نتایج جستجو برای: cave mining

تعداد نتایج: 93589  

1961
Oliver C. Lloyd

Wer e ve no record of the discussions which the founders must have had, when they \veJe ^ec*ding the terms of the lectureship, so we don't really know what these lectures aU(f SuPPose(i to accomplish. They were to be to a mixed medical and non-medical ref,renceV which rules out anything too rarefied, and the scope given in the terms of scierencf*s a wide one> namely "a subject connected with me...

Journal: :Environmental microbiology 2007
Jennifer L Macalady Daniel S Jones Ezra H Lyon

The sulfide-rich Frasassi cave system hosts an aphotic, subsurface microbial ecosystem including extremely acidic (pH 0-1), viscous biofilms (snottites) hanging from the cave walls. We investigated the diversity and population structure of snottites from three locations in the cave system using full cycle rRNA methods and culturing. The snottites were composed primarily of bacteria related to A...

2009
Loren K. Ammerman Molly McDonough Nickolay I. Hristov Thomas H. Kunz

Emory Cave in west Texas, USA is one of the few natural roost sites used by the endangered Mexican long-nosed bat Leptonycteris nivalis in the United States. Despite concern over declines in population size, no reliable methods have been developed for censusing colonies of this species that are both accurate and minimize disruption to the colony. The objective of this study was to use non-invas...

2017
Michael W. Hastriter Kelly B. Miller Gavin J. Svenson Gavin J. Martin Michael F. Whiting

Lagaropsylla signata (Wahlgren, 1903), previously known only from the Island of Java, Indonesia is redescribed and reported for the first time in Deer Cave, Gunung Mulu National Park, Sarawak, Malaysia (west coast of Borneo). Many were found clinging to the earwig Arixenia esau Jordan, 1909. A similar account of a phoretic flea (Lagaropsylla turba Smit, 1958) on the same species of cave-dwellin...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Melanie Pruvost Rebecca Bellone Norbert Benecke Edson Sandoval-Castellanos Michael Cieslak Tatyana Kuznetsova Arturo Morales-Muñiz Terry O'Connor Monika Reissmann Michael Hofreiter Arne Ludwig

Archaeologists often argue whether Paleolithic works of art, cave paintings in particular, constitute reflections of the natural environment of humans at the time. They also debate the extent to which these paintings actually contain creative artistic expression, reflect the phenotypic variation of the surrounding environment, or focus on rare phenotypes. The famous paintings "The Dappled Horse...

2014
Damian Moran Rowan Softley Eric J. Warrant Ralph E. Mistlberger

The eyed surface form and eyeless cave form of the Mexican tetra Astyanax mexicanus experience stark differences in the daily periodicities of light, food and predation, factors which are likely to have a profound influence on metabolism. We measured the metabolic rate of Pachón cave and surface fish at a fixed swimming speed under light/dark and constant dark photoperiods. In constant darkness...

2016
Sébastien Nomade Dominique Genty Romain Sasco Vincent Scao Valérie Féruglio Dominique Baffier Hervé Guillou Camille Bourdier Hélène Valladas Edouard Reigner Evelyne Debard Jean–François Pastre Jean-Michel Geneste Michael D. Petraglia

Among the paintings and engravings found in the Chauvet-Pont d'Arc cave (Ardèche, France), several peculiar spray-shape signs have been previously described in the Megaloceros Gallery. Here we document the occurrence of strombolian volcanic activity located 35 km northwest of the cave, and visible from the hills above the cave entrance. The volcanic eruptions were dated, using 40Ar/39Ar, betwee...

2013
Richard Borowsky Dana Cohen

The cave environment is consistently radically different than the surface environment because it lacks light, and animals adapting to cave life are subject to strong selective forces much different than those experienced by their ancestors who evolved in the presence of light. As such, their divergence from surface ancestors and eventual speciation is likely to be driven by the shift in ecology...

Journal: :J. Geographic Information System 2011
R. Gallotti A. Mohib M. El Graoui F. Z. Sbihi-Alaoui J.-P. Raynal

The Mio-Plio-Pleistocene sequence at Casablanca, covering the last six million years, is well known in scientific literature. The variability and the chronology of the Acheulian sequence is documented by systematic, modern and controlled investigations in various sites (Unit L and Hominid Cave at Thomas I Quarry, Rhinoceros Cave at Oulad Hamida 1 Quarry, Sidi Abderrahman Extension Quarry, Bear’...

2012
Ylenia Chiari Arie van der Meijden Mauro Mucedda João M. Lourenço Axel Hochkirch Michael Veith

Detecting the factors that determine the interruption of gene flow between populations is key to understanding how speciation occurs. In this context, caves are an excellent system for studying processes of colonization, differentiation and speciation, since they represent discrete geographical units often with known geological histories. Here, we asked whether discontinuous calcareous areas an...

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