Publications by authors named "N Piotrowska"

Article Synopsis
  • * The radiocarbon dating indicates that the cave served as a shelter for cave bears during Marine Isotope Stage 3, with bones dating back to over 47,710 years ago and up until about 31,820 years ago.
  • * Analysis of 110 radiocarbon samples from various caves shows a peak in cave bear population around 50,000 to 40,000 years ago, followed by a decline and partial recovery, with competition from other species contributing to their eventual extinction
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Lake Baikal, lying in a rift zone in southeastern Siberia, is the world's oldest, deepest, and most voluminous lake that began to form over 30 million years ago. Cited as the "most outstanding example of a freshwater ecosystem" and designated a World Heritage Site in 1996 due to its high level of endemicity, the lake and its ecosystem have become increasingly threatened by both climate change and anthropogenic disturbance. Here, we present a record of nutrient cycling in the lake, derived from the silicon isotope composition of diatoms, which dominate aquatic primary productivity.

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A recent paper by Miszczak et al. (2020) examines metal contamination of mires in Poland and Norway. The authors conclude that lead (Pb) records in ombrotrophic peatlands cannot be used to reconstruct the chronological history of anthropogenic activities due to post-depositional mobility of the metal.

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A corarection to this Article has been published and is linked from the HTML version of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper.

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