Results 231 to 240 of about 80,132 (286)
The Oldest Traces of Alcoholic Beverages in the Border Zone of the North and East European Plains
ABSTRACT Analysis of organic compounds preserved on pottery from the Bell Beaker community and the initial phase of the Trzciniec Cultural Sphere in the border zone of the Eastern and North European Plains was prompted by traces of alcoholic beverages found in contextually and formally analogous discoveries of more westerly provenance.
Dariusz Manasterski +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Physicians' Overwork Impacts Patient Satisfaction via Physician-Nurse Collaboration and Patients' Medical Risk Perception in China. [PDF]
Zhou K, Xin Y, Li M, Chen L.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT As the capital of Makuria, Tungul was a major sociopolitical center within medieval Nubia, being the seat of a bishopric and a monastic community. During the excavation of the Kom H monastery, three burial crypts (Crypts 1–3) were uncovered.
Robert J. Stark +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Geochemical data compiled from dried sediments from three water reservoirs at the ancient Maya city of Ucanal, Petén, Guatemala, reveal low to undetectable fecal biomarker concentrations. These low concentrations may be the result of the aerobic decay of sterols combined with well‐managed waste disposal practices.
Jean D. Tremblay +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Artificial intelligence chatbots mimic human collective behaviour
Abstract Artificial Intelligence (AI) chatbots, such as ChatGPT, have been shown to mimic individual human behaviour in a wide range of psychological and economic tasks. Do groups of AI chatbots also mimic collective behaviour? If so, artificial societies of AI chatbots may aid social scientific research by simulating human collectives.
James K. He +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Algunos aspectos sobre la construcción del personaje en el teatro conservado de Hernán López de Yanguas (1487-¿?) [PDF]
Espejo, Javier
core
Untangling nutrient co‐regulation of ombrotrophic peatland development
Multi‐method (FTIR, FT‐NIR and TGA) approaches characterizing the organic peat constituents at Holcroft Moss reveal a record of switches that reflect broadly hydroclimate variability governing the decomposition patterns. There are periods, however, where hydroclimate does not fully explain the variability observed and instead changes appear linked to ...
Richard C. Chiverrell +6 more
wiley +1 more source

