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Landscape ecological, phytosociological and geobotanical study of eumediterranean in west of SyriaGhazal, Abdullah, January 2008 (has links)
Hohenheim, Univ., Diss., 2008.
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Zur geobotanischen Kennzeichnung von Kulturlandschaften : vergleichende Untersuchungen in Südspanien und Nordmarokko; mit 19 Tabellen /Deil, Ulrich. January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
Zugl.: Habil.-Schr.
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The occurence of cocaine in Egyptian mummiesGörlitz, Dominique 25 November 2016 (has links) (PDF)
One of the unsolved problems of modern science is whether the pre-Columbian peoples of the New World developed completely independently of cultural influences from the Old World or if there was a trans-oceanic contact? A number of scientists agree that there are many – and often remarkable – similarities between the cultures of pre-Columbian America and those of the Mediterranean world. Nevertheless, there is no agreement, as yet, on how cultural diffusion can be differentiated from independent invention. Scientific analysis shows that scholarly positions are often strongly pre-formed from paradigms (scientific based assumptions), which tend to hinder
consideration of solid scientific data offered by geo-biology and its trans-disciplinary examination of the subject under investigation here.
An unambiguous answer to the question, what historical processes led to the emergence of the ancient American agriculture, hasn\'t been given. However, the archaeological discovery of crops with clear trans-oceanic origin, in addition to advances in molecular biology, increasingly support the hypothesis that humans from the distant past influenced each other across the oceans at a much earlier stage. The vegetation and zoo-geography indicate, by numerous examples that some species
could only have spread through perhaps unintentional (passive) human transmission [1]. There are two very old crops found in the „New World‟, which contradict the paradigm of a completely independent origin for American agriculture. These are the African Bottle Gourd (Lagenaria siceraria L.) and the ancestral cotton species (Gossypium herbaceum L.) of the domesticated spin able sub-genus of tetraploid cotton. The historical spread of both types has been under discussion for decades, especially in respect of trans-oceanic human contact with the American continent. There has also been a debate in the \"Old World\" ever since the discovery of nicotine and cocaine in Egyptian mummies, centering around whether \"New World\" plants (or the ingredients) might have been transmitted in the reverse direction, back to the presumed start in centers of the Ancient World\'s oldest civilizations.
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Diversity and Ecological patterns of Bolivian deciduous forests / Diversität und ökologische Muster in saisonalen Wäldern BoliviensLinares-Palomino, Reynaldo 30 January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Late Quaternary landscape dynamics in the Podocarpus National Park region in the southeastern Andes of Ecuador / Spätquartäre Landschaftsdynamik in der Region des Podocarpus National Parks in den südlichen Ostanden EcuadorsBrunschön, Corinna 09 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Diversity and evolution of pteridophytes, with emphasis on the Neotropics / Diversität und Evolution von Pteridophyten, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der NeotropenLehnert, Marcus 04 July 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Effekte anthropogener Störung auf die Diversität kryptogamischer Epiphyten (Flechten, Moose) in einem Bergregenwald in Südecuador / Effects of anthropogenic disturbance on the diversity of cryptogamic epiphytes (lichens, bryophytes) in mountain forest of southern EcuadorNöske, Nicole 27 January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Diversity and Ecology of Bryophytes and Macrolichens in Primary and Secondary Montane Quercus Forests, Cordillera de Talamanca, Costa Rica / Diversität und Ökologie der Moose und Makroflechten in primären und sekundären montanen Quercus-Wäldern, Cordillera de Talamanca, Costa RicaHolz, Ingo 06 November 2003 (has links)
Folgende Themenkomplexe wurden behandelt:
Biogeographie, Pflanzendiversität, Verbreitungsmuster
von Lebensformen und Arten in Mikrohabitaten sowie
entlang ökologischer Gradienten,
Epiphyt-Porophyt-Beziehungen, Vergesellschaftung,
Sekundärsukzession und die Auswahl von Indikatorarten.
Zum ersten Mal wird bei einer derartigen Untersuchung
die sekundäre Sukzession von Kryptogamengesellschaften
in tropischen Bergregenwäldern voll berücksichtigt. Die
Untersuchung wurde im Einzugsgebiet des Río Savegre auf
der pazifikseitigen Abdachung der westlichen Cordillera
de Talamanca (Costa Rica) durchgeführt.Kapitel 1 gibt eine generelle Einführung in
Tropische Bergregenwälder und die Bedeutung von Moosen
und Makroflechten als wichtige Komponenten dieser
Ökosysteme. Der Leser wird in das Untersuchungsgebiet,
sein Klima, seine Geologie und seine Vegetation
eingeführt.Im Kapitel 2 werden die pflanzengeographischen
Muster der Moose montaner Eichenwälder der Cordillera
de Talamanca dargestellt und diskutiert.Kapitel 3 diskutiert Diversität,
Mikrohabitatdifferenzierung und Lebensformenspektren
der Moose in einem hochmontanen Eichenwald Costa Ricas.
Es wurde versucht, die Moosflora aller Mikrohabitate
eines Eichenwaldes, inklusive der Strauch- und
Bodenschicht zu erfassen. Kapitel 4 und 5 beinhalten
die Beschreibung epiphytischer
Kryptogamengesellschaften (Moose und Makroflechten) in
Primär- und Sekundärwäldern. Mit Hilfe einer aus dem
Alpinismus abgeleiteten Klettertechnik wurden Bäume von
der Stammbasis bis in die Zweige der äußeren Krone
beprobt. Die Vegetationsaufnahmen repräsentieren die
Variation der epiphytischen Vegetation. Prozentuale
Deckungsgrade der rindenbewohnenden Moose und
Makroflechten wurden geschätzt und mit Hilfe einer
Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA)' und
nicht-metrischer Multi-response Permutation Procedure
(MRPP)' verglichen. Rindenproben der untersuchten Bäume
wurden mit deionisiertem Wasser extrahiert und der
pH-Wert bestimmt.Kapitel 4 behandelt die epiphytischen
Kryptogamengemeinschaften auf den dominierenden
Baumarten (Quercus copeyensis und Q. costaricensis)
primärer, hochmontaner Eichenwälder Costa Ricas.
Kapitel 5 vergleicht Artenreichtum, Vergesellschaftung
und Ökologie der epiphytischen Kryptogamen in primären
und sekundären hochmontanen Eichenwäldern Costa Ricas.
Quercus copeyensis-Bäume der oberen Baumschicht von
Primär- und Sekundärwäldern wurden beprobt mit dem Ziel
einen Einblick in Regenerationspotential, -muster und
-prozesse der Epiphytensukzession nach anthropogener
Störung zu erhalten.
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The occurence of cocaine in Egyptian mummies: new research provides strong evidence for a trans-Atlantic dispersal of humansGörlitz, Dominique January 2016 (has links)
One of the unsolved problems of modern science is whether the pre-Columbian peoples of the New World developed completely independently of cultural influences from the Old World or if there was a trans-oceanic contact? A number of scientists agree that there are many – and often remarkable – similarities between the cultures of pre-Columbian America and those of the Mediterranean world. Nevertheless, there is no agreement, as yet, on how cultural diffusion can be differentiated from independent invention. Scientific analysis shows that scholarly positions are often strongly pre-formed from paradigms (scientific based assumptions), which tend to hinder
consideration of solid scientific data offered by geo-biology and its trans-disciplinary examination of the subject under investigation here.
An unambiguous answer to the question, what historical processes led to the emergence of the ancient American agriculture, hasn\''t been given. However, the archaeological discovery of crops with clear trans-oceanic origin, in addition to advances in molecular biology, increasingly support the hypothesis that humans from the distant past influenced each other across the oceans at a much earlier stage. The vegetation and zoo-geography indicate, by numerous examples that some species
could only have spread through perhaps unintentional (passive) human transmission [1]. There are two very old crops found in the „New World‟, which contradict the paradigm of a completely independent origin for American agriculture. These are the African Bottle Gourd (Lagenaria siceraria L.) and the ancestral cotton species (Gossypium herbaceum L.) of the domesticated spin able sub-genus of tetraploid cotton. The historical spread of both types has been under discussion for decades, especially in respect of trans-oceanic human contact with the American continent. There has also been a debate in the \"Old World\" ever since the discovery of nicotine and cocaine in Egyptian mummies, centering around whether \"New World\" plants (or the ingredients) might have been transmitted in the reverse direction, back to the presumed start in centers of the Ancient World\''s oldest civilizations.
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