Academic literature on the topic 'Monte San Giorgio'

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Journal articles on the topic "Monte San Giorgio"

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Stampfli, Andreas, Mathias Lörtscher, and Fredi Guggisberg. "Artenrückgang in Magerwiesen Wissenschaftlicher Naturschutz am Monte San Giorgio." GAIA - Ecological Perspectives for Science and Society 1, no. 2 (March 1, 1992): 105–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.14512/gaia.1.2.7.

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Bürgin, Toni, Olivier Rieppel, P. Martin Sander, and Karl Tschanz. "Science in Pictures: The Fossils of Monte San Giorgio." Scientific American 260, no. 6 (June 1989): 74–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/scientificamerican0689-74.

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Müller, Johannes. "The anatomy of Askeptosaurus italicus from the Middle Triassic of Monte San Giorgio and the interrelationships of thalattosaurs (Reptilia, Diapsida)." Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 42, no. 7 (July 1, 2005): 1347–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e05-030.

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The anatomy of the thalattosauriform reptile Askeptosaurus italicus from the Middle Triassic of Monte San Giorgio is redescribed. Important anatomical features are the plesiomorphic braincase, the unique fronto-lacrimal contact, the absence of a previously described thyroid fenestra, and significant intraspecific variation in the carpus. An analysis of thalattosaur ingroup relationships reveals that Endennasaurus and the monophyletic Askeptosaurus and Anshunsaurus are the sister group to all other thalattosaurs, whereas the Monte San Giorgio taxa Clarazia and Hescheleria form the sister clade of Thalattosaurus, and the Chinese Xinpusaurus and the Californian Nectosaurus form a monophyletic group. The analysis supports the biogeographic interpretation of trans-Pacific relationships and a re-invasion of Tethyan areas.
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Maisch, Michael W., and Andreas T. Matzke. "Observations on Triassic ichthyosaurs. Part II: A new ichthyosaur with palatal teeth from Monte San Giorgio." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Monatshefte 1998, no. 1 (January 1, 1998): 26–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/njgpm/1998/1998/26.

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Stockar, Rudolf, Thierry Adatte, Peter O. Baumgartner, and Karl B. Föllmi. "Palaeoenvironmental significance of organic facies and stable isotope signatures: the Ladinian San Giorgio Dolomite and Meride Limestone of Monte San Giorgio (Switzerland, WHL UNESCO)." Sedimentology 60, no. 1 (January 2013): 239–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sed.12021.

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Stockar, Rudolf, Peter O. Baumgartner, and Daniel Condon. "Integrated Ladinian bio-chronostratigraphy and geochrononology of Monte San Giorgio (Southern Alps, Switzerland)." Swiss Journal of Geosciences 105, no. 1 (May 15, 2012): 85–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00015-012-0093-5.

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Pasini, Giovanni, Alessandro Garassino, Rudolf Stockar, and Fabio Magnani. "Penaeidean and caridean shrimps (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Upper Meride Limestone (Middle Triassic) of Monte San Giorgio (TI, Switzerland)." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen 303, no. 3 (March 31, 2022): 339–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/njgpa/2022/1053.

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Beardmore, Susan R., and Heinz Furrer. "Preservation of Pachypleurosauridae (Reptilia; Sauropterygia) from the Middle Triassic of Monte San Giorgio, Switzerland." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen 280, no. 2 (May 4, 2016): 221–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/njgpa/2016/0578.

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Etter, Walter. "A new penaeid shrimp (Antrimpos mirigiolensis n. sp., Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Middle Triassic of the Monte San Giorgio (Ticino, Switzerland)." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Monatshefte 1994, no. 4 (April 1, 1994): 223–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/njgpm/1994/1994/223.

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Beardmore, Susan R., and Heinz Furrer. "Taphonomic variation within a Middle Triassic fossil lagerstätte (Cassina beds, Meride Limestone) at Monte San Giorgio." PalZ 93, no. 1 (June 12, 2018): 49–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12542-018-0415-7.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Monte San Giorgio"

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Foss, Erik Alexander. "An Architectural Follie on Monte San Giorgio." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/97367.

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Geometry. Pure Form. What are the limits of these concepts in architecture? To what extent can they be realized through constructive means? To the architect, these concepts are often the originating forces driving their work, but their nature is intangible, and can be best understood through reason. There exists then, a dichotomy that the architect is left to resolve: that which is solely of an intelligible nature and that which can exist within the physical limitations of our reality. While architectonic limitations are that of the physical, Architecture itself exists within both of these realms, the duality of the mind and of the body, and it is the charge of the architect to reconcile their inherent contradictions. The limitations of the mind and the body are incompatible at an absolute level, but there exists a degree of overlap within which architecture is found. Place is a catalyst that can trigger this dissonance. The intelligible exists in a placeless space, a space that was given a framework by René Descartes in his notion of extension, and exists as a free body. In contrast, the architectonic is contingent on placement and the forces of gravity. They are simultaneously contradictory and co-related. This thesis pursues the limits of this contradiction; its culmination more akin to an architectural follie than the original intent: a modest hiking shelter.
Master of Architecture
This thesis explores the duality and contradictions that arise when the realm of reason and the realm of that which is built coincide. The framework through which this exploration takes place is in the conception and design of a small structure in the mountains of Ticino, an Italian canton of southern Switzerland. It is a building whose purpose is pleasure, nothing more. The pursuit of ideal form in place is a catalyst for the series of contradictions that exist within not only this thesis, but the realm of architecture. Place and space. Mind and body. Intelligible and sensible.
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Strada, L. "THE TRIASSIC INSECTS FROM MONTE SAN GIORGIO: SYSTEMATICS AND PALEOENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/265521.

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A collection of 16 specimens of insects (both adult and larval forms) collected between 1997 and 2003 in the Lower Kalkschieferzone (KSZ) at the Val Mara site D near Meride (Canton Ticino, Svizzera), Monte San Giorgio by the UNIMI team lead by Prof. A. Tintori and Dr. C. Lombardo and with the support by Dr. Markus Felber, then curator at the Museo Cantonale di S.N. in Lugano (MCSN) are here described and the paleoenvironmental implications of this entomofauna is discussed. Monte San Giorgio is a Triassic fossil lagerstätte inscribed since 2003 in the UNESCO World Heritage for its vertebrate fossils, but the importance of its fossil insects is coming into light. The insect assemblage has proved to be exceptional under two aspects: it includes the most ancient fossil record for four groups and it provides the most ancient record of nervous structures (cerebrum and nerve cord) in insects, thanks to preservation through phosphatization. The Kalkschieferzone entomofauna is also quite diverse, including representatives of seven orders, both terrestrial and aquatic, suggesting the existence of a much more complex and stable terrestrial habitat than a carbonatic platform could support.
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BINDELLINI, GABRIELE. "STUDY OF THE PALEONTOLOGICAL RECORD OF THE BESANO FORMATION (MIDDLE TRIASSIC) AT ¿SASSO CALDO¿, VARESE, UNESCO WHL MONTE SAN GIORGIO." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2022. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/924610.

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The Besano Formation consists of an alternation of laminated dolomitic banks and bituminous shales, and sparse cineritic tuffs that are dated as Late Anisian–Early Ladinian. It is one of the richest fossil-bearing formations from the Monte San Giorgio area; on the Italian side of Monte San Giorgio, the Sasso Caldo site is the one from which the greatest part of the Besano collection housed at the Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano is from. This Ph.D. thesis aims to the study of the Besano Formation macrofauna, through biochronostratigraphic zonation of the Sasso Caldo Site, revision of the large ichthyosaur Besanosaurus leptorhynchus), and study of the most important specimens, chosen for their preservation and rarity, but also to test the hypothesis of variations in the influence of open sea on the Besano basin. All the available ammonoids and bivalves from the Sasso Caldo site (Besano Formation), housed in the collections of the Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano, were examined and determined. The systematic study led to the recognition of 15 ammonoid taxa belonging to 10 genera, and five species belonging to the bivalve genus Daonella. The study of bed-by-bed collected specimens allowed the biochronostratigraphic classification of the Sasso Caldo section and the time-calibration of invertebrate and vertebrate bioevents. Results evidence that at Sasso Caldo site crops out almost the entire middle to upper Besano Formation. corresponding the Nevadites secedensis ammonoid zone. The trend of distribution of specimens reflects the establishment of an intraplatform basin with discontinuous open-marine influence in the middle Besano Formation, while the upper Besano Formation corresponds to a shallower subtidal restricted platform environment. Among the terrestrial taxa recovered at Sasso Caldo from the upper Besano Formation, a remarkably well-preserved fossil scorpion (BES SC 1973) is described in this thesis. This finding corroborates the hypothesized existence of a near shoreline during the deposition of the upper Besano Formation. BES SC 1973 is assigned to a new taxon gen. et sp. nov., included in the family Protobuthidae. This finding represents the first arachnid recorded from the Besano Formation, and the second genus attributed to the family Protobuthidae. This specimen is also the first reported Italian Mesozoic fossil scorpion. Regarding vertebrates, MSNM V927 and 928, a portion of the axial skeleton of a large diapsid, is attributed to Helveticosaurus zollingeri, a rare diapsid known only from the Besano Formation. This animal was recovered in association with the ammonoid Ticinites, at the base of the N. secedensis Zone, in coincidence with the establishment of the intraplatform basin of the middle Besano Formation. This specimen is the first record of skeletal remains and the second specimen assigned to the taxon in Italy. In this work the niche occupied by this animal in the Middle Triassic coastal ecosystems and its swimming style are also revised and discussed. MSNM V926, and SMNS 50010, respectively a portion of ribcage and an isolated partial forefin of a large ichthyosaur, were attributed to Cymbospondylus buchseri. MSNM V926 represents the first specimen attributed to this taxon and recovered on the Italian side of Monte San Giorgio. A great part of this thesis is dedicated to the revision of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus. The specimens studied and attributed to Besanosaurus leptorhynchus preserve a remarkably complete cranial and postcranial anatomy so that this taxon can be now accounted among the best-understood Middle Triassic ichthyosaur taxa. The revision of the skull morphology of this taxon clarified long-standing controversies regarding its cranial anatomy and the taxonomy of shastasaurids from Monte San Giorgio. The six specimens here described represent a potential ontogenetic series composed of an embryo (inside the maternal cavity of BES SC 999), likely two subadults, and four adults. They can be ordered by increasing size as follows: embryonic material of BES SC 999, PIMUZ T 4376, PIMUZ T 1895, BES SC 999, BES SC 1016, GPIT 1793/1, PIMUZ T 4847. Also, Besanosaurus resulted the largest Middle Triassic ichthyosaur taxon of the Western Tethys to date, since a full adult size is confidently estimated to be almost 8 m in PIMUZ T 4847. Besanosaurus is characterized by a long, slender, and gracile snout, representing an ecological specialization never seen before the Anisian in a large-sized diapsid. The study of the postcranial anatomy of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus is based on four specimens: PIMUZ T 4376, PIMUZ T 1895, BES SC 999, PIMUZ T 4847. The results suggest that this taxon possesses a peculiar bauplan, which in its proportions fits in between Cymbospondylus and the shastasaur-grade ichthyosaurs. Swimming capabilities of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus were tested and compared with Cymbospondylus and Mixosaurus. Among the ichthyosaurs from the Besano-Monte San Giorgio fauna (Cymbopondylus, mixosaurids, and Besanosaurus), different hunting strategies, demonstrated by different morphologies and dimensions of the rostra, as well as different body proportions and swimming styles, should have led to niche partitioning. The key phylogenetic position occupied by Besanosausurus leptorhynchus in the ichthyosaurian phylogeny was investigated: the analysis shows that this taxon represents the basalmost member of shastasaur-grade ichthyosaurs, recovered to be a paraphyletic group. Eventually is addressed a study of the embryonic material preserved in BES SC 999. We deem the material in the body cavity of BES SC 999 unambiguously embryonic and attributable to Besanosaurus leptorhynchus. Here the embryonic material is described in detail and qualitatively compared with the maternal specimen and to other known ichthyosaur prenatal specimens.
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Books on the topic "Monte San Giorgio"

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Furrer, H. Der Monte San Giorgio im Südtessin: Vom Berg der Saurier zur Fossil-Lagerstätte internationaler Bedeutung. Zürich: Naturforschende Gesellschaft in Zürich, 2003.

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Mixosaurier (Reptilia, Ichthyosauria) mit Quetschzähnen aus der Grenzbitumenzone (Mitteltrias) des Monte San Giorgio (Schweiz, Kanton Tessin). Basel: Kommission der Schweizerischen Paläontologischen Abhandlungen, 2004.

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Il San Giorgio vittorioso di Sebastiano Conca: Un restauro e tre acquisti per la collezione della Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena. [Siena]: Monte dei Paschi di Siena, 2006.

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D'Elia, Pina Belli. L'angelo, la montagna, il pellegrino: Monte Sant'Angelo e il santuario di San Michele del Gargano : archeologia arte culto devozione dalle origini ai nostri giorni. Roma]: C. Grenzi, 1999.

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Panfili, Andrea. Francesco Tessicini e l'organo della Madonna dei Monti in Roma, ora nella pieve di San Giorgio in Domegge di Cadore: Con notizie sugli altri organi transitati nella chiesa romana dal XVII al XX secolo. Guastalla: Associazione "Giuseppe Serassi, ", 2018.

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Pina, Belli D'Elia, Aulisa Immacolata, Museo "G. Tancredi" (Monte Sant'Angelo, Italy), and Ecole française de Rome. Galerie, eds. L' angelo la montagna il pellegrino: Monte Sant'Angelo e il santuario di San Michele del Gargano : archeologia, arte, culto, devozione dalle origini ai nostri giorni. Foggia: C. Grenzi, 1999.

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Pina, Belli D'Elia, ed. L' angelo, la montagna, il pellegrino: Monte Sant'Angelo e il santuario di San Michele del Gargano : archeologia arte culto devozione dalle origini ai nostri giorni. Roma: C. Grenzi, 1999.

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Scheffold, Beat, and Olivier Rieppel. Mesozoic Sea Dragons: Triassic Marine Life from the Ancient Tropical Lagoon of Monte San Giorgio. Indiana University Press, 2019.

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Rieppel, Olivier. Mesozoic Sea Dragons: Triassic Marine Life from the Ancient Tropical Lagoon of Monte San Giorgio. Indiana University Press, 2019.

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Scheffold, Beat, and Olivier Rieppel. Mesozoic Sea Dragons: Triassic Marine Life from the Ancient Tropical Lagoon of Monte San Giorgio. Indiana University Press, 2019.

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Book chapters on the topic "Monte San Giorgio"

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Rieber, Hans Peter. "Monte San Giorgio und Besano, mittlere Trias, Schweiz und Italien." In Europäische Fossillagerstätten, 83–90. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-57198-5_12.

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Stockar, Rudolf, and Silvio Renesto. "Co-occurrence of Neusticosaurus edwardsii and N. peyeri (Reptilia) in the Lower Meride Limestone (Middle Triassic, Monte San Giorgio)." In Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Lithographic Limestone and Plattenkalk, 167–78. Basel: Springer Basel, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-0348-0300-7_14.

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"Monte San Giorgio, Switzerland/Italy." In Dictionary of Geotourism, 404–5. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2538-0_1604.

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"A Dinosaur Lookalike from Monte San Giorgio." In Mesozoic Sea Dragons, 191–97. Indiana University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvd58t86.13.

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Viaretti, Marco, Gabriele Bindellini, and Cristiano Dal Sasso. "An exceptionally well-preserved scorpion from the Besano Formation (Monte San Giorgio, Middle Triassic, Southern Alps): preliminary study." In Fossilia, Reports in Palaeontology (Volume 2020). Earth Science Dept., University of Florence, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.32774/fosreppal.2020.0614.

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Tabatadze, Khatuna Sh. "(The Republic of Georgia, Tbilisi). Translation and Publication of Sergey Esenin’s Poem “Anna Snegina” in Georgian." In Sergey Esenin in the Context of the Epoch, 636–57. A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22455/978-5-9208-0672-7-636-657.

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The article examines the translations of Sergey Esenin’s poem “Anna Snegina” into Georgian, as well as gives a detailed comparative analysis. It is known that the poem “Anna Snegina”, on which Esenin worked with enthusiasm in December 1924 in Batumi, was very interested in Georgian poets and translators. This is evidenced by the fact that it was translated into Georgian four times and published five times. It was published twice in separate editions, and in other cases in periodicals. The writer and critic Simon Arveladze in the book “In the Mirror of the Soul” devoted a separate chapter to Esenin’s work, thus reminding the reader once again that in Georgia the author of the poem “Anna Snegina” “was recognized as a great poet during his lifetime, and today they remember him as a great lyricist...”. Considering the translations in chronological order, its first version is considered the 1927 edition in Tbilisi by the Sakhelgami publishing house. The translators was Grigol Tsetskhladze. He was a Georgian, Soviet poet and writer. It is noteworthy that the first version of the translation of the poem “Anna Snegina” published in the Georgian press was complete. One of the important facts for translators is the knowledge of the language from which they are translating. Considering the issue in this vein, Tsetskhladze, according to his contemporaries, was fluent in the Russian language, so he could fully grasp the essence of this work. The translator tried to create an adequate text as close as possible to the original. The great interest in Esenin’s work, especially in the poem, is indicated by the fact that by the end of 1956 the second version of the translation of the poem “Anna Snegina” was published in two periodicals at once. In the periodical edition of the scientific journal “Mnatobi”, as well as in the annual Almanac of the Adjara branch of the Union of Soviet Writers of Georgia “Talga” (“Wave”). The Georgian poet and translator Giorgi Salukvadze made both versions of the translation. Despite the fact that the poet-translator was quite active in translation, unfortunately, the translations in both editions are not complete. Unfortunately, the second version of the poem has not been fully translated, which prevents a detailed analysis of this translation. 14 years later, the third version of the translation of the poem appears, which dates back to 1970. Its translator is a Georgian poet and public figure — Jemal Indjia. Having started his career in 1955, he still tries not to deviate from the path he has chosen. It is also important that the Writers’ Union of Georgia consider the work on the translation of the poem “Anna Snegina” to be of great merit, in their opinion, Indzhiya with his translation made Esenin speak in Georgian. This version of the translation is complete, published as a separate publication (Tbilisi “Sabchota Sakartvelo” (“Soviet Georgia”) 1970). The fourth version of the poem was published in the two-month Almanac of World Literature “Soundje” (“Treasure”) for 1987 (no 5 and 6). One part was published in the fifth issue of the periodical, and the second part in the sixth. Georgian writer, poet and translator Zurab Kukhianidze translated it. This version of the translation is also complete. We can safely say that the above translators, with incredible great interest in Esenin’s work, in particular, to his poem “Anna Snegina”, presented the Georgian reader with the wonderful world of this work in its different interpretations. An analysis of the translations of this poem made it possible to identify successful finds and inevitable losses. In addition, it can be safely noted that, overall, all four versions of the translation turned out to be quite successful, although the musical structure of the works in Georgian sound could not be fully conveyed and underwent some transformation. Georgian-speaking readers got the opportunity to follow the character of the interpreters’ perception of a work of fiction. Moreover, rather active work of the Georgian translators gave the Georgian reader the wonderful world of this work.
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