75 research outputs found

    The Effect of Handler Personality Type on Feedlot Cattle Behavioral Responses

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    The ability to readily identify individuals that may have a greater innate ability to handle cattle in a low stress manner would be useful in feedlots and on ranches. This study was conducted to determine whether handler personality type would be a useful tool to predict stockman abilities. To accomplish this, 3 cattle handling exercises were created to observe human‐cattle interactions. A scoring system was developed to investigate cattle handling proficiency based on cattle behavioral responses. Handler personality type was classified using two assessments. Some cattle handling exercises did not differentiate handler personality types. Introverted handlers tended to have higher scores than Extraverts in Exercise 3. When Exercises 2 and 3 were pooled, the same tendency occurred for Introverted handlers to have more favorable scores. These results indicate that a relationship between handler personality type and the behavioral responses of cattle may exist. The scoring system created to quantify cattle handling proficiency was useful, but needs further development

    Shore Platform Processes in Eastern Canada

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    This research is conducted on a mesotidal, argillite shore platform at Mont Louis in Gaspé, Québec, and on macrotidal platforms in the basalts of Scots Bay and the sandstones of Burncoat Head in Nova Scotia. Rock samples have been subjected to wetting and drying and to salt weathering cycles. The platforms were surveyed; rock hardness was determined with a Rock Test Hammer; waves were recorded in the field; and downwearing rates were measured at 56 micro-erosion meter stations over 1 to 3 years. Weathering is the dominant process at Mont Louis, although the horizontal platform may have been cut by waves at the high tidal level. Wave backwearing was much more important than downwearing by weathering during the Holocene at Scots Bay. Wave quarrying only occurs on a few scarps today, however, and without much abrasive material, slow downwearing now dominates over most of the platform surface. Waves probably help to remove loosened sand grains at Burncoat Head, thereby contributing to platform downwearing. Abrasion is also important in places, but the data suggest that backwearing by wave quarrying and probably frost has been a little more important than downwearing by abrasion and weathering during the Holocene.Processus des plates-formes littorales de l’est du Canada. Une plate-forme littorale d’argilites soumise à des marées modérées à Mont Louis en Gaspésie, Québec, et des plates-formes soumises à des fortes marées dans les basaltes de Scots Bay et les grès de Burncoat Head de la Nouvelle-Écosse furent étudiées. Des échantillons de roches ont été soumis à des cycles de mouillage et de séchage et d’haloclastie. Le profil des plates-formes a été mesuré, la dureté des roches a été établie par le test du marteau de Schmidt, les vagues ont été mesurées sur le terrain et le taux d’usure vertical a été quantifié à 56 stations avec des appareils détectant la micro-­érosion, le tout sur une période d’un à trois ans. L’altération est le processus dominant à Mont Louis, bien que la plate-forme horizontale ait été entaillée par les vagues au maximum des marées hautes. L’usure horizontale par les vagues était plus importante que l’usure verticale par altération durant l’Holocène à Scots Bay. L’extraction de grands blocs par les vagues ne se produit toutefois de nos jours que sur quelques abrupts et, en l’absence de matériel abrasif, une lente usure verticale domine maintenant sur la plupart des plates-formes. Les vagues ont probablement aidé à éliminer les grains de sable produits par l’altération à Burncoat Head, contribuant ainsi à l’usure verticale de la plate-forme. L’abrasion est également importante à certains endroits, mais les données indiquent que l’usure horizontale par les vagues, et aussi par le gel, a été un peu plus importante que l’usure verticale par l’abrasion et l’altération durant l’Holocène

    Un modelo predictivo de la evolución en costas rocosas.

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    El retroceso de las costas acantiladas es un fenómeno muy extendido sobre los litorales rocosos expuestos a la incidencia combinada de los procesos marinos y meteorológicos que se dan en la franja costera. Este fenómeno se revela violentamente como movimientos gravitacionales del terreno esporádicos, pudiendo causar pérdidas materiales y/o humanas. Aunque el conocimiento de estos riesgos de erosión resulta de vital importancia para la correcta gestión de la costa, su predicción es complicada. Los modelos de predicción publicados son escasos y con importantes inconvenientes: extrapolación, extienden información registros históricos; empíricos, sobre registros históricos estudian respuesta al cambio de un parámetro; estocásticos, determinan la cadencia y magnitud de los eventos futuros extrapolando las distribuciones de probabilidad extraídas de catálogos históricos; proceso-respuesta, de estabilidad y propagación del error inexplorada; en EDPs, computacionalmente costosos y poco exactos. En este trabajo se desarrolla un modelo combinado de proceso-respuesta basado en incorporar un balance de fuerzas de los mecanismos que actúan sobre el proceso erosivo en el frente del acantilado. El modelo simula la evolución espacio-temporal de un perfil-2D del acantilado, formado por materiales heterogéneos, acoplando la dinámica marina con la evolución del terreno en cada periodo de marea. Integra en cada periodo una función de erosión, dependiente de la pendiente de la zona afectada, que se desplaza sobre la onda de marea. Se ha estudiado el error de discretización del modelo y su propagación en el tiempo a partir de las soluciones exactas para los dos primeros periodos de marea para diferentes aproximaciones numéricas en la integración y de la pendiente. Los resultados obtenidos han permitido justificar las discretizaciones que minimizan el error y los métodos de aproximación más adecuados

    Downwearing rates on shore platforms of different calcareous lithotypes

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    Vertical lowering (downwearing) of shore platform surfaces is a very important mechanism in their morphological evolution albeit much remains incompletely understood. The efficacy of mechanical and chemical weathering acting on a given substrate, together with erosional processes, influences downwearing rates. In order to determine the relationship between lithotypes and downwearing rates, data collected from a Transverse Micro-erosion Meter were obtained for shore platforms of three different calcareous lithotypes (biocalcarenite, calcarenite and carbonated siltstone) along the central Algarve coast (Southern Portugal). Downwearing rates ranged between 0.096 mm year−1 and 1.676 mm year−1 in biocalcarenite and weakly cemented calcarenite, respectively. In addition, physical properties of the rocks comprising the platforms were measured, including uniaxial compressive strength (as determined by the Point Load Test), porosity, and calcium carbonate content. The results show that downwearing depends primarily on the intrinsic properties of the substrate. Porosity, in particular, acts in two ways: (i) it tends to weaken the substrate; and, (ii) it controls the downward extent of the water percolation and therefore the depth of the weathering mantle subject to erosion by waves and currents.Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) through Research Projects PTDC/CTEGEX/70448/2006 (BISHOP) and PTDC/CTE-GIX/111230/2009 (EROS)

    A systematic review investigating the behaviour change strategies in interventions to prevent misuse of anabolic steroids.

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    We examined intervention effectiveness of strategies to prevent image- and performance-enhancing drug use. Comprehensive searches identified 14 interventions that met review inclusion criteria. Interventions were predominantly educational and delivered within school sport settings, but targeted a wide range of mediating factors. Identification of effective components was limited across studies by brief or imprecise descriptions of intervention content, lack of behavioural outcome measures and short-term follow-up times. However, studies with components in addition to information provision may be more promising. Interventions outside of sport settings are required to reflect the transition of this form of substance use to the general population

    Morphology of the Faial Island shelf (Azores): the interplay between volcanic, erosional, depositional, tectonic and mass-wasting processes

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    [1] The extents of volcanic island shelves result from surf erosion, which enlarges them, and volcanic progradation, which reduces them. However, mass‐wasting, tectonics and sediment deposition also contribute to their morphology. In order to assess the relative significance of these various processes, we have mapped in detail Faial Island's shelf in the Azores archipelago based on interpretation of geophysical and geological data. The nearshore substrates of the island, down to 30–50 m depth, are rocky and covered by volcaniclastic boulder deposits formed by surf action on now‐submerged lava flows. Below those depths, sandy and gravel volcaniclastic beds dominate, building clinoforms up to the shelf edge. In some sectors of the coast, prograding lava has narrowed the shelf, but, in contrast to nearby Pico Island, we find fewer submarine‐emplaced lavas on the shelf. In this island, we interpret the distance between the coastline and the shelf edge as almost entirely a result of a straightforward competition between surf erosion and lava progradation, in which erosion dominates. Therefore shelf width can be used as a proxy for coastline age as well as for wave energy exposure. The stratigraphy of shelf deposits in boomer seismic data is examined in detail to assess the roles of different sediment sources, accommodation space and wave exposure in creating these deposits. We also show evidence of mass‐wasting at the shelf edge and discuss the possible origins of slope instability. Finally, we discuss the contributing role of tectonics for the development of the shelf.publishe

    Late Quaternary sea-level change and early human societies in the central and eastern Mediterranean Basin : an interdisciplinary review

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    This article reviews key data and debates focused on relative sea-level changes since the Last Interglacial (approximately the last 132,000 years) in the Mediterranean Basin, and their implications for past human populations. Geological and geomorphological landscape studies are critical to archaeology. Coastal regions provide a wide range of resources to the populations that inhabit them. Coastal landscapes are increasingly the focus of scholarly discussions from the earliest exploitation of littoral resources and early hominin cognition, to the inundation of the earliest permanently settled fishing villages and eventually, formative centres of urbanisation. In the Mediterranean, these would become hubs of maritime transportation that gave rise to the roots of modern seaborne trade. As such, this article represents an original review of both the geo-scientific and archaeological data that specifically relate to sea-level changes and resulting impacts on both physical and cultural landscapes from the Palaeolithic until the emergence of the Classical periods. Our review highlights that the interdisciplinary links between coastal archaeology, geomorphology and sea-level changes are important to explain environmental impacts on coastal human societies and human migration. We review geological indicators of sea level and outline how archaeological features are commonly used as proxies for measuring past sea levels, both gradual changes and catastrophic events. We argue that coastal archaeologists should, as a part of their analyses, incorporate important sea-level concepts, such as indicative meaning. The interpretation of the indicative meaning of Roman fishtanks, for example, plays a critical role in reconstructions of late Holocene Mediterranean sea levels. We identify avenues for future work, which include the consideration of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) in addition to coastal tectonics to explain vertical movements of coastlines, more research on Palaeolithic island colonisation, broadening of Palaeolithic studies to include materials from the entire coastal landscape and not just coastal resources, a focus on rescue of archaeological sites under threat by coastal change, and expansion of underwater archaeological explorations in combination with submarine geomorphology. This article presents a collaborative synthesis of data, some of which have been collected and analysed by the authors, as the MEDFLOOD (MEDiterranean sea-level change and projection for future FLOODing) community, and highlights key sites, data, concepts and ongoing debates
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