MEMBERS JANUARY 2013 (204) Countries (50) Afghanistan Algeria

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MEMBERS JANUARY 2013 (204) Countries (50) Afghanistan Algeria MEMBERS JANUARY 2013 (204) Countries (50) Afghanistan Jordan Algeria Kenya Altai Republic of the Russian Federation Kyrgyzstan Andorra Lesotho Argentina Liechtenstein Armenia Mexico Austria Monaco Bhutan Morocco Bolivia Nepal Cameroon Pakistan Chile Peru Colombia Romania Congo (Democratic Republic of) Serbia Cuba Slovakia Ecuador Slovenia Ethiopia Spain France Sri Lanka Georgia Switzerland Ghana The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Guatemala Tunisia Guinea Turkey Indonesia Uganda Iran Ukraine Italy Venezuela Jamaica Yemen Intergovernmental Organizations (16) African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) Alpine Convention Asian Development Bank (ADB) Carpathian Convention Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) International Potato Center (CIP) Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) Mountain Partnership Secretariat 1 [email protected] www.mountainpartnership.org Secretariat for the Convention to Combat Desertification (CCD) United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) United Nations University (UNU) World Bank (WB) Major Groups and Organizations (138) Active Remedy Ltd. Adelboden Group African Conservation Foundation Agency of Development Initiatives (ADI) Agrarian Platform Agriculture Research Council of Italy- Department of Agronomy, Forestry and Land Use (CRA-DAF) Akwapim Mountain Women’s Forum (AMWF) Albertine Rift Conservation Society (ARCOS) Alliance of Central Asian Mountain Communities (AGOCA) American Councils for International Education (ACTR/ACCELS) Ancash Association Andean Mountain Association Argentinean Environmental Centre (CAMBIAR) Aspen (City of) Aspen International Mountain Foundation (AIMF) Association Ardito Desio Association for Social Development (ADESO) Association for the Development of Mountain Regions in the Republic of Macedonia (MAKMONTANA) Association of Forest and Land Users of Kyrgyzstan (AFLU Kyrgyzstan) Association of Forest and Land Users of Tajikistan (AFLU Tajikistan) Balkan Foundation for Sustainable Development (BFSD) Basalt (Town of, USA) Bolivian Mountain Institute Broad Initiatives for Negros Development (BIND) Bulgarian Association for Development of Mountain Regions (BULMONTANA) CAMP Alatoo CAMP Kuhiston Cameroon National Network of Associations and NGOs of the Mountain Partnership CarbonLab, University of Queensland Centre for Climate Change and Disaster Reduction Centre for Development and Environment (CDE) Centre for Environment Education (CEE Himalaya) Mountain Partnership Secretariat 2 [email protected] www.mountainpartnership.org Centre for Mountain Studies (CMS) CIHEAM-IAMM Club Arc Alpin (CAA) Consortium for Sustainable Development of the Andean Ecoregion (CONDESAN) Courmayeur Foundation Crescente Fértil Dean's Beans Organic Coffee Company Department of Development and Protection of Agroforestry Resources (DIVAPRA) University of Turin EasyLan Ecoforum Ecological Tourism in Europe (ETE) EKOIS Environment and Tourism Support (EATS) Environmental Research Center of the Khazar University (ERCKU) Ethiopian Institute of Agricultural Research (EIAR) Euromontana European Academy (EURAC) European Association of Elected Representatives from Mountain Areas (AEM) European Association of Elected Representatives from Mountain Areas (AEM) European Mountain Forum (EMF) Ev-K2-CNR Committee Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas (BABF) Foundation Agreste Foundation Ecohabitats Foundation Fundepáramos Foundation Pangea Foundation ProYungas Foundation Sendero of Chile Foundation for Environment and Development Foundation for Sustainable Development in Mountain Regions (FDDM) Foundation for Sustainable Development of Altai (FSDA) Fundación CoMunidad (Panama) Fundación Cordillera Tropical Ghana Wildlife Society (GWS) Global Mountain Action Global Mountain Biodiversity Assessment Gruppman International Violin Institute Guizhou University of Finance and Economics (GUFE) HELP International Huayhuash Peru Indigenous Peoples’ International Centre for Policy Research and Education (TEBTEBBA) International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) International Commission for the Protection of the Alps (CIPRA) Mountain Partnership Secretariat 3 [email protected] www.mountainpartnership.org International Council for Game and Wildlife Conservation International Development Research Centre (IDRC) International Mountaineering and Climbing Federation (UIAA) International Scientific Committee on Research in the Alps (ISCAR) International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Lebanon Mountain Trail Kavala Institute of Technology (KavTech) MAB-6 Center Metsovion Interdisciplinary Research Center (M.I.R.C) Migration and Development Mountain Areas Conservation and Development Services Mountain Environment Protection Society Mountain Forum Mountain Research and Development Mountain Research Initiative (MRI) Mountain Research: Man & Environment - Austrian Academy of Sciences Mountain Societies Development Support Programme Mountain Studies Institute Mountain territories of Dagestan National Association for the Rural Development of Romanian Mountains National Organization of Mountain Municipalities, Communities and Bodies (UNCEM) Nepal Development Research Institute New World Hope Organization Nile Basin Society Non-Timber Forest Products Exchange Programme (NTFP) Orem (City of) Pan Himalayan Grassroots Development Foundation Park City Pendeba Society PlaNet Finance Practical Action Prakriti, a mountain environment group ProMONT-BLANC Public Foundation “Ergene” Public Foundation Kyrgyzstan Mountain Societies Red de Agroindustria Rural del Peru Regional Environmental Centre for Central Asia Regional Environmental Centre for the Caucasus Resources Himalaya Foundation Romanian Mountain Forum Rural Development Fund Salt Lake City Society for Conserving Planet and Life (COPAL) Soraine Uganda Mountain Partnership Secretariat 4 [email protected] www.mountainpartnership.org Sports Medicine School Suldoz Kouhyaran Institute Sultan Qaboos University Swat Youth Front Tatra Agency for Development Promotion and Culture The Mountain Institute (TMI) Telluride Institute Tropical Science Center UNESCO Club of Serres UNISON University of Central Asia Utah Valley State College and Utah-Russia Institute Vista 360° Volunteers for Africa / ECODECO Partnership Women Organizing for Change in Agriculture and NRM (WOCAN) World Economic Forum World Mountain People Association (WMPA) World Wildlife Fund International (WWF-International) Yachay Wasi Mountain Partnership Secretariat 5 [email protected] www.mountainpartnership.org .
Recommended publications
  • 50 Anni Di Friuli a Roma
    Prima di copertina (dal basso in alto): Carnelutti, Desio, Moselli, Rubbia, Afro, Mirko, Angeli, Pasolini, Turoldo, Astaldi. Retro di copertina (dall’alto in basso): Tondo, Tessitori, Valerio, Toros, Leicht, Sartogo, Galanti, Zucchet, Girolami, Degano. Mostra Cinquant’anni di Friuli a Roma Una presenza dal 1945 Sotto l’Alto Patronato del Presidente della Repubblica ed il Patrocinio di: Senato della Repubblica Regione Autonoma Friuli Venezia Giulia Regione Lazio Comune di Roma Galleria “L’Agostiniana” Roma, piazza del Popolo, 12 11 aprile - 5 maggio 2002 Regione Autonoma Friuli Venezia Giulia Fogolâr Furlàn di Roma Friuli nel Mondo Realizzazione e stampa Arti Grafiche Friulane SpA Tavagnacco, Udine Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia Regione Lazio Comune di Roma Astaldi S.p.A. - Roma Generali - Assicurazioni Generali Banca Intesa - Milano Camera di Commercio, Industria, Artigianato e Agricoltura - Udine Cassa di Risparmio di Udine e Pordenone (CRUP) Faber S.p.A. - Cividale del Friuli Dal Fari - azienda agricola - Cividale del Friuli Telit Mobile Terminals S.p.A. - Trieste Consorzio Latterie Friulane Prosciutto di San Daniele Mostra “Cinquant’anni di Friuli a Roma” Comitato scientifico: Giovan Battista Altan, storico; Ugo Bari, generale; Giuseppe Bergamini, dir. Civici Musei Udine; Ferruccio Clavora, dir. Friuli nel Mondo; Antonio Clemente, giornalista; Fausto Corrubolo, maestro; Damiano Damiani, regista; Licio Damiani, critico; Ermes Disint, giornalista; Piero Fortuna, giornalista; Rodolfo Grasso, architetto; Luciano Pettoello Mantovani, docente; Bruno Martinis, Accademico dei Lincei; Carlo Mattiussi, ingegnere; Franco Mistretta, ministro; Carlo Mittoni, generale; Giuliana Morandini, scrittrice; Stanislao Nievo, scrittore; Piero Nigris, magistrato; Mario Padovan, critico; Leonardo Pascoletti, architetto; Gian Luigi Pezza, avvocato; Alberto Picotti, scrittore; Gianfranco Plenizio, maestro; Claudio Pighin, docente; Francesco Pittoni, ingegnere; Mario Quargnolo, critico; Isabella Reale, dir.
    [Show full text]
  • Bibliografia Di Ardito Desio
    Bibliografia Di Ardito Desio 1 - La «Buse dal Diaul» presso Castel del Monte. "Mondo Sotterraneo", anno X, pag 95, Udine 1914. 2 - La Grotta del Paciuh (Stazione Neolitica nelle Prealpi Giulie). Ibid., anni XV-XVI (1919-20), pp. 25-30, 4 fig., Udine 1920. 3 - Fenomeni carsici sul M. Musi e sul M. Sarto Ibid., pp. 64-65, Udine 1920. 4 - Il turbine atmosferico del 30 agosto 1919 in Friuli. 'In Alto ", anno XXX/, pp. 8-14,2 fig., 1 tav., Udine agosto-dicembre 1920. 5 - Il Ghiacciaio del Montasio.Ibidem, anno XXXI, pp. 21-22, Udine agosto- dicembre 1920. 6 - La Creta del Bacino di Firenze. "Paleont. Italica", vol. XXXVI, pp. 189- 234,8 tav., 10 fig., Pisa 1920. 7 - Risultati sommari di uno studio sul Glaciale del Bacino della Fella e dell'Isonzo. Boll. Soc. Geol. Ital", vol. XXXIX (1920), fasc. 3, pp. CIX-CXII, Roma 1921. 8 - Osservazioni glaciologiche nelle Alpi Camiche e Giulie. "In Alto", anno XXXII, n. 1-3, pp. 1-10, Udine 1921. 9 - I Ghiacciai del Canin e del Montasio. (Osservazioni del 1921). Ibidem, anno XXXII, n. 4-6, pp. 54-69, 1 tav., Udine 1921. 10 - Su di una particolare forma di ghiacciai delle Alpi Venete. “Atti dell'VIII Congresso Geografico Italiano”, vol. II, pp. 42-46, 2 tav., 2 fig., Firenze 1921. 11- Carta della distribuzione delle industrie del Paleolitico inferiore e medio in Europa. Ibidem, vol. II, pp. 184-185, 1 fig., Firenze 1921. 12 - Su di una grotta della Val Saisera. "Mondo Sotterraneo", anni XVII-XVIII (1921-22), pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Grotte DI INTERESSE PALEONTOLOGICO E PALETNOLOGICO in Friuli: Stato Delle Conoscenze E Risultati Preliminari Della Revisione Di Alcuni Materiali
    GORTANIA. Geologia,GORTANIA Paleontologia, Paletnologia 38 (2016) Geologia, Paleontologia, Paletnologia 38 (2016) 85-120 Udine, 30.XI.2017 ISSN: 2038-0410 Paolo Maddaleni GROTTE DI INTERESSE PALEONTOLOGICO E PALETNOLOGICO IN FRIULI: STATO DELLE CONOSCENZE E RISULTATI PRELIMinaRI DELLA REVISIONE DI alcUni MATERIALI In ricordo di Adriano Del Fabbro CAVES OF PALEONTOLOgical and PALETNOLOgical (1936-2017), appassionato studioso INTEREST IN FRIULI (NE ITALY): STATE OF KNOWLEDGE and della preistoria delle grotte friulane PRELIMinaRY RESULTS OF THE REVISION OF SOME MATERials Riassunto breve - Grotte e ripari sotto roccia sono stati utilizzati dall’uomo sia come ricoveri di tipo stabile o temporaneo che come luoghi di difesa o di “culto”. Ambienti “chiusi”, per loro natura conservativi, essi appaiono caratterizzati da un elevato potenziale informativo ai fini della ricostruzione del popolamento, in senso diacronico, di un territorio. Il Friuli, per la sua conformazione e costituzione geologica, è ricco di fenomeni carsici: alcuni di questi, soprattutto nell’area prealpina, hanno dato vita a contesti insediativi di notevole interesse, variamente abitati almeno dal Paleolitico medio. I dati disponibili per tali contesti, spesso inediti, sono nella maggior parte dei casi frutto di ricerche datate compiute a partire dagli inizi del secolo scorso. Il loro inquadramento cronologico e culturale, in assenza di dati contestuali, può oggi basarsi sulla sola analisi tipolo- gica dei reperti recuperati, in particolare quelli ceramici e litici. Fanno eccezione il Riparo di Biarzo e la Grotta di Cladrecis (oggetto di scavo negli anni ’80 del secolo scorso) ed alcune cavità della pedemontana Pordenonese (ultimi decenni - in corso: Grotte del Rio Secco e del Clusantin), gli unici ad essere stati oggetto di scavo e studi post-scavo sistematici.
    [Show full text]
  • Muttoni+Kent-2019 RIPS Copy
    Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafa (Research in Paleontology and Stratigraphy) vol. 125(1): 249-269. March 2019 ADRIA AS PROMONTORY OF AFRICA AND ITS CONCEPTUAL ROLE IN THE TETHYS TWIST AND PANGEA B TO PANGEA A TRANSFORMATION IN THE PERMIAN GIOVANNI MUTTONI1* & DENNIS V. KENT2 1 *Corresponding author. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra 'Ardito Desio', Università degli Studi di Milano, via Mangiagalli 34, I-20133 Milan, Italy. 2Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA, and Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, NY 10964, USA.. To cite this article: Muttoni G. & Kent D.V. (2019) - Adria as promontory of Africa and its conceptual role in the Tethys Twist and Pangea B to Pangea A Transformation in the Permian. Riv. It. Paleontol. Strat., 125(1): 249-269. Keywords: Paleomagnetism; Adria; Pangea B; Pangea A. Abstract. It has been almost 60 years since the frst results from the Early Permian Bolzano Quartz Porphyries from the Trento Plateau of northern Italy (Southern Alps) showed paleomagnetic inclinations steeper than inclina- tions from broadly coeval units from central Europe. This experimental discrepancy, confrmed ever since at varying levels of magnitude and certitude, implied that northern Italy had paleolatitudes too northerly relative to Europe to be considered part of the European continent. On the other hand, it became progressively more apparent that paleo- magnetic data from northern Italy were more compatible with data from Africa than with data from Europe, and this observation revived and complemented Argand’s original concept of Adria as a promontory of Africa. But if Adria was part of Africa, then the paleolatitude anomaly of Adria relative to Europe translated into a huge crustal misft of Gondwana relative to Laurasia when these landmasses were forced into a classic Wegenerian Pangea as typifed by the Bullard ft of the circum-Atlantic continents.
    [Show full text]
  • Scientific Drilling: a Long-Lasting Opportunity for Cutting-Edge Research in Earth and Ocean Sciences
    Scientific Drilling: a long-lasting opportunity for cutting-edge research in Earth and Ocean Sciences Elisabetta Erba Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra Ardito Desio, Università di Milano La Statale Angelo Camerlenghi Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale, Trieste IODP is an international dedicated to the exploration of Earth's history and dynamics trough scientific drilling and geophysical survey. It is the largest, longest and most innovative research program ever conceived in the field of Earth Sciences. DEEP SEA DRILLING PROJECT The Levingston Shipbuilding Company laid the keel of the D/V Glomar Challenger on October 18, 1967, in Orange, Texas. The ship was launched on March 23, 1968, from that city. It sailed down the Sabine River to the Gulf of Mexico, and after a period of testing, the Deep Sea Drilling Project accepted the ship on August 11, 1968 OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM The scientific research vessel JOIDES Resolution began operations in 1978 as the Sedco/BP 471, originally an oil exploration vessel. In January 1985, after being converted for scientific research, the vessel began working for the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP). Drilling with ODP continued until September 2003. IODP was launched in 2003 and build on the legacy of the Deep Sea Drilling Program (DSDP) and 2013-2023 Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) ODP 2003-2013 Multiple platforms: 3 platform providers DSDP Project MOHOLE 1985-2003 1968-1983 1958-1966 A strong partnership 23 member countries • USA • Japan • ECORD (15) • China • India • Brazil • ANZIC ECORD: a Consortium part of IODP • S Korea VIDEO ECORD https://www.ecord.org/about-ecord/about-us/ecord-explained-in-4-minutes-video/ In 2003, the European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling (ECORD) was created to coordinate the European contribution to IODP as a single partner.
    [Show full text]
  • The Persistence of Colonialism
    The Persistence of Colonialism A Century of Italo-Libyan Relationships and Their Influence on the Current European Migration Regime in the Mediterranean (1911–2017) Mathias Hatleskog Tjønn Master Thesis in Modern International and Transnational History, at the Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History, Spring 2019 university of oslo Preface The first person I owe a heartfelt thank you to, is my supervisor Patrick Bernhard. You gave me the impetus to hit the ground running and you have been a solid supporter ever since. I cannot claim to have reached anywhere near the high literary standards of either novelist, but I hope the thesis stays somewhat true to you suggestion of “more Heming- way, less Proust” in terms of its prose. I was also fortunate to have Elisabetta Cassina Wolff as my supervisor, who supplied much needed insight into Italian politics and history. At prio I could rely on Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert for further supervision. Your perspective, input and inspiration were greatly appreciated. Before deciding to enroll in the mitra program I spoke with both Johannes Due and Jørgen Jensehaugen. Thank you for the real talk and continued encouragement, gentlemen. Among the mitra faculty, particularly Daniel Maul, Klaus Nathaus and Kim Priemel deserve a tip of the hat. Of my fellow students I want to above all thank Lars Magne Tungland and Siw Ellen Lien Rysstad for our conversations. I would like to extend a warm thank you to Martin Baumeister, Sandra Heisel, Patricia Kern, Lutz Klinkhammer and Elisa Ritzmann as well as all their colleagues at the German Historical Institute in Rome, for giving me the opportunity to work with and learn from you.
    [Show full text]
  • Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 399 (2014) 246–259
    Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 399 (2014) 246–259 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/palaeo A Middle–Late Triassic (Ladinian–Rhaetian) carbon and oxygen isotope record from the Tethyan Ocean Giovanni Muttoni a,⁎, Michele Mazza a, David Mosher b, Miriam E. Katz b, Dennis V. Kent c,d, Marco Balini a a Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra “Ardito Desio”, Universita' di Milano, via Mangiagalli 34, 20133 Milan, Italy b Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180, USA c Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA d Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, NY 10964, USA article info abstract Article history: We obtained bulk-sediment δ18O and δ13C data from biostratigraphically-constrained Tethyan marine sections at Received 4 October 2013 Aghia Marina (Greece), Guri Zi (Albania), and Brumano and Italcementi Quarry (Italy), and revised the published Received in revised form 15 January 2014 chemostratigraphy of the Pizzo Mondello section (Italy). We migrated these records from the depth to the time Accepted 18 January 2014 domain using available chronostratigraphic tie points, generating Ladinian–Rhaetian δ13C and δ18O records span- Available online 29 January 2014 ning from ~242 to ~201 Ma. The δ18O record seems to be affected by diagenesis, whereas the δ13C record appears ‰ ‰ Keywords: to preserve a primary signal and shows values increasing by ~1 in the Ladinian followed by an ~0.6 decrease Carbon isotopes across the Ladinian–Carnian boundary, followed by relatively constant (but oscillatory) Carnian values punctuat- Oxygen isotopes ed by a negative excursion at ~233 Ma in the early Carnian, a second negative excursion at ~229.5 Ma across the Conodonts early–late Carnian boundary, and a positive excursion at ~227 Ma across the Carnian–Norian boundary.
    [Show full text]
  • Ardito Desio
    UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI MILANO DIPARTIMENTO DI SCIENZF, DELLA TERRA Pubblicazioni di ARDITO DESIO 20T33 MILANO Via Mangiagalli, 34 Aprile 1987 Pubblicozioni di Ardito Desio CURRICULUM VITAE Nato a Palmsnova (Udine) il 18 aprile 1897 daAntonio (nativo diPalmanova) e da Caterina Zorzella di Cividale, primo di te figli di cui due femmine: Nelsa e Bruna. Frequentò le scuole elementari a Palmanova, le medie inferiori a Udine, quelle supeiori a Cividale ed il liceo allo Jacopo Stellini di Udine. Partecipò prima come volontario nel 1915, poi di leva come ufficiale degli alpini, alla la guerua mondiale. Catturato, prigioniero nel novembre 1917, liberato nell'ottobre 1918. Ora, maggio- re degli alpini fuori servizio. Si lqureò in Scienze Naturali all'Università di Firenze con una tesi sul Glaciale della Valle di Restu, il 31 luglio 1920. Conservatore nel Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano dal 1924 al 1927. Libero docente di Geologia nel 1927, assistente incaricato a Firenze, Pavin e Milqno dal 1922. hofessore incaricato di Geologia, Geografia fisica e Paleontologia all'Uni- versità di Milano. Vinse il concorso per la cattedra di Geologia della medesima uni- versità nel'1931. Direttore effettivo dell'Istituto di Geolo§a dell'Università di Mi- lano da lui stesso fondato nel 1929, e professore incaricato di Geologia Applicata al Politecnico di Milano. Organizzò e diresse per tre anni al Politecnico il <<Corso di Tecnica delle Perforazioni» e per quattro anni all'Università il <<Corso di Perfeziona- mento in Geologia applicata» sino al 3l ottobre I 967, anno in cui ondò fuori ruolo per limiti di etù.
    [Show full text]
  • The Mountains of My Life. Walter Bonatti. T Ranslated
    The Mountains of My Life. Walter Bonatti. T r a n s l a t e d a n d e d i t e d , w i t h a n a d d i t i o n a l CHAPTER, BY ROBERT MARSHALL. NEW YORK: MODERN LIBRARY, 2001. 443 PAGES. $14.95. Was ever a great climber’s life so rich in the bright sunshine of achievement and in the darkness of calumny and paranoia? A shadow fell across the life of the 24-year-old Walter Bonatti, when the accounts of the successful climb of K2 in 1954 elided the crucial support role he’d played at great risk to his life. Alternative reconstructions by different players, miscommunications between the climbers, non-communication in dumb show between them and their Balti porters, cover ups and mendacity by principals in the Italian Alpine Club (Club Alpino Italiano, CAI), all play a part. The bare bones of this wretched story are as follows. With all other members of the team wasted or in retreat, Bonatti, accompanied by Mahdi, a porter with limited climbing or high altitude experience, carried two crucial tanks of oxygen from Camp 8 to around 26,300 feet, where they had expected to meet and share a tent with the summit team, Compagnoni and Lacedelli. The tent was not at the agreed location, and the summiters made little effort to help Bonatti and Mahdi find them, nor seemed concerned at the danger in which they stood. Unable to reach the higher pair, Bonatti (who’d already spent seven continuous days above 23,000 feet) and the porter bivouacked—this at a time when bivouacs above 8,000 meters were thought to be killers and Herman Buhl’s survival of one at the top of Nanga Parbat the previous year deemed a fluke.
    [Show full text]
  • Formal Ratification of the GSSP for the Base of the Calabrian Stage (Second Stage of the Pleistocene Series, Quaternary System)
    388 by Maria Bianca Cita 1, Philip L. Gibbard 2, Martin J. Head 3, and the ICS Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy† Formal ratification of the GSSP for the base of the Calabrian Stage (second stage of the Pleistocene Series, Quaternary System) 1 Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra ‘Ardito Desio’, Universita’ degli Studi di Milano, via Mangiagalli, 34, 20133 Milano, Italy 2 Cambridge Quaternary, Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EN, U.K. E-mail: [email protected] 3 Department of Earth Sciences, Brock University, 500 Glenridge Avenue, St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 3A1, Canada. E-mail: [email protected] The Calabrian Stage is now formally defined by the by the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) that the Global Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) at Vrica, Calabria, Italy (Fig. 1) be used to define the base of the Calabrian Stage of the at Vrica, Calabria, Italy. This GSSP had previously Pleistocene Series and Quaternary System. The Vrica GSSP had defined the base of the Pleistocene Series. The Calabrian previously defined the base of the Pleistocene and Quaternary before becomes the second stage of the Pleistocene Series and these datum points were lowered in 2009 to the Monte San Nicola Quaternary System, following the Gelasian. The GSSP GSSP in Sicily, Italy, which also defines the base of the Gelasian occurs at the base of the marine claystone conformably Stage (Gibbard and Head, 2010; Gibbard et al., 2010). The proposal had been submitted to the ICS by the Subcommission on Quaternary overlying sapropelic bed ‘e’ within Segment B in the Vrica Stratigraphy (Table 1) on 29 November 2010, and was approved by section.
    [Show full text]
  • “Chaotic Carbon Interval”: New Clues from the Δ13c
    Research Paper GEOSPHERE 13 The Norian “chaotic carbon interval”: New clues from the δ Corg GEOSPHERE; v. 13, no. 4 record of the Lagonegro Basin (southern Italy) 1 1,6 2 3 4 1,5 1,6 doi:10.1130/GES01459.1 Mariachiara Zaffani , Claudia Agnini , Giuseppe Concheri , Linda Godfrey , Miriam Katz , Matteo Maron , and Manuel Rigo 1Department of Geosciences, University of Padova, via Gradenigo 6, 35131 Padova, Italy 2Department of Agronomy, Food, Natural Resources, Animals and the Environment (DAFNAE), University of Padova, Viale dell’Università 16, 35020 Legnaro (PD), Italy 3 figures; 1 supplemental file 3Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA 4Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 110 8th St., Troy, New York 12180, USA CORRESPONDENCE: 5Department of Earth Sciences “Ardito Desio,” University of Milan, via Mangiagalli, 34, 20133 Milan, Italy mariachiara .zaffani@ studenti .unipd.it 6Institute of Geosciences and Earth Resources–Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), Via G. Gradenigo 6, 35131 Padova, Italy CITATION: Zaffani, M., Agnini, C., Concheri, G., Godfrey, L., Katz, M., Maron, M., and Rigo, M., 2017, ABSTRACT (e.g., Lucas, 1999; Benton and Twitchett, 2003; Lucas and Orchard, 2004; The Norian “chaotic carbon interval”: New clues from Erwin, 2006); and (2) the end-Triassic mass extinction (e.g., Hallam, 2002; 13 the d Corg record of the Lagonegro Basin (south­ A global carbon-isotope curve for the Late Triassic has the potential for Tanner et al., 2004; Richoz et al., 2007). The Triassic is also characterized by ern Italy): Geosphere, v. 13, no. 4, p.
    [Show full text]
  • Topics in Geobiology
    Topics in Geobiology Volume 46 The Topics in Geobiology series covers the broad discipline of geobiology that is devoted to documenting life history of the Earth. A critical theme inherent in addressing this issue and one that is at the heart of the series is the interplay between the history of life and the changing environment. The series aims for high quality, scholarly volumes of original research as well as broad reviews. Geobiology remains a vibrant as well as a rapidly advancing and dynamic field. Given this field’s multidiscipline nature, it treats a broad spectrum of geologic, biologic, and geochemical themes all focused on documenting and understanding the fossil record and what it reveals about the evolutionary history of life. The Topics in Geobiology series was initiated to delve into how these numerous facets have influenced and controlled life on Earth. Recent volumes have showcased specific taxonomic groups, major themes in the discipline, as well as approaches to improving our understanding of how life has evolved. Taxonomic volumes focus on the biology and paleobiology of organisms – their ecology and mode of life – and, in addition, the fossil record – their phylogeny and evolutionary patterns – as well as their distribution in time and space. Theme-based volumes, such as predator-prey relationships, biomineralization, paleobiogeography, and approaches to high-resolution stratigraphy, cover specific topics and how important elements are manifested in a wide range of organisms and how those dynamics have changed through the evolutionary history of life. Comments or suggestions for future volumes are welcomed. Series Editors Neil Landman American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, USA Peter J.
    [Show full text]