234 research outputs found
MATERIAL CHARACTERISATION OF A FLORENTINE PAINTER IN PORTUGAL IN THE LATE 19TH CENTURY: PAINTINGS BY GIORGIO MARINI
This paper presents the analytical characterisation of a series of paintings authored by
Giorgio Marini (1836-1905) from the Museum of Évora. Marini was an Italian painter who
lived in Portugal in the 19th century. He was a very prolific painter and his works, most of them
portraits commissioned by urban and rural bourgeois and noble elites, are dispersed all over
the country. The general good conservation state of most paintings prevented the collection of
micro-samples for detailed study. Hence, material identification of the painting materials was
performed primarily by XRF, given its non-destructive and non-invasive nature, and it was
complemented when possible by auxiliary techniques optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy,
and SEM-EDX. Pigments and fillers such as yellow and red ochre, lead white, zinc white,
barium white, chrome yellow and green chrome are among the identified pigments. This is the
first time the palette used by Giorgio Marini was identified, helping to characterised the
pigments used by foreign painters during the 19th century in Portuga
Biocontrol of Rust Fungi by Cladosporium tenuissimum
This chapter examines whether Cladosporium
tenuissimum Cooke, a destructive
hyperparasite of rust spores, can be
exploited as a BCA of rust fungi. It reports on
tests carried out to evaluate C. tenuissimum
effectiveness against rusts in the genera
Melampsora, Cronartium, Peridermium,
Uromyces and Puccinia, focusing on its
modes of action, the fine-level analysis of
the fungal host\u2013hyperparasite interface, the
antifungal compounds it produces, and its
ability to reduce disease, both in vitro and in
planta. Since effective biological control is
impossible without due consideration of the
ecology of the BCA, as well as of the other
partners involved, and an examination of
their spatial relationships and interaction
with the environment, attention is also paid
to the biological nature of the fungus,
in particular to those characteristics that
enable it to survive in natural habitats and
retain activity under varying environmental
conditions
Status of charcoal canker on oak trees at a site of community importance: case study of the relict castelfidardo forest (Sic area it520008, castelfidardo, an, Italy)
Oaks are dominant and key tree species in Mediterranean forest ecosystems. However, in recent decades, oak forests have been heavily impacted by oak decline, a worldwide phenomenon exacerbated by climate change. The charcoal disease agent Biscogniauxia mediterranea is involved in the decline of Mediterranean oak formations in a variety of contexts. Here, we investigated the impact and role of B. mediterranea in the decline of oaks in Castelfidardo Forest, a relict wood of the late Holocene and a Site of Community Importance. We established five plots within which we recorded tree positions, any symptoms and signs of decline, association of B. mediterranea to declining trees, and deadwood and associated mycota. Of 471 oaks inspected, 7.0% showed brownish exudates on the stems, 46.9% showed epicormic shoots along the main trunk, and 24.4% showed black carbonaceous stromata on diseased branches and trunks. The decline was most severe for Quercus cerris, which comprised plots #4 and #5, at 50.0% (81/162 trees) and 29.0% (33/114), respectively; then for Quercus robur for plot #3, at 40.0% (38/95); and finally for Quercus pubescens for plots #1 and #2, at 13.7% (7/51) and 12.3% (6/49), respectively. Bark tissues were collected from trees with charcoal cankers and taken to the laboratory for microscopic examination and identification by mycological and molecular methods. This investigation revealed a close association between oaks with pronounced reduction of vitality and incidence of B. mediterranea. Deadwood was equally distributed among the five plots, and was heavily colonized by Basidiomycota. The high incidence of the charcoal canker pathogen B. mediterranea appeared to be related to environmental stresses. However, the absence of silvicultural management, high competition among physiologically mature trees, and the geographic isolation of this residual forest may have predisposed oaks to decline
Immobilisation of Higher Activity Wastes from Nuclear Reactor Production of 99
A variety of intermediate- and low-level liquid and solid wastes are produced from reactor production of 99Mo using UAl alloy or UO2 targets and in principle can be collectively or individually converted into waste forms. At ANSTO, we have legacy acidic uranyl-nitrate-rich intermediate level waste (ILW) from the latter, and an alkaline liquid ILW, a U-rich filter cake, plus a shorter lived liquid stream that rapidly decays to low-level waste (LLW) standards, from the former. The options considered consist of cementitious products, glasses, glass-ceramics, or ceramics produced by vitrification or hot isostatic pressing for intermediate-level wastes. This paper discusses the progress in waste form development and processing to treat ANSTO’s ILW streams arising from 99Mo. The various waste forms and the reason for the process option chosen will be reviewed. We also address the concerns over adapting our chosen process for use in a hot-cell environment
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