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Résultats de la recherche (12 résultats)

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Par Collection Par Auteur Par Date Par Sujet Par Titre
  • Dungeness foreland: its shingle ridges and what lies under them
  • Accumulation littorale ; Ancien rivage ; Cinétique géomorphique ; Dungeness ; England ; Flèche littorale ; Galet ; Géographie physique ; Géomorphodynamique ; Holocène ; Littoral ; Quaternaire marin ; Royaume-Uni ; Sable
  • Etude de cinétique géomorphique depuis 4500 BP sur la pointe de Dungeness. (CM).
  • Fungal remains in Pleistocene ground squirrel dung from Yukon Territory, Canada
  • Fungi in dung of the Arctic ground squirrel (Spermophilus parryii) collected near Dominion Creek, Yukon Territory, Canada, have a radiocarbon age of 12.200 100 yr BP. Most of the fungal remains are assignable to modern taxa, and most
  • of these are either widespread saprobes or nonspecific coprophiles, However, specimens identified as Chaetomium simile and Thecaphora deformans represent fungi that may be more characteristic of rodent dung than that of other animals, inviting consideration of dung
  • Dung of Mammuthus in the arid Southwest, North America
  • The discovery of a unique organic deposit in a dry cave on the Colorado Plateau, southern Utah, permits the first comparison of the physical characteristics and the diet of the dung of the extinct mammoths from the arid Southwest, North America
  • Fifteen radiocarbon dates of sloth dung obtained since 1974 strengthen the hypothesis that sloth extinction occurred about 11,000 yr B. P. Paleoenvironmental studies indicate that ground sloths lived in juniper woodlands and montane conifer
  • VAN DEVENDER, T. R.
  • Spores of the dung fungus Sporormiella : increased abundance in historic sediments and before Pleistocene megafaunal extinction
  • Evidence of episodic coastal change during the Late Holocene : the Dungeness barrier complex, SE England
  • , the inter-relationship and inter-dependence between gravel barrier and marshland environments, and, ultimately, the significance of relative sea-level rise, coastal morphology, storm events, and sediment supply in shaping the Dungeness and Romney Marsh
  • of snow and the biggest depth of frozen soil in the past 45 years, the water level area of 4 lakes at the south-east of Nagqu, Tibet including Bam Co, Pung Co, Dung Co and Nuripung Co show a distinct trend of expansion in the past 30 years. That is closely