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Article Reference A revision of Western Australian Bennelongia (Crustacea, Ostracoda, Cyprididae) – the complementarity of molecular and morphological studies
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference A revision of Western Australian Bennelongia (Crustacea, Ostracoda, Cyprididae) – the complementarity of molecular and morphological studies.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference À Saint-Georges-sur-Meuse, un tronçon de la voie antique « Metz-Arlon-Tongres». Réflexions en cours sur l’approvisionnement en matériaux d’un chantier routier.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Proceedings Reference A slice of veal with your stale bread? Faunal remains from the 18th century latrine at the abbey of Clairefontaine (Belgium)
Analysis of faunal remains coming from archaeological contexts of abbeys have been carried out in several European countries. In Belgium, although such studies are available for the north of the country (Flanders), they are still lacking for the southern part (Wallonia). The study of animal bones unearthed in the Cistercian nunnery of Clairefontaine (1247-1794) helps to fill this gap. Here, we focus on the 18th century latrine in which animal remains were collected by hand. In addition, samples were taken in the filling of the structure for a total of 80 liters of sediments and were wet sieved to recover the small bone fragments. The information gathered during the faunal analysis are presented and then compared with historical sources, especially the account books of the abbey, to provide a more accurate insight into the diet of the sisters. It appears that consumption of meat was not uncommon. The relative diversity of foods consumed and some unusual findings are indicative of the high status of the abbey of Clairefontaine, which is also revealed by plant remains and material culture.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference A slice of veal with your stale bread? Faunal remains from the 18th century latrine at the abbey of Clairefontaine (Belgium)
Des analyses de restes fauniques issus de fouilles archéologiques en contexte religieux ont été menées dans plusieurs pays européens. En Belgique, de telles études sont disponibles pour la Flandre mais aucune abbaye wallonne n'avait jusqu'alors fait l'objet d'analyse archéo­ zoologique. L'étude des ossements d'animaux découverts lors des fouilles de l'abbaye cistercienne de Clairefontaine 1247-1794), en province de Luxembourg, contribue donc à combler cette lacune. Ici, nous nous concentrons sur les latrines du 18e siècle dans lesquelles les restes d'animaux ont été récoltés à la main. En outre, des échantillons de sédiments ont été prélevés dans le remplissage de la structure et tamisés afin de récupérer les petits fragments osseux. Les résultats obtenus lors de l'étude faunique sont présentés et comparés aux sources historiques, en particulier les livres de comptes de l'abbaye étudiés par Isabelle Bernard, afin de fournir un aperçu plus précis de l'alimentation des sœurs. Il semble que la consom­mation de viande n'était pas rare. La relative diversité des aliments consommés et certaines découvertes plus inhabituelles sont révélatrices du haut statut de l'abbaye de Clairefontaine, qui est également reflété par les restes de plantes et la culture matérielle.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference A special issue on DNA barcoding edited by the Belgian Network for DNA Barcoding (BeBoL)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference A stable reference area for multibeam bathymetry and backscatter: KWINTE, a dedicated quality control area in the Belgian North Sea
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021 OA
Proceedings Reference A story about knowledge and self-reliance: Biodiversity Research in a Developing Country (DRC)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Proceedings Reference A Story Of Unexpected species diversity: the case of the African Pike Hepsetus odoe (Bloch, 1794) (Characiformes: Hepsetidae)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference A surprisingly short early Holocene humid spell inferred from remnant shorelines and palaeolake deposits in northern Arabia
Early Holocene greening of the Sahara has been inferred from many sedimentary archives (e.g. Hoelzmann et al., 2001). Likewise, over the last two decades similar reconstructions of lakes and a more humid climate have been established for the southern Arabian Peninsula (e.g. Fleitmann et al., 2007; Engel et al., 2017) and the Levant (Bar-Matthews et al., 2003). Such evidence also exists for northern Arabia (Schulz and Whitney, 1986; Crassard et al., 2013; Zielhofer et al., 2018), but is limited in sufficiently robust proxy data and chronological resolution, hampering our understanding of the scarce archaeological record of that time (Hilbert et al., 2014). In this paper, we present latest results of the ongoing DFG-funded project CLEAR, which explores the highly resolved palaeolake record of the sabkha basin in the oasis of Tayma, northern Arabia. Today only flooded episodically after rainfall events, the endorheic basin is encircled by a ring of isolated shoreline deposits in an altitudinal corridor of only a few metres, consisting almost entirely of Melanoides tuberculatus and Hydrobia sp. shells, Amphibalanus amphitrite carapaces, foraminifers, and ostracods, with minor amounts of siliciclastic sand (Engel et al., 2012; Pint et al., 2017). These deposits have recently been mapped and dated by 14C and OSL, and indicate the presence of an early Holocene lake with a depth of up to 17 m and an area of up to 22 km². They correlate with partly varved lake sediments of the central basin according to the 14C-(pollen concentrates), varve- and cryptotephra-based chronology (Dinies et al., 2015; Neugebauer et al., 2017). In the framework of CLEAR, the palaeolake sequence was subjected to detailed sedimentological, geochemical and micropalaeontological analyses (grain-size distribution, XRD, µXRF, thin- section studies, foraminifera, ostracods, diatoms, pollen, stable isotopes, C/N, lipid biomarkers). Current results indicate increasing moisture at Tayma from c. 9300 cal. yrs. BP with pronounced humid conditions only over the second half of the 9th millennium BP, represented by an annually varved sequence of aragonite-, diatom-, and clastic silt- dominated laminae. After 7950 cal. yrs. BP, aridification set in, leading to sabkha development at c. 4200 cal. yrs. BP and the accumulation of aeolian sand. The rather short period of increased moisture availability contrasts with adjacent records from southern Arabia and the Levantine region (Bar-Matthews et al., 2003; Fleitmann et al., 2007), which reflect more humid conditions over several millennia during the early to mid-Holocene. This is a contribution to the research project “CLEAR – Holocene Climatic Events of Northern Arabia” (DFG PL 535/2-1; FR 1489/5-1; EN 977/2-1); see also contribution Pint et al. (this conference) and project website https://clear2018.wordpress.com. References: Bar-Matthews, M, et al., Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 67, 3181–3199 (2003); Crassard, R., et al., PLOS ONE 8, e68061 (2013); Dinies, M., et al., Quat. Int. 382, 293–302 (2015); Engel, M., et al., 2012, Quat. Int. 266, 131–141 (2012); Engel, M., et al., Global Planet. Change 148, 258–267 (2017); Fleitmann, D., et al., Quat. Sci. Rev. 26, 170–188 (2007); Hilbert, Y.H., et al., J. Archaeol. Sci. 50, 460–474 (2014); Hoelzmann, P., et al., Palaeogeogr. Palaeocl. 169, 193–217 (2001); Neugebauer, I., et al., Quat. Sci. Rev. 170 269–275 (2017); Pint, A., et al., J. Foram. Res. 42, 175–187 (2017); Schulz, E., Whitney, Hydrobiologia 143, 175–190 (1986); Zielhofer, C., et al., Quat. Int. 473, 120–140 (2018).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018