Besides being important components of landscape‐level biodiversity, medicinal plants are essential resources for traditional and modern healthcare. However, human‐driven biodiversity loss has resulted in the decline of medicinal plant populations. By maintaining connections between nature, culture, and people, sacred natural sites can help counteract ...
Rita Engel +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Earliest evidence of smoke-dried mummification: More than 10,000 years ago in southern China and Southeast Asia. [PDF]
Hung HC +22 more
europepmc +1 more source
Archaeological explorations in Peru. Part III, Textiles of the early Nazca period
Lila M. O'Nealé, Paul Martín
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The urgency of genetic decline in New Brunswick butternut, Juglans cinerea L.
Butternut is yet another North American tree species undergoing rapid mortality due to the globalization of forest pathogens. Pairing tree health surveys and genetic diversity metrics, we captured a 7‐year snapshot of butternut's path to extirpation from its distinct range in New Brunswick, Canada.
Berni M. van der Meer +3 more
wiley +1 more source
New methods on the block: Taxonomic identification of archaeological bones in resin-embedded sediments through paleoproteomics. [PDF]
Fagernäs Z +14 more
europepmc +1 more source
Archaeological Evidence on the Diffusion and Evolution of Maize in Northeastern Mexico
Paul C. Mangelsdorf +2 more
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Pre-Historic Rhodesia: An Examination of the Ethnological and Archaeological Evidences as to the Origin and Age of the Rock Mines and Stone Buildings, with a Gazetteer of Mediaeval South-East Africa [PDF]
H. H. JOHNSTON, Richard Hall
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ABSTRACT Rationale Recent advances in high‐throughput molecular analyses of collagen peptides, especially ZooMS (Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry), have permitted breakthroughs in the analysis of archaeological material that is highly fragmented, a factor that hinders morphological identification.
Pauline Raymond +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Light on the Old Testament from Babel. By Albert T. Clay, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Semitic Philology and Archaeology, etc., in the University of Pennsylvania. (Philadelphia: The Sunday School Times Company, 1907.) [PDF]
T. G. Pinches
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ABSTRACT The lack of attention paid to low‐energy watercourses, particularly at the academic level, complicates the design, implementation, and evaluation of their ecological restoration. This article examines the case of the Vistre, a river in southern France, and its rehabilitation, based mainly on remeandering.
Serrhini‐Naji Ghita +4 more
wiley +1 more source

