70 research outputs found
A Strategic Orientation Model for the Turkish Local e-Governments
Increased environmental uncertainty and complexity along with budget constraints
requires public organizations to manage strategically as never before. The
environments of public organizations have become increasingly turbulent and more
firmly interconnected. During the past two decades, governments have innovated
new management tools such as strategic planning, outsourcing, and performance
measurement to deal with complex governance and networks to provide their
public services. Meanwhile, the drive to implement e-government has resulted in
the formulation of many e-government visions and strategies, driven by their own
sets of political, economic, and social factors and requirements. With this regard,
recent developments in e-service provision of Turkish Local e-Governments
deserve empirical and well-structured research. Building on the recent literature,
this study draws a strategic orientation framework and tests it by analyzing the
contents of strategic documents of 114 Turkish Local e-Governments
Kirklandia texana Caster—Cretaceous hydrozoan medusoid or trace fossil chimaera?
Volume: 18Start Page: 665End Page: 67
The first true anomiid bivalve?
Volume: 25Start Page: 897End Page: 90
Environmental factors determining the distribution of brachiopods
Volume: 17Start Page: 879End Page: 90
The ecology of a Middle Jurassic hardground and crevice fauna
Volume: 17Start Page: 507End Page: 52
Ecology of sponge reefs from the Upper Bathonian of Normandy
Volume: 24Start Page: 1End Page: 2
Macroids from mixed siliciclastic-carbonate high-frequency sequences of the Agrio Formation (Lower Cretaceous), Neuquén Basin. Palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental constraints
Macroids, cm-sized biogenically coated grains made of associations of metazoans or protozoans, accumulate in some high-frequency sedimentary sequences of the upper Hauterivian to lower Barremian Agua de la Mula Member of the Agrio Formation in the Neuquén Basin (northern Patagonia, Argentina). The macroids studied are sub-spheroidal and sub-discoidal in shape, 2–3 cm in diameter and 1–2 cm in height. Each macroid is characterised by a rough, weakly bored surface, encrusted by oysters, serpulids, and small, dome-shaped bryozoan colonies. The growth arrangement consists of locally concentric, agglutinated encrusting foraminifers growing above and around skeletal nuclei. The accumulations of macroids on top of some starvation hemi-sequences during the latest Hauterivian 3rd-order transgressive systems tract help in understanding the palaeoenvironmental conditions at the onset of high-frequency regressions, characterised by low but persistent sedimentation rates and a generally low-energy environment. Mineralisation of sand-sized glauconite and apatite grains suggests ephemeral periods of reduced sedimentation or non-deposition. Pyrite framboid size-distribution indicates the upper dysoxic zone with oxygen restrictions. The re-establishment of terrigenous sediment input following transgression promoted eutrophication of the water column. Under such palaeoenvironmental conditions, benthic life was represented mainly by species able to thrive with eutrophicated, oxygen-poor waters at the sediment-water interface. This setting excludes activity of borers during the formation of macroids. Macroids result pivotal in understanding palaeoecology of inherent benthic communities and in refining the interpretation of palaeoenvironmental parameters in mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp systems
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