Results 101 to 110 of about 9,310 (247)

Mollusken im Auengrünland des Biosphärenreservates Mittelelbe vor und nach dem extremen Sommerhochwasser 2002 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
Hochwasserereignisse sind von besonderer Bedeutung, da sie die Auenlandschaft räumlich und zeitlich strukturieren und so eine große Vielfalt an Habitaten schaffen.
Deichner, Oskar   +5 more
core  

On inscriptions from Asia Minor II

open access: yesGephyra, 2011
This article proposes thoughts and corrections to three inscriptions: 1. In a text from near Nikaia in Bithynia, the word “Leukes” after the mention of Zeus is interpreted as the genitive of the name of the village “Leuke”, not as a personal name.
Thomas Corsten
doaj  

Таблиці для визначення молюсків родин Lithoglyphidae, Melanopsidae, Вithyniidae [PDF]

open access: yes, 2002
Наводяться таблиці для визначення підродин, родів і видів Lithoglyphidae, Melanopsidae ...
Градовський, В. М.
core  

The funerary inscription of Gaius Tarquitius

open access: yesGephyra, 2011
This article presents a fragmentary inscription of a Roman soldier named Gaius Tarquitius who served probably as an ordinary soldier or as a middle-ranking officer at best in what presumably was an auxiliary cohort. Perhaps of Bithynian extraction, Gaius
Konrad Stauner
doaj  

Inscriptions of unknown soldiers of the Roman army

open access: yesGephyra, 2012
This article presents three fragmentary inscriptions of Roman soldiers: no. 1 mentions an officer, probably a prefect of a cohort; no. 2 is the funerary inscription of a legionary tribune and no.
Konrad Stauner, Livia Stauner
doaj  

GASTROPODS AND BIVALVES OF THE MIDDLE ANISIAN FROM KOKAELI PENINSULA (TURKEY)

open access: yesRivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia, 2020
Aim of this paper is the description of a faunule of gastropods and bivalves found associated with ammonites belonging to the Pelsonian from Kokaeli Peninsula (Turkey), a region named in the past Bithynia.
N. FANTINI SESTINI
doaj  

New Grave Inscriptions in the Museum of Bursa

open access: yesGephyra, 2010
The Museum of Bursa has a huge number of archaeological and epigraphic artifacts primarily from Bithynia, Mysia and Phrygia. In 2004 we began to continually record the inscriptions that had been brought to the museum since 1993.
N. Akyürek Şahin, Fatih Onur
doaj  

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