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1.
The urban and ceremonial center Khonkho Wankane flourished in the southern Lake Titicaca Altiplano region during the Late Formative prior to the rise of Tiwanaku as a dominant urban center. This site yielded an avifaunal number of identified specimens (NISP) = 631, with a minimum of 26 taxa represented among 539 skeletal elements or fragments. A total of 92 egg shell fragments also were recovered. The avifauna inhabited two major ecological zones: Lake Titicaca, its margins/wetlands and other water margins; and the dry Altiplano grassland (or puna). Lake/wetland taxa include Phoenicopterus chilensis (Chilean flamingo), Nycticorax nycticorax (night heron) and multiple taxa in the Order Anseriformes (ducks, geese, etc.) including Chloephaga melanoptera (Andean goose), Anas georgica (yellow‐billed pintail), A. flavirostris (speckled teal) and Oxyura jamaicensis (Andean ruddyduck). Also present are Fulica ardesiaca (Andean coot), Gallinago andina (puna snipe), Himantopus mexicanus (black‐necked stilt) and Charadrius alticola (puna plover). Puna taxa include Nothoprocta cf. ornata (ornate tinamou), Nothura cf. darwinii (Darwin's nothura), Metropelia sp. (ground doves), Athene cunicularia (burrowing owl), and multiple Passeriformes (songbirds, etc.). Taxa with a cosmopolitan distribution include Falco cf. femoralis (aplomado falcon) and Tyto alba (barn owl). Taphonomic analysis indicates that the avifauna were used in ceremonial contexts, including multiple Falco cf. femoralis burials, and for dietary and possibly tool‐making purposes. Other sources of introduction into the site deposits likely include natural mortality of taxa directly inhabiting the site area. These findings are compared to the avifauna recovered from the Formative site of Chiripa along the Lake Titicaca margin, which included a much higher proportion of lake bird fauna. At Khonkho Wankane, the importance of wetland avifauna may have been enhanced by the alteration of the local environment to include qochas, or artificial reservoirs/ponds, and continued despite reliance upon multiple domesticated plant and mammal species. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
Ordovician graptolite-bearing strata in eastern Yunnan were deposited in nearshore, shallow-water environments. Graptolites are systematically described from three sections through the Hungshihyen Formation in eastern Yunnan Province, China: (1) Hongshiya section near Ercun village, Kunming; (2) Liujiang section, Luquan; and (3) Guihuaqing Reservoir section, Luquan. The graptolite fauna, characterized by the predominance of deflexed forms, includes ten species in two genera: Baltograptus turgidus (Lee), B. varicosus (Wang), B. yunnanensis (Li), B. calidus (Ni), B. enshiensis (Ni), Baltograptus sp. cf. B. deflexus (Elles & Wood), Baltograptus sp. cf. B. bolivianus (Finney & Branisa), Baltograptus sp. A, Baltograptus sp. B and Corymbograptus v-fractus minor (Li). A detailed morphological study of these southern Chinese graptolite faunas suggests that Baltograptus wudingensis (Li) is a junior synonym of B. turgidus (Lee); Baltograptus kunmingensis (Ni) is a junior synonym of B. varicosus (Wang); and Baltograptus triangulatus (Ni) is a junior synonym of B. yunnanensis (Li). The B. varicosus Biozone is newly recognized within the middle part of the Hungshihyen Formation, replacing the former Didymograptus deflexus Biozone. This interval is well correlated to the Baltograptus jacksoni Biozone in Britain, the Tetragraptus akzharensis, ‘Baltograptus cf. deflexus’ and Didymograptus bifidus (lower part) biozones in NW Argentina (eastern Cordillera), and the Acrograptus filiformis and Didymograptellus eobifidus biozones in northern Guizhou, South China. Accordingly, the interval is of mid-Floian age, rather than late Floian as previously proposed.  相似文献   

3.
The main objective of this paper is to suggest an alternative approach for the investigation of domestication in the Levant. First, basic data regarding domestication in the Levant are presented. Then the various traditional approaches towards domestication in the prehistoric Levant, labeled (1) environmental, (2) social and anthropological, and (3) cognitive, are briefly reviewed. This discussion forms the basis for a proposal of a “holistic approach,” in which domestication is regarded as a long-term, multidimensional and multirelational phenomenon, including many elements—such as plants, animals, humans, material culture and ancestors—with increasing human manipulation of these various constituents. After a presentation of the theoretical framework, a growth metaphor is used to reconstruct the process of domestication (ca. 20,000–6500 B.P.) as a number of phases: (1) germination in the Kebaran; (2) development in the Early Natufian; (3) retreat/dormancy in the Late/Final Natufian; (4) growth in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A; (5) florescence in the Early- and Middle Pre-Pottery Neolithic B: (6) further development in the Late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B; (7) dispersal in the Final Pre-Pottery Neolithic B and the Pottery Neolithic. In each of these phases, relations between the various elements are dealt with, special attention being paid to symbolical relations, as evidenced by “art” and ritual.  相似文献   

4.
In light of recent reflexive ethnography based on frameworks of performativity, this work develops a phenomenological interpretation of my white, male, gaijin (foreign), English-speaking positionality inside Japan's private English conversation schools (eikaiwa). These eikaiwa are ubiquitous in modern urban areas. They are patronized predominantly by women who seek career enhancement, study and/or work abroad, and international romance. To understand the gendered participation patterns inside the eikaiwa I develop a phenomenological understanding of my positionality through a framework based on Occidentalism. This framework is grounded in the ideo-geographically specific notions of seken (surveillance) and akogare (desire). Akogare is instantiated and intensified inside eikaiwa by the performative aspects of staff, students and instructor practices in addition to eikaiwa texts and advertising and popular media discourses while seken, especially gender-normative seken, directed at women is minimized. This framework allows me to present a nuanced account of the interaction of my positionalities with those of the informants.  相似文献   

5.
Yates, A.M., December, 2008. Two new cowries (Gastropoda: Cypraeidae) from the middle Miocene of South Australia. Alcheringa 32, 353–364. ISSN 0311-5518.

The South Australian specimens of the cypraeids Umbilia leptorhyncha (McCoy, 1877) and Lyncina (Austrocypraea) contusa (McCoy, 1877) are re-examined. Umbilia caepa sp. nov. differs from U. leptorhyncha in its smaller size, more strongly pyriform shape, weaker and less extensive apertural dentition, plate-like columellar margin of the posterior canal and more extensive basal flanges. True U. leptorhyncha is also recorded from the Cadell Formation of South Australia, demonstrating that the two species were sympatric in the Murray Basin. The specimens originally referred to Cypraea contusa var. from the Cadell Formation have had a confusing taxonomic history and they are here named as a new species Lyncina (Austrocypraea) cadella sp. nov. The new species differs from true L. (A.) contusa in its smaller size, less extensive malleations of the dorsal surface, fewer apertural teeth and a projecting internal margin of the fossula. These two new species boost a small but growing list of species that were endemic to the Murray Basin during the middle Miocene.  相似文献   

6.
Zhen, Y.Y. 9 July 2019. Revision of two phragmodontid species (Conodonta) from the Darriwilian (Ordovician) of the Canning Basin in Western Australia and phylogeny of the Cyrtoniodontidae. Alcheringa XX, xxx–xxx. ISSN 0311-5518

Based on re-examination of the material used in the original study from the subsurface Goldwyer and Nita Formations (middle Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician) of the Canning Basin, Western Australia, two phragmodontid species (Phragmodus polystrophos Watson and Ph. spicatus Watson) are revised as having a septimembrate apparatus including geniculate (Ph. polystrophos) or nongeniculate (Ph. spicatus) M, triform alate Sa, modified tertiopedate (Ph. polystrophos) or tripennate (Ph. spicatus) Sb, modified bipennate Sc, modified quadriramate Sd, carminate Pa and pastinate Pb elements. Characterized by a carminate Pa element in their respective species apparatuses, these two species demonstrate a close phylogenetic relationship with Phragmodus cognitus Stauffer from the Late Ordovician (Sandbian) of North America. These distinctive shared characters have allowed their accommodation within a new genus, Protophragmodus gen. nov., which represents an evolutionary lineage separated from species of Phragmodus Branson & Mehl (sensu stricto). In addition, it is postulated that the Cyrtoniodontidae might have originated in the early–middle Darriwilian from ‘Plectodina’ in shallow-water settings, with Phragmodus (sensu stricto), the most derived part of the family, perhaps directly evolving from Protophragmodus gen. nov. in the late Darriwilian and then becoming cosmopolitan, deeper-water dwellers in the Late Ordovician.

Y.Y. Zhen [], Geological Survey of New South Wales, W.B. Clarke Geoscience Centre, 947–953 Londonderry Road, Londonderry, NSW 2753, Australia.  相似文献   

7.
This reading is based on the assumption that the first five lines deal with the following three members of a Veronese family: (I) the younger Balbus (nato 5 identified by viro 1 and Caecilius 9), (II) his father, the older Balbus (parenti at 1 and senex at 4), and (III) the wife of Balbus the younger seen as the main target of the poem (the marita of 6 and, paradoxically, the virgo of 19); the assumption is that virgo is a reference to the sexual incapacity of a former husband from her time in Brixia. Badian's conjecture pacta (6) is defended, and two conjectures are proposed: incestus for illius (23) and quaerendu’ vir unde (27).  相似文献   

8.
Books Reviews     
《Nations & Nationalism》2002,8(1):111-129
Books reviewed: Mladen Lazic (ed.), Protest in Belgrade – Winter of Discontent. Malcolm Anderson, States and Nationalism in Europe since 1945. Ida Blom, Karen Hagemann and Catherine Hall (eds.), Gendered Nations: Nationalisms and Gender Order in the Long Nineteenth Century. Stephen May, Language and Minority Rights: Ethnicity, Nationalism and the Politics of Language. Shari J. Cohen, Politics without a Past. The Absence of History in Postcommunist Nationalism. Alison Palmer, Colonial Genocide. Michael King, Moriori: a People Rediscovered Gurharpal Singh, Ethnic Conflict in India: a Case Study of Punjab. Crispin Bates (ed.), Community, Empire and Migration: South Asians in Diaspora. Yoram Hazony, The Jewish State. Yaacov Ro’i, Islam in the Soviet Union. From World War II to Gorbachev. Marta Dyczok, Ukraine. Movement without Change, Change without Movement. Neboj?a Popov (ed.), The Road to War in Serbi – Trauma and Catharsis. Ger Duijzings, Religion and the Politics of Identity in Kosovo. Julie A. Mertus, Kosovo – How Myths and Truths Started a War.  相似文献   

9.
This article focuses on the current shifts in expressions of Cuban national identity by considering the articulations of cubanidad and cubanía in recent documentary films from Cuba's Muestra joven. Rather than suggesting a disappearance or deterioration of national identity, these three examples of contemporary Cuban cinema evidence a more fluid, sentiment-based articulation of Cubanness that can be considered the island's élan vital. This analysis of representations of the ongoing transformation of Cuba deploys theories and terms conceptualised by Georg Sorenson in The Transformation of the State: Beyond the Myth of Retreat (2004) in order to posit how cubanidad is aligned with the modes of citizenship (the official), which is a sense of Cubanness defined by a rationality that may be imposed, while cubanía is affined with a sentiment fuelled by intuition (the personal). Thus we propose that just as the Muestra joven embodies the current vacillation and movement of Cuban cinema between citizenship and sentiment, so deMoler (Muestra 2004), Model Town (Muestra 2007) and La Época, el Encanto y Fin de Siglo (Muestra 2000) indicate a process of reinterpretation and rupture in a context of flux instead of rigidity.  相似文献   

10.
Trilobites are common faunal elements in the Melbourne Formation, a unit of early Ludlow (upper nilssoni Biozone) age, which crops out extensively in the Darraweit Guim Province of the Melbourne Zone, central Victoria. New diagnoses are given for species previously described, including Maurotarion euryceps (McCoy, 1876; = Cyphaspis spryi Gregory, 1901), Raphiophorus jikaensis (Chapman, 1912; = Ampyx yarraensis Chapman, 1912), Cromus simpliciculus (Talent, 1964), Cromus spryi (Chapman, 1912), Sthenarocalymene kilmorensis (Gill, 1945; = Gravicalymene hetera Gill, 1945) and Trimerus harrisoni (McCoy, 1876). A new phacopid genus, Orygmatos is described, represented by the species O. yanyeani gen. et sp. nov. Other species newly described include Cromus melbournensis sp. nov., Arcticalymene australis sp. nov., “Ananaspis” woiwurrungi sp. nov. and Kettneraspis hollowayi sp. nov.

Species composition of the trilobite fauna varies spatially, and a number of distinct assemblages can be defined. Abundant trilobite moult configurations are conclusive for interpretation of the benthic fauna as autochthonous, inferring depth estimations based on benthic community distribution to be valid. A depth-related succession of communities is recognised and indicate the Melbourne Formation was deposited at relatively shallow depths on a broad, eastwardly deepening shelf, with deposition dominated by storm processes. The palaeoenvironment comprised a BA-1 community including the Arcticalymene australis trilobite assemblage, restricted to very shallow depths (~20 m) on the SW coastal margin of the shelf and preserved in proximal tempestite lithologies; and a BA-5 community group containing three distinct trilobite assemblages dominated by species of Cromus and a deeper water fauna, preserved in distal tempestite lithologies and ranging widely over the shelf at depths in the range of maximum storm wave base (~50 – 80 m).  相似文献   

11.

In Polyb. 21,7,1–4 there are several words that are used in a particular sense not (clearly) accounted for in our dictionaries, notably LSJ. The words are: (1) πuρ?óρō?, device in the shape of a funnel used for throwing fire, (2) κημó?, receptacle in the shape ōι a funnel or basket used for throwing fire, fire‐basket, (3) αγκúλη, loop or case for fastening poles resembling bowsprits, (4) κōντó?, particular kind ōι bowsprit carrying a receptacle for fire (κημó?), (5) εμβōλń and παρεμβōλń, ramming through frontal, and front lateral, attack respectively, (6) εκταρ?ττōμαι, Med., stir violently and throw out.  相似文献   

12.
Physical parameters of petroleum‐bearing fluid inclusions such as bulk density (ρ), molar volume (Vm), vapour volume fraction (?vap) and homogenization temperature (Th) are essential information to model petroleum composition (x) in inclusions and to reconstruct palaeotemperature and palaeopressure of trapping. For the main petroleum types contained in a fluid inclusion, we can follow how ?vap and Th are simultaneously influenced by a change of bulk density in a ?vap versus Th projection. We have correlated Th and ?vap for different petroleum compositions for a large range of bulk density values. However, postentrapment events under new pressure (P) and temperature (T) conditions can greatly modify the initial fingerprints of physical conditions and chemical composition of fluid inclusions. Re‐equilibration is frequent, especially in the case of fragile minerals. Stretching and leakage phenomenon have been simulated using the Petroleum Inclusion Thermodynamics (pit ) software, from virtual petroleum inclusions with known hydrocarbon composition. The aim of these simulations is to understand how ?vap and Th evolve with these re‐equilibration phenomena, with respect to the oil composition. Results of stretching simulations show a characteristic increase of Th and ?vap along correlation curves, with the curve shape dependent on petroleum composition. Leakage simulations show an increase of Th and a smaller increase or even a decrease in ?vap. Consequently, the better preserved inclusions in a given population can be presumed to be those that have the lowest Th. Applications of Th and ?vap measurements of natural inclusions in calcite and in quartz showed that the fragility of the host mineral is a key factor allowing the recording of post‐entrapment events. Inclusions that have stretched or leaked are identified and the best preserved inclusions selected for evaluation of P–T–x trapping conditions. Moreover, petroleum types trapped in inclusions can be identified from ?vap and Th measurements without compositional modelling.  相似文献   

13.
The Agnostida are the most important part of the fauna of the Abbey Shales, which is the best-known middle St David's (Middle Cambrian) sequence in Britain. Revision of Illing's (1916) collections allows a correlation of the Paradoxides hicksii fauna with Westergaard's (1946) Ptychagnostus atavus-Tomagnostus fissus Zone, and the Paradoxides davidis fauna with Westergaard's Hypagnostus parvifrons Zone and Ptychagnostus punctuosus Zone (based on the Swedish sequence). A Metadiscus sp. is described. Six species of Condylopygidae are discussed, of which three show a pygidial ‘fringe’. Eleven species of Quadragnostinae, three of Ptychagnostinae (one showing a hypostome), and four of Tomagnostinae (including young growth-stages) are illustrated or discussed. Two species of Diplagnostidae, one species of Phalacroma and two of Phalagnostus are illustrated.  相似文献   

14.
Twenty‐six tesserae (red, orange, yellow, light amber, green, blue and white) from the balneum of the villa at Faragola (Ascoli Satriano, Foggia) have been examined by colorimetry, ICP–MS, ICP–OES and SEM–EDS. Different types of calcareous sands have been used as the source of silica (network former), also providing the stabilizing agent. A natron‐type soda source served as the network modifier; however, the use of a sodium‐rich plant ash and the recycling process have been hypothesized for the production of two tesserae (FT 1 red and FT 3 orange). The colouring and opacifying agents were Cu oxide (cuprite, orange), metallic copper (red), Pb antimonates (yellow), Ca antimonates (white), a mixture of copper (Cu2+) and Pb antimonates (green), a mixture of cobalt (Co2+) or copper (Cu2+) and Ca antimonates (blue). The light amber tesserae should owe their colour to iron (Fe3+) alone or associated with sulphide (S2?) and Ca antimonates. It is likely that the Faragola tesserae were locally produced in a secondary glass workshop.  相似文献   

15.
This study examines an ensemble of Romanesque churches in the region of Val d’Aran in the Spanish Pyrenees, built between the 11th and 13th centuries. Seven topographical studies performed between 2014 and 2015 examined these churches systematically using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) as a data‐acquisition technique. The data obtained allowed for a geometrically accurate analysis of the orientation of these churches based on four Romanesque liturgies: Gemma animae (c.1120), by Honorius of Autun; Rationale divinorum officiorum (c.1150), by Jean Beleth; Mitralis de Officio (1190), by Sicard, Bishop of Cremona; and Prochiron, vulgo rationale divinorum officiorum (1291), by Guillaume Durand.  相似文献   

16.
The five known species of pentameride brachiopods from the Yass Syncline Ludlow (LateSilurian) succession, belonging to the superfamilies Pentameroidea, Gypiduloidea and Clorindoidea, are fully revised; no new species are recognised. The pentameroids Conchidium sp. cf. hospes and Aliconchidium yassi are confined to the Bowspring Limestone Member (Silverdale Formation). The gypiduloid Ascanigypa glabra and externally homeomorphic clorindoids Barrandina wilkinsoni and Clorinda minor replace them in the overlying Barrandella Shale Member, the last two extending into the Yarwood Siltstone Member (Black Bog Shale). Clorinda minor is also possibly present in the Rainbow Hill Member (Rosebank Shale). All except C. minor are uncommon to rare components of the Yass brachiopod fauna. Clorinda molongensis, a species of uncertain mid- to late Silurian age from the Molong Limestone, is also revised. Aliconchidium and Barrandina are known only from Yass, whereas Clorinda is cosmopolitan. Conchidium alsois widespread, but C. hospes is a species from the Prague Basin probably also known from the Urals and the Tien Shan. Ascanigypa is another Prague Basin taxon, recently recognised in Arctic Canada.  相似文献   

17.
Prosopiscus is particularly important in Ordovician palaeobiogeography because of its wide geographic distribution in Gondwana and peri-Gondwanan regions. It appears to have been confined to low palaeolatitudes, representing a characteristic member of the warm water eastern Gondwanan shelf faunas. Trends in the distribution of the Ordovician genus can be observed due to its long stratigraphic range. Prosopiscus was restricted to, and may have originated in, Australia during the late Early Ordovician (Bendigonian-Chewtonian). By the Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian), Prosopiscus had dispersed to other parts of Gondwana and peri-Gondwana, including the North and South China blocks, Tarim, central Himalayas, and the Argentine Precordillera (South America). Possible explanations for the distribution of Prosopiscus are that: (1) there were no oceanic barriers preventing dispersal of trilobites between different regions of Gondwana, thus permitting uninhibited migration over vast distances; (2) Prosopiscus was not restricted to a specific biofacies; (3) a major eustatic transgression during the early Darriwilian may have facilitated the dispersal of Prosopiscus in allowing further development and expansion of marine environments; and (4) a prolonged planktonic larval stage may have permitted wide dispersal.

Prosopiscus lauriei sp. nov. is described from the late Early Ordovician (Bendigonian-Chewtonian) Tabita Formation at Mount Arrowsmith, northwestern New South Wales, Australia. The new species is closely related to P. praecox, from the Nora Formation, Georgina Basin, central Australia, and to P. magicus from northwest China.  相似文献   

18.
Paleoecological and taphonomic analysis of the mammalian microfauna from three Bolivian altiplano sites is presented: Khonkho Wankane [Late Formative period; number of identified specimens (NISP) = 1019], Mollo Kontu (Middle Horizon period; NISP = 610) and Pukara de Khonkho (Late Intermediate period; NISP = 165). The following species, all of which are present in this region today, were identified: Akodon boliviensis (Bolivian grass mouse), Andinomys edax (Andean mouse), Auliscomys sublimis (Andean leaf‐eared mouse), Cavia porcellus (guinea pig/cuy), Chinchilla chinchilla (chinchilla), Ctenomys leucodon (white‐toothed tuco‐tuco), Eligmodontia puerulus (Andean gerbil mouse), Galea musteloides (common yellow‐toothed cavy), Lagidium viscacia (vizcacha), Neotomys ebriosus (Andean swamp rat),and Oligoryzomys destructor (destructive pygmy rice rat). Some direct human involvement with the deposition of some of the larger species (Cavia porcellus, Chinchilla chinchilla, Ctenomys leucodon and Lagidium viscacia) was noted, although C. porcellus was identified only from a single element from Mollo Kontu. Most deposition was likely due to natural in‐burrow deaths and other natural attrition of these species. No significant shift in environment during the occupation of these sites was detected. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
Book Reviews     
《International affairs》2001,77(1):171-240
Books reviewed: Jenny, Edkins, Nalini, Persram and Veronique, Pin‐Fat, (ed.) Sovereignty and subjectivity Robert M. A., Crawford, Idealism and realism in International Relations: beyond the discipline Hazel, Smith, (ed.) Democracy and International Relations: critical theories/problematic practices Ian, Clark, Globalization and International Relations theory Nicholas J., Wheeler, Saving strangers: humanitarian intervention in international society Robert, Jackson, The global covenant: human conduct in a world of states Michael, Byers, (ed.) The role of law in international politics: essays in international relations and international law Rein, Müllerson, Ordering anarchy: international law in international society Thomas D., Grant, The recognition of states: law and practice in debate and evolution Boutros, Boutros‐Ghali, Unvanquished: a US–UN saga Edward, McWhinney, The United Nations and a new world order for a new millennium: self‐determination, state succession, and humanitarian intervention Sherman W., Garnett, (ed.) Rapprochement or rivalry? Russia–China relations in a changing Asia Maria do, Ceu Pinto, Political Islam and the United States: a study of US policy towards Islamist movements in the Middle East Fawaz A., Gerges, America and political Islam: clash of cultures or clash of interests? Michael, Cox, Adrian, Guelke and Fiona, Stephen, (ed.) A farewell to arms? From ‘long peace’ to long war in Northern Ireland John, Darby and Roger Mac, Ginty, (ed.) The management of peace processes Barbara F., Walter and Jack, Snyder, (ed.) Civil wars, insecurity and intervention David P., Auerswald, Disarmed democracies: domestic institutions and the use of force Robert, O'Neill and John, Baylis, (ed.) Alternative nuclear futures: the role of nuclear weapons in the post‐Cold War world Lisa A., Baglione, To agree or not to agree: leadership, bargaining and arms controls Andrew, Rojecki, Silencing the opposition: antinuclear movements and the media in the Cold War Christian, Joppke and Steven, Lukes, (ed.) Multicultural questions Robert K., Schaeffer, Severed states: dilemmas of democracy in a divided world James F., Hollifield and Calvin, Jillson, (ed.) Pathways to democracy: the political economy of democratic transitions Graeme, Gill, The dynamics of democratization: elites, civil society and the transition process Ted Robert, Gurr, People versus states: minorities at risk in the new century Karen, Armstrong, The battle for God: fundamentalism in Judaism, Christianity and Islam Mark, Juergensmeyer, Terror in the mind of God: the global rise of religious violence John L., Esposito and Michael, Watson, (ed.) Religion and global order Ger, Duijzings, Religion and the politics of identity in Kosovo Mahmoud, Sadri and Ahmad, Sadri, (ed. and transl.) Reason, freedom, and democracy in Islam: essential writings of Abdolkarim Soroush Gary P., Sampson, Trade, environment and the WTO: the post‐Seattle agenda Gary P., Sampson and W. Bradnee, Chambers, (ed.) Trade, environment and the millennium Robert, Gilpin, The challenge of global capitalism: the world economy in the 21st century Ngaire, Woods, (ed.) The political economy of globalization Thomas, Friedman, The Lexus and the olive tree R. J. Barry, Jones, The world turned upside down? Globalization and the future of the state Morris, Goldstein, Graciela L., Kaminsky and Carmen M., Reinhart, Assessing financial vulnerability: an early warning system for emerging markets Christopher L., Gilbert and David, Vines, (ed.) The World Bank: structure and policies Catherine L., Mann, Sue E., Eckert and Sarah Cleeland, Knight, Global electronic commerce: a policy primer Stephen G., Cecchetti, Hans, Genberg, John, Lipsky and Sushil, Wadhwani, Asset prices and central bank policy Ulrich, Bartsch and Benito, Müller with Asbjørn, Aaheim, Fossil fuels in a changing climate: impacts of the Kyoto Protocol and developing country participation Axel, Michaelowa and Michael, Dutschke, (ed.) Climate policy and development: flexible instruments and developing countries Matthew, Paterson, Understanding global environmental politics: domination, accumulation, resistance Martin H., Folly, Churchill, Whitehall and the Soviet Union, 1940–1945 Saul, Kelly and Anthony, Gorst, (ed.) Whitehall and the Suez crisis Scott, Lucas, Freedom's war: the US crusade against the Soviet Union 1945–56 Sergei N., Khrushchev, Nikita Khrushchev and the creation of a superpower Stephen, Twigge and Len, Scott, Planning Armageddon: Britain, the United States and the command of Western nuclear forces 1945–1964 Qiang, Zhai, China and the Vietnam wars, 1950–1975 Wolfgang, Wessels, Die Oeffnung des Staates: Modelle und Wirklichkeit grenzueberschreitender Verwaltungspraxis 1960–1995 Jonathan P. G., Bach, Between sovereignty and integration: German foreign policy and national identity after 1989 Emil J., Kirchner, (ed.) Decentralization and transition in the Visegrad: Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia Heinz, Kramer, A changing Turkey: the challenge to Europe and the United States Gráinne de, Búrca and Joanne, Scott, (ed.) Constitutional change in the EU: from uniformity to flexibility? Colin, Crouch, (ed.) After the euro: shaping institutions for governance in the wake of European Monetary Union Paul, Kubicek, Unbroken ties: the state, interest associations, and corporatism in post‐Soviet Ukraine Gordon B., Smith, (ed.) State‐building in Russia: the Yeltsin legacy and the challenge of the future Andrei, Shleifer and Daniel, Treisman, Without a map: political tactics and economic reform in Russia Greg, Austin and Alexey D., Muraviev, The armed forces of Russia in Asia Avi, Shlaim, The iron wall: Israel and the Arab world Mai, Yamani, Changed identities: the challenge of the new generation in Saudi Arabia Hilal, Khashan, Arabs at the crossroads: political identity and nationalism Neil, Quilliam, Syria and the New World Order Michael M., Gunter, The Kurdish predicament in Iraq: a political analysis Julian, May, (ed.) Poverty and inequality in South Africa: meeting the challenge Susan Collin, Marks, Watching the wind: conflict resolution during South Africa's transition to democracy Larry, Diamond and Mark F., Plattner, (ed.) Democratization in Africa Michela, Wrong, In the footsteps of Mr Kurtz: living on the brink of disaster in the Congo Roger, Tangri, The politics of patronage in Africa: parastatals, privatization and private enterprise Fátima Moura, Roque, Building peace in Angola: a political and economic vision Janet, MacGaffey and Rémy, Bazenguissa‐Ganga, Congo–Paris: transnational traders on the margins of the law Reinhard, Drifte, Japan's quest for a permanent Security Council seat: a matter of pride or justice? Gerald L., Curtis, The logic of Japanese politics: leaders, institutions and the limits of change Fred I., Greenstein, The presidential difference: leadership style from FDR to Clinton Rebecca K. C., Hersman, Friends and foes: how Congress and the President really make foreign policy Bill, Weinberg, Homage to Chiapas: the new indigenous struggles in Mexico Alison, Brysk, From tribal village to global village: Indian rights and international relations in Latin America Carmelo, Mesa‐Lago, with Alberto Arenas, de Mesa, Ivan, Brenes, Verónica, Montecinos and Mark, Samara, Market, socialist, and mixed economies: comparative policy and performance: Chile, Cuba, and Costa Rica  相似文献   

20.
The results of an archaeometric study concerning the coloured stones and 14 white marble sculptures found in the ancient city of Urbs Salvia (Urbisaglia, Macerata) – one of the main Roman archaeological sites of the Marche region (east central Italy) – are presented here. Data show the presence of the most important decorative stones used by the Romans, originating in all of the Mediterranean provinces, from Egypt and North Africa to Asia Minor, Greece, Gallia, Iberia and Italy. Thirty‐one different coloured lithotypes have been identified, including red and green porphyries as well as marmor phrygium and numidicum, namely the four most expensive stones cited in Diocletian's edict. Crustae of marmor chium, taenarium, chalcidicum, scyreticum, lucullaeum and sagarium also feature. Another significant presence is that of coloured stones that are generally rare, even in Rome and Ostia, such as cipollino mandolato (which is very abundant at Urbs Salvia, more than anywhere outside Gallia), broccatello di Spagna, alabastro a pecorella, lapis ophytes, brecciated facies of marmor iassene and cottanello antico. Worthy of mention, too, is the abundant presence of so‐called Roman breccia from Lez (Upper Garonne valley, French Pyrenees), a stone never reported outside Gallia. The 14 marble sculptures analysed come from public and private buildings of the Roman city and are now exhibited at the Archaeological Museum of Urbisaglia. Our petrographic and isotopic analyses show that they are made of Lunense (five), Pentelic (three), Parian lychnites (three), Thasian (three) and Proconnesian (one Corinthian capital) marbles. The quality of the coloured stones identified, together with the presence of sculptures made of precious imported white marble varieties, reveals an opulent town and a local patronage wishing to decorate public buildings and rich houses with the most sought‐after marbles of Rome.  相似文献   

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