25 research outputs found
FATIMA Czech pilot
In FATIMA project, a pilot site in Czechia was established to demonstrate how precision agriculture may serve for optimizing crop yields as well as for protection of water quality, since the pilot is located in Czech largest drinking water reservoir catchment. The pilot site Dehtáře is situated in the south-west Bohemo-Moravian Highland. The site contains tile drainage and is of very heterogeneous soil conditions; from shallow, light and stony Haplic Cambisols to heavy Haplic Gleysols, with profoundly different water regimes. For the field trial (spring barley in 2016), crop yield potential was determined from crop statuses as captured by satellite images) eight years back, assessed by Enhanced Vegetation Index. Based on this, as well as on a detailed soil survey and repeated soil sampling, variable fertilizer application zones (70 – 120%) were delineated and mineral fertilizers distributed accordingly with GPS operated spreader three times from late April to late May. The rest of the site was fertilized uniformly. Soil water regime (soil moisture, soil water potential) was monitored continuously on eight spots and real-time broadcasted by wireless sensor network to WEB GIS interface via SensLog solution, adopted from FOODIE project. In the same spots, soil water was sampled by gravitational soil lysimeters. Precise harvest showed a general agreement with the delineated application zones and yield potential, however, some ambiguities were revealed, most probably due to changeable soil water regime, as documented by the sensors, as well as due to variable soil chemical properties (low soil pH). Nevertheless, precisely applied fertilizer doses in the application zones brought about 10% higher crop yields with simultaneous better N crop efficiency. Soil water quality samples confirmed that heterogeneous doses of fertilizer in correctly delineated zones is a promising approach for improvement of groundwater quality especially in shallow soils with low water and nutrient retention abilit
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Cultic resilience and inter-city engagement at the dawn of urban history: protohistoric Mesopotamia and the ‘city seals’, 3200-2750 BC
Within the context of early urbanism, elite groups developed the world’s earliest writing in Mesopotamia, 3200-2750 BC, comprising administrative documents in the form of inscribed clay tablets. How did these proto-literate urban communities engage with each other and what strategies did they employ to address major challenges to their survival? The ‘city seal’ evidence survives as seal impressions on clay bureaucratic artefacts, both inscribed tablets and impressed sealings. These impressions feature signs representing the names of Mesopotamian cities, many of them identifiable with known sites. The documents stand at the threshold of history, as the earliest evidence for inter-city engagement. Using an innovative methodology and interpretive framework of cultic resilience, we integrate archaeometric, iconographic, and functional analyses of the earliest stages of writing and sealing, to argue that the city seal evidence provides unique insights into inter-city cooperation by Mesopotamian cities during a critical episode of early urban development