نتایج جستجو برای: stable isotopes

تعداد نتایج: 276152  

Journal: :Science & justice : journal of the Forensic Science Society 2009
Nicola Farmer James Curran David Lucy Niamh Nic Daeid Wolfram Meier-Augenstein

Arson is a significant problem around the world, and is a crime which results in a low number of convictions. The scene of an arson can be varied, commercial, residential or national park, and recently cases have been identified which were initiated by a lit match. Matches can be recovered from a scene, usually in a burnt condition. The benefit of analysing unburnt matches has been researched p...

2017
Xueshu Xie Roman A. Zubarev

Isotopic compositions of reactants affect the rates of chemical and biochemical reactions. Usually it is assumed that heavy stable isotope enrichment leads to progressively slower reactions. Yet the effect of stable isotopes may be nonlinear, as exemplified by the "isotopic resonance" phenomenon. Since the isotopic compositions of other planets of Solar system, including Mars and Venus, are mar...

2009
Katharine R. Hendry Rosalind E.M. Rickaby Michael P. Meredith Henry Elderfield

Article history: The polar foraminifera Ne Received 17 March 2008 Received in revised form 18 November 2008 Accepted 20 November 2008 Available online 13 January 2009 Editor: P. DeMenocal

2018
Cristina Valdiosera Torsten Günther Juan Carlos Vera-Rodríguez Irene Ureña Eneko Iriarte Ricardo Rodríguez-Varela Luciana G Simões Rafael M Martínez-Sánchez Emma M Svensson Helena Malmström Laura Rodríguez José-María Bermúdez de Castro Eudald Carbonell Alfonso Alday José Antonio Hernández Vera Anders Götherström José-Miguel Carretero Juan Luis Arsuaga Colin I Smith Mattias Jakobsson

Population genomic studies of ancient human remains have shown how modern-day European population structure has been shaped by a number of prehistoric migrations. The Neolithization of Europe has been associated with large-scale migrations from Anatolia, which was followed by migrations of herders from the Pontic steppe at the onset of the Bronze Age. Southwestern Europe was one of the last par...

Journal: :Ecology Letters 2007
Craig A Layman John P Quattrochi Caroline M Peyer Jacob E Allgeier Katharine Suding

Much research has focused on identifying species that are susceptible to extinction following ecosystem fragmentation, yet even those species that persist in fragmented habitats may have fundamentally different ecological roles than conspecifics in unimpacted areas. Shifts in trophic role induced by fragmentation, especially of abundant top predators, could have transcendent impacts on food web...

Journal: :Trends in ecology & evolution 2004
Dustin R Rubenstein Keith A Hobson

Establishing patterns of movement of wild animals is crucial for our understanding of their ecology, life history and behavior, and is a prerequisite for their effective conservation. Advances in the use of stable isotope markers make it possible to track a diversity of animal species in a variety of habitats. This approach is revolutionizing the way in which we make connections between phases ...

2017
Kristin Haynert Mirijam Kiggen Bernhard Klarner Mark Maraun Stefan Scheu

Mesofauna taxa fill key trophic positions in soil food webs, even in terrestrial-marine boundary habitats characterized by frequent natural disturbances. Salt marshes represent such boundary habitats, characterized by frequent inundations increasing from the terrestrial upper to the marine pioneer zone. Despite the high abundance of soil mesofauna in salt marshes and their important function by...

Journal: :Science & justice : journal of the Forensic Science Society 2008
Wolfram Meier-Augenstein Isla Fraser

The relationship between diet, geographic location and isotopic composition of human tissue has been successfully exploited in archaeological and palaeodietary studies, i.e. on ancient man, but cases in which this approach has been applied to present-day people e.g. to aid identification of mutilated or deteriorated bodies are far and few between. Stable isotope data are presented here from a c...

2008
M. H. Farpoor H. R. Krouse

Article history: Stable isotope geochemistry Received 15 March 2008 Received in revised form 29 May 2008 Accepted 4 June 2008 Available online 30 June 2008

2009
Brice X. Semmens Eric J. Ward Jonathan W. Moore Chris T. Darimont

Variability in resource use defines the width of a trophic niche occupied by a population. Intra-population variability in resource use may occur across hierarchical levels of population structure from individuals to subpopulations. Understanding how levels of population organization contribute to population niche width is critical to ecology and evolution. Here we describe a hierarchical stabl...

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