusks and fish otoliths from the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin
Stable isotope sclerochemistry of biogenic carbonate is frequently used for the reconstruction of paleotemperature and seasonality. Yet, few studies have compared intra-and inter-taxon isotope variability and variation within a single depositional environment. We measured seasonal changes in δ18O and δ13C compositions in multiple specimens of two carditid bivalve species, a turritelline gastropod species, and two species of otoliths from demersal fish, from two early Eocene (latest Ypresian, 49.2 Ma) coquinas in the inner neritic Aalter Formation, located in the Belgian part of the southern North Sea Basin (paleolatitude ∼41°N). Results demonstrate considerable variation among taxa in the mean, amplitude, and skewness of δ18O and δ13C values from sequentially sampled growth series. We attribute this variation to factors including differences in seasonal growth over ontogeny, mixing of depositional settings by sediment transport, differences between sedentary and mobile organisms, and differences in longevity of the taxa in question. Growth cessation during winters in turritellines and fishes in particular lead to an incomplete representation of the seasonal cycle in their growth increments, in comparison to carditid bivalves. Ophidiid fish otolith isotope records appear to reflect environmental conditions over a wider range of habitats and environments, and we infer this is due to a combination of sedimentary transport, as these are small structures, and postmortem transport by free-swimming predatory fish. Our study highlights the potential variability encompassed by taxa in the shallow marine realm even when they are found in the same deposits. While this has significant implications for seasonality reconstructions based on conventional isotope profiles, we show that careful study of the ecology and ontogeny of multiple taxa and specimens within a death assemblage can reveal sources of variation and yield a close approximation of conditions in the setting of interest.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2025
Article Reference A European monsoon-like climate in a warmhouse world
The middle Eocene warmhouse period (45 million years ago) featured atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations equivalent to those projected under high future emission scenarios. Seasonal- to weather timescale climate reconstructions from this period can provide critical insight into the impact of Anthropogenic warming on intra-annual variability in temperature and precipitation. Here, we combine daily-scale reconstructions of the evolution of temperature and the water cycle in western Europe based on stable oxygen and clumped isotope analyses on the fastest-growing gastropod known in the fossil record: Campanile giganteum. Our dataset shows that the middle Eocene of western Europe featured monsoon-like conditions, with seawater temperatures of ˊ24 °C during mild and wet winters, 30 °C during hot and dry spring and autumn seasons, and ˊ28 °C during warm and comparatively wet summers. Coupled climate model simulations using the Community Earth System Model indicate these seasonal variations in temperature and precipitation were driven by shifting atmospheric and oceanic circulation regimes over Western Europe, with winds from different directions bringing distinct waters to the region and minimal wind during spring reducing cooling through diminished latent heat flux. Our results highlight that Europe may experience wetter summers with more frequent extreme rainfall events under future high emissions scenarios.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2025