10 research outputs found

    From influence to impact: the multifunctional land-use in Mediterranean prehistory emerging from palynology of archaeological sites (8.0-2.8 ka BP)

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    Archaeobotany is used to discover details on local land uses in prehistoric settlements developed during the middle and beginning of late Holocene. Six archaeological sites from four countries (Spain, Italy, Greece, and Turkey) have pollen and charcoal records showing clear signs of the agrarian systems that had developed in the Mediterranean basin during different cultural phases, from pre-Neolithic to Recent Bronze Age. A selected list of pollen taxa and sums, including cultivated trees, other woody species, crops and annual or perennial synanthropic plants are analysed for land use reconstructions. In general, cultivation has a lower image in palynology than forestry, and past land uses became visible when oakwoods were affected by human activities. On-site palynology allows us to recognise the first influence of humans even before it can be recognised in off-site sequences, and off-site sequences can allow us to determine the area of influence of a site. Neolithic and Bronze Age archaeological sites show similar land use dynamics implying oak exploitation, causing local deforestation, and cultivation of cereal fields in the area or around the site. Although a substantial difference makes the Neolithic influence quite distant from the Bronze Age impact, mixed systems of land exploitation emerged everywhere. Multiple land use activities exist (multifunctional landscapes) at the same time within the area of influence of a site. Since the Neolithic, people have adopted a diffuse pattern of land use involving a combination of diverse activities, using trees\u2013crops\u2013domesticated animals. The most recurrent combination included wood exploitation, field cultivation and animal breeding. The lesson from the past is that the multifunctional land use, combining sylvo-pastoral and crop farming mixed systems, has been widely adopted for millennia, being more sustainable than the monoculture and a promising way to develop our economy

    IMPACT OF ENDOCRINE DISORDERS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS

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    Patients presenting with different critical illnesses often display secondary endocrine systemic conditions. In another respect, patients registered in intensive care units (ICUs) might present major clinical findings that are attributable to the precipitating illness and might mask underlying primary endocrine diseases. In this chapter we will analyze two specific conditions, dysglycemia and low-T3 syndrome (lowT3S), often occurring in different critical ill patients. In the last years several studies reported that dysglycemia is an independent risk factor of mortality for critically ill patients. Dysglycemia, including stress-induced hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, or serum blood fluctuation, has a poor prognostic impact especially in subjects who did not know to have diabetes before admission in ICU. As far as lowT3S is concerned, it is also known as non-thyroidal illness syndrome and indicates a condition in which an impairment in thyroid function can be detected in the absence of appropriate changes in TSH levels. In this chapter we will analyze the underlining mechanisms and consequences for both dysglycemia and lowT3S in different critical illnesses and the most appropriate therapeutic approache

    Characterization of biochemical markers of blood-brain-barrier permeability and the functioning of the central nervous system

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    The fossil record of lissamphibians from Africa, Madagascar, and the Arabian Plate

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