Academic literature on the topic 'Zarzis (Tunisie)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Zarzis (Tunisie)"

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Perthuisot, J. P., S. Castanier, and A. Maurin. "La huntite (CaMg <sub>3</sub> (CO <sub>3</sub> ) <sub>4</sub> ) de la Sebkha el Melah (Zarzis, Tunisie); un exemple de microbiodiagenese carbonatogene." Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France VI, no. 4 (July 1, 1990): 657–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/gssgfbull.vi.4.657.

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Hazelton, Robert H., Robert M. Sargent, Erich R. Gundlach, Mohamed Anis Boussetta, Ahmed Ben Djebara, and Sahbene Ben Fadhel. "PREVENTION AND ABATEMENT OF MARINE POLLUTION IN TUNISIAN COMMERCIAL PORTS." International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings 2001, no. 2 (March 1, 2001): 1449–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.7901/2169-3358-2001-2-1449.

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ABSTRACT In addition to having ports that ship and receive oil and other commercial products by sea, the Republic of Tunisia is exposed to potential spills from vessels that are routed close to shore as they transit the Mediterranean. This paper summarizes a study that was conducted to evaluate Tunisia's commercial ports' oil spill contingency plans, response equipment, and response management systems, for the purposes of increasing the spill response capability of the Tunisian Office of the Merchant Marine and Ports (OMMP) and bringing each plan up to criteria established by Tunisia's 1996 oil spill legislation and international standards. The four ports evaluated were Bizerte, Tunis-Goulette-Radès (TGR), Sfax, and Zarzis. Interviews and discussions were conducted with representatives of the OMMP, the Agency for Environmental Protection (ANPE), the Tunisian Petroleum Activities Enterprise (ETAP), the Tunisian Navy and Merchant Marine, the Directorate General of Energy, the state-owned oil transportation company (TRAPSA), and selected private sector oil companies. The equipment review entailed analysis of existing equipment in each port, potential spill size and location, time to respond, and environmentally sensitive areas needing protection. Specific recommendations were made for improving the readiness posture of Tunisia's commercial ports and for the purchase of additional spill-response equipment and services. Implementation of these recommendations will result in a significantly improved capability on the part of the private and public sector users of Tunisia's commercial ports to respond effectively to marine oil spills, should one occur. This paper highlights the readiness capability of each port and the extent of oil transportation activities, and provides recommendations to improve response via equipment purchases, improvement of the existing response management system, implementation of a training and exercise program, and changes to the port contingency plans.
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Zelleg, Marwa, Imen Said, Essaieb Hamdi, and Zoubeir Lafhaj. "Experimental testing for Zarzis port sediments (Tunisia) in road materials." Geotechnical Research 5, no. 1 (March 2018): 13–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1680/jgere.17.00013.

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Feki, M., M. Châari, and L. Neifar. "Spatial variability of helminth parasites and evidence for stock discrimination in the round sardinella, Sardinella aurita (Valenciennes, 1847), off the coast of Tunisia." Journal of Helminthology 90, no. 3 (June 22, 2015): 353–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022149x15000371.

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AbstractThree digeneans – Parahemiurus merus (Linton, 1910), Aphanurus stossichii (Monticelli, 1891) and Lecithochirium sp. – and one tetraphyllidean cestode larva were used as biological tags to discriminate the stock of Sardinella aurita (Valenciennes, 1847). In total, 579 fish were examined in five zones off the Tunisian coast, including Bizerte and Kelibia in the north, Mahdia in the east, Gabes and Zarzis in the south. Discriminant analyses used for the separation of S. aurita allowed for the identification of two discrete stocks. Sardinella aurita from Bizerte, Kelibia and Zarzis clumped together as a single stock. Parahemiurus merus and A. stossichii were the most important species in determining the location of sampled fish from these regions. Specimens from Mahdia and Gabes were grouped as one stock characterized by the presence of Lecithochirium sp. and larvae of the Tetraphyllidea. These results were corroborated by comparing the parameters of prevalence and mean abundance of parasites among zones. The separation of S. aurita between localities after pooling specimens from Bizerte, Kelibia and Zarzis and separately pooling those from Mahdia and Gabes also allowed the identification of two discrete stocks, one in offshore waters from Bizerte, Kelibia and Zarzis characterized by the digeneans P. merus and A. stossichii and one in inshore waters from Mahdia and Gabes characterized by Lechithochirium sp. and tetraphyllidean larvae.
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Zagaria, Valentina. "The Morally Fraught Harga." Cambridge Journal of Anthropology 37, no. 2 (September 1, 2019): 57–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cja.2019.370205.

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The Tunisian coastal town of Zarzis is known for its generations of male emigrants to France and for initiating post-revolutionary harga – the ‘burning’ of the border via undocumented sea crossings to ‘Europe’. Despite migration being central to life in Zarzis, the harga is fraught with anxieties and moral accusations. While older generations accuse younger ones of chasing after easy money and causing jealousies, thereby fuelling the harga, young men reckon that risking the crossing is a matter of escaping social death. Men of all ages also agree that the harga is often women’s fault. This article explores how the desire of making a living in Europe is evaluated in a departure town, and what the accusations and negative emotions it conjures up might reveal about people’s understandings of their economic and moral lives in times of political and social change.
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Feki, M., M. Châari, L. Neifar, and L. Boudaya. "Helminth parasites of the chub mackerelScomber coliasoff the Tunisian coast and their use in stock discrimination." Journal of Helminthology 92, no. 1 (February 20, 2017): 90–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022149x17000104.

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AbstractNine helminth parasites were used as biological tags to discriminate diverse areas ofScomber coliasGmelin, 1789. During three seasons, a total of 369 fish were examined in four zones off the Tunisian coast, including Bizerte in the north, Kelibia and Mahdia in the centre and Zarzis in the south. Discriminant analyses were used to identify distinct areas ofS. colias. Fish from Bizerte were grouped as one area and were correlated negatively with the monogeneanGrubea cochlearand the digeneanLecithocladium excisum. Specimens from Kelibia and Mahdia were grouped together and were characterized by the ectoparasitePseudokuhnia minorand by endoparasitesProdistomum orientalis, Monascus filiformisand anisakid larvae. Fish from Zarzis were grouped as one area and were positively correlated with the monogeneanG. cochlearand the digeneanL. excisum. These results were corroborated by comparing the prevalence and mean abundance of parasites among zones. Results of other discriminant analyses used for the classification ofS. coliasbetween localities after pooling specimens from the central areas of Kelibia and Mahdia also allowed the identification of three distinct areas: one in the north, correlated negatively withG. cochlearandL. excisum;one in the centre, characterized byP. minor, P. orientalis, M. filiformisand anisakid larvae; and one in the south, from Zarzis, characterized byG. cochlearandL. excisum. Results of comparisons of infection parameters between seasons and those of seasonal discrminant analyses showed a seasonal stability of communities from the northern and the southern areas. Specimens from the central regions showed variability between seasons, suggesting migratory movements.
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Zagaria, Valentina. "“A Small Story With Great Symbolic Potential”: Attempts at Fixing a Cemetery of Unknown Migrants in Tunisia." American Behavioral Scientist 64, no. 4 (November 28, 2019): 540–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002764219882994.

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From the summer of 2015, as Europe faced the so-called “refugee crisis,” a cemetery in southeast Tunisia started gaining fame. Journalists, researchers, filmmakers, photographers, and activists began traveling to the coastal town of Zarzis to report on a burial site for the victims of the European Union’s border. They were welcomed by local actors, and in particular by Chamseddine, a former fisherman who over the years became deeply involved in these burials. Told through one man’s charitable commitment to provide dignity to those who died at the European Union’s liquid border, the cemetery was fixed as a place epitomizing both the deadly effects of migration policies and the compassion of simple citizens in the face of horror. Different individuals and groups also began organizing to materially fix the cemetery. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Zarzis between 2015 and 2018, this article explores the conceptual and practical acts of “fixing” surrounding the cemetery. These resulted in turning it into a focal symbol triggering moral and political discourses not only of empathy and hope but also of blame and responsibility, bringing to the fore the colonial and neocolonial legacies of the “refugee crisis.”
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Bellaaj-Zouari, Amel, Souheil Dkhili, Refka Gharsalli, Abdelkrim Derbali, and Nejla Aloui-Bejaoui. "Shell morphology and relative growth variability of the invasive pearl oyster Pinctada radiata in coastal Tunisia." Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 92, no. 3 (December 9, 2011): 553–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025315411001925.

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The variability of shell morphology and relative growth of the invasive pearl oyster Pinctada radiata was studied within and among ten populations from coastal Tunisia using discriminant tests. Therefore, 12 morphological characters were examined and 34 metric and weight ratios were defined. In addition to the classic morphological characters, populations were compared by the thickness of the nacreous layer. Results of Duncan's multiple comparison test showed that the most discriminative ratios were the width of nacreous layer of right valve to the inflation of shell, the hinge line length to the maximum width of shell and the nacre thickness to the maximum width of shell. The analysis of variance revealed an important inter-population morphological variability. Both multidimensional scaling analysis and the squared Mahalanobis distances (D2) of metric ratios divided Tunisian P. radiata populations into four biogeographical groupings: the north coast (La Marsa); harbours (Hammamet, Monastir and Zarzis); the Gulf of Gabès (Sfax, Kerkennah Island, Maharès, Skhira and Djerba) and the intertidal area (Ajim). However, the Kerkennah Island population was discriminated by the squared Mahalanobis distances (D2) of weight ratios in an isolated group suggesting particular trophic conditions in this area. The allometric study revealed high linear correlation between shell morphological characters and differences in allometric growth among P. radiata populations. Unlike the morphological discrimination, allometric differentiation shows no clear geographical distinction. This study revealed that the pearl oyster P. radiata exhibited considerable phenotypic plasticity related to differences of environmental and/or ecological conditions along Tunisian coasts and highlighted the discriminative character of the nacreous layer thickness parameter.
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Zagaria, Valentina. "The clandestine cemetery." Human Remains and Violence 5, no. 1 (April 2019): 18–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/hrv.5.1.3.

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The Mediterranean Sea has recently become the deadliest of borders for illegalised travellers. The victims of the European Union’s liquid border are also found near North African shores. The question of how and where to bury these unknown persons has recently come to the fore in Zarzis, a coastal town in south-east Tunisia. Everyone involved in these burials – the coastguards, doctors, Red Crescent volunteers, municipality employees – agree that what they are doing is ‘wrong’. It is neither dignified nor respectful to the dead, as the land used as a cemetery is an old waste dump, and customary attitudes towards the dead are difficult to realise. This article will first trace how this situation developed, despite the psychological discomfort of all those affected. It will then explore how the work of care and dignity emerges within this institutional chain, and what this may tell us about what constitutes the concept of the human.
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Fezei, Radouanne, Halim Hammi, and Adel M’nif. "Extractive process for preparing high purity magnesium chloride hexahydrate." Chemical Industry and Chemical Engineering Quarterly 18, no. 1 (2012): 83–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/ciceq110815049f.

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This paper refers a method for the preparation of magnesium chloride hexahydrate (bischofite) from Sebkha el Melah of Zarzis Tunisian natural brine. It is a five-stage process essentially based on crystallization by isothermal evaporation and chemical precipitation. The two first steps were dedicated to the crystallization of sodium chloride and potassiummagnesium double salts, respectively. Then, the resulting liquor was desulfated using calcium chloride solution. After that another isothermal evaporation stage was implemented in order to eliminate potassium ions in the form of carnallite, KCl.MgCl2.6H2O. At the end of this step, the recovered solution primarily composed of magnesium and chloride ions was treated by dioxan in order to precipitate magnesium chloride as MgCl2.6H2O.C4H8O2. This compound dried at constant temperature of 100?C gave good quality magnesium chloride hexahydrate. Besides this salt, the various by-products obtained from the different treatment stages are also useful.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Zarzis (Tunisie)"

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Bouaicha, Mouldi. "Le parler de Zarzis : étude descriptive d'un parler arabe du sud est tunisien." Paris 5, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA05H037.

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Essentiellement inspirée des travaux d'A. Martinet et des principaux tenants de la théorie fonctionnaliste, l'étude traite, en cinq parties, d'un parler arabe du sud est tunisien: le parler de zarzis. Nous examinons dans un premier temps la situation linguistique en Tunisie pour identifier le parler considéré parmi de nombreuses variétés régionales mais aussi et surtout par rapport à l'arabe littéral (classique et moderne). L'étude du parler de zarzis et les quelques comparaisons-jugées nécessaires avec d'autres parlers arabes nous ont permis de voir son originalité en ce sens qu'il a, en dehors des traits communs aux diverses variétés de l'arabe, des éléments spécifiques au parler de zarzis. Ces éléments se rencontrent aussi bien en phonologie qu'en morphologie. Pour l'étude et la classification des formes, nous avons choisi de nous écarter des modèles classiques de description en essayant d'appliquer une méthode qui, par sa souplesse, rend compte et de la complexité de ces formes et de leur diversité
Essentially based on the works of A. Martinet and the major compobebts of the functionalist theory, the study deals, in five parts, with an Arab dialect in the south of Tunisia: the zarzis dialect. Xe first examine the linguistic situation in Tunisia so to identity, among many other regional varieties but also in relation to both classical and modern written Arabic, the dialect here dealt x with. We then present a relatively detailed description of the phonological system. The study of the zarzis dialect and the few necessary comparisons with other Arab varieties allowed us to perceive its originality. Hence, beyond the common aspects, some elements are specifical to this dialect. These innovations can be found in both phonology and morphology. In order to study and classify the forms, we preferred to get away from the classical descriptive models and tried to apply a much more flexible method that takes into account the complexity and the diversity of the linguistic forms
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Slablab, Ali. "Aspects démographiques et socio-économiques de l'émigration de la région de Zarzis Tunisie vers la région parisienne : enquêtes auprès des travailleurs et de leur famille." Paris 5, 1985. http://www.theses.fr/1985PA05H032.

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Books on the topic "Zarzis (Tunisie)"

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Mediterranean Conference on Intelligent Systems and Automation (2nd 2009 Zarzis, Tunisia). Intelligent systems and automation: 2nd Mediterranean Conference on Intelligent Systems and Automation (CISA'09), Zarzis, Tunisia, 23-25 March 2009. Edited by Beji Lotfi, Otmane Samir, and Abichou Azgal. Melville, N.Y: American Institute of Physics, 2009.

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Mediterranean Conference on Intelligent Systems and Automation (2nd 2009 Zarzis, Tunisia). Intelligent systems and automation: 2nd Mediterranean Conference on Intelligent Systems and Automation (CISA'09), Zarzis, Tunisia, 23-25 March 2009. Edited by Beji Lotfi, Otmane Samir, and Abichou Azgal. Melville, N.Y: American Institute of Physics, 2009.

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Mediterranean Conference on Intelligent Systems and Automation (2nd 2009 Zarzis, Tunisia). Intelligent systems and automation: 2nd Mediterranean Conference on Intelligent Systems and Automation (CISA'09), Zarzis, Tunisia, 23-25 March 2009. Edited by Beji Lotfi, Otmane Samir, and Abichou Azgal. Melville, N.Y: American Institute of Physics, 2009.

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Jāmiʻah al-Tūnisīyah. Markaz al-Dirāsāt wa-al-Abḥāth al-Iqtiṣādīyah wa-al-Ijtimāʻīyah. and Tunisia. Secrétariat d'Etat à la recherche scientifique et à la technologie., eds. La pêche côtière en Tunisie et en Méditerranée: Actes du séminaire : Zarzis 18-19-20 Nov. 1994. Tunis: Secrétariat d'état à la recherche scientifique et à la technologie, 1995.

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La pêche côtière en Tunisie et en Méditerranée: Actes du séminaire : Zarzis 18-19-20 Nov. 1994. Tunis: Secrétariat d'état à la recherche scientifique et à la technologie, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Zarzis (Tunisie)"

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Zouch, Afef, Mohamed Elwachem, Olfa Hentati, and Mohamed Ksibi. "Assessing the Efficacy of Dredged Sediments from Zarzis Harbor, Tunisia: Implication to Agriculture." In Recent Advances in Environmental Science from the Euro-Mediterranean and Surrounding Regions (2nd Edition), 2103–9. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51210-1_329.

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Zelleg, M., I. Said, E. Hamdi, and Z. Lafhaj. "Sediment transport and silting in Zarzis commercial harbor (Tunisia)." In River Sedimentation, 500–506. CRC Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315623207-93.

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"Project “SOLARTECH SUD,” Solar Eco-Village Zarzis - Djerba Tunisia." In Distributed Renewable Energies for Off-Grid Communities, 321–23. Elsevier, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-397178-4.15005-4.

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Conference papers on the topic "Zarzis (Tunisie)"

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ATOUI, Abdelfattah, Mouldi BRAHIM, and Chérif SAMMARI. "Contribution à l’étude hydrodynamique sédimentaire de la frange littorale de Zarzis (Tunisie)." In Conférence Méditerranéenne Côtière et Maritime - Coastal and Maritime Mediterranean Conference. Editions Paralia, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5150/cmcm.2011.026.

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El-Gharbi, Sinda, Meriem Tekaya, Mohamed Hammami, and Beligh Mechri. "Effect of storage time on biochemical quality of olive fruits from Tunisian Zarazi cultivar: Physiological properties of olive fruits affected by storage." In 2017 International Conference on Engineering & MIS (ICEMIS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icemis.2017.8273108.

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