Showing 1 - 16 results of 16 for search '"fish"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
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    Evaluating fish processing patterns in the lower stream of the Colorado River (eastern Pampa-Patagonian transition, Argentina): An experimental work by Stoessel, Luciana, Martinez, Gustavo Adolfo, Alcaraz, Ana Paula

    Published 2018
    “…Freshwater and marine fish specimens recovered from the zooarchaeological assemblages of these periods exhibit processing cutmarks. …”
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    Effects of dietary lipids on cell proliferation of murine oral mucosa by Actis, A. B., Joekes, S., Cremonezzi, D., Morales, G., Eynard, A. R.

    Published 2017
    “…After weaning, BALB/c mice were assigned to four diets: Control (C), Corn Oil (CO), Fish (FO) and Olein (O). Two weeks later, DMBA was injected into the submandibular area. …”
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    Dunes as Units of Preservation of the Archaeological Record in the North Coast of San Matías Gulf, Province of Río Negro (Argentina) by Herrera Villegas, Dalila Viviana

    Published 2019
    “…The objective of this paper is to identify the agents that acted on the preservation and current disposition of the archaeological record, recognizing the importance that the bodies of dunes have had in the state of conservation of the evidence, which is conformed by valves, remains of fish and marine mammals, terrestrial vertebrates, lithics, and carbon, among others.…”
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    Isotopic ecology and human palaeodiets in the lower basin of the Colorado River, Buenos Aires province, Argentina by Martinez, Gustavo Adolfo, Zangrando, Atilio Francisco Javier, Prates, Luciano Raúl

    Published 2009
    “…As a general trend, the results obtained from both C and N isotopic signals indicate a diet based on the consumption of protein provided by meat of terrestrial herbivores (e.g. artiodactyls) with the complement of fish. These results are in agreement with the data obtained from the zooarchaeological record for the Late Holocene.…”
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    First approach to the paleodiet of hunter-gatherers through stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) in the eastern Pampa-Patagonia transition during the Middle Holocene by Flensborg, Gustavo Ariel, Martinez, Gustavo Adolfo, Tessone, Augusto

    Published 2018
    “…., vegetal and animal) and marine resources (e.g., fish). Thus, both spatial and temporal variations in diet and subsistence, as well as issues related to mobility and the use of landscape (coast-inland), were explored. …”
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    Potential parasitic infections transmitted by seafood in ancient populations from Patagonia by Alarcos, Ana Julia, Suby, Jorge Alejandro

    Published 2020
    “…Some species of molluscs, fishes and pinnipeds are highly infected by larvae that are potentially hazardous for human health. …”
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    Changing scenarios in Bajo de la Quinta (San Matías Gulf, Northern Patagonia, Argentina): Impact of geomorphologic processes in subsistence and human use of coastal habitats by Favier Dubois, Cristian Mario, Kokot, Roberto Roque

    Published 2011
    “…With respect to the first issue, changes in human paleodiets and fishing practices could be related with the sedimentary filling and rectification of this littoral after the high marine level scenario. …”
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    Isotopic niche partitioning between two apex predators over time by Drago, Massimiliano, Cardona, Luis, Franco Trecu, Valentina, Crespo, Enrique Alberto, Vales, Damián Gustavo, Borella, Florencia, Zenteno, Lisette, Gonzáles, Enrique M., Inchausti, Pablo

    Published 2017
    “…This recent dietary change of South American fur seals can be explained by at least two non-mutually exclusive mechanisms: (i) the decrease in the abundance of sympatric South American sea lions as a consequence of small colony size and high pup mortality resulting from commercial sealing; and (ii) the decrease in the average size of demersal fishes due to intense fishing of the larger class sizes, which may have increased their accessibility to those eared seals with a smaller mouth gape, i.e., South American fur seals of both sexes and female South American sea lions.…”
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    Holocene changes in the trophic ecology of an apex marine predator in the South Atlantic Ocean by Vales, Damián Gustavo, Cardona, Luis, Zangrando, Atilio Francisco Javier, Borella, Florencia, Saporiti, Fabiana, Prosser Goodall, Rae Natalie, Rosa de Oliveira, Larissa, Crespo, Enrique Alberto

    Published 2017
    “…Stable isotope ratios of nitrogen and carbon in bone collagen have been used to reconstruct the foraging ecology of South American fur seals (Arctocephalus australis) in the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean since the Middle Holocene, a region inhabited by hunter-gatherers by millennia and modified by two centuries of whaling, sealing and fishing. Results suggest that the isotopic niche of fur seals from Patagonia has not changed over the last two millennia (average for the period: δ13C2200-0BP = −13.4 ± 0.5‰, δ15N2200-0BP = 20.6 ± 1.1‰). …”
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