Colección Digital Complutense
RESULTADO
- 1. Inaugural address : delivered to the University of St. Andrews, Feb. 1st, 1867,
URL: http://books.google.com/books?printsec=frontcover&vid=UCM5324974249 Colección: Libros electrónicos UCM-Google
Año: 1867.
Identificador: b23410255
Título: Inaugural address : delivered to the University of St. Andrews, Feb. 1st, 1867,
Ubicación: Políticas y Soc.-F. Ant. - 2. Qué puede y qué no puede aportarnos la Tafonomía.
URL: http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CGIB/article/view/2487 Colección: Portal de revistas científicas complutenses
Resumen: Sin resumen
Autor: Andrews, P.
Acceso desde: 01/01/1997
Número: Vol 23, (1997)
Revista: Cuadernos de GeologÃa Ibérica
Identificador OAI: oai:revistas.ucm.es:article/2487
Páginas: 53 - 72
Nombre: Qué puede y qué no puede aportarnos la TafonomÃa.
URL Número: http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CGIB/issue/view/135/showToc/
URL revista: http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CGIB/ - 3. Select works of Henry Fielding, Esq. containing, the adventures of Joseph Andrews, the history of Tom Jones, Amellia, - and the history of Jonathan Wild. To which is prefixed, an original account of the life and writings of the author /
URL: http://books.google.com/books?printsec=frontcover&vid=UCM5322385241 Colección: Libros electrónicos UCM-Google
Año: 1807.
Identificador: b22751178
Título: Select works of Henry Fielding, Esq. containing, the adventures of Joseph Andrews, the history of Tom Jones, Amellia, - and the history of Jonathan Wild. To which is prefixed, an original account of the life and writings of the author /
Ubicación: Filología A-S.19 - 4. The Azokh Cave complex: Middle Pleistocene to Holocene human occupation
in the Caucasus
URL: http://eprints.ucm.es/14577 Colección: Archivo institucional e-prints complutense
Autor: Allué, Ethel; Andrews, Peter; Asryan, Lena; Cáceres Cuello de Oro, Isabel; Ditchfield, Peter; Domínguez Alonso, Patricio; Fernández Jalvo, Yolanda; King, Tania; Made, J. van der; Marín Monfort, M.D.; Moloney, Norah; Murray, John; Nieto Díaz, Manuel; Sanz Martín, Teresa; Sevilla García, Paloma; Torres, Trinidad; Yepiskoposyan, Levon
CDU: 56:551.7
Departamento: Fac. de CC. Geológicas - Depto. de Paleontología
Editorial: Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam
estatus: Publicado
formato: Electrónico
Identificador OAI: oai:www.ucm.es:14577
ISSN: 0047-2484
materia2: Paleontología
Materia: Geología
Palabras clave: Azokh cave; Human ocupation
resumen> Azokh Cave is located near the village of the same name in the Nagorno-Karabagh region of the south-eastern part of the Lesser Caucasus (3937.09’ N and 4659.19’ E, 962 metres –a.s.l.). Azokh Cave and other relevant Acheulian sites in the Caucasus (Fig. 1) were described by Lioubine (2002). Together with Mousterian sites (Klein, 1969, 1999; Hoffecker and Cleghorn, 2000; Hoffecker, 2002; Stringer and Andrews, 2005) and sites producing evidence of the Middle-Late Palaeolithic transition (Joris and Adler 2008), the Caucasus region has provided evidence of continuous human settlement of the area throughout the Pleistocene. The geographical location of these sites indicates the persistence of a natural corridor that Lioubine (2002) named the ‘Caucasus isthmus’ and which we describe as the Trans-Caucasian corridor. Based on a geological survey of Quaternary deposits in collaboration with the Armenian Academy of Sciences (Ferna´ndez-Jalvo et al., 2004; King et al., 2003), we observe that the topography of the area has changed considerably due to tectonic compression and periglacial isostasy. This is in agreement with estimations by GPS studies (Mosar, 2006, Mosar et al., 2007) and ESR (Gru¨n et al., 1999) that establishedan uplift rate of12 to14 mm/year or 0.8–1.0 cm/year, respectively. The corridor has changed greatly since the middle Pleistocene, with uplift and erosion altering the landscape, but it is likely that passage through the Caucasian mountains has always been possible. The Trans-Caucasian corridor and other routes via Turkey and towards Asia (Bar-Yosef and Belfer-Cohen, 2001) were migration pathways during the Pleistocene. Fossil humans in the Caucasian area are scarce. The site of Dmanisi in Georgia yielded the earliest known Eurasian hominins (1.7 Ma, Gabunia et al., 2000; Rightmire et al., 2006; Martino´ n- Torres et al., 2008). Late surviving Neanderthals are present at several sites: Mezmaiskaya Cave, in the Northern Caucasus of Russia (30 ka, Skinner et al., 2005), provided remains of late surviving Neanderthals; a mandible of a 2–3 year old Neanderthal child was found at Barakay Cave (North Caucasus; Lubin et al., 2002). Two incisor fragments and one premolar from Kudaro I may be human (Lioubine, 2002). In this context, Azokh Cave fills an important temporal gap. Azokh Cave contains a nearly continuous stratigraphic section from : Azokh Cave is located near the village of the same name in the Nagorno-Karabagh region of the south-eastern part of the Lesser Caucasus (3937.09’ N and 4659.19’ E, 962 metres –a.s.l.). Azokh Cave and other relevant Acheulian sites in the Caucasus (Fig. 1) were described by Lioubine (2002). Together with Mousterian sites (Klein, 1969, 1999; Hoffecker and Cleghorn, 2000; Hoffecker, 2002; Stringer and Andrews, 2005) and sites producing evidence of the Middle-Late Palaeolithic transition (Joris and Adler 2008), the Caucasus region has provided evidence of continuous human settlement of the area throughout the Pleistocene. The geographical location of these sites indicates the persistence of a natural corridor that Lioubine (2002) named the ‘Caucasus isthmus’ and which we describe as the Trans-Caucasian corridor. Based on a geological survey of Quaternary deposits in collaboration with the Armenian Academy of Sciences (Ferna´ndez-Jalvo et al., 2004; King et al., 2003), we observe that the topography of the area has changed considerably due to tectonic compression and periglacial isostasy. This is in agreement with estimations by GPS studies (Mosar, 2006, Mosar et al., 2007) and ESR (Gru¨n et al., 1999) that establishedan uplift rate of12 to14 mm/year or 0.8–1.0 cm/year, respectively. The corridor has changed greatly since the middle Pleistocene, with uplift and erosion altering the landscape, but it is likely that passage through the Caucasian mountains has always been possible. The Trans-Caucasian corridor and other routes via Turkey and towards Asia (Bar-Yosef and Belfer-Cohen, 2001) were migration pathways during the Pleistocene. Fossil humans in the Caucasian area are scarce. The site of Dmanisi in Georgia yielded the earliest known Eurasian hominins (1.7 Ma, Gabunia et al., 2000; Rightmire et al., 2006; Martino´ n- Torres et al., 2008). Late surviving Neanderthals are present at several sites: Mezmaiskaya Cave, in the Northern Caucasus of Russia (30 ka, Skinner et al., 2005), provided remains of late surviving Neanderthals; a mandible of a 2–3 year old Neanderthal child was found at Barakay Cave (North Caucasus; Lubin et al., 2002). Two incisor fragments and one premolar from Kudaro I may be human (Lioubine, 2002). In this context, Azokh Cave fills an important temporal gap. Azokh Cave contains a nearly continuous stratigraphic section from
revisado: TRUE
Tipo: Artículo
Título: The Azokh Cave complex: Middle Pleistocene to Holocene human occupation in the Caucasus
Título de publicación: Journal of Human Evolution - 5. Azokh caves excavations 2002-2006:
Middle-Upper palaeolithic transition
in Nagorno-Karabagh
URL: http://eprints.ucm.es/14604 Colección: Archivo institucional e-prints complutense
Autor: Allue, E.; Andrews, Peter; Asryan, Lena; Balasanyan, G.; Bessa Correia, V.; Campos Egea, Rocío; Cáceres Cuello de Oro, Isabel; Dietchfield, P.; Domínguez Alonso, Patricio; Fernández Jalvo, Yolanda; Geigl, E.M.; Grün, R.; Hardy, K.; Hayrabetyan, H.; Hovsepian King, T.; Made, J. van der; Marín Monfort, M.D.; Melkonyan, A.; Mkrtichyan, E.; Moloney, Norah; Murray, John; Nieto Díaz, Manuel; Safarian, V.; Sanz Martín, Teresa; Scott, L.; Sevilla García, Paloma; Smith, C.; Torres Pérez-Hidalgo, Trinidad José de; Yepiskoposyan, Levon
CDU: 56
Departamento: Fac. de CC. Geológicas - Depto. de Paleontología
Editorial: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
estatus: Publicado
formato: Electrónico
Identificador OAI: oai:www.ucm.es:14604
ISBN: 978-84-00-08909-2
materia2: Paleontología
Materia: Geología
Palabras clave: Azokh cave; Paleolithic transition; Excavation; Eurasia
revisado: TRUE
Tipo: Sección de libro
Título: Azokh caves excavations 2002-2006: Middle-Upper palaeolithic transition in Nagorno-Karabagh - 6. Estudio taxonómico de las especies del género geranium L. (geraniaceae) en la Península Ibérica y Baleares
URL: http://eprints.ucm.es/3478 Colección: Archivo institucional e-prints complutense
Autor: Velasco Steigrad, Myriam
Colaborador: Fernández-Galiano Fernández, Emilio
Departamento: Fac. de CC. Biológicas - Depto. de Biología Vegetal I (Botánica y Fisiología Vegetal)
Editorial: Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Servicio de Publicaciones
estatus: No publicado
formato: Electrónico
Identificador OAI: oai:www.ucm.es:3478
ISBN: 84-669-0688-6
materia2: Botánica
Materia: Biología
Notas: Tesis Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Departamento de Biología Vegetal I (Botánica y Fisiología Vegetal), leída el 17-11-1992
Palabras clave: Geranios España
Resumen: Esta tesis doctoral consiste en un estudio taxonómico del genero geranium l. En sus especies españolas. Aporta interesantes datos sobre cariología, biología floral y corología, muchos de ellos fruto de sus trabajos en la Univ. De St. Andrews, donde la doctoranda permaneció una larga estancia. El planteamiento del trabajo, desarrollo experimental y conclusiones son correctos y contribuirán sin duda, a aclarar algunos problemas que plantean las especies del genero presenta también una iconografía original sobre todas las especies estudiadas, además de la iconografía histórica correspondiente
revisado: TRUE
Tipo: Tesis
Título: Estudio taxonómico de las especies del género geranium L. (geraniaceae) en la Península Ibérica y Baleares - 7. AK Sco: a tidally induced atmospheric dynamo in a pre-main sequence binary?
URL: http://eprints.ucm.es/15993 Colección: Archivo institucional e-prints complutense
Autor: Gómez de Castro, Ana Inés
CDU: 52
Departamento: Fac. de CC. Matemáticas - Sección Deptal. de Física de la Tierra, Astronomía y Astrofísica I
Editorial: American Institute of Physics
estatus: Publicado
formato: Electrónico
Identificador OAI: oai:www.ucm.es:15993
ISBN: 978-0-7354-0627-8
materia2: Astronomía
Materia: Matemáticas
Notas: 15th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems and the Sun, JUL 21-25, 2008, St Andrews, SCOTLAND
Palabras clave: Stars: pre-main sequence; stars: magnetic fields; binaries: spectroscopic
Resumen: AK Sco is a unique source: a 10-30 Myrs old pre-main sequence spectroscopic binary composed by two nearly equal F5 stars that at periastron are separated by barely eleven stellar radii so, the stellar magnetospheres fill the Roche lobe at periastron. The orbit is not yet circularized (e=0.47) and very strong tides are expected. This makes of AK Sco, the ideal laboratory to study the effect of gravitational tides in the stellar magnetic field building up during pre-main sequence evolution. Evidence of this effect is reported in this contribution.
revisado: TRUE
Tipo: Sección de libro
Título: AK Sco: a tidally induced atmospheric dynamo in a pre-main sequence binary?
575 x 883 pixeles PNG |
575 x 991 pixeles PNG |