Results 61 to 70 of about 1,765 (143)
ABSTRACT The Lake Volvi area, part of the region of Macedonia (northern Greece), is a biodiversity hotspot, located in the central part of a major communication corridor connecting the western and eastern parts of the Balkans. The sediment succession from Lake Volvi is investigated here to provide a unique high‐resolution pollen and geochemical record ...
Lucrezia Masci +14 more
wiley +1 more source
A dynamic explanation for the origin of the western Mediterranean organic-rich layers [PDF]
The eastern Mediterranean sapropels are among the most intensively investigated phenomena in the paleoceanographic record, but relatively little has been written regarding the origin of the equivalent of the sapropels in the western Mediterranean, the ...
Allen +78 more
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT Soil erosion across South Africa's drylands occurs widely in the form of gullies and badlands (locally termed dongas) that have developed in colluvium and in valley fills along incised rivers. This erosion has commonly been attributed to land mismanagement, particularly since European settlement, but natural factors such as soil properties ...
Richard Lyons +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Using pollen in turbidites for vegetation reconstructions
ABSTRACT Turbidites, deposited by sub‐aqueous gravity flows, are common in sedimentary archives worldwide and present a unique challenge and opportunity when reconstructing past vegetation through pollen analysis. When sampling pollen from a sediment core for palaeovegetation records, it is common practice to target background sediments (i.e.
Laura S. McDonald +10 more
wiley +1 more source
This study presents a high-resolution palaeoclimate reconstruction based on a radiocarbon-dated 240 cm deep trench profile from Renuka Lake, Northwestern Himalaya, India.
Anupam Nag +3 more
doaj +1 more source
The Eemian calcareous tufa formation of Caours provides one of the best‐dated records of the last interglacial from fluvial terrace systems in NW Europe, and on the same site, a unique succession of four Palaeolithic layers attributed to Neanderthals, rich in large mammal remains. The tufa, firmly dated to 123.1±2.8 ka on the basis of 25 ages (mainly U‐
Pierre Antoine +12 more
wiley +1 more source
Living in Sangiran: A spatial reconstruction of hominin environment in Java at 1 Ma
This study focuses on analysing and testing the relationship between Homo erectus behaviour and environmental dynamics in Sangiran, Java, at the time around 1 Ma.
Mika R. Puspaningrum +7 more
doaj +1 more source
Stratigraphy and chronology of a 15ka sequence of multi-sourced silicic tephras in a montane peat bog, eastern North Island, New Zealand. [PDF]
We document the stratigraphy, composition, and chronology of a succession of 16 distal, silicic tephra layers interbedded with lateglacial and Holocene peats and muds up to c. 15 000 radiocarbon years (c.
Lowe, David J. +2 more
core +2 more sources
The first complete genome of the extinct European wild ass (Equus hemionus hydruntinus)
Abstract We present palaeogenomes of three morphologically unidentified Anatolian equids dating to the first millennium BCE, sequenced to a coverage of 0.6–6.4×. Mitochondrial DNA haplotypes of the Anatolian individuals clustered with those of Equus hydruntinus (or Equus hemionus hydruntinus), the extinct European wild ass, secular name ‘hydruntine ...
Mustafa Özkan +23 more
wiley +1 more source
Carbon isotope signatures from land snail shells: Implications for palaeovegetation reconstruction in the eastern Mediterranean [PDF]
In this studywecompare carbon isotope values inmodern Helix melanostoma shell carbonate (d13Cshell) from the Gebel al-Akhdar region of Libya with carbon isotope values in H.
A.L. Prendergast +71 more
core +1 more source

