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Search publications of the members of the Royal Belgian institute of natural Sciences

Article Reference The Middle Holocene shell mound of El Gouna on the Red Sea (Egypt)
In the El Gouna (Hurghada) area on the Red Sea of Egypt, a Middle Holocene shell mound from around 5800 B.P. (uncalibrated radiocarbon years before A.D. 1950) has been tested by a restricted excavation. Collection of shellfish on the Red Sea shore provided subsistence opportunities for Middle Holocene groups coeval with the Early Predynastic Tasian of the Nile Valley. The El Gouna site demonstrates for the first time that prehistoric shell mounds exist near the Egyptian Red Sea shore.
Inproceedings Reference Identification of a member of the “Palaeochelys s.l. – Mauremys group” (Testudines) in the early Oligocene of Boutersem (Belgium)
Article Reference Molecular phylogenetics of Haustrinae and Pagodulinae (Neogastropoda: Muricidae) with a focus on New Zealand species
Article Reference Van heinde en verre: gebruik en herkomst van polychrome marmers in Romeins Tongeren - een eerste stand van zaken.
Article Reference Graan en stenen in het hart van de civitas Tungrorum . Resultaten van recent maalsteenonderzoek
Inproceedings Reference Stratigraphic context and dating of the Middle and Late Eocene vertebrate localities of the Fayum.
The Fayum Oasis and surrounding areas in Egypt include a number of exceptionally rich and important fossil vertebrate sites. These include the Wadi Al-Hitan World Heritage Site, made famous by the abundance of archaeocete whale remains, and the site BQ-2 with its diverse terrestrial mammals, including primates. Despite the importance of this area, the stratigrapby is poorly understood and there has be little agreement in the dating of the fossiliferous units. This is in large part due to the extreme diachroneity of some of the rock units and paucity of biostratigraphically useful fossils within the shallow water facies. Platform carbonates are overlain by condensed open marine mudstones of the Gebannam Formation. These span the Bartonian-Priabonian boundary, with a diverse offhore marine fauna being present throughout, including marine mammals. Four units of shoreface sandstone of the Birkel Qarun Formation overlie and partly pass into the Gehannam Formation. The lowest of these sandstone units is dated to nannofossil zone NP19/20, and hence 'mid' Priabonian, and contains the oldest archaeocetes described from the region. Diverse fossils, including abundant whales, are present throughout the Birket Qarun Formation, but these are especially concentrated at the top of the lowest sandstone (lowstand systems tract) and in the transgressive lower part of the third sandstone and its lateral equivalent within the Gehannam Formation (transgressive systems tract). The overlying Qasr el Sagha Formation is a very rapidly deposited deltaic/lagoonal complex. Tidal channels from two to over 40 metres deep are present throughout. The lower part of this formation is still in nannofossil zone NP19/20. INterchannel deposits contain a fully marine, but probably shallow water, assemblage. Larger channels also include deeper water elements near the base, with transported terrestrial and quasimarine elements being present within the uppermost part of a small channel fill at quarry BQ-2. The transition to the non-marine units above is sharp but conformable and coincides with the base of the Oligocene. The clastic succession indicates the initiation of Nile-type drainage and coincides with the uplift of East Africa, preventing drainage to the east. It is likely that clastic successions in the Qattara Depression and Libya can be related to the same sedimentological episodes. This is largely based on, and dedicated to, the work of Chris King, who passed away earlier this year.
Article Reference Le site d'habitat romain à enclos fossoyé de Silly "Tramasure" (Silly, province de Hainaut)
Article Reference La villa des Trois Haies à Heure-le-Tixhe (Diets-Heur, Tongeren). Les sondages de Xavier Debras.
Article Reference a6bed9d7f8d34c4fb54fa7c8409b6241
Article Reference Octet Stream 1bf1ded3e9934a5d80ec9f3a9cf8f70a
Article Reference 7f77201047b94d9faf5a5b57a4462390
Article Reference 600bd0659b2243a1adaf6defcf86d3df
Article Reference bcce1f3219e54163b423e599ceef15b2
Article Reference C source code 86221e0778a34ceea19aebcf80e2e2fc
Inproceedings Reference A new specimen shows that Jeholornis and Jixianornis are the same species
Inproceedings Reference New facts on the history of the first Asian dinosaurs.
Inproceedings Reference Bone War in Belgium: Who discovered the Bernissart Iguanodons? Dinosaurs, their Kith and Kin
Inproceedings Reference New data on latest Cretaceous hadrosaurids from Russia and north-eastern China
Inproceedings Reference Brain of ornithopod dinosaurs and new characters for phylogenetic analyses
Inproceedings Reference Late Cretaceous biota and the K-Pg Boundary in Jiayin
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