Results 41 to 50 of about 1,851 (220)
Five decades of hand‐feel soil texture estimation: Accuracy, challenges, and improvements
Abstract Soil texture refers to the proportion of fine soil particles with diameters less than 2 mm, classified into particle size categories that define the soil texture class. Hand‐feel estimation in the field is widely used by soil scientists and technicians during pedological surveys to characterize soil horizons.
Roberto Barbetti +4 more
wiley +1 more source
English literature on the Ottoman Turks in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries [PDF]
In the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century a large and complex English literature on the Ottoman Turks developed, characterised by its diversity in form, content, opinion and context.
INGRAM, ANDERS, Ingram, Anders
core
The Phenomenon of Creepiness in a Digital Marketing World
ABSTRACT Creepiness is a potential negative emotional response by consumers toward the digital data‐driven personalization of marketing efforts. This phenomenon has become increasingly prevalent with the rise of advanced (AI) technologies and inexpensive data collection.
Alisa Petrova +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Figures mythiques et histoire. Réinterprétations et contrastes entre Orient et Occident
The history of the Islamic East is marked by great personages who are considered as models and Founding Fathers. Some of them are of Islamic origin, others have been inherited from Antiquity or the Bible.
Denise Aigle
doaj +1 more source
A revised classification of Rubiaceae subfamily Rubioideae tribe Rubieae*
Abstract In its current circumscription, Rubiaceae subfam. Rubioideae tribe Rubieae consists of 18 genera, i.e., Asperula, Callipeltis, Castrila, Crucianella, Cruciata, Cynanchica, Didymaea, Galium, Hexaphylla, Kelloggia, Mericarpaea, Microphysa, Phuopsis, Pseudogalium, Rubia, Sherardia, Thliphthisa and Valantia.
Joachim W. Kadereit +1 more
wiley +1 more source
This study maps 160 years of extreme precipitation risks across the Middle East, uncovering a significant rise in high‐risk areas from 10% to 35% by 2100 under high‐emission scenarios. Northwestern Iran and Turkey emerge as critical hotspots, urging immediate climate adaptation measures.
Poya Fakour +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Fish and Fishery in Ancient Turks
This paper addresses the meaning of the word fish not only in the modern Turkish, but also in ancient historical texts. Besides, it describes the role of fishing in the life of the Turkic tribes, as well as the image of fish in art. In this respect, the word fish, which corresponds in its meaning to ‘city’ and ‘animal’, is explained in the light of ...
openaire +1 more source
On iron metallurgy and related questions in ancient Xinjiang during the Xiong-nu and Turks Periods
Xinjiang, China is an important region for the history of ancient metallurgy in Inner Eurasia. In this article, the author discusses iron metallurgy in ancient Xinjiang from the Han to Tang Periods, from the third century BCE to the tenth century CE, i.e.
Wensuo Liu
doaj
Weaponizing Nature, Naturalizing Violence: Anthropologies of Ecofascism
ABSTRACT After decades of denial and obstruction, the global Right is increasingly willing to acknowledge that climate change is a threat to lives and lifeways everywhere. Moreover, some seize on the specter of ecological collapse to advance fascistic politics.
Chloe Ahmann +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Enduring Crises of the Nation‐State: How Spatial Imaginations Reshape Identity and Dis/Unity
ABSTRACT This article reframes the contemporary “crisis” of the nation‐state not as a simple erosion of sovereignty but as a problem of spatial misalignment: adaptive states remain strategically embedded in dense transnational regimes, yet domestic legitimacy falters when unitary national imaginaries confront heterogeneous, multi‐sited social realities.
Erdem Bekaroğlu, Suat Yazan
wiley +1 more source

