Suchergebnis für: "allinanchor:Gebruiker= Beheer site:.rexroth inurl:login", 34 Treffer

von 1 bis 20

The pattern and timing of the colonization of Europe by modern humans

   00:56:16 
00:26:27.0 Aurignacian sites
00:27:50.0 Gravettian sites
00:28:36.0 Neanderthal, Late Middle Palaeolithic sites
Title: The pattern and timing of the colonization of Europe by modern humans
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Nicholas Conard (author), Michael Bolus (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-11
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Upper Palaeolithic, Neanderthals, Aurignacian, Danube Valley, Swabian Alb, Hohlenstein-Stadel, Sirgenstein, Vogelherd, Achtal, Lonetal, Geißenklösterle, Conard, Nicholas,
Identifier: UT_20010411_001_evolution_0003
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Abundant fossil evidence indicates that modern humans evolved outside of Europe. Despite nearly a century and a half of research across many parts of the continent, there is no evidence for the arrival of anatomically modern humans in Europe before ca. 40 ka. At sites including Vogelherd where early European modern humans have been recovered, their skeletal remains are found in association with Aurignacian artifacts that are characterized by innovative lithic and organic artifacts and abundant examples of art and ornament that go far beyond the range of variation documented among the material culture of the indigenous Neanderthals. The distribution of dates for the most convincing evidence for the Aurignacian and early Upper Paleolithic suggests that Homo sapiens sapiens arrived in Europe around 40 ka. The best evidence for this early phase of occupation comes, broadly speaking, from the Circum-Mediterranean area and the upper reaches of the Danube Valley. The observation that many very early and also very rich Aurignacian sites are well documented in the Swabian Alb, suggests an early settlement of this area which led to the elaborate cultural developments documented at sites including Sirgenstein, Vogelherd, Hohlenstein-Stadel and Geißenklösterle. These sites, among other important finds, have yielded the earliest artworks and musical instruments known from Europe. The Kulturpumpe model describes several potential mechanisms to explain these cultural innovations. Following this initial appearance of modern humans, Neanderthals and anatomically and culturally modern people coexisted in often spatial separate regions until ca. 25-30 ka when the last Neanderthals died out in the most peripheral parts of Europe. This paper provides new dates for the Aurignacian of the Swabian Alb and archaeological analyses to test the hypotheses that the Danube Corridor and the Mediterranean coast provide the two key routes for the colonization of Europe. Ecological and chronological data testing the Kulturpumpe model will also be provided.

Lecture Astroparticle Physics - Dark Matter, 22. Lesson

   00:50:29 
00:22:53.0 EDELWEISS (Experience pour DEtecter Les Wimps En SIte Souterrain)
00:26:09.0 EDELWEISS (Experience pour DEtecter Les Wimps En SIte Souterrain): location, results
00:28:08.0 EDELWEISS (Experience pour DEtecter Les Wimps En SIte Souterrain): future
Title: Lecture Astroparticle Physics - Dark Matter, 22. Lesson
Description: Lecture SoSe 2005; Monday, 11. Juli 2005
Creator: Josef Jochum (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2005-07-11
Subjects: Astroparticle Physics, Astroteilchenphysik, Dark Matter, Lecture, Dark Matter search, Low-T-Detectors, CDMS (Cryogenic Dark Matter Search), EDELWEISS (Experience pour DEtecter Les Wimps En SIte Souterrain), CRESST (Cryogenic Rare Event Search with Superconducting Thermometers), CRESST I, CRESST II,
Identifier: UT_20050711_002_astrophys_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise

Lecture Astroparticle Physics - Dark Matter, 22. Lesson

   00:50:29 
Title: Lecture Astroparticle Physics - Dark Matter, 22. Lesson
Description: Lecture SoSe 2005; Monday, 11. Juli 2005
Creator: Josef Jochum (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2005-07-11
Subjects: Astroparticle Physics, Astroteilchenphysik, Dark Matter, Lecture, Dark Matter search, Low-T-Detectors, CDMS (Cryogenic Dark Matter Search), EDELWEISS (Experience pour DEtecter Les Wimps En SIte Souterrain), CRESST (Cryogenic Rare Event Search with Superconducting Thermometers), CRESST I, CRESST II,
Identifier: UT_20050711_002_astrophys_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise

Vorlesung Biochemie III, 39. Stunde

   00:44:52 
Title: Vorlesung Biochemie III, 39. Stunde
Description: Vorlesung im WiSe 2005-2006; Donnerstag, 02. Februar 2006
Creator: Gabriele Dodt (author), Michael Duszenko (author), Robert Feil (author), Bernd Hamprecht (author), Thilo Stehle (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2006-02-02
Subjects: Biochemie, Vorlesung, Lecture, Biochemistry, Genmutationen, DNA-Reparatur, DNA-Umlagerungen, DNA-Rekombination, homologe Rekombination, Holliday-Modell, orts-spezifische Rekombination (SSR, Site-specific recombination), Transposition,
Identifier: UT_20060202_001_biochemie3_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise

Lecture Introduction to Cultural Studies, 11. and 12. Lesson

   01:25:05 
01:18:06.0 Time and Space, The country as the site of ordinary life: "What is Pastoral?", Paul Alpers
01:19:46.0 Time and Space, The country as the site of ordinary life: "The Archers"
01:21:12.0 Time and Space, The country as the site of ordinary life: "Murder at the Vicarage", Agatha Christie
Title: Lecture Introduction to Cultural Studies, 11. and 12. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im SoSe 2015; Dienstag, 19. Mai 2015
Creator: Matthias Bauer (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2015-05-19
Subjects: Cultural Studies, English, Lecture, Vorlesung, Time, Space, Nature, Civilization, Country, City, Landscape Garden, Boundaries, Relational Concepts, Garden of Eden, City of the Dead, Civilized Nature, Organic City,
Identifier: UT_20150519_001_cultstudc_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise

Hominid physiology and OIS 3 palaeoclimate

   00:37:49 
00:13:01.0 Mousterian sites, Temperatures
00:29:22.0 Aurignacian sites, Temperatures
Title: Hominid physiology and OIS 3 palaeoclimate
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Leslie Aiello (author), Mark Collard (author), Peter Wheeler (author), William Davis (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-11
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Pleistocene, OIS-3, Oxygen Isotope Stage 3, Neanderthals, Upper Palaeolithic, Mousterian, Climate, Glacial Europe, Greenland ice cores, Palaeoenvironment,
Identifier: UT_20010411_001_evolution_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 (OIS-3) dates between 60,000 and 25,000 years ago and is the period that saw the entry of anatomically modern humans into Europe and the extinction of the Neanderthals. Ice cores from Greenland and the Antarctic have shown that the previously assumed relative mildness of the OIS-3 climate was in error. Rather it was a period of many abrupt alterations between relatively warm periods and cold intervals, which particularly toward the end of the period were as severe as the last glacial maximum. The international, multidisplinary Stage 3 Project headed by Professor Tjeerd Van Andel (University of Cambridge), was established in 1996 with its major aims 1) to determine to what degree the drastic climate changes recorded in Greenland ice cores influence European landscapes, and 2) to determine the effect of the European stage 3 climate on Middle and Upper Palaeolithic human populations (htt;://www.esc.cam.ac.uk/oistage3/ Details/Homepage.html). The first step in this research was to model the climate and landscapes of a typically warm and a typically cold climate event in Europe and the adjacent North Atlantic between 45,000 and 30,000 years ago. These events center on 30,000 cal BP for the cold and 37-39 cal BP for the warm event in the chronology of the GISP2 Greenland ice core. The broader aims of the stage 3 project focus on the ways in which the climatic conditions and palaeoenvironments of mid-glacial Europe impact on Palaeolithic humans. Here we contribute to these broader aims by focusing on the thermoregulatory requirements of Neanderthals and anatomically modern humans occupying Europe during both the warm and cold phases of OIS-3. A number of simulations are run based on inferred surface area to volume relationships for Neanderthals and modern humans, modern human rates of thermal conductance and various levels of insulation provided by fat layers, animal skins and tailored clothing. Results are tested against the known extremes of human climatic adaptation afforded by the native Americans of Tierra del Fuego. They suggest that both Neanderthals and modern humans would have been able to occupy Europe without undo difficultly during the warm phases of Stage 3 but would have had considerable difficultly during the cold phases. Cultural differences in protection against the elements may have been of utmost importance for survival during these phases, as would have occupation of areas of refuge in the environment. We are grateful to the Leverhulme and McDonald Trusts and to the many donors to the gift accounts of the Godwin Institute and the Earth Sciences Department, University of Cambridge for supporting the Stage 3 Project.

Biological and cultural evolution during the Lower Paleolithic of the Near East

   00:36:19 
00:10:32.0 Israel, Early sites
00:14:15.0 Syria, sites
Title: Biological and cultural evolution during the Lower Paleolithic of the Near East
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Peter Schmid (author), Jean-Marie Le Tensorer (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-12
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Pleistocene, Near East, Evolution, Lower Palaeolithic, African Homo ergaster, Asian Homo erectus, Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar, Acheulean, Yabrudian, Hummalian, Schmid, Peter,
Identifier: UT_20010412_001_evolution_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Issuing from Africa, the first men migrated at different main periods towards Asia and Europe. During these migrations, the Near East on the whole and Syria in particular, played a leading role as a crossroads between the three continents. In fact, the first human beings have been present for over 2 millions years in this region which has always been a favorable way for Early Paleolithic settlements. In this paper a new Homo erectus discovery from Syria is presented. It is an almost complete left parietal bone some 500.000 years old. It came from an Acheulian level, characterized by oval-shaped handaxes, at the site of Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar and was discovered in October 1996. This site has an exceptional Acheulian sequence as well as Yabrudian and Hummalian levels. The stratigraphy at Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar is very complex due to a) the variability in sedimentation and b) deformation of the layers in the dolina which was intermittently flooded by a spring. The hominid remains were found in an archaeological layer with both cultural and faunal remains, which will add new information on filling the geographical gap between the African H. ergaster and the Asian H. erectus.

New models of human dispersal applied to the peopling of the Americas

   00:32:23 
00:19:20.0 Earliest palaeoindian occupation, Sites
00:22:50.0 C14 dates, Excavation sites
Title: New models of human dispersal applied to the peopling of the Americas
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: James Steele (author), Lee Hazelwood (author), Gustavo Politis (author), Timothy J. Sluckin (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-12
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, South America, Adaptability, Demography, Hunter-gatherersc, Human dispersal, Fisher-Skellam, Diffusion, Habitat variation, Palaeoecology, Spatial distribution, Ecosystem geography, Clovis, Palaeoindian occupation, Steele, James, Hazelwood, Lee, Politis, Gustavo,
Identifier: UT_20010412_001_evolution_0005
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: We have developed a simulation model of human dispersals which takes account of the effects of habitat variation on directions and rates of spread. The basic form of this model is a discrete approximation of Fisher-Skellam's wave of advance on a two-dimensional lattice. However, our model allows us also to examine the effects of a non-standard treatment of the mobility term, which takes account of taxis (advection-diffusion up gradients of resource concentration). We use this model to predict the archaeological signatures of human dispersal into the Americas, under different assumptions about the demography and adaptability of late glacial hunter-gatherers. We also report new radiocarbon dates for the peopling of southern South America, which were obtained to help us to evaluate the plausibility of these different sets of assumptions.

Ringvorlesung Digital Humanities: Anwendungsbereiche, Möglichkeiten, Werkzeuge - Digitale Korpuslinguistik und Textometrie: Das Beispiel des Projekts PaLaFra

   01:31:58 
00:14:02.0 Abfragebeispiel 1: Login
Title: Ringvorlesung Digital Humanities: Anwendungsbereiche, Möglichkeiten, Werkzeuge - Digitale Korpuslinguistik und Textometrie: Das Beispiel des Projekts PaLaFra
Description: Ringvorlesung im SoSe 2024; Dienstag, 18. Juni 2024
Creator: Rembert Eufe (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2024-06-18
Subjects: Digital Humanities, Anwendungsbereiche, Möglichkeiten, Werkzeuge, Digitale Korpuslinguistik, Textometrie, Projekt PaLaFra, PaLaFraLat,
Identifier: UT_20240618_001_sose24digithu...
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Ziel dieser Vorlesung ist es, aus disziplinärer und interdisziplinärer Perspektive Einblicke in die Anwendungsbereiche und Möglichkeiten der Digital Humanities zu geben, etwa wie mit digitalen Werkzeugen geisteswissenschaftliche Projekte unterstützt oder wie mithilfe von Kategorien und daraus entstehenden Heuristiken Texte sowie weitere Artefakte digital erschlossen werden können. Mitglieder der Philosophischen Fakultät sowie Mitarbeiter des Digital Humanities Centers stellen laufende oder bereits abgeschlossene - teilweise eigene, ggf. auch fremde - Projekte vor, jeweils mit Blick auf den Nutzen des digitalen Werkzeugs. Dabei wird sowohl ein Blick auf das digitale Werkzeug selbst gegeben oder die entwickelte Heuristik, ein Annotationsschema usw., wird anhand konkreter Beispiele entwickelt. Die Vorlesung wendet sich somit an alle Studierende, die erste Kontakte mit den Digital Humanities suchen oder aber sich über die Vielfalt der Möglichkeiten innerhalb der Fächer unserer Fakultät informieren möchten.

17th European White Dwarf Workshop: Asteroseismology of the ZZ Ceti Star KUV08368+4026

   00:15:25 
Title: 17th European White Dwarf Workshop: Asteroseismology of the ZZ Ceti Star KUV08368+4026
Description: 17th European White Dwarf Workshop, 16. bis 20. August 2010
Creator: Chun Li (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2010-08-20
Subjects: Astronomie, Physik, Astrophysik, Workshop, White Dwarf, Asteroseismology, ZZ Ceti Star KUV08368+4026,
Identifier: UT_20100820_009_eurowd_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Asteroseismology of the ZZ Ceti Star KUV08368+4026 (C. Li and J.N. Fu) (Beijing Normal University) KUV 08368+4026 was considered a member of a subgroup of ZZ Ceti stars with large amplitudes and common frequencies around a narrow range of 1.6 mHz and 2.0 mHz. As the first effort of asteroseismological study for KUV 08368+4026 since discovery of its variability in 1996, a single-site run in February of 2009 and a 3-site observation campaign from December of 2009 to January of 2010 for the ZZ Ceti star KUV 08368+4026 were carried out in China and Mexico. More than 15,000 images for 28 nights were obtained. 19 frequencies were distinguished in the datasets with 8 frequencies identified as independent modes. These results are critical in determining stellar parameters including mass, rotation period, hydrogen mass fraction, etc., and also helpful in constructing practical stellar and oscillation models, which will bring new knowledge to internal structures of white dwarf stars.

Schloss Conversations - Venus in Transit: Prehistoric Art and Religion

   01:39:23 
Title: Schloss Conversations - Venus in Transit: Prehistoric Art and Religion
Description: Schloss Conversations - Venus in Transit: Prehistoric Art and Religion, im WiSe 2018-2019; Montag, 28. Januar 2019
Creator: Silvia Tomásková (author), Nicholas Conard (author), Monique Scheer (author), Pamela Klassen (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer); Jäckle, Christoph (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2019-01-28
Subjects: Universität, Tübingen, Schloss Conversations, Venus in Transit, Prehistoric Art,
Identifier: UT_20190128_001_schlossconv_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: A conversation with Silvia Tomásková (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) and Nicolas Conard (University of Tübingen) hosted by Pamela Klassen (University of Toronto) and Monique Scheer (University of Tübingen). Tübingen houses some of the oldest works of art ever discovered; archeologists also hypothesize that they had religious functions. This installment of the 'Schloss Conversations' brings together perspectives from religious studies, cultural history, and archeology to think about the social and political contexts of the narratives that emerge around such artifacts and how they might be fueled by the apparatus provided by the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site.

The pattern and timing of the colonization of Europe by modern humans

   00:56:16 
Title: The pattern and timing of the colonization of Europe by modern humans
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Nicholas Conard (author), Michael Bolus (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-11
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Upper Palaeolithic, Neanderthals, Aurignacian, Danube Valley, Swabian Alb, Hohlenstein-Stadel, Sirgenstein, Vogelherd, Achtal, Lonetal, Geißenklösterle, Conard, Nicholas,
Identifier: UT_20010411_001_evolution_0003
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Abundant fossil evidence indicates that modern humans evolved outside of Europe. Despite nearly a century and a half of research across many parts of the continent, there is no evidence for the arrival of anatomically modern humans in Europe before ca. 40 ka. At sites including Vogelherd where early European modern humans have been recovered, their skeletal remains are found in association with Aurignacian artifacts that are characterized by innovative lithic and organic artifacts and abundant examples of art and ornament that go far beyond the range of variation documented among the material culture of the indigenous Neanderthals. The distribution of dates for the most convincing evidence for the Aurignacian and early Upper Paleolithic suggests that Homo sapiens sapiens arrived in Europe around 40 ka. The best evidence for this early phase of occupation comes, broadly speaking, from the Circum-Mediterranean area and the upper reaches of the Danube Valley. The observation that many very early and also very rich Aurignacian sites are well documented in the Swabian Alb, suggests an early settlement of this area which led to the elaborate cultural developments documented at sites including Sirgenstein, Vogelherd, Hohlenstein-Stadel and Geißenklösterle. These sites, among other important finds, have yielded the earliest artworks and musical instruments known from Europe. The Kulturpumpe model describes several potential mechanisms to explain these cultural innovations. Following this initial appearance of modern humans, Neanderthals and anatomically and culturally modern people coexisted in often spatial separate regions until ca. 25-30 ka when the last Neanderthals died out in the most peripheral parts of Europe. This paper provides new dates for the Aurignacian of the Swabian Alb and archaeological analyses to test the hypotheses that the Danube Corridor and the Mediterranean coast provide the two key routes for the colonization of Europe. Ecological and chronological data testing the Kulturpumpe model will also be provided.

Middle Pleistocene hominid behavioral record of East Africa

   00:42:18 
00:02:22.0 Rift Valley, Acheulian sites
Title: Middle Pleistocene hominid behavioral record of East Africa
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Sally McBrearty (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-10
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Middle Pleistocene, East Africa, Acheulian, Hominid, Middle Stone Age, Kapthurin Formation, Hand-axe,
Identifier: UT_20010410_001_evolution_0002
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: The Middle Pleistocene Africa in is traditionally viewed as a period of uniformity and stasis. Its stone technology is most commonly referred to the Acheulian, and the maker of this technology is thought to be Homo erectus. Closer examination reveals a more complex picture. Fossil discoveries in both East and South Africa demonstrate that the origin of Homo sapiens is a Middle Pleistocene phenomenon. The taxonomic status of more archaic African hominids from this timespan is ambiguous, and the presence of more than one hominid species is likely. In East Africa, where volcanics make temporal control possible through the application of the K/Ar and 40Ar/39Ar methods, the Middle Pleistocene archaeological record displays a remarkable degree of variability. Assemblages that can be ascribed both to the Oldowan and to the Middle Stone Age are present at Middle Pleistocene localities in the Middle Awash, Ethiopia, and in the Kapthurin Formation, Kenya. East African artifact occurrences that can be attributed to the Acheulian exhibit a variety of approaches to biface manufacture and flake production, as well as highly variable proportions and types of formal tools. Behaviors usually thought characteristic of later time periods, such as blade production, projectile points, and the use of pigment, are present in the archaeological record of the Kapthurin Formation, Kenya, before 280 ka, and long distance trade or transport of obsidian is demonstrated before 130 ka at a number of sites in Kenya and Tanzania.

Lecture Introduction to Linguistics, 11. and 12. Lesson

   01:22:13 
01:06:56.0 Wh Movement, a Landing Site for Wh Words
Title: Lecture Introduction to Linguistics, 11. and 12. Lesson
Description: Vorlesung im WiSe 2017-2018; Dienstag, 05. Dezember 2017
Creator: Marisa Köllner (author), Johannes Wahle (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2017-12-05
Subjects: Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Linguistics, Lecture Course, Vorlesung, Morphology, Syntax, Phrase Structure, Move, Yes-No Questions, Deep and Surface Structure, Do Insertion,
Identifier: UT_20171205_001_indling_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Students beginning to study General Linguistics ('Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft') must do the course "Introduction to General Linguistics" to gain an overview of the four core areas of linguistics and to acquire linguistic analytical skills. This course introduces basic concepts of linguistics in : - syntax (the study of grammatical structure at the sentence level) - semantics (the study of the link between form and meaning) - phonetics and phonology (the study of language sounds and language sound systems) - pragmatics (the study of language in use) The material will largely revolve around the analysis of German and English, with occasional glances at other languages. The class introduces basic notions in linguistics, central aspects of the analysis of German and English, and seeks to convey an understanding of the approach of generative (cognitive) linguistics to natural language.

Verleihung der Nachhaltigkeitspreise 2020 der Universität Tübingen

   00:55:08 
00:38:52.0 Peters, Rebecca: "Supporting sustainable hydropower plant site and size selection in the Vjosa Catchment (Balkan Region)"
Title: Verleihung der Nachhaltigkeitspreise 2020 der Universität Tübingen
Description: Veranstaltung im WiSe 2020-2021; Donnerstag, 26. November 2020
Creator: Andreas Rothfuß (author), Thomas Potthast (author), Hannah-Marie Beck (author), Jessica Lawson (author), Julika Merckle (author), Miriam Gerstberger (author), Rebecca Peters (author), Jasmin Sessler (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2020-11-26
Subjects: Universität, Tübingen, Zukunft, Nachhaltigkeitspreis,
Identifier: UT_20201126_001_nachhalttag_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise

Evolution by a birth-and-death process in the MHC and other multigene families

   00:42:53 
00:08:40.0 Key restriction enzyme sites
Title: Evolution by a birth-and-death process in the MHC and other multigene families
Description: Evolutionary Aspects of Antigen Presentation
Creator: Masatoshi Nei (author)
Contributor: ZIT Universitätsklinikum Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-07-20
Subjects: Antigen Presentation, Symposium, MHC loci, Biology, Multigene, Protein groups, Genes, Polymorphism, HLA, Gene conversion, Antigens, Immunoglobulin, TCR, Masatoshi Nei,
Identifier: UT_20010720_001_antigen_0004
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Scientific symposium to celebrate the 65th birthday of Jan Klein, July 19 - 20, 2001

Neandertal - modern human interactions in western Eurasia and the emergence of modern Europeans

   00:28:33 
00:07:33.0 Palaeolithic sites in Northwest Croatia
Title: Neandertal - modern human interactions in western Eurasia and the emergence of modern Europeans
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Fred H. Smith (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-11
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Pleistocene, Cranium, Neandertal, Neanderthal, Upper Palaeolithic, Morphology, Palaeoenvironment,
Identifier: UT_20010411_001_evolution_0002
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: The role of Neandertals to the emergence of early modern humans in Europe has been a contentious issue since the first Neandertal was recognized in 1856. At the current time, a consensus is emerging that the appearance of modern Europeans resulted from episodes of significant immigration of populations into Europe during the later Interpleniglacial period (ca. 39 ka to 32 ka). Even during its colder stadials, the Interpleniglacial was milder that preceding or succeeding time spans, and this may have facilitated the movement of nomadic populations from western Asia into Europe. However, the nature of biocultural interaction between immigrant and indigenous populations in Europe during this period remains a topic of heated debate. Studies on ancient and recent mitochondrial DNA, interpretations of the archaeological record, and analyses of morphometric patterning of Late Pleistocene and recent human skeletal remains have all been cited as demonstrating that Neandertals were a separate evolutionary lineage from, and made no appreciable biological contributions to, early modern people. In this presentation, I will discuss the nature of the evidence suggesting that Neandertals did make a substantial contribution to early modern European populations. From the standpoint of anatomy, the evidence of such contributions is seen in details of structure rather than major aspects of anatomical gestalt. Nonetheless the presence of certain specific features in early modern European samples is difficult to explain if Neandertals are excluded from any biological role in their ancestry. In addition, aspects of chronological patterning, biogeography and the archaeological record suggest, but does not prove, the likelihood of significant interaction between Neandertal and early modern populations in various parts of Europe. From the various sources of available information, I will argue that the nature of interaction and population dynamics in Europe during the later Interpleniglacial were extremely complex and likely included the assimilation of Neandertal contributions into Biological structure of the first modern Europeans. Thus recent claims that Neandertals must represent a species separate from Homo sapiens are not compelling.

Vorlesung Biochemie III, 39. Stunde

   00:44:52 
00:30:12.0 Rekombination, orts-spezifische (SSR, Site-specific recombination): Cre/lox System
Title: Vorlesung Biochemie III, 39. Stunde
Description: Vorlesung im WiSe 2005-2006; Donnerstag, 02. Februar 2006
Creator: Gabriele Dodt (author), Michael Duszenko (author), Robert Feil (author), Bernd Hamprecht (author), Thilo Stehle (author)
Contributor: ZDV Universität Tübingen (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2006-02-02
Subjects: Biochemie, Vorlesung, Lecture, Biochemistry, Genmutationen, DNA-Reparatur, DNA-Umlagerungen, DNA-Rekombination, homologe Rekombination, Holliday-Modell, orts-spezifische Rekombination (SSR, Site-specific recombination), Transposition,
Identifier: UT_20060202_001_biochemie3_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise

Biological and cultural evolution during the Lower Paleolithic of the Near East

   00:36:19 
Title: Biological and cultural evolution during the Lower Paleolithic of the Near East
Description: International symposium at the University of Tübingen, Germany, 8th-12th April 2001. This symposium explores the relationship between environmental change and the key events in the evolution and dispersal of the human clade, from its origin around 5-8 Myr to the expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe between 100 Kyr and 15 Kyr.
Creator: Peter Schmid (author), Jean-Marie Le Tensorer (author)
Contributor: Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung Universität Tübingen (producer); Conard, Nicholas John (organizer); Collard, Mark (organizer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2001-04-12
Subjects: Palaeolithic archaeology, Geoarchaeology, Palaeoanthropology, Pleistocene, Near East, Evolution, Lower Palaeolithic, African Homo ergaster, Asian Homo erectus, Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar, Acheulean, Yabrudian, Hummalian, Schmid, Peter,
Identifier: UT_20010412_001_evolution_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: Issuing from Africa, the first men migrated at different main periods towards Asia and Europe. During these migrations, the Near East on the whole and Syria in particular, played a leading role as a crossroads between the three continents. In fact, the first human beings have been present for over 2 millions years in this region which has always been a favorable way for Early Paleolithic settlements. In this paper a new Homo erectus discovery from Syria is presented. It is an almost complete left parietal bone some 500.000 years old. It came from an Acheulian level, characterized by oval-shaped handaxes, at the site of Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar and was discovered in October 1996. This site has an exceptional Acheulian sequence as well as Yabrudian and Hummalian levels. The stratigraphy at Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar is very complex due to a) the variability in sedimentation and b) deformation of the layers in the dolina which was intermittently flooded by a spring. The hominid remains were found in an archaeological layer with both cultural and faunal remains, which will add new information on filling the geographical gap between the African H. ergaster and the Asian H. erectus.

Masdar City- From vision to reality

   00:25:06 
Title: Masdar City- From vision to reality
Description: Arnulf Dinkel: "Masdar City- From vision to reality", 22.9.2010, WSES 2010
Creator: Arnulf Dinkel (author)
Contributor: World Student Environmental Summit (producer)
Publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
Date Created: 2010-09-22
Subjects: Tübingen, Universität, Internationale Beziehungen, World Student Environmental Summit, Renewable Energies, Erneuerbare Energien, Masdar City,
Identifier: UT_20100922_002_summit_0001
Rights: Rechtshinweise
Abstracts: First, the different aspects of MASDAR (Carbon, City, Power, Venture Capital, Institute of Science and Technology) are introduced. Vision: - The Cleantech Cluster will be powered solely by renewable energy. - Furthermore, zero waste and carbon neutrality (mainly by energy efficient building design and renewable energy generation) are to be implemented. - The city planning includes mixed use, walkability, narrow streets and natural shadowing and is thus inspired by traditional arabian cities. Reality: - difficulties in realization of efficient buildings - off site grounds needed as site turned out as too small - waste to energy not efficient - no feed-in regulations etc. Rethink: - Strategic partnership with Fraunhofer (ISE) - Learned: - Revised plans, realism - strategic partnerships - cost effectiveness, smarter constructions - better local and regional integration - longer development (10-20 years)