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Journal articles on the topic 'South-Western Anatolia'

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1

Göçmen, Bayram, Nursen Alpagut-Keskin, Mehmet Zülfü Yildiz, Ahmet Mermer, and Hüseyin Arikan. "Serological characterization and confirmation of the taxonomic status of Montivipera albizona (Serpentes, Viperidae) with an additional new locality record and some phylogenetical comments." Animal Biology 59, no. 1 (2009): 87–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157075609x417116.

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AbstractThis is the first record of the presence of Montivipera albizona (Nilson, Andrén & Flärdh 1990), in Kahramanmaraş province, Mediterranean Region of Turkey. Here, one young male specimen was collected and is described. The present record of M. albizona extends its known distribution (Kulmac Mountain Range, Sivas) some 250 km to the south-west, where the Anatolian Diagonal exhibits a bifurcation. Our data based on the electropheoretic analysis of blood-sera, indicate that the M. xanthina populations from the western Anatolia and M. albizona distributed along the Anatolian Diagonal sh
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YOĞURTÇUOĞLU, BARAN, and JÖRG FREYHOF. "Aphanius irregularis, a new killifish from south-western Anatolia (Cyprinodontiformes: Aphaniidae)." Zootaxa 4410, no. 2 (2018): 319. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4410.2.4.

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Aphanius irregularis, new species, is described from the spring Kaklık in the Büyük Menderes River drainage in south-western Anatolia. Males of A. irregularis are distinguished from males of other species of the A. anatoliae group by having irregularly set and shaped dark-brown flank-bars often fused to each other, forming rows of vertically elongated silvery blotches and many small silvery spots or fields of small vermiculation, disconnected from silvery bar interspaces on flank. Males of A. irregularis are distinguished from males of some other species of the A. anatoliae group by having a w
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3

Karaman, M. "The tectonic evolution of Lake Eğirdir, West Turkey." Geologos 16, no. 4 (2010): 223–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10118-010-0006-x.

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The tectonic evolution of Lake Eğirdir, West Turkey Lake Eğirdir is one of the most important fresh-water lakes of Turkey. It has a tectonics-related origin. The area formed under a roughly N-S compressional tectonic regime during the Middle Miocene. The stresses caused slip faults west and east of Isparta Angle, and the lake formed at the junction of these faults. The area subsided between normal faults, thus creating the topographic condition required for a lake. The lacustrine sediments have fundamentally different lithologies. After the Late Miocene, central Anatolia started to move westwa
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Hoşgör, Izzet, and Stanislav Štamberg. "A first record of late Middle Permian actinopterygian fish from Anatolia, Turkey." Acta Geologica Polonica 64, no. 2 (2014): 147–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/agp-2014-0009.

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Abstract The Middle-Upper Permian of the Gomaniibrik Formation, of the Tanin Group, in south-east Anatolia, close to the Iraq border, yielded moderately preserved fish remains. Two species, Palaeoniscum freieslebeni and Pygopterus cf. nielseni, known so far only from the Upper Permian deposits of the Zechstein Basin in western Central Europe, were recognised. This late Middle Permian Anatolian record significantly widens the geographical range of these actinopterygians into the equatorial Palaeotethys Realm.
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Schütt, Hartwig, and Ridvan Şeşen. "The genusTheodoxusin South-western Anatolia, Turkey (Gastropoda, Prosobranchia, Neritidae)." Zoology in the Middle East 6, no. 1 (1992): 63–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09397140.1992.10637614.

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6

Yoğurtçuoğlu, Baran, and Jörg Freyhof. "Aphanius irregularis, a new killifish from south-western Anatolia (Cyprinodontiformes: Aphaniidae)." Zootaxa 4410, no. 2 (2018): 319–30. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4410.2.4.

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Yoğurtçuoğlu, Baran, Freyhof, Jörg (2018): Aphanius irregularis, a new killifish from south-western Anatolia (Cyprinodontiformes: Aphaniidae). Zootaxa 4410 (2): 319-330, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4410.2.4
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7

Gürer, Derya, Douwe J. J. van Hinsbergen, Murat Özkaptan, et al. "Paleomagnetic constraints on the timing and distribution of Cenozoic rotations in Central and Eastern Anatolia." Solid Earth 9, no. 2 (2018): 295–322. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/se-9-295-2018.

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Abstract. To quantitatively reconstruct the kinematic evolution of Central and Eastern Anatolia within the framework of Neotethyan subduction accommodating Africa–Eurasia convergence, we paleomagnetically assess the timing and amount of vertical axis rotations across the Ulukışla and Sivas regions. We show paleomagnetic results from ∼ 30 localities identifying a coherent rotation of a SE Anatolian rotating block comprised of the southern Kırşehir Block, the Ulukışla Basin, the Central and Eastern Taurides, and the southern part of the Sivas Basin. Using our new and published results, we comput
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8

Christoph, Germann. "Two new species of Otiorhynchus Germar, 1822 (Tecutinus Reitter, 1912) from south-western Anatolia (Coleoptera, Curculionidae: Entiminae)." Journal of Insect Biodiversity 5, no. 2 (2017): 1–11. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.291927.

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Christoph Germann (2017): Two new species of Otiorhynchus Germar, 1822 (Tecutinus Reitter, 1912) from south-western Anatolia (Coleoptera, Curculionidae: Entiminae). Journal of Insect Biodiversity 5 (2): 1-11, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.291927
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9

Özdoğan, Mehmet. "The Making of The Early Bronze Age in Anatolia." Old World: Journal of Ancient Africa and Eurasia 3, no. 1 (2023): 1–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26670755-20230007.

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Abstract In Anatolian archaeology, as it is the case in the neighbouring regions of the Near East and Aegean, the Bronze Age is considered in three consecutive stages, however, defined not in accordance with metallurgical achievements, but on changing modalities in social and economic structures. Before the beginning of the Early Bronze Age there were fully established farming communities across almost all of Anatolia, though subsisting mainly on family-level farming with no indication of complex social structuring. Likewise, during the final stages of the Late Chalcolithic there was a notable
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Gürler, B. "An inscribed bowl decorated with wheel abrasion-technique in western Anatolia." Anatolian Studies 48 (December 1998): 171–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3643053.

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It is difficult to distinguish the eastern series of cut decorated glasses from the western ones. The origin of the western series of some forms with this kind of decoration is attributed to north Italy, while that of the eastern ones is attributed to north Syria by Hayes (1975: 36). However, it is difficult to find parallels in north Syria (Lightfoot 1990: 8), and examples have been found in Cyprus, in the southern coasts of Anatolia, in the Aegean region, in Cyrenaica, in the northern coasts of the Black Sea and in south Russia (Harden 1958: 49, no 13; Vessberg 1965: 44/19; Oliver 1983: 255,
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11

Barbot, S., and J. R. Weiss. "Connecting subduction, extension and shear localization across the Aegean Sea and Anatolia." Geophysical Journal International 226, no. 1 (2021): 422–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggab078.

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SUMMARY The Eastern Mediterranean is the most seismically active region in Europe due to the complex interactions of the Arabian, African, and Eurasian tectonic plates. Deformation is achieved by faulting in the brittle crust, distributed flow in the viscoelastic lower-crust and mantle, and Hellenic subduction, but the long-term partitioning of these mechanisms is still unknown. We exploit an extensive suite of geodetic observations to build a kinematic model connecting strike-slip deformation, extension, subduction, and shear localization across Anatolia and the Aegean Sea by mapping the dist
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Satan, Ali, and Meral Balcı. "The Turkish Province from an English Diplomat’s Viewpoint 70 Years Ago." European Journal of Social Sciences Education and Research 9, no. 1 (2017): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.26417/ejser.v9i1.p7-13.

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In 1947, a British diplomat conducted a visit to the places travelled rarely by local and foreign travelers, The Black Sea Coast between Samsun and Giresun in the North, the Malatya-Erzincan train line in the South, the Sivas-Erzurum train route in the West, Erzincan-Şebinkarahisar- Giresun in the East, and reported what he saw to London. In secret report, there provided military, political, ethnographic and historical information. In rapidly changing life conditions in the world, this secret report, which was written seventy years ago, set us on a historical journey. In the year, which the se
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13

YILDIRIM, HASAN. "Muscari atillae (Asparagaceae): a new species from Eastern Anatolia, Turkey." Phytotaxa 213, no. 3 (2015): 291. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.213.3.9.

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The genus Muscari Miller (1754: 926) is represented by about 50 species (Speta 1998), which are distributed in Caucasus, temperate Europe, Africa, and north-western and south-western Asia (Losinskaya 1935, Davis & Stuart 1966, 1980, Stuart 1966, Garbari & Greuter 1970, Davis 1984, Townsend & Guest 1985, Feinbrun 1986, Rechinger 1990, Jafari & Maassoumi 2011). According to the latest checklist for Muscari s.s., this genus is represented by 47 taxa (Govaerts 2015).
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Korábek, Ondřej, Lucie Juřičková, Igor Balashov, and Adam Petrusek. "The contribution of ancient and modern anthropogenic introductions to the colonization of Europe by the land snail Helix lucorum Linnaeus, 1758 (Helicidae)." Contributions to Zoology 87, no. 2 (2018): 61–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18759866-08702001.

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Helix lucorum is a large synanthropic land snail of substantial economic importance, which has been recently reported from a number of new sites in Western, Central, and Eastern Europe. It is an originally Anatolian and Caucasian species, but its presumed natural distribution also covers the south and east of the Balkans. Populations of unclear origin, known as Helix lucorum taurica, live in the south-western part of Crimea. The Balkan and Crimean populations differ in their appearance, were long treated as different species or subspecies, and the Crimean populations are protected by law as a
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YILDIRIM, HASAN, MEHMET ÇİÇEK, KENAN AKBAŞ, and ERKAN ŞEKER. "Scutellaria topcuoglui (Lamiaceae), a new serpentinomorph species from south-western Anatolia, Turkey." Phytotaxa 528, no. 3 (2021): 180–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.528.3.2.

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Scutellaria topcuoglui (Lamiaceae) from Muğla Province (south-western Anatolia) is described as a new species to science. The new species is morphologically similar to S. glaphyrostachys, but differs from it by several morphological characters, such as the presence of glandular hairs in stems, leaves, bracts, calyx and corolla, scutellum length, corolla length, coloration, and indumentum, mericarp length, coloration, and sculpture, pollen shape, and habitat preference. Diagnostic characters, a comprehensive description, photographs, and a distribution map are provided.
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Doğru, Fikret, and Oya Pamukçu. "Analysis of gravity disturbance for boundary structures in the Aegean Sea and Western Anatolia." Geofizika 36, no. 1 (2019): 53–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.15233/gfz.2019.36.5.

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Western Anatolia has been shaped N–S-trending extensional tectonic regime and W-E trending horst, grabens and active faults due to the collision of Africa, Arabian and Eurasia plates. The borders of the Aegean Sea tectonic is limited between eastern of Greece, western of Anatolia and Hellenic subduction zone in the south of Crete. To evaluate these tectonic elements gravity disturbance data of the Aegean Sea and Western Anatolia was used in this study. It is thought that the gravity disturbance data reflects the tectonic elements and discontinuities way better than gravity anomaly due to the c
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17

Sipahiler, Füsun. "Seven new species and a new subspecies of Trichoptera from south western Anatolia." Aquatic Insects 11, no. 3 (1989): 129–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01650428909361360.

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18

Casale, A., R. Felix, and J. Muilwijk. "Two new cave-dwelling Laemostenus (Antisphodrus) species from south-western Anatolia (Coleoptera, Carabidae)." Tijdschrift voor Entomologie 146, no. 2 (2003): 235–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22119434-900000124.

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19

ÖZBEK, MEHMET UFUK, MÜNEVVER ARSLAN, and FUNDA ÖZBEK. "Dichoropetalum vuralii (Apiaceae), a new species from Yenişarbademli (Isparta, south-western Turkey)." Phytotaxa 278, no. 2 (2016): 153. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.278.2.5.

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Dichoropetalum vuralii, a new species of Dichoropetalum sect. Dichoropetalum, is described and illustrated from the alpine stage of Dedegöl Mountains in south-western Anatolia, Turkey. It is morphologically similar to D. depauperatum and D. bupleuroides from which it differs mainly in the stem length, basal leaves and segments, number and shape of bracts and bracteoles, and mericarp features. The diagnostic morphological and carpo-anatomical characters of D. vuralii are discussed with regard to other close relatives. Additionally, notes are presented regarding its ecology and conservation stat
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20

Dinçer, Berkay, Serkan Şahin, and Göknur Karahan. "West Afyonkarahisar (Turkey) Palaeolithic Survey 2022, Field Methods and First Results." Anatolia Antiqua XXXI (2023): 243–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/12dd9.

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Afyonkarahisar is located at the crossroads of almost all main roads in the north-south and east-west directions in the west of Anatolia. This important area has never been subject to Palaeolithic research. In 2022, two separate teams started Palaeolithic surveys in this province. The survey in the western districts was carried out at observation points located every 10 km in the field, thus aiming to identify Palaeolithic sites in Afyonkarahisar in an unbiased manner. In 2022, 28 of the 31 observation points in the western districts were visited and four major Palaeolithic sites dating to the
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Günel, Sevinç. "Mycenaean cultural impact on the Çine (Marsyas) plain, southwest Anatolia: the evidence from Çine-Tepecik." Anatolian Studies 60 (December 2010): 25–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066154600001009.

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AbstractTepecik is situated in the province of Aydın, on the edge of the Çine valley that forms the southern branch of the Maeander river system. It is located on a mountain pass extending towards the south, as well as on a natural passageway through the mountain range on the western side of the Çine plain. Its location on a number of natural routes is reflected in the material culture of the site, which displays both local (western Anatolian) and Aegean elements. The Late Bronze Age cultural remains from Çine-Tepecik include a group of Mycenaean pottery, presented and assessed in this study,
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de Barros Damgaard, Peter, Rui Martiniano, Jack Kamm, et al. "The first horse herders and the impact of early Bronze Age steppe expansions into Asia." Science 360, no. 6396 (2018): eaar7711. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aar7711.

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The Yamnaya expansions from the western steppe into Europe and Asia during the Early Bronze Age (~3000 BCE) are believed to have brought with them Indo-European languages and possibly horse husbandry. We analyzed 74 ancient whole-genome sequences from across Inner Asia and Anatolia and show that the Botai people associated with the earliest horse husbandry derived from a hunter-gatherer population deeply diverged from the Yamnaya. Our results also suggest distinct migrations bringing West Eurasian ancestry into South Asia before and after, but not at the time of, Yamnaya culture. We find no ev
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OKAY, ARAL I., İZVER TANSEL, and OKAN TÜYSÜZ. "Obduction, subduction and collision as reflected in the Upper Cretaceous–Lower Eocene sedimentary record of western Turkey." Geological Magazine 138, no. 2 (2001): 117–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756801005088.

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Late Cretaceous–Early Eocene Tethyan evolution of western Turkey is characterized by ophiolite obduction, high-pressure/low-temperature metamorphism, subduction, arc magmatism and continent–continent collision. The imprints of these events in the Upper Cretaceous–Lower Eocene sedimentary record of western Anatolia are studied in thirty-eight well-described stratigraphic sections. During the Late Cretaceous period, western Turkey consisted of two continents, the Pontides in the north and the Anatolide-Taurides in the south. These continental masses were separated by the İzmir-Ankara Neo-Tethyan
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Drahor, M. G., G. Göktürkler, M. A. Berge, T. Ö. Kurtulmuş, and N. Tuna. "3D resistivity imaging from an archaeological site in south-western Anatolia, Turkey: a case study." Near Surface Geophysics 5, no. 3 (2007): 195–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/1873-0604.2006031.

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Seghedi, Ioan, Cahit Helvacı, and Zoltan Pécskay. "Composite volcanoes in the south-eastern part of İzmir–Balıkesir Transfer Zone, Western Anatolia, Turkey." Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 291 (January 2015): 72–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2014.12.019.

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Hawkins, J. D. "Tarkasnawa King of Mira ‘Tarkondemos’, Boǧazköy sealings and Karabel." Anatolian Studies 48 (December 1998): 1–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3643046.

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The historical geography of Anatolia in the period sourced by the Boǧazköy texts (Middle-Late Bronze Age) has proved an on-going problem since they first became available, and nowhere was this more acutely felt than in southern and western Anatolia, generally acknowledged as the site of the Arzawa lands, also probably the Lukka lands. A major advance has been registered since the mid-1980s, with the publication and interpretation of the Hieroglyphic inscription of Tudhaliya IV from Yalburt, and the Cuneiform treaty on the Bronze Tablet of the same king. These two documents have established tha
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Chotalishvili, Lela. "On Cretan-South Caucasian Toponymic Parallels." PHASIS, no. 17 (May 17, 2014): 64–72. https://doi.org/10.60131/phasis.17.2014.2321.

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The Pre-Greek linguistic world demonstrates a clear unity and one of the best examples of this unity are geographic names of the Island of Crete, which have numerous parallels in the entire Aegean region – on islands, as well as in Continental Greece and Anatolia. This issue is substantially accentuated by R. Brown in his well-known book Evidence for Pre-Greek Speech on Crete from Greek Alphabetic Sources (Amsterdam 1985). He successively reviews the names presented at different places of the Island of Crete and divides the island into four parts: western, western-central, eastern-central and
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., Yusuf Kumlutas, Mehmet OZ, Adem Ozdemir, M. Rizvan Tunc ., Hakan Durmus ., and Serdar Dusen. "On the Populations of Ablepharus kitaibelii (Bibron and Bory, 1833) (Sauria: Scincidae) from South-Western Anatolia." Pakistan Journal of Biological Sciences 8, no. 3 (2005): 461–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3923/pjbs.2005.461.465.

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Germann, Christoph. "Two new species of Otiorhynchus Germar, 1822 (Tecutinus Reitter, 1912) from south-western Anatolia (Coleoptera, Curculionidae: Entiminae)." Journal of Insect Biodiversity 5, no. 2 (2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.12976/jib/2017.5.2.

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Otiorhynchus (Tecutinus) gultekini sp. nov. from Geyik Dağları and O. (Tecutinus) marggii sp. nov. from Bey Dağları, both from south-western Turkey, are described. Otiorhynchus gultekini sp. nov. is close to O. riedeli Braun, 1989 and O. ikisderensis Smreczyński, 1970 whereas O. marggii sp. nov. is morphologically close to O. brevicornis Boheman, 1842 and O. staveni Braun, 2000. All species of the subgenus are keyed and mapped.
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Deniz, İsmail Gökhan, İlker Genç, and Duygu Sarı. "Morphological and molecular data reveal a new species of Allium (Amaryllidaceae) from SW Anatolia, Turkey." Phytotaxa 212, no. 4 (2015): 283. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.212.4.4.

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Allium undulatitepalum (Amaryllidaceae) is described as a new species from the Antalya Province of Turkey. It belongs to the section Melanocrommyum and is endemic to the south-western region of Turkey. The new species is a close relative of A. orientale, but according to results of the ITS sequences, and based on the morphological differences presented in the description, it is clearly different from its relative. A phylogenetic tree, distribution map, illustrations, pollen and seed microphotographs, karyo-morphology, as well as notes on the biogeography and ecology of the new species are prov
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Bacvarov, Krum. "Early Neolithic jar burials in southeast Europe: a comparative approach." Documenta Praehistorica 33 (December 31, 2006): 101–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/dp.33.11.

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A typical product of early farming symbolism, jar burial, appeared in the beginning of southeast European Neolithization. Early jar burial development in south-east Europe displays two distinct chronological levels: an early Neolithic core area in the Struma and Vardar valleys and the western Rhodope, and later, late/final Neolithic and/or early Chalcolithic – depending on local terminology – manifestations ‘scattered’ in various places in the study area. It is the early chronological level of jar burial distribution that will be considered here in relation to the first expressions of these mo
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Hodder, Ian. "‘Always momentary, fluid and flexible’: towards a reflexive excavation methodology." Antiquity 71, no. 273 (1997): 691–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00085410.

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Çatalhöyük, on the Konya Plain in south central Anatolia, in the 1960s became the most celebrated Neolithic site of western Asia: huge (21 hectares), with early dates, tightpacked rooms with roof access, exuberant mural paintings, cattle heads fixed to walls, dead buried beneath floors in collective graves.This site, as difficult to excavcate as it is strange, is the object of a pioneering application of the ‘post-processual’ approach, hitherto largely a matter of re-working and criticism outside the trench. The Çatalhöyük project director explains his approach, in which the conclusions as wel
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Di Giacomo, Giacomo, Massimo Limoncelli, and Giuseppe Scardozzi. "Rilievo e ricostruzione virtuale del Ponte Sud di Hierapolis di Frigia (Turchia)." Virtual Archaeology Review 4, no. 8 (2015): 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/var.2013.4281.

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<p>The paper concerns the topographical survey and the 3D reconstruction of a Roman bridge-aqueduct located immediately to the south of Hierapolis in Phrygia (south-western Turkey), along the ancient route directed to Colosse and the internal Anatolia; only its southern abutment and scarce remains of the northern one are preserved. It is in a very difficult location, inside the narrow and deep valley, and it was never studied before. During the 2011 field work campaign of the Italian Archaeological Mission, it was surveyed using a high precision differential GPS system (for the plan docu
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Prelević, D., C. Akal, R. L. Romer, and S. F. Foley. "Lamproites as indicators of accretion and/or shallow subduction in the assembly of south-western Anatolia, Turkey." Terra Nova 22, no. 6 (2010): 443–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3121.2010.00963.x.

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Karataş, Ahmet, and Mustafa Sözen. "Contribution to karyology, distribution and taxonomic status of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae), in Turkey." Zoology in the Middle East 33, no. 1 (2004): 51–64. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13445665.

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(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The distribution of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii, in Turkey is de­ scribed with the help of literature records and our own new records. The range extends all over the country, with populations in Thrace, the Marmara region and the western Black Sea region be­ longing to the nominate form, and those in the eastern Black Sea region, in Central, eastern, southern and south-eastern Anatolia to M s. pallidus. The transition between the two subspecies occurs in a wide area extending from the Aegean region to the central Black Sea re
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Karataş, Ahmet, and Mustafa Sözen. "Contribution to karyology, distribution and taxonomic status of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae), in Turkey." Zoology in the Middle East 33, no. 1 (2004): 51–64. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13445665.

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(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The distribution of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii, in Turkey is de­ scribed with the help of literature records and our own new records. The range extends all over the country, with populations in Thrace, the Marmara region and the western Black Sea region be­ longing to the nominate form, and those in the eastern Black Sea region, in Central, eastern, southern and south-eastern Anatolia to M s. pallidus. The transition between the two subspecies occurs in a wide area extending from the Aegean region to the central Black Sea re
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Karataş, Ahmet, and Mustafa Sözen. "Contribution to karyology, distribution and taxonomic status of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae), in Turkey." Zoology in the Middle East 33, no. 1 (2004): 51–64. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13445665.

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(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The distribution of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii, in Turkey is de­ scribed with the help of literature records and our own new records. The range extends all over the country, with populations in Thrace, the Marmara region and the western Black Sea region be­ longing to the nominate form, and those in the eastern Black Sea region, in Central, eastern, southern and south-eastern Anatolia to M s. pallidus. The transition between the two subspecies occurs in a wide area extending from the Aegean region to the central Black Sea re
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38

Karataş, Ahmet, and Mustafa Sözen. "Contribution to karyology, distribution and taxonomic status of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae), in Turkey." Zoology in the Middle East 33, no. 1 (2004): 51–64. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13445665.

Full text
Abstract:
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The distribution of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii, in Turkey is de­ scribed with the help of literature records and our own new records. The range extends all over the country, with populations in Thrace, the Marmara region and the western Black Sea region be­ longing to the nominate form, and those in the eastern Black Sea region, in Central, eastern, southern and south-eastern Anatolia to M s. pallidus. The transition between the two subspecies occurs in a wide area extending from the Aegean region to the central Black Sea re
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39

Karataş, Ahmet, and Mustafa Sözen. "Contribution to karyology, distribution and taxonomic status of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae), in Turkey." Zoology in the Middle East 33, no. 1 (2004): 51–64. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13445665.

Full text
Abstract:
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The distribution of the Long-winged Bat, Miniopterus schreibersii, in Turkey is de­ scribed with the help of literature records and our own new records. The range extends all over the country, with populations in Thrace, the Marmara region and the western Black Sea region be­ longing to the nominate form, and those in the eastern Black Sea region, in Central, eastern, southern and south-eastern Anatolia to M s. pallidus. The transition between the two subspecies occurs in a wide area extending from the Aegean region to the central Black Sea re
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40

Byvaltsev, Alexandr, Svyatoslav Knyazev, and Anatoly Afinogenov. "Is Bombus pomorum (Panzer, 1805) (Hymenoptera: Apidae) a new bumblebee for Siberia or an indigenous species?" Journal of Threatened Taxa 13, no. 1 (2021): 17574–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/jott.5889.13.1.17574-17579.

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Bombus pomorum (Panzer, 1805) is known from Europe, Anatolia, the Caucasus, and to the Urals in Russia. Two specimens have been collected in the south of western Siberia for the first time. It is possible that the species is indigenous to Siberia but was not discovered until regular observations were made. There is also a possibility that this observation results from an expansion of the range of B. pomorum. We consider the evidence that our study coincided with a range expansion of the bumblebee species B. pomorum and B. sylvarum (Linnaeus,1761) near the end of 20th century. The distribution
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Pylypchuk, Yaroslav V., and Nino Sulava. "Before the Great States. Caucasians from the Neolithic to the Early Iron Age." Near East and Georgia 15 (December 15, 2023): 234–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.32859/neg/15/234-263.

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This article focuses on the history of the Caucasus and its people from the 5th to the 2nd millennium BC. One of the first significant developments in the history of the South Caucasus was the Kuro-Araxes culture, which united various Caucasian peoples living in the South Caucasus region, Anatolia, northwestern Iran, and northern Mesopotamia. This culture served as an ancestral foundation for the Proto-Kolkh, Trialet, Karmirberd, Kizylvank, and Uzerlin-Sevan cultures. In the North Caucasus, the Maikop and Dolmen cultures were prominent during the Bronze Age. These cultures provided a basis fro
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Genç, Can Ş., Şafak Altunkaynak, Zekiye Karacık, Metin Yazman, and Yücel Yılmaz. "The Çubukludağ graben, south of İzmir: its tectonic significance in the Neogene geological evolution of the western Anatolia." Geodinamica Acta 14, no. 1-3 (2001): 45–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09853111.2001.11432434.

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Genç, C. "The Çubukludag graben, south of Izmir: its tectonic significance in the Neogene geological evolution of the western Anatolia." Geodinamica Acta 14, no. 1-3 (2001): 45–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0985-3111(00)01061-5.

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Erkan, K. "Geothermal investigations in western Anatolia using equilibrium temperatures from shallow boreholes." Solid Earth 6, no. 1 (2015): 103–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/se-6-103-2015.

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Abstract. Determination of the conductive heat flow in western Anatolia has broad implications in many areas, including studies on the present-day extensional tectonic activity and assessments of the geothermal resources in the region. In this study, high-resolution equilibrium temperatures from 113 boreholes with depths of ~100 m were analyzed for determination of the conductive heat flow. Thermal conductivities were either determined by measurements on outcrops or estimated using lithologic records. By a detailed analysis of temperature–depth curves, a total of 55 sites were selected as bein
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AKAR, Fahriye, Mehveş Feyza AKKOYUNLU, and Funda BİLİM. "THE SPATIAL ANALYSIS OF b-VALUES OF THE AREA BETWEEN BODRUM AND FETHIYE DISTRICTS, THE SOUTH-WESTERN ANATOLIA, TURKEY." Mühendislik Bilimleri ve Tasarım Dergisi 10, no. 1 (2022): 238–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.21923/jesd.982238.

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Bouchal, Johannes M., Reinhard Zetter, Friđgeir Grímsson, and Thomas Denk. "The middle Miocene palynoflora and palaeoenvironments of Eskihisar (Yatağan basin, south-western Anatolia): a combined LM and SEM investigation." Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 182, no. 1 (2016): 14–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/boj.12446.

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Sutgibi*, Semra. "Climate Change in Southwestern Anatolia (Turkey) and Its Possible Impacts on Plant Biodiversity." Journal of Biomedical Research & Environmental Sciences 6, no. 5 (2024): 444–56. https://doi.org/10.37871/jbres2102.

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Biodiversity is of great importance for ecosystems such as protecting soils against erosion, increasing soil fertility, providing clean water to streams/rivers, contributing to the healthy continuation of nutrient cycling, pollinating plants, and acting as a buffer against diseases. These characteristics of biodiversity are called “ecosystem functions” or “ecosystem services”. However, many factors threaten biodiversity, such as changes in land cover and land use, pollution, invasion of exotic species and climate change. Among these, it would not be wrong to say that the anthropogenic climate
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Çağlayandereli, Mustafa, and Hediye Göker. "Anatolia tattoo art; Tunceli exampleAnadolu dövme sanatı; Tunceli ili örneği." Journal of Human Sciences 13, no. 2 (2016): 2545. http://dx.doi.org/10.14687/jhs.v13i2.3827.

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In this article, Anatolia tattoo tradition and art are examinated of Tunceli culture. Tattoo is accepted the first father of writing is defined to aim of decoration or giving message and to paint specific cultural figures to the body and lower part of skin surface. Tattoo is one of subject of social sciences especially sociology and antropology, tattoo is dating back to old periods of history, and it is seen in all societies as a cultural object. The tattoo is also a colorful elemen of Anatolian civilization. As a sociological context of tattoo is used to show an occupation group as a ‘mark’,
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İskenderoğlu, Ali, and Namık Aysal. "Chemo-stratigraphy, petrology and U-Pb geochronology of South-eastern part of the Yuntdağ volcano (Karakılıçlı – Manisa) in Western Anatolia." All Earth 33, no. 1 (2021): 30–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09853111.2021.1904492.

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Asztalos, Marika, Dinçer Ayaz, Yusuf Bayrakcı, et al. "It takes two to tango – Phylogeography, taxonomy and hybridization in grass snakes and dice snakes (Serpentes: Natricidae: Natrix natrix, N. tessellata)." Vertebrate Zoology 71 (December 7, 2021): 813–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/vz.71.e76453.

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Using two mitochondrial DNA fragments and 13 microsatellite loci, we examined the phylogeographic structure and taxonomy of two codistributed snake species (Natrix natrix, N. tessellata) in their eastern distribution area, with a focus on Turkey. We found evidence for frequent interspecific hybridization, previously thought to be extremely rare, and for backcrosses. This underscores that closely related sympatric species should be studied together because otherwise the signal of hybridization will be missed. Furthermore, the phylogeographic patterns of the two species show many parallels, sugg
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