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1

Gorochov, A. V., and S. Alexiou. "A new species of the genus Ovaliptila (Orthoptera: Gryllidae: Gryllomorphinae) from Rhodes Island, Greece." Zoosystematica Rossica 26, no. 1 (June 23, 2017): 107–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.31610/zsr/2017.26.1.107.

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2

CORSINI-FOKA, MARIA, GERASIMOS KONDYLATOS, IOANNA KATSOGIANNOU, KONSTANTINOS GRITZALIS, and GIANNI INSACCO. "On the occurrence of Lethocerus patruelis (Stål, 1855) (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Nepomorpha: Belostomatidae) in Rhodes (eastern Mediterranean Sea)." Journal of Insect Biodiversity 13, no. 1 (December 3, 2019): 10–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.12976/jib/2019.13.1.3.

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The finding in 2017 of a female of Lethocerus patruelis, a species rarely collected in the Aegean Islands, is documented from Rhodes (Greece), more than 160 years after its first record in the same island. The general distribution of the giant water bug and its occurrence in the area are briefly discussed.Keywords: Belostomatidae, giant water bug, Lethocerus patruelis, Aegean Sea, Rhodes, Greece
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3

MacDonald, Colin. "Problems of the Twelfth Century BC in the Dodecanese." Annual of the British School at Athens 81 (November 1986): 125–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400020116.

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Three islands of the Dodecanese (Rhodes, Kos, and Kalymnos) have produced a substantial amount of published evidence which sheds light on population fluctuations and external relations during the twelfth century BC. The burial evidence from the Ialysos cemeteries indicates that the population may have increased fivefold after LH IIIB. A corresponding decrease may have occurred in southern Rhodes indicating a synoecism of the island. If this is so, the reasons may be related to the increasing prosperity of the main town, Ialysos. This is a period of regional diversity. Distinctive island pottery styles developed under marked Minoan influence. However, mainland influence was stronger, broader, and more constant. None of these islands appears to have contributed to the development of IIIC styles elsewhere nor actively participated in maritime trade. Rhodes and Kos acquired objects from the east Mediterranean and Europe. At this time, there is evidence for a revival of sea travel within and beyond the Aegean. Rhodes, in particular, benefited from this but may primarily have been a passive recipient. The resulting prosperity could have been one factor which drew people to the area of Ialysos in a process of synoecism.
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4

CRESPO, MANUEL B., and CAROLINA PENA-MARTÍN. "Two new species of Limonium (Plumbaginaceae) from Rhodes Island (eastern Aegean area, Greece)." Phytotaxa 94, no. 2 (April 22, 2013): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.94.2.1.

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Limonium quinnii and L. rhodense (Plumbaginaceae) are here described from the maritime cliffs of Rhodes Island (Greece). These new species can be included in the Limonium palmare aggregate, a group highly diversified in the eastern Mediterranean but still poorly known. The differences among L. quinnii and L. rhodense with the related taxa are provided and discussed. Data on the breeding systems, ecology and distribution of both species are also given.
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5

Koskeridou, E. "PLIOCENE BRACHIOPODS FROM RHODES ISLAND (CAPE VAGIA SECTION)." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 40, no. 1 (June 8, 2018): 121. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.16495.

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Six brachiopod species (5 terebratulids and 1 craniid) from the upper Pliocene sandy and calcareous deposits of the Cape Vagia (Rhodes Island) are described: Gryphus sp., Terebratulina refusa, Megerlia truncata, Megerlia truncata var. monstruosa, Argyrotheca cordata, Megathiris detruncata and Novocrania anomala. This is the first record of Megerlia truncata var. monstruosa from the Pliocene of Greece and of Megerlia truncata from the Pliocene of Rhodes. Megathiris detruncata, Terebratulina retusa and Argyrotheca cordata are described for the first time from the Pliocene of Rhodes. This brachiopod association displays close affinity with those from the Mediterranean province, where assemblages of similar composition are associated with shallow-water, high energy environments. However, the association of Gryphus sp., Terebratulina retusa and Novocrania anomala corresponds to deeper water moderate environments.
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6

Symeonidou, Stella, and Dimitra Vagiona. "Water Footprint of Crops on Rhodes Island." Water 11, no. 5 (May 24, 2019): 1084. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w11051084.

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The aim of this paper is to evaluate the water footprints (WFs) of all the main crops on Rhodes island at a municipal unit (MU) scale, as well as for the area of the island as a whole. WF estimations are made with a distinction of rainfed and irrigated crops, using CROPWAT 8.0. Rainfed crops and the drip irrigation method are predominant in the study area, which faces water scarcity issues. Furthermore, a reduction factor in plant coefficients is introduced, to adapt to the drip irrigation technique. From the findings obtained, useful conclusions are drawn regarding the most water-demanding crops, but also the type of their WF component (blue/green/gray). In all categories of crops, there are large fluctuations across MUs, mainly due to the different yields. Higher WF values occur for rainfed and irrigated olives, which constitute the predominant crop, followed by hard and soft wheat. WF is a useful indicator identifying which crops require improvement or restructuring in a study area, and quantifies the exact volumes of water, which is a useful element in the formulation of agricultural policy in the context of sustainable water resources management.
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7

LEKKAS, E., G. DANAMOS, E. SKOURTSOS, and D. SAKELLARIOU. "The occurrence and geodynamic significance of the volcano-sedimentary Tyros-beds (base of the Gavrovo-Tripolis unit) on Rhodes island, Dodekanese, SE Aegean." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 34, no. 1 (January 1, 2001): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.16946.

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The Archangelos volcano-sedimentary formation is described here. It outcrops at the base of the alpine Archangelos unit of Rhodes island and displays sedimentary and lithological characteristics, which allow its correlation with the Upper Paleozoic - Upper Triassic Tyros-beds, known from the base Gavrovo-Tripolis unit in Peloponnesus, Kythira and Crete. Consequently Archangelos unit is correlated with the Gavrovo-Tripolis unit. Moreover it is suggested that Tyros-beds characterize the base of the external carbonate platform of Hellenides all along the southern Hellenic Arc, from Peloponnesus through Kythira and Crete to Rhodes Island.
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8

KONDYLATOS, GERASIMOS, MARIA CORSINI-FOKA, and EMMANOUIL PERAKIS. "First record of the isopod Idotea hectica (Pallas, 1772) (Idoteidae) and of the brachyuran crab Matuta victor (Fabricius, 1781) (Matutidae) in the Hellenic waters." Mediterranean Marine Science 19, no. 3 (December 31, 2018): 656. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.18106.

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The presence and the establishment of Idotea hectica is reported for the first time in the Hellenic seas on the basis of three adult specimens and a juvenile collected from Posidonia oceanica meadows close to the main town of Rhodes Island, Aegean Sea. Common and contrasting characters between this and other species of the genera Idotea and Pentidotea are briefly discussed. Furthermore, following a westward expansion along the eastern Mediterranean coasts, Matuta victor was discovered for the first time in Hellenic waters on the basis of a single specimen from the northeast of Rhodes Island.
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9

CORSINI-FOKA, M., G. KONDILATOS, and P. S. ECONOMIDIS. "Occurrence of the lessepsian species Portunus pelagicus (Crustacea) and Apogon pharaonis (Pisces) in the marine area of Rhodes Island." Mediterranean Marine Science 5, no. 1 (June 1, 2004): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.213.

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A large number of Red Sea species are colonizing the eastern Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal, mainly following the Anatolian coasts and spreading westwards. Portunus pelagicus is one of the most common Red Sea swimming crabs, first recorded in the Levantine Basin in 1898. Four specimens of P. pelagicus were collected in different marine areas of Rhodes Island from 1991 to 2000, while three specimens of the lessepsian fish Apogon pharaonis, first recorded in the Mediterranean in 1947, were caught during 2002 in the NW coast of Rhodes. The sub-tropical character of the marine area around Rhodes seems to facilitate the propagation of lessepsian species. These migrants have reached the island at different velocity and degree of establishment of their populations. The occurrence of the blue swimmer crab P. pelagicus and of the bullseye cardinal fish A. pharaonis increases the number of the decapod Crustacea and fish species of Red Sea origin observed in Greek waters.
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10

Stiros, S., S. Papageorgiou, V. Kontogianni, and P. Psimoulis. "Church repair swarms and earthquakes in Rhodes Island, Greece." Journal of Seismology 10, no. 4 (November 8, 2006): 527–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10950-006-9035-x.

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11

Pirazzoli, P. A., L. F. Montaggioni, J. F. Saliège, G. Segonzac, Y. Thommeret, and C. Vergnaud-Grazzini. "Crustal block movements from Holocene shorelines: Rhodes Island (Greece)." Tectonophysics 170, no. 1-2 (December 1989): 89–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0040-1951(89)90105-4.

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12

Kimourtzis, Panagiotis, Georgios Kokkinos, Ioannis V. Papageorgiou, and Ioannis F. Papageorgiou. "Economic crisis and integration: Deconstructing social borders in Rhodes Island." Social and Education History 6, no. 2 (June 22, 2017): 167. http://dx.doi.org/10.17583/hse.2017.2635.

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Greece has been the focus of the mass media because of the ongoing economic crisis and the mixed migration flows that use the country as entry point to Europe. Although conceptually different, both phenomena converge in a vicious cycle that triggers an othering process. The economic crisis transfers Greece from the geopolitical centre to the periphery making the country dependent on the external economic and political decision making. Nevertheless, apart from being at the border, Greece is also the border of Europe. Peripherality appoints to Greece an instrumental role for the management of migration. Boundaries as “thresholds” produce patters of inclusion and exclusion creating by that perceptions of the Self and the Other. To that extent, the instrumental role of Greece as consequence of its peripherisation amplifies locally an othering process. Based on a different function of borders and peripheries, namely the endorsement of antagonistic narratives, this article discusses potential interventions in that vicious cycle. A local cultural diversity in Rhodes, Greece, the Rhodian Muslim community has been the receiving end of diversity management policies with particular emphasis on education throughout the 20th century. The knowledge accumulated may support new efforts countering the othering process. ResumenGrecia se ha situado en el centro de atención de los medios de comunicación a causa de la actual crisis económica y de los flujos migratorios mixtos que utilizan el país como punto de entrada a Europa. Ambos fenómenos convergen en un círculo vicioso que desencadena un proceso de alterización. La crisis económica mueve a Grecia desde el centro geopolítico a la periferia, haciendola dependiente de la toma de decisiones económicas y políticas externas. Además de estar en la frontera, Grecia es también la frontera de Europa. La perifericidad le atribuye un papel instrumental en la gestión de la migración. Los límites como "umbrales" producen patrones de inclusión y exclusión que se crean por esa percepción de Sí mismo y del Otro. El papel instrumental de Grecia como consecuencia de su periferización amplifica localmente un proceso de alterización. Basado en una función diferente de las fronteras y las periferias, y con el respaldo de narrativas antagónicas, en este artículo se discuten posibles intervenciones en ese círculo vicioso. Una diversidad cultural local en Rodas (Grecia), la comunidad musulmana rodesa, ha sido la receptora de las políticas de gestión de la diversidad con particular énfasis en educación a través del siglo XX. El conocimiento acumulado puede respaldar nuevos esfuerzos para contrarrestar el proceso de alterización.
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13

Riak, Patricia. "Celebrations During a Traditional Wedding on the Island of Rhodes." Dance Chronicle 34, no. 3 (September 2011): 388–421. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01472526.2011.615213.

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14

Zumwalt, Rosemary Levy, and Gregori Viens. "Island of Roses: The Jews of Rhodes in Los Angeles." Journal of American Folklore 113, no. 449 (2000): 325. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/542109.

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15

Jones, Kenneth R. "ALCAEUS OF MESSENE, PHILIP V AND THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES: A RE-EXAMINATION OF ANTH. PAL. 6.171." Classical Quarterly 64, no. 1 (April 16, 2014): 136–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009838813000591.

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Among the poems of the Greek Anthology is one (Anth. Pal. 6.171) which purports to be the dedicatory inscription of the Colossus of Rhodes built to celebrate the Rhodians' successful resistance to the siege of their island by Demetrius Poliorcetes in the years 305–304 b.c. It has long been assumed by scholars that this epigram represents the authentic dedicatory inscription carved on the base of the Colossus, which was completed in the 280s and stood for some sixty years before being destroyed by an earthquake that rocked the island of Rhodes in the 220s. There are, however, strong reasons to doubt the epigram's authenticity, some of which come from considerations of the poem itself and others which come from a comparison with a closely related epigram (Anth. Pal. 9.518) composed by Alcaeus of Messene to celebrate Philip V's military successes during his Aegean campaign of 203–200. Verbal and thematic parallels between the two epigrams make a connection certain. It is the aim of the present study to re-examine the Rhodian epigram and its relation to Anth. Pal. 9.518 in order to propose a new date for the former in the context of Rhodes' defeat of Philip V and the advent of Rome in the affairs of the states ringing the Aegean.
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16

DANELIAN, T., M. BONNEAU, J. P. CADET, A. POISSON, and Β. VRIELYNCK. "Palaeoceanographic implications of new and revised bio-chronostratigraphic constraints from the Profitis Ilias Unit (Rhodes, Greece)." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 34, no. 2 (August 1, 2018): 619. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.17111.

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Middle Oxfordian-early Kimmeridgian radiolaria, extracted from the top of radiolarites of Profitis Ilias unit (Rhodes island), suggest that the latter are essentially Middle Jurassic in age and the overlying siliceous shales Late Jurassic. The previously identified Calpionellid horizon at the top of Profitis Ilias siliceous marls is now regarded as early Valanginian in age. The above chronostratigraphic constraints allow tentative correlations to be made between Profitis Ilias and Pindos-Olonos sedimentary units. Finally, the palaeoceanographic significance of the studied series in Rhodes and potentially similar pelagic sequences in the Marmaris area of Turkey are discussed.
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17

WARINGER, JOHANN, and HANS MALICKY. "The larvae of Athripsodes longispinosus longispinosus (Martynov 1909), Athripsodes longispinosus paleochora (Malicky 1972), and Athripsodes bilineatus aegeus Malicky 1999 (Trichoptera: Leptoceridae), including a discriminatory matrix to the larvae of genus Athripsodes Billberg 1820 in Greece." Zootaxa 4609, no. 3 (May 24, 2019): 485. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4609.3.5.

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Larvae of three leptocerid caddisfly subspecies described in the present paper were sampled in Greece and the North Aegean island of Gökceada (Turkey). Information on the morphology of the final larval instar of each is given and the most important diagnostic features are illustrated. The subspecies are integrated into a synoptic discriminatory matrix including the currently known larvae of Greek species of genus Athripsodes. The species can be easily separated by head coloration; the morphology of the ventral apotome; setal and spinal patterns on the metadorsum, foretibiae, and anal prolegs; and by distribution. With respect to distribution, Athripsodes longispinosus longispinosus is known from Bulgaria, the Caucasus area, Turkey, the northern Greek mainland, and the Greek islands of Thasos, Lesbos, Andros, Ikaria, Naxos, and Rhodes. Athripsodes longispinosus paleochora is an endemic of the Greek island of Crete, and A. bilineatus aegeus has been recorded from the Peloponnese; the Greek islands of Euboea, Skiathos, Kithira, Andros; and Turkey.
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Gad, Fragkiska-Karmela, Maria Chatzinaki, Dimitris Vandarakis, Chara Kyriakidou, and Vasilios Kapsimalis. "Assessment of Wave Storm-Induced Flood Vulnerability in Rhodes Island, Greece." Water 12, no. 11 (October 23, 2020): 2978. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w12112978.

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Coastal areas are threatened by extreme meteorological phenomena, such as wave storms. Therefore, the analysis of such events, such as providing information for their potential hazards assessment, is a key element in coastal management. In this study, a preliminary assessment of flood vulnerability due to storms was performed in Rhodes Island, Greece. Firstly, storm events were defined in terms of significant wave height, peak period, and duration, and they were grouped by means of cluster analysis into five classes (from weak to extreme) reflecting the intensity of each event. Subsequently, flood hazard was assessed by using an empirical formula for wave run-up calculations on cross-shore profiles and storm surge data at the region. Finally, a Flood Vulnerability Index (FVI) was used for assessing vulnerability according to a scale from very low to very high. The most intense storms were found to occur in the eastern, southeastern, and southern part of the island. More than 60% of storms were classified as weak, while extreme events were found to occur with a frequency of less than 2.5%. Regarding flood hazard and vulnerability, the maximum values of wave run-up were calculated in the southeastern region, but the most vulnerable part was found to be the northwestern region, as the FVI was assessed as very high for weak and extreme events.
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19

Koskeridou, Efterpi, Evi Vardala-Theodorou, and Pierre Moissette. "Pliocene and Pleistocene shallow-water chitons (Mollusca) from Rhodes Island, Greece." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen 251, no. 3 (March 1, 2009): 303–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/0077-7749/2009/0251-0303.

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20

Papavasileiou¬, Vasileios, Eleni Nikolaou, Nikos Andreadakis, Yota Xanthacou, Dimitrios Matzanos, and Maria Kaila. "THE CONTRIBUTION OF WOMEN IN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF LOCAL SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT." vol 5 issue 15 5, no. 15 (December 29, 2019): 1327–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.18769/ijasos.592100.

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Sustainable local development aims to improve economy while taking into account environmental protection. Within this context, the contribution of women to sustainable local development over the years is essential to be explored in order to highlight the importance of their offer. This research aims to investigate the role of women in environmental protection for sustainable local development in a Greek island, Rhodes. A semi-structured interview was designed as a data collection tool. It was a field research which was conducted in the villages of the island as well as in the city of Rhodes. The sample of the survey was composed of women over sixty-five (65) years of age. The results of the survey show that the participation of women was particularly important in the environmental protection of the island, as their daily habits and occupations were environmentally friendly. The yards of their houses were decorated with flowers and trees. In their gardens they planted vegetables that were cultivating without using fertilizers or pesticides. They also collected rain water and they generally spent water with great care and attention. They did not throw the excess food in the garbage, they were giving pets or domestic animals the leftover food, and they also made sure that garbage from housework was scarce. Therefore, their work, their everyday habits and their way of life did not burden the environment, so they made a decisive contribution to the sustainable development of the island. Keywords: environmental, local sustainable development, women
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21

Bru, Hadrien. "Les Pisidiens à Rhodes aux époques hellénistique et romaine." Electrum 27 (2020): 149–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/20800909el.20.008.12798.

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In the perspective of a complete external prosopography of the Pisidians in progress, this article presents a commented catalogue of 61 persons who lived on the island of Rhodos and in its Carian Peraia from the 3rd century BCE to the beginning of the Roman Imperial period. Concerning those slaves, mercenaries, artists, craftsmen or merchants, a historical context is provided, then remarks on their juristic, social and economical status. The evoked documentation is based on inscribed monuments—mainly funerary—and amphora stamps.
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22

CORSINI-FOKA, M., P. MARGIES, G. KONDILATOS, and P. S. ECONOMIDIS. "Torquigener flavimaculosus Hardy and Randall, 1983 (Pisces: Tetraodontidae) off Rhodes island marine area: a new alien fish in the Hellenic waters." Mediterranean Marine Science 7, no. 2 (December 1, 2006): 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.172.

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The presence of the pufferfish Torquigener flavimaculosus was recorded during the winter 2006-2007 off Rhodes Island (SE Aegean Sea). The species, known from the western Indian Ocean, has established populations from the Levantine basin to Fethiye, Turkey. This finding expands the known range of the species in the Mediterranean to the south-eastern Aegean Sea.
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KALOGIROU, S. "First record of the non-indigenous fangtooth moray Enchelycore anatina from Rhodes Island, south- eastern Aegean Sea." Mediterranean Marine Science 11, no. 2 (October 8, 2010): 357. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.83.

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The collection of one specimen of the non-indigenous fangtooth moray Enchelycore anatina of tropical Atlantic origin was for the first time found in an area of south eastern Aegean Sea. This record may indicate a recent establishment of the species on the coasts of Rhodes Island and a possible expansion of it on the coastal rocky habitats.
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Βερυκίου-Παπασπυριδάκου, Ε., Γ. Μπαθρέλλος, and Χ. Σκυλοδήμου. "PHYSICO-GEOGRAPHICAL OBSERVATIONS OF THE COASTAL ZONE OF THE NORTHEASTERN PART OF ISLAND RHODES." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 36, no. 2 (July 23, 2018): 958. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.16898.

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Rhodes is the biggest island of the Dodecanese complex; its geology is very interesting for the researchers because it h located onto the eastern end of the Aegean arcade. This paper involves the physico-geographical features of the coastal zone of the NE part of Rhodes. Specifically, the major geological formations of the region were studied and classified, according to their morphology and lithology. In addition, the human interventions that have affected the region were also recorded. The geological formations met in the study region are the following: Mesozoic limestones, Oligocene flysch, Pliocene - Pleistocene marls, calcarenites, and Holocene deposits. Steep slopes and cliffs basically characterize the limestone coasts. Some mirror faults, indicate the intense tectonic movements whereas, some coastlines witness the former sea level. The flysch coasts have mainly steep slope. The coasts, which are developed on marls and calcarenites have got various morphological slopes. This has resulted to the formation of steep costs with cliffs and middle slope costs that are characterized by smooth relief. The coasts developed onto alluvial deposits have mainly gentle slope bearing the bulk of the beaches. They are featured by several geoforms such as coastal dunes, while the human intervention is significant.
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25

Waage, Hilde Henriksen. "The Winner Takes All: The 1949 Island of Rhodes Armistice Negotiations Revisited." Middle East Journal 65, no. 2 (April 15, 2011): 279–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.3751/65.2.15.

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26

M., Abdel Wadood, and Panayotidi M. "THE FLORAL AND GEOMETRICAL ELEMENTS ON THE OTTOMAN ARCHITECTURE IN RHODES ISLAND." Egyptian Journal of Archaeological and Restoration Studies 4, no. 2 (December 1, 2014): 87–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/ejars.2014.7264.

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27

Oikonomou, Ar, P. Triantafyllidis, K. Beltsios, N. Zacharias, and M. Karakassides. "Raman structural study of ancient glass artefacts from the island of Rhodes." Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids 354, no. 2-9 (January 2008): 768–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jnoncrysol.2007.08.092.

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28

Manoli, Eleni, Dionysios Assimacopoulos, and Christos A. Karavitis. "Water supply management approaches using US on the island of Rhodes, Greece." Desalination 161, no. 2 (February 2004): 179–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0011-9164(04)90053-7.

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29

Corsini-Foka, Maria, Gerasimos Kondylatos, and Elias Santorinios. "Increase of sea turtles stranding records in Rhodes Island (eastern Mediterranean Sea): update of a long-term survey." Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 93, no. 7 (May 29, 2013): 1991–2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025315413000556.

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A total of 209 strandings of sea turtles (152 loggerhead turtles Caretta caretta, 42 green turtles Chelonia mydas, 15 unidentified) were recorded during the period 1984–2011 along the coasts of Rhodes (Aegean Sea, Greece). The proportion of dead to live individuals was different in the two species. Stranded Caretta caretta were larger than Chelonia mydas. The size range of stranded green turtles, usually juveniles, appeared to increase since 2000, including the largest specimens ever observed in Greek waters. For both species, a tendency to strand more frequently on the west coast of the island, along fishing ground areas, was noted. The higher incidence of loggerhead turtle strandings was observed in summer, while more green turtle strandings were documented in winter. Factors involved in the increased trend of stranding records of both species, along with the acceleration of this phenomenon in the last decade, are discussed. Data from Rhodes provide evidence that human activities detrimentally affect mainly larger-sized loggerhead turtles living in shallow waters.
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30

Çinar, Melih Ertan. "A new species of Myrianida (Polychaeta: Syllidae: Autolytinae) from Rhodes (Greece, eastern Mediterranean)." Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 95, no. 6 (March 11, 2015): 1101–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025315415000107.

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This paper deals with a new species of Myrianida collected from Rhodes Island at 1 m depth among algae in April 2014. This new species is mainly characterized by having flattened dorsal cirri; high number of falcigers in parapodia; a trepan with 16 unequal teeth; and a brownish patch (in fixed specimen) on dorsum of each segment. Individuals are at the stage of reproduction, with developing stolons.
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31

Papadopoulos, G. A., E. Daskalaki, A. Fokaefs, and N. Giraleas. "Tsunami hazards in the Eastern Mediterranean: strong earthquakes and tsunamis in the East Hellenic Arc and Trench system." Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 7, no. 1 (January 16, 2007): 57–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-7-57-2007.

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Abstract. Data on tsunami phenomena occurring in the East Hellenic Arc and Trench system (HA-T) from antiquity up to the present have been updated, critically evaluated and compiled in the standard GITEC format developed in the last decade for the New European Tsunami Catalogue. New field observations are presented for the tsunamis of 9 February 1948 and 24 March 2002. From the 18 tsunamis reported eight are rather well-documented while another nine remain doubtful. The mean recurrence of strong tsunamis is likely equal to about 142 years. Most of the tsunamis documented are caused by strong earthquakes occurring in the area offshore Rhodes to the east or northeast of the island. However, there are large earthquakes near Rhodes that do not cause tsunamis, like the 1926 and 1957 ones, which is of particular importance for the tsunami hazard assessment.
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32

Bile, Monique. "Textes crétois honorant des médecins: histoire et dialecte." Fortunatae. Revista Canaria de Filología, Cultura y Humanidades Clásicas, no. 32 (2020): 51–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.25145/j.fortunat.2020.32.04.

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In the epigraphical Cretan corpus, four Hellenistic inscriptions relating to physicians are addressed to the cities of which these men were native (Kos, Kasos). The analysis of these texts throws light on their historical context; the linguistic comparison of the Cretan documents with Koan and Rhodian inscriptions (Rhodes controled politically the small island of Kasos )makes evident that Dorian koina and above all Attic-Ionic koine had penetrated into these dialects.
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33

Kondylatos, Gerasimos, Fabio Crocetta, Maria Corsini-Foka, and Carlo Froglia. "Crustacea Decapoda from the Rhodes Island Area (Eastern Mediterranean): New Records and an Updated Checklist." Diversity 12, no. 6 (June 15, 2020): 246. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d12060246.

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Decapod crustaceans are ecologically and commercially important members of marine communities. Faunal surveys constitute essential tools for the understanding of local diversity, especially in areas subjected to significant alterations of community composition due to climate changes, anthropogenic impacts, and biological invasions. Following a literature review and the study of new samples, we hereby update on the Crustacea Decapoda from the Rhodes Island area (Greece), situated in a key position in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Published data yielded records of 120 species, whereas 28 taxa are recorded here for the first time from the study area. Among them, the collection of Liocarcinus bolivari widens its distribution to the eastern Mediterranean. Details on material examined and distributional/faunal remarks are provided for the species newly recorded and for some other native and alien species rarely reported from Rhodes. The present paper raises the local decapod biodiversity to 148 species, accounting for ~50% of the Hellenic Aegean decapod fauna and provides a useful baseline for analysing the long-term changes in the local fauna and the westward spreading of Lessepsian species. Despite present advances, the lack of records of many common Mediterranean species may be still due to limited fieldwork in some habitats rather than a true absence.
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Vandarakis, Dimitrios, Ioannis P. Panagiotopoulos, Vassiliki Loukaidi, Georgios-Angelos Hatiris, Paraskevi Drakopoulou, Aikaterini Kikaki, Fragkiska-Karmela Gad, et al. "Assessment of the Coastal Vulnerability to the Ongoing Sea Level Rise for the Exquisite Rhodes Island (SE Aegean Sea, Greece)." Water 13, no. 16 (August 7, 2021): 2169. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w13162169.

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The foreseeable acceleration of global sea level rise could potentially pose a major threat to the natural charm and functional integrity of the world-renowned tourist coastal attractions of Rhodes Island, as a result of the anticipated increasing frequency of flooding and erosion events. Hence, this study aims to determine the most vulnerable segments (in terms of physical impact) of the Rhodes coastline through the widely accepted coastal vulnerability index (CVI), applying a combination of well-known, broadly used approaches and methods. The frequency distribution of the current CVI along the island’s coastline suggests a rather worrying high to very high vulnerability of 40%. In addition, a CVI projection to the end of the 21st century (based on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predictive scenarios) indicates an enhancement of the total vulnerability by 48%, mainly focused on the majority of the western coastline. Hence, a considerable number of popular coastal destinations in the island shall remain under unignorable threat and, therefore, coastal managers and decision-makers need to hatch an integrated plan to minimize economic and natural losses, private property damage and tourism infrastructure deterioration from flooding and erosion episodes, which will most likely be intensified in the future.
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35

Tapinaki, S., M. Skamantzari, A. Anastasiou, S. Koutros, E. Syrokou, and A. Georgopoulos. "3D HOLISTIC DOCUMENTATION OF HERITAGE MONUMENTS IN RHODES." International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLVI-M-1-2021 (August 28, 2021): 739–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xlvi-m-1-2021-739-2021.

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Abstract. This paper focuses on the holistic 3D geometric documentation of four Cultural Heritage buildings, of different historic eras, on the island of Rhodes. The main scope was to produce the 3D models and all required products according to the needs and specifications set by the EU funded HYPERION project. The ideal combination of multi-source data acquisition and processing was employed, which is the modern perception for the methodology of geometric documentation of monuments. The workflow for the combination of geodetic, photogrammetric and laser scanning data acquisition methods is described in detail. Very decisive factor in carrying out fieldwork for data acquisition was the time frame, which was very limited due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The establishing of a holistic framework for the documentation of Cultural Heritage by carrying out a wide range of multidisciplinary research, acquiring and combining datasets from various sensors and sources, as well as by developing innovative tools for systematic monitoring gives substantial results in order to protect, preserve and enhance Cultural Heritage sites. The documentation results are presented and discussed for their usefulness for the project.
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36

SOMMER, DAVID, OLIVER HILLERT, LUCIE HRŮZOVÁ, and DAVID KRÁL. "Bolbelasmus (Bolbelasmus) zagrosensis (Coleoptera: Scarabaeoidea: Bolboceratidae), a new species from Iran, along with an updated key to the western Palaearctic species of the subgenus." Zootaxa 4920, no. 3 (January 29, 2021): 380–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4920.3.4.

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Bolbelasmus (Bolbelasmus) zagrosensis Sommer, Hillert, Hrůzová & Král, new species, from Iran is described, illustrated and compared with its congeners known from the western Palaearctic region. An updated key to the western Palaearctic species of the nominotypical subgenus is provided. New country record of B. (B.) nireus (Reitter, 1895) from Greece (island of Rhodes) is reported. Distribution of B. (B.) makrisi Miessen, 2011, B. (B.) nireus and the new species is summarized and mapped.
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37

Quillévéré, Frédéric, Jean-Jacques Cornée, Pierre Moissette, Gatsby Emperatriz López-Otálvaro, Christiaan van Baak, Philippe Münch, Mihaela Carmen Melinte-Dobrinescu, and Wout Krijgsman. "Chronostratigraphy of uplifted Quaternary hemipelagic deposits from the Dodecanese island of Rhodes (Greece)." Quaternary Research 86, no. 1 (July 2016): 79–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2016.05.002.

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38

Quillévéré, Frédéric, Jean-Jacques Cornée, Pierre Moissette, Gatsby Emperatriz Lopez-Otalvaro, Christiaan van Baak, Philippe Münch, Mihaela Carmen Melinte-Dobrinescu, and Wout Krijgsman. "Chronostratigraphy of uplifted Quaternary hemipelagic deposits from the Dodecanese island of Rhodes (Greece)." Quaternary Research 86, no. 1 (July 2016): 79–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033589400039739.

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AbstractAn integrated magneto-biostratigraphic study, based on calcareous nannofossils and foraminifers, together with the radiometric dating of a volcaniclastic layer found in several outcrops, was carried out on the hemipelagic deposits of the Lindos Bay Formation (LBF) at six localities on the island of Rhodes (Greece). Our highly refined chronostratigraphic framework indicates that the lower and upper lithos-tratigraphic boundaries of the LBF are diachronous. Associated with the40Ar/39Ar age determination of 1.85 ± 0.08 Ma for the volcaniclastic layer, our data show that among the investigated outcrops, the Lindos Bay type locality section provides the longest record (1.1 Ma) of the LBF. Hemipelagic deposition occurred continuously from the late Gelasian (~1.9 Ma) to the late Calabrian (~0.8 Ma), i.e., from Chrons C2n (Olduvai) to C1r.1r (Matuyama) and from nannofossil Zones CNPL7 to CNPL10. This long record, together with the hemipelagic nature of the deposits, make the Lindos Bay type locality section a unique element in the eastern Mediterranean region, allowing future comparisons with other early Quaternary deep-sea sections available in the central and western Mediterranean regions.
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39

Gad, Fragkiska-Karmela, Giorgos-Angelos Hatiris, Vassiliki Loukaidi, Stavroula Dimitriadou, Paraskevi Drakopoulou, Andreas Sioulas, and Vasilios Kapsimalis. "Long-Term Shoreline Displacements and Coastal Morphodynamic Pattern of North Rhodes Island, Greece." Water 10, no. 7 (June 26, 2018): 849. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w10070849.

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40

Falniowski, Andrzej, Joseph Heller, Robert A. D. Cameron, Beata M. Pokryszko, Artur Osikowski, Aleksandra Rysiewska, and Sebastian Hofman. "Melanopsidae (Caenogastropoda: Cerithioidea) from the eastern Mediterranean: another case of morphostatic speciation." Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 190, no. 2 (March 7, 2020): 483–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlz160.

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Abstract Melanopsidae were collected from 23 localities in central and south-eastern Europe, the Aegean Islands and Israel. This study considered Melanopsis from the Aegean Islands, the Peloponnese and Israel, and Esperiana esperi, Holandriana holandrii and Microcolpia from continental Europe. Shells and radulae were described and illustrated, showing continuous variation of shell characters and differences in radulae among genera. Phylogenetic analyses were conducted on single-locus datasets (COI, 18S, 28S, ITS2 and H3) and on a concatenated dataset. Molecular data showed a differentiation not paralleled in morphology, reflecting morphostatic evolution. In all species with ribbed shell-forms, the ribbed and unribbed forms did not differ genetically. Within Melanopsis, four clades representing five species were distinguished. Melanopsis buccinoidea is found in Khios and Lesbos Islands, M. astropaliae in Naxos, Samos and Tinos Islands, M. wagneri in Rhodes Island and the Peloponnese, and M. costata and M. saulcyi in Israel. Molecular results and the ICZN rule of priority restrict the range of M. buccinoidea to the North Aegean Islands. ‘Melanopsis’ parreyssi belongs to the genus Microcolpia. Esperiana esperi belongs to a clade separate from Microcolpia.
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41

Köktürk, Hüseyin, and N. P. Milner. "A land dispute from the Lycian borderland." Anatolian Studies 53 (December 2003): 131–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3643091.

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AbstractAn inscription from a private collection in Fethiye tells part of a court case concerning the illegal sale of land to ‘foreigners’, who are identified as Lycians. It is argued that the land belonged to Rhodes' mainland possessions bordering on Lycia, and some of the individuals named in the inscription may be identified with members of a prominent second century AD Rhodian family. Possible locations for the land at Daidala or on the island of Meis/Castellorizo are discussed.
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42

Sepetcioğlu, Tuncay Ercan. "Cretan Turks at the End of the 19th Century: Migration and Settlement." Sosyolojik Bağlam Dergisi 1, no. 1 (December 28, 2020): 27–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.52108/2757-5942.1.1.3.

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The Cretan Turks (and now their descendants) are a group of people who originally had lived in the Island of Crete till 1923 when the Obligatory Population Exchange Agreement signed between Turkey and Greece. Through almost the entire 19th century, as a result of Greek revolts one after another in different times in history and the public order on the island was disrupted, the Cretan Turkish population in fear of their lives left their living places, became refugees and the demographic structure of the island changed in favor of the Orthodox Christians. Among those migrations, the biggest and the most decisive on the political future of the island is the Heraklion Events that started in 1897 which resulted in the migration of at least 40,000 Turks. This population movement is particularly important as it caused the expansion of Cretan Turks to very different regions. The present existence of a Cretan community in Turkey, Lebanon, Syria, Libya, the Rhodes and Kos Islands of Greece, along with (albeit few) Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia, the Island of Cyprus and Palestine happened due to this immigration movement. This article approaches the immigration and settlement process that happened at the very end of the 19th century as a result of a revolt in Crete, in a sudden and involuntary manner, in a period where the Ottoman Empire suffered from political, economic and social difficulties. Tracking the official records and by fieldwork where and how immigrants settled, how many and where new settlements were founded for them were analyzed with the methodological approaches of history and historical anthropology.
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43

Conrad, Lawrence I. "The Arabs and the Colossus." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 6, no. 2 (July 1996): 165–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186300007173.

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In 305 B.C. Demetrius I Poliorcetes of Macedonia (r. 321–283), pursuing his ambition of reuniting the empire of Alexander, marched against the island city of Rhodes, which since the partition of 323 had been able to reassert its independence and pursue its own foreign policies. The ensuing siege, one of the most famous military campaigns of Hellenistic times, was a failure, and in 304 Demetrius was obliged to admit defeat and withdraw, leaving behind his siege train and large amounts of other military stores. The jubilant Rhodians gathered up this equipment and sold it for 300 talents, which, in gratitude for their deliverance, they used to commission a spectacular monument to the sun god Helios, the focus of a lively cult at Rhodes. The sculptor selected for the task was Chares, an artist from the town of Lindos (about 40 kilometres south of the capital) and a student of the renowned Lyssipus, who had recently erected a great bronze statue of Zeus at Tarentum in Italy.
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44

PANCUCCI-PAPADOPOULOU, M. A., M. CORSINI-FOKA, and M. NALETAKI. "Macrophthalmus graeffei A. Milne Edwards, 1873 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Macrophthalmidae): a new Indo-Pacific guest off Rhodes Island (SE Aegean Sea, Greece)." Mediterranean Marine Science 11, no. 1 (May 6, 2010): 195. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.103.

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A new alien crab, the macrophthalmid Macrophthalmus graeffei, is reported from the eastern coastline of Rhodes Island. The species, of Indo-West Pacific origin, is known from muddy sediments up to about 80 m depth. In the Mediterranean, its presence has been observed along Levantine coasts as well as along the Turkish coast of the Aegean Sea.Macrophthalmus graeffei increases to twelve the number of alien brachyurans present in the Hellenic SE Aegean Sea, ten of them having Indo-Pacific origin.
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45

CORSINI-FOKA, M., G. KONDYLATOS, and M. A. PANCUCCI-PAPADOPOULOU. "A new alien crab for the Mediterranean Sea: Xanthias lamarckii (H. Milne Edwards, 1834) (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Xanthidae)." Mediterranean Marine Science 14, no. 2 (June 4, 2013): 295. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.441.

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A single specimen of Xanthias lamarckii was collected on March 2013 from the shallow waters of Chtenia, a rocky islet near Rhodes Island, south-eastern Aegean Sea. The occurrence of this Indo-West Pacific species is reported for the first time in the Mediterranean waters and documents the ongoing process of biological invasion of the basin. The vector of introduction of X. lamarckii is unknown so far, waiting for future information on establishment and spread of the species in its new environment.
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46

Kevrekidis, Kosmas, and Bella Galil. "EXOTIC DECAPODS AND A STOMATOPOD OFF RHODES ISLAND (GREECE) AND THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN TRANSIENT." Crustaceana 75, no. 7 (2002): 925–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156854002321210758.

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47

Antonatos, Gerasimos. "Curative Water Springs of Kallithea Muncipality: A Case Study of Island of Rhodes, Greece." International Journal of the Humanities: Annual Review 4, no. 10 (2007): 89–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.18848/1447-9508/cgp/v04i10/43446.

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48

Lefkarites, Mary P. "The sociocultural implications of modernizing childbirth among Greek women on the island of Rhodes." Medical Anthropology 13, no. 4 (January 1992): 385–412. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01459740.1992.9966059.

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49

MOISSETTE, PIERRE, EFTERPI KOSKERIDOU, HARA DRINIA, and JEAN-JACQUES CORNÉE. "Facies associations in warm-temperate siliciclastic deposits: insights from early Pleistocene eastern Mediterranean (Rhodes, Greece)." Geological Magazine 153, no. 1 (June 15, 2015): 61–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756815000230.

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AbstractDiverse, abundant and usually well-preserved communities of skeletal organisms occur in the lower Pleistocene (Gelasian) siliciclastic deposits of the Greek island of Rhodes. Benthic foraminifers, molluscs and bryozoans have been studied in four measured and sampled sections located in the northern part of the island. Among these bottom-dwelling organisms, numerous extant taxa are good environmental indicators and, combined with field observations and sedimentological data, they provide information on the probable conditions in which they developed. The siliciclastic deposits of the Kritika Formation have been divided into 14 different bio- and lithofacies, which have been further grouped into four facies associations corresponding to four different environmental settings: (1) continental to fluviatile; (2) brackish-water (lagoonal/deltaic); (3) infralittoral (0–20 m); and (4) upper circalittoral (depths of 20–40 m, but also down toc.50–60 m). Among the marine facies associations, several characteristic biocoenoses have been recognized: soft-bottoms (fine to coarse sands and gravels); seagrass meadows; biogenic calcareous crusts on drowned beachrock slabs; red algal rhodoliths; and bivalve shell beds. In the studied sections, 13 superimposed genetic sequences have been documented. The repetition of similar facies associations within each sequence suggests: (1) a possibly eustasy-controlled, cyclic sedimentation; (2) a general subsidence of Rhodes during the deposition of the studied facies associations; and (3) a mostly constant range of environmental conditions (i.e. sedimentation rates and temperature) throughout the Gelasian.
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50

Marketou, Toula, Efi Karantzali, Hans Mommsen, Nikos Zacharias, Vasilis Kilikoglou, and Alexander Schwedt. "Pottery Wares from the Prehistoric Settlement at Ialysos (Trianda) in Rhodes." Annual of the British School at Athens 101 (November 2006): 1–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400021274.

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Among the vast amount of pottery yielded from the Late Bronze Age settlement of Ialysos (Trianda) on Rhodes, 233 samples have been selected for chemical analysis by means of Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA) at the Bonn Laboratory. Thus, a rather comprehensive new data-base for pottery assemblages from Rhodes and other related production centres has been provided. Further evidence has been also suggested for the local mechanisms of pottery production and the patterns of continuity and changes from the LM IA, through to LMIB/LH IIA and LH IIB-III A1 to LH III A2/LH III B1 periods, in both the intra site and inter site relations of the island with Minoan Crete, the Greek mainland, the Argolid, Cyprus, and other eastern Mediterranean sites.The study sets the basis for further studies towards the identification of the rather complex system of the society of Ialysos and its interaction with some other yet unknown centers in the Aegean during the early stages of the Bronze Age and throughout the periods of the Minoan and Mycenaean expansion.
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