{"type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [{"id": "10.24072/pcjournal.537", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:20:33Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2024-01-23", "title": "Evaluating the Effects of Environmental Disturbances and Pesticide Mixtures on N-cycle related Soil Microbial Endpoints", "description": "ABSTRACT                 <p>Pesticides are widely used in conventional agriculture, either applied separately or in combination during the culture cycle. Due to their occurrence and persistence in soils, pesticide residues may have an impact on soil microbial communities and on supported ecosystem services. In this regard, the EFSA (European Food Safety Authority) recently published a scientific opinion inciting to change pesticide risk assessment to better protect soil microbe-mediated processes. Climate change is another major concern for all living organisms including soil microbial community stability. Extreme climatic events, such as heat waves or heavy rainfalls, are becoming more and more frequent and their impact on soil microbial diversity and functions have already been demonstrated.</p>                 <p>The objectives of this study were to evaluate the effects of temperature and humidity disturbances and pesticide active ingredients exposure on soil microbial community structure and functions. To this end, 250 soil microcosms were exposed to either a heat disturbance, a high humidity to mimic heavy rain, or no environmental disturbance. After three days of recovery, soil microcosms were treated with different active ingredients: clopyralid (herbicide), cypermethrin (insecticide) and pyraclostrobin (fungicide). The treatments were applied alone or in combination at 1x or 10x of the agronomical dose. We then evaluated the effects of the disturbances and the active ingredients on various microbial endpoints related to the diversity and the structure of soil microbial communities, and with a specific focus on microbial guilds involved in nitrification.</p>                 <p>Overall, we demonstrated that the impact of environmental disturbances applied to soil microcosms, especially heat, on microbial endpoints was stronger than that of the active ingredients applied alone or in combinations. Compounded effects of environmental disturbances and active ingredients were detected, but sparsely and were of small scale for the chosen pesticides and applied doses.</p", "keywords": ["[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]", "2. Zero hunger", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "Science", "ecotoxicology; global change disturbance; heat stress; Nitrogen cycle; pesticide mixture;", "Q", "15. Life on land", "bacterial communities", "CC1-960", "6. Clean water"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.24072/pcjournal.537"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Peer%20Community%20Journal", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.24072/pcjournal.537", "name": "item", "description": "10.24072/pcjournal.537", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.24072/pcjournal.537"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2024-01-23T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.3389/fpls.2017.00996", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:20:46Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-06-20", "description": "Open AccessLas pr\u00e1cticas de agricultura de conservaci\u00f3n (AC) se est\u00e1n promoviendo ampliamente en muchas \u00e1reas del \u00c1frica subsahariana para recuperar los suelos degradados y mejorar los servicios ecosist\u00e9micos. Este estudio examin\u00f3 los efectos de tres pr\u00e1cticas de labranza [arado convencional con vertedera (CT), azada manual (MT) y labranza sin labranza (NT)], y tres sistemas de cultivo (ma\u00edz continuo, rotaci\u00f3n anual de soja-ma\u00edz y cultivo intercalado de soja/ma\u00edz) en la calidad del suelo, la productividad de los cultivos y la rentabilidad en ensayos en finca administrados por investigadores y agricultores de 2010 a 2013 en el noroeste de Ghana. En el ensayo madre gestionado por el investigador, las pr\u00e1cticas de AC de NT, retenci\u00f3n de residuos y rotaci\u00f3n/intercalaci\u00f3n de cultivos mantuvieron un mayor carbono org\u00e1nico del suelo y N total del suelo en comparaci\u00f3n con las pr\u00e1cticas de labranza convencionales despu\u00e9s de 4 a\u00f1os. La densidad aparente del suelo fue mayor en los suelos NT que en los suelos CT en los senderos madre gestionados por el investigador o en los ensayos de beb\u00e9s gestionados por los agricultores despu\u00e9s de 4 a\u00f1os. En el ensayo madre gestionado por el investigador, no hubo diferencias significativas entre los sistemas de labranza o los sistemas de cultivo en los rendimientos de ma\u00edz o soja en las primeras tres temporadas. En la cuarta temporada, la rotaci\u00f3n de cultivos tuvo el mayor impacto en los rendimientos de ma\u00edz con ma\u00edz CT despu\u00e9s de que la soja aumentara los rendimientos en un 41 y 49% en comparaci\u00f3n con el ma\u00edz MT y NT, respectivamente. En los ensayos gestionados por los agricultores, el rendimiento del ma\u00edz oscil\u00f3 entre 520 y 2700 kg ha-1 y entre 300 y 2000 kg ha-1 para CT y NT, respectivamente, lo que refleja las diferencias en la experiencia de los agricultores con NT. En promedio entre los agricultores, los sistemas de cultivo CT aumentaron el rendimiento de ma\u00edz y soja en un rango de 23 a 39% en comparaci\u00f3n con los sistemas de cultivo NT. El an\u00e1lisis parcial del presupuesto mostr\u00f3 que el costo de producir ma\u00edz o soja es 20-29% m\u00e1s barato con los sistemas NT y da mayores rendimientos al trabajo en comparaci\u00f3n con la pr\u00e1ctica de CT. Las relaciones beneficio/coste tambi\u00e9n muestran que los sistemas de cultivo NT son m\u00e1s rentables que los sistemas CT. Concluimos que con el tiempo, la implementaci\u00f3n de pr\u00e1cticas de AC que involucran NT, rotaci\u00f3n de cultivos, cultivos intercalados de ma\u00edz y soja junto con la retenci\u00f3n de residuos de cultivos presenta un escenario de beneficio mutuo debido a la mejora del rendimiento de los cultivos, el aumento del rendimiento econ\u00f3mico y las tendencias de aumento de la fertilidad del suelo. Sin embargo, el mayor desaf\u00edo sigue siendo producir suficiente biomasa y retenerla en el campo.", "keywords": ["Conservation agriculture", "Cropping", "Agricultural Innovation and Livelihood Diversification", "no-tillage", "Soil Science", "Plant Science", "Crop", "Soil quality", "Environmental science", "SB1-1110", "Tillage", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "residue retention", "crop rotation", "Crop rotation", "FOS: Mathematics", "profitability", "Crop residue", "Crop yield", "soil quality", "Crop Yield Stability", "Agroforestry", "Biology", "2. Zero hunger", "Conventional tillage", "Geography", "Crop Diversity", "Plant culture", "Life Sciences", "Agriculture", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "crop yield", "Soil Nutrient Management", "15. Life on land", "Plough", "Agronomy", "conservation agriculture", "Intercropping", "Archaeology", "Agricultural science", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Intercropping in Agricultural Systems", "Soil Carbon Dynamics and Nutrient Cycling in Ecosystems", "General Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "intercropping", "Agronomy and Crop Science", "Mathematics", "Cropping system"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.00996"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Frontiers%20in%20Plant%20Science", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.3389/fpls.2017.00996", "name": "item", "description": "10.3389/fpls.2017.00996", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.3389/fpls.2017.00996"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-06-21T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5194/essd-13-3707-2021", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:21:47Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-01-07", "title": "C-band radar data and in situ measurements for the monitoring of wheat crops in a semi-arid area (center of Morocco)", "description": "<p>Abstract. A better understanding of the hydrological functioning of irrigated crops using remote sensing observations is of prime importance in the semi-arid areas where the water resources are limited. Radar observations, available at high resolution and revisit time since the launch of Sentinel-1 in 2014, have shown great potential for the monitoring of the water content of the upper soil and of the canopy. In this paper, a complete set of data for radar signal analysis is shared to the scientific community for the first time to our knowledge. The data set is composed of Sentinel-1 products and in situ measurements of soil and vegetation variables collected during three agricultural seasons over drip-irrigated winter wheat in the Haouz plain in Morocco. The in situ data gathers soil measurements (time series of half-hourly surface soil moisture, surface roughness and agricultural practices) and vegetation measurements collected every week/two weeks including above-ground fresh and dry biomasses, vegetation water content based on destructive measurements, cover fraction, leaf area index and plant height. Radar data are the backscattering coefficient and the interferometric coherence derived from Sentinel-1 GRDH (Ground Range Detected High resolution) and SLC (Single Look Complex) products, respectively. The normalized difference vegetation index derived from Sentinel-2 data based on Level-2A (surface reflectance and cloud mask) atmospheric effects-corrected products is also provided. This database, which is the first of its kind made available in open access, is described here comprehensively in order to help the scientific community to evaluate and to develop new or existing remote sensing algorithms for monitoring wheat canopy under semi-arid conditions. The data set is particularly relevant for the development of radar applications including surface soil moisture and vegetation parameters retrieval using either physically based or empirical approaches such as machine and deep learning algorithms. The database is archived in the DataSuds repository and is freely-accessible via the DOI:  https://doi.org/10.23708/8D6WQC  (Ouaadi et al., 2020a).                         </p>", "keywords": ["550", "Arid", "Soil Moisture", "0211 other engineering and technologies", "FOS: Mechanical engineering", "02 engineering and technology", "Digital Soil Mapping Techniques", "Normalized Difference Vegetation Index", "630", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Engineering", "Pathology", "GE1-350", "2. Zero hunger", "QE1-996.5", "Vegetation Monitoring", "Water content", "Ecology", "Geography", "Statistics", "Life Sciences", "Hydrology (agriculture)", "Geology", "Remote Sensing in Vegetation Monitoring and Phenology", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Remote sensing", "Soil Erosion and Agricultural Sustainability", "6. Clean water", "Satellite Observations", "Archaeology", "Physical Sciences", "Leaf area index", "Telecommunications", "Medicine", "Vegetation (pathology)", "Environmental Engineering", "Data set", "[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences", "Aerospace Engineering", "Soil Science", "Environmental science", "Digital Soil Mapping", "[SDU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]", "Global Soil Information", "FOS: Mathematics", "Biology", "Radar", "Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry", "Canopy", "FOS: Environmental engineering", "Soil Properties", "Paleontology", "FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences", "15. Life on land", "Remote Sensing of Soil Moisture", "Surface Deformation Monitoring", "Computer science", "Agronomy", "Environmental sciences", "Geotechnical engineering", "[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "[SDU.STU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Mathematics"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/13/3707/2021/essd-13-3707-2021.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-13-3707-2021"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Earth%20System%20Science%20Data", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5194/essd-13-3707-2021", "name": "item", "description": "10.5194/essd-13-3707-2021", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5194/essd-13-3707-2021"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-01-07T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.60692/00fqh-scr74", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:03Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2022-02-28", "title": "Expansion of olive orchards and their impact on the cultivation and landscape through a case study in the countryside of Cordoba (Spain)", "description": "Open Access\u062a\u0645 \u062a\u0639\u0632\u064a\u0632 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062f\u0627\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0638\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0632\u0631\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0634\u0631\u064a\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u0633\u062a\u0648\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0645\u062e\u062a\u0644\u0641\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0644\u0643\u0646 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0642\u062a \u0646\u0641\u0633\u0647 \u062a\u0639\u0632\u0632 \u0647\u0630\u0647 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\u0631\u0626\u064a\u0633\u064a. \u0645\u0646 \u0639\u0646\u0627\u0635\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u0627\u0638\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0628\u064a\u0639\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0636\u0644\u0639\u0629 \u0647\u0630\u0647\u060c \u0644\u0627 \u064a\u0632\u0627\u0644 \u062c\u0632\u0621 \u0643\u0628\u064a\u0631 (\u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0633\u0628\u064a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062b\u0627\u0644\u060c \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u062d\u062f\u0631\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062e\u0627\u062f\u064a\u062f \u0648\u0628\u0646\u0648\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u064a\u0627\u0647 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0634\u0631\u0627\u0626\u0637/\u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u062c\u0647 \u063a\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u062a\u062c\u0629) \u063a\u064a\u0631 \u0646\u0628\u0627\u062a\u064a (57 \u066a). \u0644\u0630\u0644\u0643\u060c \u064a\u062c\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0638\u0631 \u0641\u064a \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0646\u0627\u0635\u0631 \u0641\u064a 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Life on land", "Soil Erosion and Agricultural Sustainability", "Olive trees", "Agronomy", "Sustainability", "Archaeology", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Shifting cultivation", "Medicine", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Vegetation (pathology)"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.60692/00fqh-scr74"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Land%20Use%20Policy", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.60692/00fqh-scr74", "name": "item", "description": "10.60692/00fqh-scr74", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.60692/00fqh-scr74"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-05-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5281/zenodo.4384105", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:13Z", "type": "Software", "title": "A Colab-Python script code to identify palaeo-landscape features", "description": "Open Access{'references': ['1. Python Software Foundation. Python Language Reference. 2020. Available: http://www.python.org', '2. Wu Q. geemap: A Python package for interactive mapping with Google Earth Engine. Journal of Open Source Software. 2020;5: 2305', '3. Bisong E. Google Colaboratory. In: Bisong E, editor. Building Machine Learning and Deep Learning Models on Google Cloud Platform: u00a0 u00a0  u00a0A Comprehensive Guide for Beginners. Berkeley, CA: Apress; 2019. pp. 59 u201364', '4. Project Jupyter. Jupyter Notebook. 2020. Available: https://jupyter.org/', '5. QGIS Development Team. QGIS Geographic Information System. Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project. 2019. u00a0  u00a0  u00a0Available: https://www.qgis.org/en/site/index.html', '6. Gillies S et al. Rasterio: geospatial raster I/O for Python programmers. Mapbox; 2013. Available: https://github.com/mapbox/rasterio', '7. Hunter JD. Matplotlib: A 2D Graphics Environment. Comput Sci Eng. 2007;9: 90 u201395.']}", "keywords": ["Remote Sensing", "Multispectral analysis", "Landscape Archaeology", "Spectral decomposition", "15. Life on land", "Sentinel-2", "Riverscape", "Fluvial and Alluvial Archaeology", "12. 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Wu Q. geemap: A Python package for interactive mapping with Google Earth Engine. Journal of Open Source Software. 2020;5: 2305', '3. Bisong E. Google Colaboratory. In: Bisong E, editor. Building Machine Learning and Deep Learning Models on Google Cloud Platform: u00a0 u00a0  u00a0A Comprehensive Guide for Beginners. Berkeley, CA: Apress; 2019. pp. 59 u201364', '4. Project Jupyter. Jupyter Notebook. 2020. Available: https://jupyter.org/', '5. QGIS Development Team. QGIS Geographic Information System. Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project. 2019. u00a0  u00a0  u00a0Available: https://www.qgis.org/en/site/index.html', '6. Gillies S et al. Rasterio: geospatial raster I/O for Python programmers. Mapbox; 2013. Available: https://github.com/mapbox/rasterio', '7. Hunter JD. Matplotlib: A 2D Graphics Environment. Comput Sci Eng. 2007;9: 90 u201395.']}", "keywords": ["Remote Sensing", "Multispectral analysis", "Landscape Archaeology", "Spectral decomposition", "15. Life on land", "Sentinel-2", "Riverscape", "Fluvial and Alluvial Archaeology", "12. Responsible consumption", "Python"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5235030"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5281/zenodo.5235030", "name": "item", "description": "10.5281/zenodo.5235030", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5281/zenodo.5235030"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-12-22T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5281/zenodo.5907228", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:17Z", "type": "Software", "title": "Spatial statistics to reveal patterns and connections in the historic landscape", "description": "The R script code was developed by dr. F. Brandolini (Newcastle University, UK) to accompany the paper: F. Brandolini &amp; S. Turner (2022<em>) Revealing patterns and connections in the historic landscape of the northern Apennines (Vetto, Italy),</em> Journal of Maps, DOI: 10.1080/17445647.2022.2088305 <strong>Abstract</strong> In the Northern Apennines, significant modifications to the characteristic historic features of landscapes occurred since the 1950s as agriculture declined in importance and villages were progressively depopulated. Today European and national policies are promoting the repopulation of these regions in order to help preserve the cultural identity of territories and to reduce demographic pressure in urban areas. Such initiatives increase the need for cultural and natural landscape management to be better integrated using interdisciplinary approaches. Sustainable landscape management is a dynamic process involving the formulation of a set of strategies to underpin the preservation of landscape heritage and to foster local development on the basis of the values and opportunities provided by landscapes themselves. This study uses landscape archaeology and spatial statistics to provide insights into which parts of the historic landscape retain the greatest time-depth and which parts reflect more recent radical change, enabling an understanding which goes beyond the basic spatial relationships between landscape components. <strong>Methods</strong> This dataset was explored with two spatial statistical tools using the programming language R (R Core Team 2021): Local Indicators for Categorical Data (LICD) and Point Pattern analysis (PPA). The LICD method is based on join-count statistics (JCS), a solid method to measure the correlation between binomial variables and the distance between observations. LICD has been recently employed in landscape archaeological studies for verifying visible patterns and disclosing hidden spatial relationships (article: Carrer et al. 2021, Data: Zenodo Repository) The application of PPA in landscape studies has been widely applied in Ecology and it is growing popular also in Archaeology (Knitter and Nakoinz 2018; Brandolini and Carrer 2020; Costanzo et al. 2021). In this study, PPA was employed to provide a quantitative assessment of the correlations between different components of the Vetto landscape. <strong>List of files included in Brandolini_Turner_tjom_2022.zip:</strong> R_script_code named 'tjom_supplementary' in .rmd format Output folder: png and .txt products of the R script code GeoTiff folder (.TIFF file format): Geomorphons Euclidean distances from Irregular Fields (IF) Euclidean distances from Combined Fields (CF) EsriSHP folder (.shp file format): H_sites folder: historic settlements (h_sites.shp) rural_ruins folder: abandoned rural ruins (rural_ruins.shp) hlc folder: HLC_periods.shp HLC_types.shp roi folder: Region Of Interest (roi.shp) <strong>Contacts</strong> <em>dr. F. Brandolin</em>i: filippo.brandolini@newcastle.ac.uk <strong>Acknowledgements</strong> The authors would like to acknowledge the help of the mayor Mr Fabio Ruffini and all the staff of Vetto d\u2019 Enza, Dr. Alessandra Curotti and Dr. Chiara Cantini and (Unione Montana dei Comuni dell\u2019Appennino Reggiano) and Dott.ssa Annalisa Capurso (Soprintendenza Archeologia Belle Arti e Paesaggio per la citt\u00e0 metropolitana di Bologna e le province di Modena, Reggio Emilia e Ferrara) for their administrative assistance in preparation of the project fieldwork activities. Also, we wish to thank Dr Anna Campeol and Mr Davide Cavecchi (Provincia di Reggio Emilia - Ufficio Topografico) for their help in retrieving and digitising the Nuovo Catasto Terreni cadastral map. The authors also thank the AsRe (Archivio Stato di Reggio Emilia) and AsPr (Archivio Stato di Parma) administration and staff for giving the right to digitise the historical maps and for helping during the consultation at the archives. Finally, we thank Francesco Carrer (Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) for his comments on the R script code, and Christopher Sevara (Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) for his suggestions in retrieving historical satellite images.", "keywords": ["Landscape Heritage", "Landscape Management", "Landscape Archaeology", "Spatial Statistics", "11. Sustainability", "Spatial Humanities", "Digital Geoarchaeology", "15. Life on land", "Historic Landscape Characterisation", "Point Pattern Analysis", "Local Indicator for Categorical Data"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Brandolini, Filippo", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5907228"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5281/zenodo.5907228", "name": "item", "description": "10.5281/zenodo.5907228", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5281/zenodo.5907228"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-01-26T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5281/zenodo.5907229", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:17Z", "type": "Software", "title": "Spatial statistics to reveal patterns and connections in the historic landscape", "description": "The R script code was developed by dr. F. Brandolini (Newcastle University, UK) to accompany the paper: F. Brandolini &amp; S. Turner (2022<em>) Revealing patterns and connections in the historic landscape of the northern Apennines (Vetto, Italy),</em> Journal of Maps, DOI: 10.1080/17445647.2022.2088305 <strong>Abstract</strong> In the Northern Apennines, significant modifications to the characteristic historic features of landscapes occurred since the 1950s as agriculture declined in importance and villages were progressively depopulated. Today European and national policies are promoting the repopulation of these regions in order to help preserve the cultural identity of territories and to reduce demographic pressure in urban areas. Such initiatives increase the need for cultural and natural landscape management to be better integrated using interdisciplinary approaches. Sustainable landscape management is a dynamic process involving the formulation of a set of strategies to underpin the preservation of landscape heritage and to foster local development on the basis of the values and opportunities provided by landscapes themselves. This study uses landscape archaeology and spatial statistics to provide insights into which parts of the historic landscape retain the greatest time-depth and which parts reflect more recent radical change, enabling an understanding which goes beyond the basic spatial relationships between landscape components. <strong>Methods</strong> This dataset was explored with two spatial statistical tools using the programming language R (R Core Team 2021): Local Indicators for Categorical Data (LICD) and Point Pattern analysis (PPA). The LICD method is based on join-count statistics (JCS), a solid method to measure the correlation between binomial variables and the distance between observations. LICD has been recently employed in landscape archaeological studies for verifying visible patterns and disclosing hidden spatial relationships (article: Carrer et al. 2021, Data: Zenodo Repository) The application of PPA in landscape studies has been widely applied in Ecology and it is growing popular also in Archaeology (Knitter and Nakoinz 2018; Brandolini and Carrer 2020; Costanzo et al. 2021). In this study, PPA was employed to provide a quantitative assessment of the correlations between different components of the Vetto landscape. <strong>List of files included in Brandolini_Turner_tjom_2022.zip:</strong> R_script_code named 'tjom_supplementary' in .rmd format Output folder: png and .txt products of the R script code GeoTiff folder (.TIFF file format): Geomorphons Euclidean distances from Irregular Fields (IF) Euclidean distances from Combined Fields (CF) EsriSHP folder (.shp file format): H_sites folder: historic settlements (h_sites.shp) rural_ruins folder: abandoned rural ruins (rural_ruins.shp) hlc folder: HLC_periods.shp HLC_types.shp roi folder: Region Of Interest (roi.shp) <strong>Contacts</strong> <em>dr. F. Brandolin</em>i: filippo.brandolini@newcastle.ac.uk <strong>Acknowledgements</strong> The authors would like to acknowledge the help of the mayor Mr Fabio Ruffini and all the staff of Vetto d\u2019 Enza, Dr. Alessandra Curotti and Dr. Chiara Cantini and (Unione Montana dei Comuni dell\u2019Appennino Reggiano) and Dott.ssa Annalisa Capurso (Soprintendenza Archeologia Belle Arti e Paesaggio per la citt\u00e0 metropolitana di Bologna e le province di Modena, Reggio Emilia e Ferrara) for their administrative assistance in preparation of the project fieldwork activities. Also, we wish to thank Dr Anna Campeol and Mr Davide Cavecchi (Provincia di Reggio Emilia - Ufficio Topografico) for their help in retrieving and digitising the Nuovo Catasto Terreni cadastral map. The authors also thank the AsRe (Archivio Stato di Reggio Emilia) and AsPr (Archivio Stato di Parma) administration and staff for giving the right to digitise the historical maps and for helping during the consultation at the archives. Finally, we thank Francesco Carrer (Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) for his comments on the R script code, and Christopher Sevara (Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) for his suggestions in retrieving historical satellite images.", "keywords": ["Landscape Heritage", "Landscape Management", "Landscape Archaeology", "Spatial Statistics", "11. Sustainability", "Spatial Humanities", "Digital Geoarchaeology", "15. Life on land", "Historic Landscape Characterisation", "Point Pattern Analysis", "Local Indicator for Categorical Data"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Brandolini, Filippo", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5907229"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5281/zenodo.5907229", "name": "item", "description": "10.5281/zenodo.5907229", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5281/zenodo.5907229"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-01-26T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5281/zenodo.7735993", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:29Z", "type": "Software", "title": "HiLSS Project", "description": "The R script code was developed by dr. F. Brandolini (Newcastle University, UK) to accompany the paper: '<em>Brandolini, F., Kinnaird, T.C., Srivastava, A., Turner S. - Modelling the impact of historic landscape change on soil erosion and degradation. Sci Rep 13, 4949 (2023)</em>'. <strong>List of files included in <em>HLC_RUSLE.zip</em>:</strong> <em>R_script_code named 'HLC_RUSLE' in .rmd format</em> <em>Output folder: </em> <em>Figures folder: .png products of the R script code</em> <em>Rasters folder: .png products of the R script code</em> <em>Tables folder: .pdf products of the R script code</em> <em>GeoTiff folder (.TIFF file format): Regional RUSLE Data</em> <em>GPKG:</em> <em>HLC </em>dataset and <em>Region Of Interest file in .gpkg format.</em>", "keywords": ["13. Climate action", "Landscape Archaeology", "11. Sustainability", "RUSLE", "15. Life on land", "Historic Landscape Characterisation", "Soil Sustainability", "Soil Erosion Modelling", "12. Responsible consumption"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Brandolini Filippo", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7735993"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5281/zenodo.7735993", "name": "item", "description": "10.5281/zenodo.7735993", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5281/zenodo.7735993"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-10-10T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5281/zenodo.7777673", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:30Z", "type": "Software", "title": "HiLSS Project", "description": "The R script code was developed by dr. F. Brandolini (Newcastle University, UK) to accompany the paper: '<em>Brandolini, F., Kinnaird, T.C., Srivastava, A., Turner S. - Modelling the impact of historic landscape change on soil erosion and degradation. Sci Rep 13, 4949 (2023)</em>'. <strong>List of files included in <em>HLC_RUSLE.zip</em>:</strong> <em>R_script_code named 'HLC_RUSLE' in .rmd format</em> <em>Output folder: </em> <em>Figures folder: .png products of the R script code</em> <em>Rasters folder: .png products of the R script code</em> <em>Tables folder: .pdf products of the R script code</em> <em>GeoTiff folder (.TIFF file format): Regional RUSLE Data</em> <em>GPKG:</em> <em>HLC </em>dataset and <em>Region Of Interest file in .gpkg format.</em>", "keywords": ["13. Climate action", "Landscape Archaeology", "11. Sustainability", "RUSLE", "15. Life on land", "Historic Landscape Characterisation", "Soil Sustainability", "Soil Erosion Modelling", "12. Responsible consumption"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Filippo, Brandolini", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7777673"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5281/zenodo.7777673", "name": "item", "description": "10.5281/zenodo.7777673", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5281/zenodo.7777673"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-10-10T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5281/zenodo.7934059", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:31Z", "type": "Dataset", "title": "HiLSS Project", "description": "This\u00a0repository is periodically updated.   Historic Landscape and Soil Sustainability (MSCA-IF-2019 - Individual Fellowships)   The HiLSS Project aims to investigate the relationships between sustainability and landscape heritage with particular reference to soil loss and degradation over the long term. The project will take a multidisciplinary approach that combines archaeology, Historical Landscape Characterisation (HLC), geosciences, and computer-based geospatial analysis (GIS - Geographical Information Systems) and modelling (RUSLE - Revisited Universal Soil Loss Equation). The research objectives of the HiLSS project are to quantify the impact of human activities during the Late Holocene in order to create spatial models which can inform the development of sustainable conservation strategies for rural landscape heritage. This project will focus on two mountainous regions that present historical and cultural similarities but located in different climatic zones of Europe (1- Tuscan-Emilian Apennines, Italy; 2- Northern-mid Galicia, Spain). In previous HLC studies, land-use has been evaluated from the perspective of cultural heritage, whereas RUSLE have used it as a proxy for the land-cover of an area and its effect on soil erosion. The HiLSS project will propose an innovative methodology that combines both the historic/cultural values and the environmental values of land-use to inform development of a model for the sustainable conservation. By considering the different agricultural land-use HLC types in GIS-RUSLE modelling, it will be possible to quantify the effect on soil loss for each HLC type and consequently to devise more environmentally sustainable management for each type. Environmental sustainability and historic landscape conservation are typically treated as two separate fields, but the HiLSS project will develop a transformative model for interdisciplinary research, proposing a new way to embrace both cultural and natural values as components of the same landscape management plans.     HLC_RUSLE.zip    The R script code was developed by dr. F. Brandolini (Newcastle University, UK) to accompany the paper: 'Brandolini, F., Kinnaird, T.C., Srivastava, A., Turner S. -\u00a0Modelling the impact of historic landscape change on soil erosion and degradation. Sci Rep 13, 4949 (2023)'.   List of files included in HLC_RUSLE.zip:      R_script_code named 'HLC_RUSLE'\u00a0in .rmd format   Output folder:        Figures folder: .png products of the R script code    Rasters\u00a0folder: .png products of the R script code    Tables\u00a0folder: .pdf\u00a0products of the R script code       GeoTiff folder (.TIFF file format): Regional RUSLE\u00a0Data   GPKG:\u00a0HLC dataset\u00a0and\u00a0Region Of Interest file in .gpkg format      Spatial statistics to reveal patterns and connections in the historic landscape    The R script code was developed by dr. F. Brandolini (Newcastle University, UK) to accompany the paper: '\u00a0F.\u00a0Brandolini & S.\u00a0Turner\u00a0(2022)\u00a0Revealing patterns and connections in the historic landscape of the northern Apennines (Vetto, Italy),\u00a0Journal of Maps,\u00a0DOI:\u00a010.1080/17445647.2022.2088305.\u00a0'.   It is available at:\u00a0https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5907229     Supplementary material_Land _SI_Historic Landscape Evolution.zip    Supplementary Materials to accompaing\u00a0the paper:\u00a0The evolution of historic agroforestry landscape in the Northern Apennines (Italy) and its consequences for slope geomorphic processes, submitted to\u00a0Land,\u00a0Special Issue\u00a0Historic Landscape Transformation.     Project_Publications.zip    List of .pdf file included in the folder:\u00a0   1) Brandolini F, Domingo-Ribas G, Zerboni A and Turner S. A Google Earth Engine-enabled Python approach for the identification of anthropogenic palaeo-landscape features [version 2; peer review: 2 approved, 1 approved with reservations]. Open Res Europe 2021,\u00a01:22\u00a0(https://doi.org/10.12688/openreseurope.13135.2)   2) Brandolini F., Turner S.\u00a0 2022 - Revealing patterns and connections in the historic landscape of the northern Apennines (Vetto, Italy), \u00a0Journal of Maps,\u00a0 (https://doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2022.2088305)   3) Brandolini, F., Kinnaird, T.C., Srivastava, A., Turner S. 2023 -\u00a0Modelling the impact of historic landscape change on soil erosion and degradation. Sci Rep 13, 4949 (2023), (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-31334-z)   4)\u00a0Brandolini, F., Compostella, C., Pelfini, M., and Turner, S. 2023 - 'The Evolution of Historic Agroforestry Landscape in the Northern Apennines (Italy) and Its Consequences for Slope Geomorphic Processes' Land 12, no. 5: 1054. (https://doi.org/10.3390/land12051054)", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "13. Climate action", "Landscape Archaeology", "11. Sustainability", "RUSLE", "USPED", "15. Life on land", "Historic Landscape Characterisation", "Soil Sustainability", "Soil Erosion Modelling", "12. Responsible consumption"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Brandolini Filippo", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7934059"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5281/zenodo.7934059", "name": "item", "description": "10.5281/zenodo.7934059", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5281/zenodo.7934059"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-10-10T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5284/1105451", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "unspecified", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:23:37Z", "type": "Report", "title": "The Drying Green Cummersdale Cumbria", "description": "An archaeological evaluation was carried out by CFA Archaeology on land at the Drying Green, Cummersdale, Cumbria during January 2017. Three trenches were excavated across the proposed site of a new housing development in order to evaluate any potential surviving archaeological remains. The trenches contained evidence for possible surviving archaeology in the form of postholes and a ditch, although no dating evidence was recovered.", "keywords": ["Archaeology", "Grey Literature", "15. Life on land"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Mann", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.5284/1105451"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5284/1105451", "name": "item", "description": "10.5284/1105451", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5284/1105451"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.6084/m9.figshare.20477290", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:07Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2022-08-11", "title": "Revealing patterns and connections in the historic landscape of the northern Apennines (Vetto, Italy)", "description": "In the Northern Apennines, significant modifications to the characteristic historical features of landscapes have occurred since the 1950s as agriculture declined in importance and villages were progressively depopulated. Today, European policies are promoting the repopulation of these regions to help preserve the cultural identity of territories and reduce demographic pressure inurban areas. Such initiatives increase the need for cultural and natural landscape management to be better integrated using interdisciplinary approaches. Sustainable landscape management is a dynamic process involving the formulation of strategies to underpin the preservation of landscape heritage and foster local development based on the values and opportunities provided by landscapes themselves. This study uses landscape archaeology and spatial statistics to provide insights into which parts of the historic landscape retain the greatest time-depth and which parts reflect the more recent radical change, enabling an understanding which goes beyond the basic spatial relationships between landscape components.", "keywords": ["local indicators for categorical data", "point pattern analysis", "G3180-9980", "Landscape archaeology", "Maps", "11. Sustainability", "landscape management", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "historic landscape characterisation", "spatial statistics", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/17445647.2022.2088305"}, {"href": "https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=284595/39618FDF-222E-4078-8426-E55819A569AD.pdf&pub_id=284595"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.20477290"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Maps", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.6084/m9.figshare.20477290", "name": "item", "description": "10.6084/m9.figshare.20477290", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.6084/m9.figshare.20477290"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.60692/9nxrv-e7y75", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:03Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2020-12-16", "title": "Spatial differentiation characteristics and driving factors of agricultural eco-efficiency in Chinese provinces from the perspective of ecosystem services", "description": "Farmland ecosystem service is an important output of agricultural production, but it has been incompletely reflected in current studies on eco-efficiency. In this study, the value of improved farmland ecosystem services is used as one of the expected outputs. The data envelopment method is used to evaluate the agricultural eco-efficiency (AEE) of 31 provincial administrative regions in China from 2006 to 2018. The spatial autocorrelation method is used to explore the characteristics of AEE in China. Geographical detector model (Geodetector) is adopted to detect the driving factors of AEE spatial differentiation in China. China\u2019s AEE trend from 2006 to 2018 was downward with the efficiency value decreasing from 1.023 to 0.995. China\u2019s AEE level has improved with an average of 1.004. The spatial distribution pattern represented in space is in the following order: eastern region &gt; western region &gt; northeast region &gt; central region. The AEE gap among provinces in the western region is the largest, and that in the northeast region is the smallest. China\u2019s AEE spatial correlation distribution presents random distribution characteristics. During the research period, the lowehigh (LH) efficiency response area has centered on Yunnan Province. The lowelow (LL) level concentration area has centered on Inner Mongolia autonomous region and Liaoning Province. The highelow (HL) level diffusion effect agglomeration area has centered on Heilongjiang Province. Energy input, water resource input, and carbon emission are the core drivers of AEE spatial differentiation in China. Water resource input, pesticide input and labor input are the significant control factors of AEE spatial differentiation in the eastern, central, and western regions of China.", "keywords": ["Economics and Econometrics", "China", "Environmental Engineering", "Economics", "Discrete Choice Models in Economics and Health Care", "Social Sciences", "Mathematical analysis", "01 natural sciences", "Environmental science", "Data envelopment analysis", "Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Impact Analysis", "11. Sustainability", "FOS: Mathematics", "Ecosystem services", "Spatial distribution", "Biology", "Ecosystem Services", "Ecosystem", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "Agricultural economics", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Global Analysis of Ecosystem Services and Land Use", "Geography", "Ecology", "Distribution (mathematics)", "Statistics", "FOS: Environmental engineering", "Spatial analysis", "Agriculture", "Remote sensing", "15. Life on land", "Economics", " Econometrics and Finance", "Driving factors", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "Physical Sciences", "Spatial heterogeneity", "Common spatial pattern", "Mathematics"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.60692/9nxrv-e7y75"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Cleaner%20Production", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.60692/9nxrv-e7y75", "name": "item", "description": "10.60692/9nxrv-e7y75", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.60692/9nxrv-e7y75"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-03-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.60692/wzwcw-szh03", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:03Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-05-30", "title": "Effects of agricultural management practices on soil quality: A review of long-term experiments for Europe and China", "description": "Open AccessIn this paper we present effects of four paired agricultural management practices (organic matter (OM) addition versus no organic matter input, no-tillage (NT) versus conventional tillage, crop rotation versus monoculture, and organic agriculture versus conventional agriculture) on five key soil quality indicators, i.e., soil organic matter (SOM) content, pH, aggregate stability, earthworms (numbers) and crop yield. We have considered organic matter addition, no-tillage, crop rotation and organic agriculture as 'promising practices'; no organic matter input, conventional tillage, monoculture and conventional farming were taken as the respective references or 'standard practice' (baseline). Relative effects were analysed through indicator response ratio (RR) under each paired practice. For this we considered data of 30 long-term experiments collected from 13 case study sites in Europe and China as collated in the framework of the EU-China funded iSQAPER project. These were complemented with data from 42 long-term experiments across China and 402 observations of long-term trials published in the literature. Out of these, we only considered experiments covering at least five years. The results show that OM addition favourably affected all the indicators under consideration. The most favourable effect was reported on earthworm numbers, followed by yield, SOM content and soil aggregate stability. For pH, effects depended on soil type; OM input favourably affected the pH of acidic soils, whereas no clear trend was observed under NT. NT generally led to increased aggregate stability and greater SOM content in upper soil horizons. However, the magnitude of the relative effects varied, e.g. with soil texture. No-tillage practices enhanced earthworm populations, but not where herbicides or pesticides were applied to combat weeds and pests. Overall, in this review, yield slightly decreased under NT. Crop rotation had a positive effect on SOM content and yield; rotation with ley very positively influenced earthworms' numbers. Overall, crop rotation had little impact on soil pH and aggregate stability \u2212 depending on the type of intercrop; alternatively, rotation of arable crops only resulted in adverse effects. A clear positive trend was observed for earthworm abundance under organic agriculture. Further, organic agriculture generally resulted in increased aggregate stability and greater SOM content. Overall, no clear trend was found for pH; a decrease in yield was observed under organic agriculture in this review.", "keywords": ["Soil Science", "Organic chemistry", "Crop", "01 natural sciences", "Long-term field experiments", "Crop Productivity", "Soil quality", "Environmental science", "Organic Matter Dynamics", "Tillage", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Soil quality indicators", "Crop rotation", "Management of Soil Fertility and Crop Productivity", "Soil water", "FOS: Mathematics", "Agricultural management practices", "Monoculture", "Crop Yield Stability", "Biology", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "Literature review", "Response ratio", "Soil science", "2. Zero hunger", "Soil organic matter", "Soil Fertility", "Conventional tillage", "Geography", "Life Sciences", "Agriculture", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Soil Nutrient Management", "15. Life on land", "Agronomy", "Chemistry", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Organic matter", "Intercropping in Agricultural Systems", "Soil Carbon Dynamics and Nutrient Cycling in Ecosystems", "Agronomy and Crop Science", "Mathematics"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.60692/wzwcw-szh03"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Agriculture%2C%20Ecosystems%20%26amp%3B%20Environment", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.60692/wzwcw-szh03", "name": "item", "description": "10.60692/wzwcw-szh03", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.60692/wzwcw-szh03"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-10-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10023/27354", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:19Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2023-03-27", "title": "Modelling the impact of historic landscape change on soil erosion and degradation", "description": "Abstract<p>International policies and guidelines often highlight the divide between \uffe2\uff80\uff98nature\uffe2\uff80\uff99 and \uffe2\uff80\uff98heritage\uffe2\uff80\uff99 in landscape management, and the weakness of monodisciplinary approaches. This study argues that historic agricultural practices have played a key role in shaping today\uffe2\uff80\uff99s landscapes, creating a heritage which affords opportunities for more sustainable landscape management. The paper develops a new interdisciplinary approach with particular reference to soil loss and degradation over the long term. It presents innovative methods for assessing and modelling how pre-industrial agricultural features can mitigate soil erosion risk in response to current environmental conditions. Landscape archaeology data presented through Historic Landscape Characterisation are integrated in a GIS-RUSLE model to illustrate the impact of varying historic land-uses on soil erosion. The resulting analyses could be used to inform strategies for sustainable land resource planning.</p", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "MCC", "GE", "330", "Science", "Q", "R", "DAS", "CC Archaeology", "15. Life on land", "CC", "333", "Article", "12. Responsible consumption", "13. Climate action", "11. Sustainability", "Medicine", "SDG 2 - Zero Hunger", "soil erosion; geomorphology; landscape archaeology; gis modelling", "GE Environmental Sciences", "SDG 15 - Life on Land"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://air.unimi.it/bitstream/2434/1157142/2/s41598-023-31334-z.pdf"}, {"href": "https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-31334-z.pdf"}, {"href": "https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=290514/25AE1152-3C53-4F19-82F7-C273FA162B1A.pdf&pub_id=290514"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/10023/27354"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Scientific%20Reports", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10023/27354", "name": "item", "description": "10023/27354", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10023/27354"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2023-03-27T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10045/65422", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:21Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-03-30", "title": "Assessing the territorial influence of an Iberian worship site. The chemical characterisation of the terracotta from the Iron Age sanctuary of La Serreta", "description": "Open AccessThis paper presents the study of the prestigious terracotta votive figurines from the Iberian Iron Age sanctuary of La Serreta (Alicante province, Spain) composed of 174 items. Portable X-ray fluorescence (PXRF) was used to identify elemental markers that permit us to observe the differences between local and non-local terracotta figurines and furthermore to evaluate the geographical influence of the La Serreta sanctuary using Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The Partial Least Squares Discriminant Analysis (PLSDA) statistical method was also used to classify the figurines of uncertain geographical origin. The resulting groups were related to typological and stylistic groups of figurines and the distribution in different sites in the region.", "keywords": ["Terracotta", "Alicante", "PXRF", "Territorial influence", "Iron Age", "Sanctuary of La Serreta", "Votive figurines", "Iberian Iron Age sanctuary", "La Serreta", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "Iberian Peninsula", "Arqueolog\u00eda"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10045/65422"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Archaeological%20Science%3A%20Reports", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10045/65422", "name": "item", "description": "10045/65422", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10045/65422"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-06-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10261/235007", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:26Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2020-08-07", "title": "Ceramic productions and human interactions during the Early Bronze Age in northern Iberia", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p>The Early Bronze Age ceramic collection found into the caves of La Llana and El Toral III in Asturias (Spain) presents common decoration such as that found in the centre of Cantabrian Spain from the same period, which resembles others found in the Ebro Valley and Atlantic Europe. Therefore, the main objective of this study it is to identify the raw material origin and understand the pottery production process during the Early Bronze Age in the Cantabrian region. A methodological approach based on the chemical and mineralogical analysis of vessels and experimentally fired clay samples collected all over the centre of this region was developed. Furthermore, the post\u2010depositional processes affecting the sherds\u2019 composition was evaluated by employing the rare earth elements as markers. The results showed that the studied assemblage has important similarities with the raw materials of the surrounding area, which supports the hypothesis of a regional mobility.</p></article>", "keywords": ["Human mobility", "Pottery", "Rare earth element", "Chemical-mineralogical characterisation", "Post-depositional processes", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "01 natural sciences", "Raw material", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10261/235007"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Archaeometry", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10261/235007", "name": "item", "description": "10261/235007", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10261/235007"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-09-02T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "11245.1/cab44461-b72a-44ab-8946-f011c3aafeb2", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:45Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2020-11-24", "title": "Sorting Out the Recent Historiography of Development Assistance: Consolidation and New Directions in the Field", "keywords": ["0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "004"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Kalinovsky, A.M.", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0022009420962315"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/11245.1/cab44461-b72a-44ab-8946-f011c3aafeb2"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Contemporary%20History", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "11245.1/cab44461-b72a-44ab-8946-f011c3aafeb2", "name": "item", "description": "11245.1/cab44461-b72a-44ab-8946-f011c3aafeb2", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/11245.1/cab44461-b72a-44ab-8946-f011c3aafeb2"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-11-24T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "11245.1/eb5407d3-e110-4349-bb30-aff2b5d9475d", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:45Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2023-07-04", "title": "Exceptions to Socialism: Gender, Ethnicity, and the Transformation of Soviet Development in Comparative Perspective", "description": "Abstract<p>In the 1970s and 1980s, Soviet social scientists and planners grew increasingly skeptical that they could draw Central Asian peasants, and especially women, into the industrial workforce, and turned to experimenting with \uffe2\uff80\uff9cnon traditional\uffe2\uff80\uff9d forms of work, such as home labor for handicrafts and consumer goods and family subcontracting in agriculture. This article traces Soviet debates about women\uffe2\uff80\uff99s labor and the family in Central Asia in the context of demographic policy, productivity, and welfare. It argues that the evolution of home labor and other \uffe2\uff80\uff9cnon traditional\uffe2\uff80\uff9d labor policies aimed at Central Asians share two distinctive features with neoliberal-inspired welfare discussions in the United States as well as the emerging politics of entrepreneurship in the sphere of international development. First, all three emerged as a result of social scientists and planners revisiting earlier paradigms after perceived policy failures. Second, despite their pessimistic reading of earlier policy initiatives, Soviet policymakers and their counterparts hung on tenaciously to the idea that state policy could be used to improve people\uffe2\uff80\uff99s lives. By studying the turn towards individual labor and entrepreneurship in the USSR alongside the emergence of micro-credit in international development and changing welfare politics in the US, we can see neoliberalism emerging where universalist policies meet their limits.</p", "keywords": ["330", "8. Economic growth", "05 social sciences", "1. No poverty", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "300", "0506 political science"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Kalinovsky, A.M.", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/11245.1/eb5407d3-e110-4349-bb30-aff2b5d9475d"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Comparative%20Studies%20in%20Society%20and%20History", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "11245.1/eb5407d3-e110-4349-bb30-aff2b5d9475d", "name": "item", "description": "11245.1/eb5407d3-e110-4349-bb30-aff2b5d9475d", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/11245.1/eb5407d3-e110-4349-bb30-aff2b5d9475d"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2023-07-04T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "11568/855854", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:49Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-02-13", "title": "Indirect chronology method employing rare earth elements to identify Sagunto Castle mortar construction periods", "description": "A novel indirect chronology method has been developed to identify Sagunto Castle construction periods. The method is based on the use of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to determine rare earth elements (REE) and other trace elements in mortars. Additionally, a no destructive geochemical analysis based on X-ray fluorescence (XRF) was employed for major elements determination. Collected chemical data were processed through Principal Component Analysis (PCA) to highlight any differences among the mortars belonging to different buildings and construction periods. The results show that PCA analysis permits to discriminate construction periods according to mortar sample REE contents. Major elements and trace elements show just coarse differences related to the mortar composition. The proposed method permitted to clarify important issues about wall stratigraphy and its effectiveness on a novel indirect chronology developed method.", "keywords": ["Mortar:", "Indirect chronology:", "06 humanities and the arts", "Mortar", " Rare Earth Elements (REE)", " ICP-MS", " multivariate statistics", " indirect chronology", " Sagunto Castle.", "01 natural sciences", "Multivariate statistics", "Sagunto Castle", "0104 chemical sciences", "Mortar", "Rare earth elements (REE):", "ICP-MS", "Rare earth elements (REE)", "0601 history and archaeology", "Multivariate statistics:", "Indirect chronology", "Sagunto", "ICP-MS:"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/112483/1/TEXT.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/11568/855854"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Microchemical%20Journal", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "11568/855854", "name": "item", "description": "11568/855854", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/11568/855854"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-05-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "11568/935316", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:49Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-05-09", "title": "Chronological Classification of Ancient Mortars Employing Spectroscopy and Spectrometry Techniques: Sagunto (Valencia, Spain) Case", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p>Forty-two mortar samples, from two archaeological excavations located in Sagunto (Valencian Community, Spain), were analysed by both portable energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (pED-XRF) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to determine major and minor elements and traces including rare earth elements (REEs). Collected data were crossed with those previously obtained from Sagunto Castle mortars, and principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to discriminate the construction phases of the unearthed buildings. REE permitted to ascribe most of the masonries to the Roman Imperial period. Moreover, a statistical model was built by employing partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) in order to classify the mortars from Roman Imperial period and from Islamic period due to the problematic overlapping between these two phases. Results confirmed the effectiveness of the developed indirect chronology method, based on REE data, to discriminate among historic mortars from different construction periods on a wide scale including different Sagunto archaeological sites.</p></article>", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "0601 history and archaeology", "QC350-467", "06 humanities and the arts", "Optics. Light", "energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (pED-XRF); inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS)", "Analytical Chemistry; Atomic and Molecular Physics", " and Optics; Spectroscopy"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/130462/1/9736547.pdf"}, {"href": "https://iris.unica.it/bitstream/11584/248342/2/Ramacciotti%20et%20al%202018.pdf"}, {"href": "https://arpi.unipi.it/bitstream/11568/935316/1/P101%20Chronological%20Classification%20of%20Ancient%20Mortars.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/11568/935316"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Spectroscopy", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "11568/935316", "name": "item", "description": "11568/935316", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/11568/935316"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "11585/634154", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:51Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-03-28", "title": "Poisoning histories in the Italian renaissance: The case of Pico Della Mirandola and Angelo Poliziano", "description": "Giovanni Pico della Mirandola and Angelo Poliziano were two of the most important humanists of the Italian Renaissance. They died suddenly in 1494 and their deaths have been for centuries a subject of debate. The exhumation of their remains offered the opportunity to study the cause of their death through a multidisciplinary research project. Anthropological analyses, together with documentary evidences, radiocarbon dating and ancient DNA analysis supported the identification of the remains attributed to Pico. Macroscopic examination did not reveal paleopathological lesions or signs related to syphilis. Heavy metals analysis, carried out on bones and mummified tissues, showed that in Pico's remains there were potentially lethal levels of arsenic, supporting the philosopher's poisoning theory reported by documentary sources. The arsenic concentrations obtained from analysis of Poliziano's remains, are probably more related to an As chronic exposure or diagenetic processes rather than poisoning.", "keywords": ["Male", "Microscopy", "Spectrum Analysis", "Environmental Exposure", "Mummies", "06 humanities and the arts", "Bone and Bones", "Arsenic", "Forensic Toxicology", "03 medical and health sciences", "0302 clinical medicine", "Italy", "Arsenic Poisoning", "Microscopy", " Electron", " Scanning", "Humans", "0601 history and archaeology", "Carbon Radioisotopes", "Ancient DNA; Angelo Poliziano; Arsenic poisoning; Girolamo benivieni; Pico della Mirandola; Radiocarbon dating", "DNA", " Ancient", "History", " 15th Century"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/11585/634154"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Forensic%20and%20Legal%20Medicine", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "11585/634154", "name": "item", "description": "11585/634154", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/11585/634154"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-05-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "11590/484290", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:24:53Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2024-05-08", "title": "A unifying modelling of multiple land degradation pathways in Europe", "description": "Abstract<p>Land degradation is a complex socio-environmental threat, which generally occurs as multiple concurrent pathways that remain largely unexplored in Europe. Here we present an unprecedented analysis of land multi-degradation in 40 continental countries, using twelve dataset-based processes that were modelled as land degradation convergence and combination pathways in Europe\uffe2\uff80\uff99s agricultural (and arable) environments. Using a Land Multi-degradation Index, we find that up to 27%, 35% and 22% of continental agricultural (~2 million km2) and arable (~1.1 million km2) lands are currently threatened by one, two, and three drivers of degradation, while 10\uffe2\uff80\uff9311% of pan-European agricultural/arable landscapes are cumulatively affected by four and at least five concurrent processes. We also explore the complex pattern of spatially interacting processes, emphasizing the major combinations of land degradation pathways across continental and national boundaries. Our results will enable policymakers to develop knowledge-based strategies for land degradation mitigation and other critical European sustainable development goals.</p", "keywords": ["Degradation (telecommunications)", "Soil Degradation", "Science", "Soil Science", "01 natural sciences", "Environmental protection", "Article", "Environmental science", "12. Responsible consumption", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Agricultural land", "Sustainable development", "11. Sustainability", "Arable land", "Environmental resource management", "Biology", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Global Analysis of Ecosystem Services and Land Use", "Geography", "Ecology", "Q", "1. No poverty", "Life Sciences", "Agriculture", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "15. Life on land", "Computer science", "Soil Erosion and Agricultural Sustainability", "Land Tenure and Property Rights in Agriculture", "Threatened species", "Environmental degradation", "Habitat", "Archaeology", "Land Fragmentation", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "Physical Sciences", "Land use", "Telecommunications", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Land degradation"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/11590/484290"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Nature%20Communications", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "11590/484290", "name": "item", "description": "11590/484290", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/11590/484290"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2024-05-08T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "1959.7/uws:63733", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:05Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-02-27", "title": "Temperature and aridity regulate spatial variability of soil multifunctionality in drylands across the globe", "description": "Abstract<p>The relationship between the spatial variability of soil multifunctionality (i.e., the capacity of soils to conduct multiple functions; SVM) and major climatic drivers, such as temperature and aridity, has never been assessed globally in terrestrial ecosystems. We surveyed 236 dryland ecosystems from six continents to evaluate the relative importance of aridity and mean annual temperature, and of other abiotic (e.g., texture) and biotic (e.g., plant cover) variables as drivers of SVM, calculated as the averaged coefficient of variation for multiple soil variables linked to nutrient stocks and cycling. We found that increases in temperature and aridity were globally correlated to increases in SVM. Some of these climatic effects on SVM were direct, but others were indirectly driven through reductions in the number of vegetation patches and increases in soil sand content. The predictive capacity of our structural equation\uffc2\uffa0modelling was clearly higher for the spatial variability of N\uffe2\uff80\uff90 than for C\uffe2\uff80\uff90 and P\uffe2\uff80\uff90related soil variables. In the case of N cycling, the effects of temperature and aridity were both direct and indirect via changes in soil properties. For C and P, the effect of climate was mainly indirect via changes in plant attributes. These results suggest that future changes in climate may decouple the spatial availability of these elements for plants and microbes in dryland soils. Our findings significantly advance our understanding of the patterns and mechanisms driving SVM in drylands across the globe, which is critical for predicting changes in ecosystem functioning in response to climate change.</p", "keywords": ["Abiotic component", "Atmospheric sciences", "Physical geography", "Arid", "Climate Change", "Soil Science", "Spatial variability", "Environmental science", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Soil", "Biodiversity Conservation and Ecosystem Management", "Soil texture", "Aridity index", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "Soil water", "FOS: Mathematics", "Pathology", "Climate change", "Biology", "Ecosystem", "Nature and Landscape Conservation", "Soil science", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Soil Fertility", "Ecology", "Geography", "Global Forest Drought Response and Climate Change", "Statistics", "Temperature", "Life Sciences", "Cycling", "Geology", "FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Plants", "15. Life on land", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "Physical Sciences", "Medicine", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Soil Carbon Dynamics and Nutrient Cycling in Ecosystems", "Ecosystem Functioning", "Vegetation (pathology)", "Mathematics"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/128150/8/Dur-n_et_al-2018-Ecology.pdf"}, {"href": "https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ecy.2199"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/1959.7/uws:63733"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Ecology", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "1959.7/uws:63733", "name": "item", "description": "1959.7/uws:63733", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/1959.7/uws:63733"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-05-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "1959.7/uws:76472", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:06Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2024-03-16", "title": "Urban greenspaces and nearby natural areas support similar levels of soil ecosystem services", "description": "Abstract<p>Greenspaces are important for sustaining healthy urban environments and their human populations. Yet their capacity to support multiple ecosystem services simultaneously (multiservices) compared with nearby natural ecosystems remains virtually unknown. We conducted a global field survey in 56 urban areas to investigate the influence of urban greenspaces on 23 soil and plant attributes and compared them with nearby natural environments. We show that, in general, urban greenspaces and nearby natural areas support similar levels of soil multiservices, with only six of 23 attributes (available phosphorus, water holding capacity, water respiration, plant cover, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and arachnid richness) significantly greater in greenspaces, and one (available ammonium) greater in natural areas. Further analyses showed that, although natural areas and urban greenspaces delivered a similar number of services at low (&gt;25% threshold) and moderate (&gt;50%) levels of functioning, natural systems supported significantly more functions at high (&gt;75%) levels of functioning. Management practices (mowing) played an important role in explaining urban ecosystem services, but there were no effects of fertilisation or irrigation. Some services declined with increasing site size, for both greenspaces and natural areas. Our work highlights the fact that urban greenspaces are more similar to natural environments than previously reported and underscores the importance of managing urban greenspaces not only for their social and recreational values, but for supporting multiple ecosystem services on which soils and human well-being depends.</p", "keywords": ["Medio ambiente natural", "2410.05 Ecolog\u00eda Humana", "Health", " Toxicology and Mutagenesis", "0211 other engineering and technologies", "710", "Urban Green Space", "02 engineering and technology", "01 natural sciences", "zelene povr\u0161ine", "Urban planning", "Natural (archaeology)", "11. Sustainability", "Urban Heat Islands and Mitigation Strategies", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/630*1:630*9", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Global Analysis of Ecosystem Services and Land Use", "Geography", "Ecology", "2417.13 Ecolog\u00eda Vegetal", "Carbon cycle", "3. Good health", "2511 Ciencias del Suelo (Edafolog\u00eda)", "Archaeology", "Physical Sciences", "urban forests", "HT361-384", "Ecolog\u00eda (Biolog\u00eda)", "Urbanization. City and country", "Environmental Engineering", "711.4:911.375", "631.4", "Environmental science", "soil", "12. Responsible consumption", "Impact of Urban Green Space on Public Health", "Urban ecosystem", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "Ecosystem services", "14. Life underwater", "Agroforestry", "Biology", "City planning", "Ecosystem", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "SDG-15: Life on land", "tla", "FOS: Environmental engineering", "15. Life on land", "ekosistemske storitve", "Urban ecology", "HT165.5-169.9", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "urbani gozdovi", "ecosystem services", "502.3"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://www.nature.com/articles/s42949-024-00154-z.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/1959.7/uws:76472"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/npj%20Urban%20Sustainability", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "1959.7/uws:76472", "name": "item", "description": "1959.7/uws:76472", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/1959.7/uws:76472"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2024-03-16T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "20.500.11815/1261", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:12Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-10-24", "title": "Using research networks to create the comprehensive datasets needed to assess nutrient availability as a key determinant of terrestrial carbon cycling", "description": "Open AccessA wide range of research shows that nutrient availability strongly influences terrestrial carbon (C) cycling and shapes ecosystem responses to environmental changes and hence terrestrial feedbacks to climate. Nonetheless, our understanding of nutrient controls remains far from complete and poorly quantified, at least partly due to a lack of informative, comparable, and accessible datasets at regional-to-global scales. A growing research infrastructure of multi-site networks are providing valuable data on C fluxes and stocks and are monitoring their responses to global environmental change and measuring responses to experimental treatments. These networks thus provide an opportunity for improving our understanding of C-nutrient cycle interactions and our ability to model them. However, coherent information on how nutrient cycling interacts with observed C cycle patterns is still generally lacking. Here, we argue that complementing available C-cycle measurements from monitoring and experimental sites with data characterizing nutrient availability will greatly enhance their power and will improve our capacity to forecast future trajectories of terrestrial C cycling and climate. Therefore, we propose a set of complementary measurements that are relatively easy to conduct routinely at any site or experiment and that, in combination with C cycle observations, can provide a robust characterization of the effects of nutrient availability across sites. In addition, we discuss the power of different observable variables for informing the formulation of models and constraining their predictions. Most widely available measurements of nutrient availability often do not align well with current modelling needs. This highlights the importance to foster the interaction between the empirical and modelling communities for setting future research priorities.", "keywords": ["Global vegetation models", "550", "manipulation experiments", "Terrestrial-Aquatic Linkages", "Kolefni", "01 natural sciences", "Nutrient cycle", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Terrestrial ecosystem", "SDG 13 - Climate Action", "Climate change", "Jar\u00f0vegur", "Environmental resource management", "Global change", "General Environmental Science", "SDG 15 - Life on Land", "Carbon-nutrient cycle interactions", "2. Zero hunger", "Data syntheses", "Global and Planetary Change", "Ecology", "Geography", "Physics", "Life Sciences", "Application of Stable Isotopes in Trophic Ecology", "Cycling", "Carbon cycle", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Chemistry", "ORGANIC-MATTER", "Archaeology", "Physical Sciences", "Nutrient availability", "NET PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY", "Ecosystem Functioning", "570", "LAND", "TROPICAL RAIN-FOREST", "carbon-nutrient cycle interactions", "data syntheses", "Soil Science", "Environmental science", "[SDU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]", "SOIL-PHOSPHORUS AVAILABILITY", "global vegetation models", "SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being", "nutrients", "USE EFFICIENCY", "SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy", "GLOBAL CHANGE", "Key (lock)", "Biology", "Ecosystem", "Manipulation experiments", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "Renewable Energy", " Sustainability and the Environment", "Ecosystem Structure", "Public Health", " Environmental and Occupational Health", "Nutrients", "15. Life on land", "Computer science", "[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]", "13. Climate action", "ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Global Methane Emissions and Impacts", "Environmental Science", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "NITROGEN-FIXATION", "Soil Carbon Dynamics and Nutrient Cycling in Ecosystems", "Nutrient Limitation", "ELEVATED CO2", "Nutrient"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/20.500.11815/1261"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Environmental%20Research%20Letters", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "20.500.11815/1261", "name": "item", "description": "20.500.11815/1261", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/20.500.11815/1261"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-12-07T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "20.500.12123/10635", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:16Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-05-18", "title": "Landholders' perceptions on legal reserves and agricultural intensification: Diversity and implications for forest conservation in the eastern Brazilian Amazon", "description": "Open AccessLa protecci\u00f3n de los bosques en tierras de propiedad privada es una piedra angular del marco de la pol\u00edtica ambiental brasile\u00f1a. La legislaci\u00f3n brasile\u00f1a exige que todas las fincas del pa\u00eds mantengan y protejan las \u00e1reas forestales conocidas como Reservas Legales. Dado que las Reservas Legales tienen importantes implicaciones para la protecci\u00f3n de los bosques y la producci\u00f3n agr\u00edcola, es clave que entendamos las percepciones de los propietarios de tierras hacia las Reservas Legales. Aplicamos la metodolog\u00eda Q para identificar diferentes perspectivas de los propietarios medianos y grandes sobre las Reservas Legales y su relaci\u00f3n con la intensificaci\u00f3n agr\u00edcola en el municipio de Paragominas, en la Amazon\u00eda oriental. Realizamos 31 entrevistas en las que los propietarios ordenaron 36 declaraciones en una matriz de distribuci\u00f3n casi normal. Se identificaron tres grupos de propietarios de tierras: 1) los entusiastas de la planificaci\u00f3n del uso de la tierra (n = 16) estaban interesados en iniciativas de zonificaci\u00f3n para explorar dise\u00f1os de paisajes alternativos y legislaci\u00f3n que puedan ofrecer mejores resultados de conservaci\u00f3n y producci\u00f3n; 2) los partidarios de la agricultura basada en agroqu\u00edmicos (n = 7) ten\u00edan los puntos de vista m\u00e1s cr\u00edticos contra las Reservas Legales y percib\u00edan sus costos como m\u00e1s altos que los posibles beneficios ambientales y de calidad de vida; 3) los respondedores del mercado complacientes con las pol\u00edticas (n = 4) no mostraron inter\u00e9s en las reformas de las Reservas Legales y fueron el grupo m\u00e1s impulsado por el mercado. Si bien Paragominas ha logrado \u00e9xitos notables en detener la deforestaci\u00f3n a gran escala a trav\u00e9s de un pacto social de 'Municipio Verde', abordar la persistente degradaci\u00f3n y fragmentaci\u00f3n de los bosques en la regi\u00f3n sigue siendo una prioridad clave. Las iniciativas de gobernanza local que tienen en cuenta las percepciones de m\u00faltiples partes interesadas sobre la protecci\u00f3n de los bosques pueden fomentar el di\u00e1logo y el entendimiento mutuo para conservar y restaurar eficazmente las Reservas Legales. Los conocimientos sobre las percepciones de los grandes terratenientes sobre las Reservas Legales pueden informar dichos procesos de gobernanza para conciliar la protecci\u00f3n forestal y la intensificaci\u00f3n agr\u00edcola sostenible en Paragominas.", "keywords": ["Amazonas (Brasil)", "Economics", "FOS: Political science", "SAO-FELIX", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_16141", "Social Sciences", "NEEDS", "01 natural sciences", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Reservas Forestales", "Natural resource economics", "conservation des for\u00eats", "FRONTIER", "K01 - Foresterie - Consid\u00e9rations g\u00e9n\u00e9rales", "Stakeholder", "11. Sustainability", "Business", "Environmental resource management", "intensification", "Political science", "Legal Reserve", "Environmental planning", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Forest Reserves", "Corporate governance", "Geography", "Ecology", "[SDV.SA.AEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Agriculture", " economy and politics", "Forest protection", "Life Sciences", "Agriculture", "Amazonas (Brazil)", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Brazilian Amazon", "LAND CONFLICT", "STATE", "Land Tenure and Property Rights in Agriculture", "Management", "Programming language", "E11 - \u00c9conomie et politique fonci\u00e8res", "Economics", " Econometrics and Finance", "Archaeology", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_4184", "Physical Sciences", "d\u00e9boisement", "Biodiversity Conservation", "[SDV.SA.SF] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Silviculture", " forestry", "Forest Protection", "Forest conservation", "Economics and Econometrics", "propri\u00e9taire foncier", "Conservaci\u00f3n de la Diversidad Biol\u00f3gica", "Amazon rainforest", "Legislation", "Discrete Choice Models in Economics and Health Care", "Soil Science", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_15590", "FOS: Law", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_331593", "12. Responsible consumption", "Farmer perceptions", "SYSTEMS", "politique de l'environnement", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1374158672853", "K70 - D\u00e9g\u00e2ts caus\u00e9s aux for\u00eats et leur protection", "Agroforestry", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2597", "Biology", "Legal Pluralism", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "Protecci\u00f3n Forestal", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_28136", "Agricultural intensification", "15. Life on land", "Computer science", "Q methodology", "Deforestation (computer science)", "13. Climate action", "http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_33485", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "r\u00e9serve foresti\u00e8re", "r\u00e9serve naturelle", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "d\u00e9gradation des for\u00eats", "BIODIVERSITY", "DEFORESTATION", "Drivers and Impacts of Tropical Deforestation", "Law", "Finance"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/20.500.12123/10635"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Forest%20Policy%20and%20Economics", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "20.500.12123/10635", "name": "item", "description": "20.500.12123/10635", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/20.500.12123/10635"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-08-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2078.1/249649", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:20Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-06-29", "title": "Impact of Holocene climate change on silicon cycling in Lake 850, Northern Sweden", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p> Diatom-rich sediment in a small subarctic lake (Lake 850) was investigated in a 9400\u2009cal.\u2009yr\u2009BP sediment record in order to explore the impact of Holocene climate evolution on silicon cycling. Diatom stable silicon isotopes ([Formula: see text]) and biogenic silica (BSi) indicate that high BSi concentrations in sediment throughout the Holocene are associated with a lighter Si isotope source of dissolved silica (DSi), such as groundwater or freshly weathered primary minerals. Furthermore, higher BSi concentrations were favoured during the mid-Holocene by low detrital inputs and possibly a longer ice-free period allowing for more diatom production to occur. The diatom [Formula: see text] signature shows a link to changes in regional climate and is influenced by length of diatom growth period and hydrological fluctuations. Lighter Si isotopic values occur during the mid-Holocene, when climate is inferred to be more continental and drier, with pronounced seasonality. In contrast, a heavier Si isotopic signature is observed in the early and late Holocene, when oceanic influences are thought to be stronger and the climate wetter. The [Formula: see text] values have generally lighter signatures as compared with other studies, which supports a light DSi source. </p></article>", "keywords": ["Global and Planetary Change", "Ecology", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "8. Economic growth", "Paleontology", "01 natural sciences", "Earth-Surface Processes", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/09596836211025973"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/2078.1/249649"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/The%20Holocene", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2078.1/249649", "name": "item", "description": "2078.1/249649", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2078.1/249649"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-06-29T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "21.11116/0000-0004-8E59-9", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:21Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2019-08-23", "title": "Usable Pasts Forum: Critically Engaging Food Security", "description": "In this inaugural Usable Pasts Forum, we make the case<br>that archaeology has a critical role to play in reframing<br>approaches to food security in the African continent.", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/21.11116/0000-0004-8E59-9"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/African%20Archaeological%20Review", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "21.11116/0000-0004-8E59-9", "name": "item", "description": "21.11116/0000-0004-8E59-9", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/21.11116/0000-0004-8E59-9"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2019-08-23T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "21761622", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:27Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2011-04-03", "title": "Healing the Body and the Soul through Visualization: A Technique used by the Community Healing Team of Cape Dorset, Nunavut", "description": "As Alice Kimiksana indicated, the Healing Circle or Healing Teams evolved to help First Nations people who attended residential schools deal with the aftermath of the abuse many of them suffered there. They use a variety of interventions, some traditional and some more Western in origin, for an innovative approach to a very serious problem. One technique developed by Western psychology, but very useful and adaptable in other cultural settings, is guided imagery or visualization. Often used for performance enhancement in sports, it is also applicable to other situations from medical settings to mental health treatment. In this presentation, Novaliinga Kingwatsiaq of Kingnait (Cape Dorset) led the audience through a modified version of a visualization used by her Community Healing Team. (During visualization one assumes a relaxed state with one\u2019s eyes closed and imagines oneself in the context of a story told by the person guiding the imagery.) The imagery she chose is both symbolically and culturally appropriate. Most audience members were unfamiliar with the process of visualization, and several indicated that they were intrigued by the experience. Kumaarjuk Pii introduced Novaliinga Kingwatsiaq and translated for her.", "keywords": ["Imagery", " Psychotherapy", "Arctic Regions", "Nunavut", "06 humanities and the arts", "History", " 20th Century", "History", " 21st Century", "Community Mental Health Services", "3. Good health", "Population Groups", "Community Medicine", "Humans", "0601 history and archaeology", "Community Health Services", "Medicine", " Traditional", "Delivery of Health Care", "Faith Healing"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Novaliinga, Kingwatsiaq, Kumaarjuk, Pii,", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/21761622"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Arctic%20Anthropology", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "21761622", "name": "item", "description": "21761622", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/21761622"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2003-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2434/878015", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:31Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-09-06", "title": "A Google Earth Engine-enabled Python approach for the identification of anthropogenic palaeo-landscape features", "description": "<ns4:p>The necessity of sustainable development for landscapes has emerged as an important theme in recent decades. Current methods take a holistic approach to landscape heritage and promote an interdisciplinary dialogue to facilitate complementary landscape management strategies. With the socio-economic values of the \u201cnatural\u201d and \u201ccultural\u201d landscape heritage increasingly recognised worldwide, remote sensing tools are being used more and more to facilitate the recording and management of landscape heritage. The advent of freeware cloud computing services has enabled significant improvements in landscape research allowing the rapid exploration and processing of satellite imagery such as the Landsat and Copernicus Sentinel datasets. This research represents one of the first applications of the Google Earth Engine (GEE) \u00a0Python application programming interface (API) in studies of historic landscapes. The complete free and open-source software (FOSS) cloud protocol proposed here consists of a Python code script developed in Google Colab, which could be adapted and replicated in different areas of the world. A multi-temporal approach has been adopted to investigate the potential of Sentinel-2 satellite imagery to detect buried hydrological and anthropogenic features along with spectral index and spectral decomposition analysis. The protocol's effectiveness in identifying palaeo-riverscape features has been tested in the Po Plain (N Italy).</ns4:p>", "keywords": ["FOS: Computer and information sciences", "Landscape Archaeology", "Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV)", "Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition", "0211 other engineering and technologies", "Articles", "02 engineering and technology", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "Fluvial and Alluvial Archaeology", "12. Responsible consumption", "Multispectral analysis", "Computer Science - Computers and Society", "Buried features", "Multispectral analysis;Sentinel-2;Spectral decomposition;Python;Riverscape;Fluvial and Alluvial Archaeology;Landscape Archaeology;Buried features", "13. Climate action", "Computers and Society (cs.CY)", "11. Sustainability", "Spectral decomposition", "Sentinel-2", "Riverscape", "Python", "Research Article", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://air.unimi.it/bitstream/2434/878015/4/Brandolini%2bet%2bal_ORE_2021_compressed%20%282%29.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/2434/878015"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Open%20Research%20Europe", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2434/878015", "name": "item", "description": "2434/878015", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2434/878015"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-03-24T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2434/1052268", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:31Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2023-05-12", "title": "The Evolution of Historic Agroforestry Landscape in the Northern Apennines (Italy) and Its Consequences for Slope Geomorphic Processes", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p>Historic agricultural practices have played a dominant role in shaping landscapes, creating a heritage which must be understood and conserved from the perspective of sustainable development. Agroforestry (i.e., the practice of combining trees with agriculture or livestock) has existed since ancient times in European countries, and it has been recognised as one of the most resilient and multifunctional cultural landscapes, providing a wide range of economic, sociocultural, and environmental benefits. This research explores aspects of the history, physical characteristics, decline, and current state of conservation of historic agroforestry systems on the Northern Apennines in Italy, using an interdisciplinary approach combining archival sources, landscape archaeology, dendrochronology, and GIS analysis. Furthermore, through computer-based modelling, this research aims to evaluate how the abandonment of this historic rural land-use strategy impacted slope geomorphic processes over the long term. The importance of environmental values attached to traditional rural landscapes has received much attention even beyond the heritage sector, justifying the definition of transdisciplinary approaches necessary to ensure the holistic management of landscapes. Through the integration of the Unit Stream Power-Based Erosion Deposition (USPED) equation with landscape archaeological data, the paper shows how restoring the historic agroforestry landscape could significantly mitigate soil mass movements in the area. Thus, the interdisciplinary workflow proposed in this study enables a deep understanding of both the historical evolution of agroforestry systems and its resulting effects for cumulative soil erosion and deposition in the face of climate change.</p></article>", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "S", "transdisciplinary landscape studies", "Agriculture", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "12. Responsible consumption", "remote sensing and GIS; historic landscape characterisation; slope processes; landscape archaeology; landscape modelling; transdisciplinary landscape studies; geomorphometry; alberata emiliana", "landscape archaeology", "13. Climate action", "remote sensing and GIS", "11. Sustainability", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "slope processes", "historic landscape characterisation", "landscape modelling", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "http://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/12/5/1054/pdf"}, {"href": "https://air.unimi.it/bitstream/2434/1052268/2/land-12-01054-v2.pdf"}, {"href": "https://air.unimi.it/bitstream/2434/1052268/3/land-12-01054-v2_compressed.pdf"}, {"href": "https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/12/5/1054/pdf"}, {"href": "https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=291264/11B42E72-559A-4B2B-B355-0FF6E8B88A26.pdf&pub_id=291264"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/2434/1052268"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Land", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2434/1052268", "name": "item", "description": "2434/1052268", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2434/1052268"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2023-05-12T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2535425885", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:33Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2016-10-19", "title": "Prediction of alkaline earth elements in bone remains by near infrared spectroscopy", "description": "An innovative methodological approach has been developed for the prediction of the mineral element composition of bone remains. It is based on the use of Fourier Transform Near Infrared (FT-NIR) diffuse reflectance measurements. The method permits a fast, cheap and green analytical way, to understand post-mortem degradation of bones caused by the environment conditions on different skeletal parts and to select the best preserved bone samples. Samples, from the Late Roman Necropolis of Virgen de la Misericordia street and En Gil street located in Valencia (Spain), were employed to test the proposed approach being determined calcium, magnesium and strontium in bone remains and sediments. Coefficients of determination obtained between predicted values and reference ones for Ca, Mg and Sr were 90.4, 97.3 and 97.4, with residual predictive deviation of 3.2, 5.3 and 2.3, respectively, and relative root mean square error of prediction between 10% and 37%. Results obtained evidenced that NIR spectra combined with statistical analysis can help to predict bone mineral profiles suitable to evaluate bone diagenesis.", "keywords": ["Spectroscopy", " Near-Infrared", "Fossils", "Reproducibility of Results", "06 humanities and the arts", "01 natural sciences", "Bone and Bones", "Spain", "Strontium", "Metals", " Alkaline Earth", "Spectroscopy", " Fourier Transform Infrared", "Humans", "Calcium", "Magnesium", "0601 history and archaeology", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/110415/1/TAL_R1.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/2535425885"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Talanta", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2535425885", "name": "item", "description": "2535425885", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2535425885"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2580184031", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:33Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-01-28", "title": "When is a terrace not a terrace? The importance of understanding landscape evolution in studies of terraced agriculture", "description": "Before the invention of modern, large-scale engineering projects, terrace systems were rarely built in single phases of construction, but instead developed gradually, and could even be said to have evolved. Understanding this process of landscape change is therefore important in order to fully appreciate how terrace systems were built and functioned, and is also pivotal to understanding how the communities that farmed these systems responded to changes; whether these are changes to the landscape brought about by the farming practices themselves, or changes to social, economic or climatic conditions. Combining archaeological stratigraphy, soil micromorphology and geochemistry, this paper presents a case-study from the historic and extensive terraced landscape at Konso, southwest Ethiopia, and demonstrates - in one important river valley at least - that the original topsoil and much of the subsoil was lost prior to the construction of hillside terraces. Moreover, the study shows that alluvial sediment traps that were built adjacent to rivers relied on widespread hillside soil erosion for their construction, and strongly suggests that these irrigated riverside fields were formerly a higher economic priority than the hillside terraces themselves; a possibility that was not recognised by numerous observational studies of farming in this landscape. Research that takes into account how terrace systems change through time can thus provide important details of whether the function of the system has changed, and can help assess how the legacies of former practices impact current or future cultivation.", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "Soil", "2311", "Rivers", "2305", "Agriculture", "0601 history and archaeology", "Ethiopia", "06 humanities and the arts", "2308", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/112206/1/Ferro_Vazquez_et_al_JEMA_2017.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/2580184031"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Environmental%20Management", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2580184031", "name": "item", "description": "2580184031", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2580184031"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-11-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2592501389", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:33Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-03-07", "title": "Burned bones forensic investigations employing near infrared spectroscopy", "description": "The use of near infrared (NIR) spectroscopy was evaluated, by using chemometric tools, for the study of the environmental impact on burned bones. Spectra of internal and external parts of burned bones, together with sediment samples, were treated by Principal Component Analysis and cluster classification as exploratory techniques to select burned bone samples, less affected by environmental processes, to properly carry out forensic studies. Partial Least Square Discriminant Analysis was used to build a model to classify bone samples based on their burning conditions, providing an efficient and accurate method to discern calcined and carbonized bone. Additionally, Partial Least Square regression models were built to predict calcium, magnesium and strontium concentration of bone samples from their NIR spectra, being obtained an accurate root mean square error of prediction of 5.2% for calcium. Furthermore a screen methodology, for magnesium and strontium prediction, with a RPD of 0.24 and 1.08 respectively, was developed.", "keywords": ["0301 basic medicine", "03 medical and health sciences", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "1607"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/113691/1/TEXT.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/2592501389"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Vibrational%20Spectroscopy", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2592501389", "name": "item", "description": "2592501389", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2592501389"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-05-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2603379888", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:34Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-03-30", "title": "Assessing the territorial influence of an Iberian worship site. The chemical characterisation of the terracotta from the Iron Age sanctuary of La Serreta", "description": "Open AccessThis paper presents the study of the prestigious terracotta votive figurines from the Iberian Iron Age sanctuary of La Serreta (Alicante province, Spain) composed of 174 items. Portable X-ray fluorescence (PXRF) was used to identify elemental markers that permit us to observe the differences between local and non-local terracotta figurines and furthermore to evaluate the geographical influence of the La Serreta sanctuary using Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The Partial Least Squares Discriminant Analysis (PLSDA) statistical method was also used to classify the figurines of uncertain geographical origin. The resulting groups were related to typological and stylistic groups of figurines and the distribution in different sites in the region.", "keywords": ["Terracotta", "Alicante", "Territorial influence", "Iberian Iron Age sanctuary", "La Serreta", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "Arqueolog\u00eda"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/2603379888"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Archaeological%20Science%3A%20Reports", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2603379888", "name": "item", "description": "2603379888", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2603379888"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-06-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "27837852", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:37Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2016-10-19", "title": "Prediction of alkaline earth elements in bone remains by near infrared spectroscopy", "description": "An innovative methodological approach has been developed for the prediction of the mineral element composition of bone remains. It is based on the use of Fourier Transform Near Infrared (FT-NIR) diffuse reflectance measurements. The method permits a fast, cheap and green analytical way, to understand post-mortem degradation of bones caused by the environment conditions on different skeletal parts and to select the best preserved bone samples. Samples, from the Late Roman Necropolis of Virgen de la Misericordia street and En Gil street located in Valencia (Spain), were employed to test the proposed approach being determined calcium, magnesium and strontium in bone remains and sediments. Coefficients of determination obtained between predicted values and reference ones for Ca, Mg and Sr were 90.4, 97.3 and 97.4, with residual predictive deviation of 3.2, 5.3 and 2.3, respectively, and relative root mean square error of prediction between 10% and 37%. Results obtained evidenced that NIR spectra combined with statistical analysis can help to predict bone mineral profiles suitable to evaluate bone diagenesis.", "keywords": ["Spectroscopy", " Near-Infrared", "Fossils", "Reproducibility of Results", "06 humanities and the arts", "01 natural sciences", "Bone and Bones", "Spain", "Strontium", "Metals", " Alkaline Earth", "Spectroscopy", " Fourier Transform Infrared", "Humans", "Calcium", "Magnesium", "0601 history and archaeology", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/110415/1/TAL_R1.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/27837852"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Talanta", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "27837852", "name": "item", "description": "27837852", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/27837852"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2807448259", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:39Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-05-31", "title": "Effects of agricultural management practices on soil quality: A review of long-term experiments for Europe and China", "description": "Open AccessIn this paper we present effects of four paired agricultural management practices (organic matter (OM) addition versus no organic matter input, no-tillage (NT) versus conventional tillage, crop rotation versus monoculture, and organic agriculture versus conventional agriculture) on five key soil quality indicators, i.e., soil organic matter (SOM) content, pH, aggregate stability, earthworms (numbers) and crop yield. We have considered organic matter addition, no-tillage, crop rotation and organic agriculture as 'promising practices'; no organic matter input, conventional tillage, monoculture and conventional farming were taken as the respective references or 'standard practice' (baseline). Relative effects were analysed through indicator response ratio (RR) under each paired practice. For this we considered data of 30 long-term experiments collected from 13 case study sites in Europe and China as collated in the framework of the EU-China funded iSQAPER project. These were complemented with data from 42 long-term experiments across China and 402 observations of long-term trials published in the literature. Out of these, we only considered experiments covering at least five years. The results show that OM addition favourably affected all the indicators under consideration. The most favourable effect was reported on earthworm numbers, followed by yield, SOM content and soil aggregate stability. For pH, effects depended on soil type; OM input favourably affected the pH of acidic soils, whereas no clear trend was observed under NT. NT generally led to increased aggregate stability and greater SOM content in upper soil horizons. However, the magnitude of the relative effects varied, e.g. with soil texture. No-tillage practices enhanced earthworm populations, but not where herbicides or pesticides were applied to combat weeds and pests. Overall, in this review, yield slightly decreased under NT. Crop rotation had a positive effect on SOM content and yield; rotation with ley very positively influenced earthworms' numbers. Overall, crop rotation had little impact on soil pH and aggregate stability \u2212 depending on the type of intercrop; alternatively, rotation of arable crops only resulted in adverse effects. A clear positive trend was observed for earthworm abundance under organic agriculture. Further, organic agriculture generally resulted in increased aggregate stability and greater SOM content. Overall, no clear trend was found for pH; a decrease in yield was observed under organic agriculture in this review.", "keywords": ["Soil Science", "Organic chemistry", "Crop", "01 natural sciences", "Long-term field experiments", "Crop Productivity", "Soil quality", "Environmental science", "Organic Matter Dynamics", "Tillage", "Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Soil quality indicators", "Crop rotation", "Management of Soil Fertility and Crop Productivity", "Soil water", "FOS: Mathematics", "Agricultural management practices", "Monoculture", "Crop Yield Stability", "Biology", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "Literature review", "Response ratio", "Soil science", "2. Zero hunger", "Soil organic matter", "Soil Fertility", "Conventional tillage", "Geography", "Life Sciences", "Agriculture", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Soil Nutrient Management", "15. Life on land", "Agronomy", "Chemistry", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Organic matter", "Intercropping in Agricultural Systems", "Soil Carbon Dynamics and Nutrient Cycling in Ecosystems", "Agronomy and Crop Science", "Mathematics"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/2807448259"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Agriculture%2C%20Ecosystems%20%26amp%3B%20Environment", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2807448259", "name": "item", "description": "2807448259", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2807448259"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-10-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2883910666", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:40Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2018-07-19", "title": "Molecular Fingerprinting of14C Dated Soil Organic Matter Fractions from Archaeological Settings in NW Spain", "description": "Abstract<p>This paper evaluates the complexities of radiocarbon (14C) dates from soil organic matter (SOM) in archaeological scenarios. The aqueous NaOH-insoluble residual SOM from Neolithic to medieval sites in NW Spain produced consistently older calibrated14C ages than NaOH-extractable SOM. Using pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS) and thermally assisted hydrolysis and methylation (THM-GC-MS), we analyzed the molecular composition of these SOM fractions, aiming to understand the differences in14C ages and to gain insight on SOM dynamics in relation to age fractionation. The molecular composition of the NaOH-extractable SOM, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of total SOM, has a larger proportion of microbial detritus than the NaOH-insoluble SOM. This might suggest that the discrepancies between the two fractions is due to microbial rejuvenation in the extractable fraction, leading to14C results that are younger than the activity that is to be dated. However, archaeological evidence presented here unambiguously shows that the14C age of the extractable SOM provides the more accurate age for the targeted activity, and that the insoluble fraction contains inherited old carbon. After statistical data evaluation using Partial Least Squares-Regression (PLS-R), it is concluded that this inherited SOM is a mixture of Black Carbon from wild and/or domestic fires and recalcitrant aliphatic SOM.</p", "keywords": ["Radiocarbon dating", "Molecular composition", "THM-GC-MS", "SOM fractions", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "Py-GC-MS", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/2883910666"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Radiocarbon", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2883910666", "name": "item", "description": "2883910666", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2883910666"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2018-07-18T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "28139267", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:39Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2017-01-28", "title": "When is a terrace not a terrace? The importance of understanding landscape evolution in studies of terraced agriculture", "description": "Before the invention of modern, large-scale engineering projects, terrace systems were rarely built in single phases of construction, but instead developed gradually, and could even be said to have evolved. Understanding this process of landscape change is therefore important in order to fully appreciate how terrace systems were built and functioned, and is also pivotal to understanding how the communities that farmed these systems responded to changes; whether these are changes to the landscape brought about by the farming practices themselves, or changes to social, economic or climatic conditions. Combining archaeological stratigraphy, soil micromorphology and geochemistry, this paper presents a case-study from the historic and extensive terraced landscape at Konso, southwest Ethiopia, and demonstrates - in one important river valley at least - that the original topsoil and much of the subsoil was lost prior to the construction of hillside terraces. Moreover, the study shows that alluvial sediment traps that were built adjacent to rivers relied on widespread hillside soil erosion for their construction, and strongly suggests that these irrigated riverside fields were formerly a higher economic priority than the hillside terraces themselves; a possibility that was not recognised by numerous observational studies of farming in this landscape. Research that takes into account how terrace systems change through time can thus provide important details of whether the function of the system has changed, and can help assess how the legacies of former practices impact current or future cultivation.", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "2311", "2305", "Agriculture", "06 humanities and the arts", "15. Life on land", "Landscape evolution", "01 natural sciences", "Terraces", "Soil", "Archaeology", "Rivers", "Land management", "0601 history and archaeology", "Ethiopia", "2308", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/112206/1/Ferro_Vazquez_et_al_JEMA_2017.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/28139267"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Environmental%20Management", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "28139267", "name": "item", "description": "28139267", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/28139267"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2017-11-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "3109710554", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:58Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2020-11-24", "title": "Sorting Out the Recent Historiography of Development Assistance: Consolidation and New Directions in the Field", "keywords": ["0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "004"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Kalinovsky, A.M.", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0022009420962315"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/3109710554"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Contemporary%20History", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "3109710554", "name": "item", "description": "3109710554", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/3109710554"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-11-24T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "3047714626", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:55Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2020-08-07", "title": "Ceramic productions and human interactions during the Early Bronze Age in northern Iberia", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p>The Early Bronze Age ceramic collection found into the caves of La Llana and El Toral III in Asturias (Spain) presents common decoration such as that found in the centre of Cantabrian Spain from the same period, which resembles others found in the Ebro Valley and Atlantic Europe. Therefore, the main objective of this study it is to identify the raw material origin and understand the pottery production process during the Early Bronze Age in the Cantabrian region. A methodological approach based on the chemical and mineralogical analysis of vessels and experimentally fired clay samples collected all over the centre of this region was developed. Furthermore, the post\u2010depositional processes affecting the sherds\u2019 composition was evaluated by employing the rare earth elements as markers. The results showed that the studied assemblage has important similarities with the raw materials of the surrounding area, which supports the hypothesis of a regional mobility.</p></article>", "keywords": ["Human mobility", "Pottery", "Rare earth element", "Chemical-mineralogical characterisation", "Post-depositional processes", "0601 history and archaeology", "06 humanities and the arts", "01 natural sciences", "Raw material", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/3047714626"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Archaeometry", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "3047714626", "name": "item", "description": "3047714626", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/3047714626"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-09-02T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "3111070593", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:25:58Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2020-12-16", "title": "Spatial differentiation characteristics and driving factors of agricultural eco-efficiency in Chinese provinces from the perspective of ecosystem services", "description": "Farmland ecosystem service is an important output of agricultural production, but it has been incompletely reflected in current studies on eco-efficiency. In this study, the value of improved farmland ecosystem services is used as one of the expected outputs. The data envelopment method is used to evaluate the agricultural eco-efficiency (AEE) of 31 provincial administrative regions in China from 2006 to 2018. The spatial autocorrelation method is used to explore the characteristics of AEE in China. Geographical detector model (Geodetector) is adopted to detect the driving factors of AEE spatial differentiation in China. China\u2019s AEE trend from 2006 to 2018 was downward with the efficiency value decreasing from 1.023 to 0.995. China\u2019s AEE level has improved with an average of 1.004. The spatial distribution pattern represented in space is in the following order: eastern region &gt; western region &gt; northeast region &gt; central region. The AEE gap among provinces in the western region is the largest, and that in the northeast region is the smallest. China\u2019s AEE spatial correlation distribution presents random distribution characteristics. During the research period, the lowehigh (LH) efficiency response area has centered on Yunnan Province. The lowelow (LL) level concentration area has centered on Inner Mongolia autonomous region and Liaoning Province. The highelow (HL) level diffusion effect agglomeration area has centered on Heilongjiang Province. Energy input, water resource input, and carbon emission are the core drivers of AEE spatial differentiation in China. Water resource input, pesticide input and labor input are the significant control factors of AEE spatial differentiation in the eastern, central, and western regions of China.", "keywords": ["Economics and Econometrics", "China", "Environmental Engineering", "Economics", "Discrete Choice Models in Economics and Health Care", "Social Sciences", "Mathematical analysis", "01 natural sciences", "Environmental science", "Data envelopment analysis", "Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Impact Analysis", "11. Sustainability", "FOS: Mathematics", "Ecosystem services", "Spatial distribution", "Biology", "Ecosystem Services", "Ecosystem", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "Agricultural economics", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Global Analysis of Ecosystem Services and Land Use", "Geography", "Ecology", "Distribution (mathematics)", "Statistics", "FOS: Environmental engineering", "Spatial analysis", "Agriculture", "Remote sensing", "15. Life on land", "Economics", " Econometrics and Finance", "Driving factors", "Archaeology", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "Physical Sciences", "Spatial heterogeneity", "Common spatial pattern", "Mathematics"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/3111070593"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Journal%20of%20Cleaner%20Production", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "3111070593", "name": "item", "description": "3111070593", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/3111070593"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-03-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "34998760", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:26:14Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2022-01-06", "title": "Exploring the potential role of environmental and multi-source satellite data in crop yield prediction across Northeast China", "description": "Open AccessLe d\u00e9veloppement d'un syst\u00e8me pr\u00e9cis de pr\u00e9diction du rendement des cultures \u00e0 grande \u00e9chelle est d'une importance primordiale pour la gestion des ressources agricoles et la s\u00e9curit\u00e9 alimentaire mondiale. L'observation de la Terre fournit une source unique d'informations pour surveiller les cultures \u00e0 partir d'une diversit\u00e9 de gammes spectrales. Cependant, l'utilisation int\u00e9gr\u00e9e de ces donn\u00e9es et de leurs valeurs dans la pr\u00e9diction du rendement des cultures est encore peu \u00e9tudi\u00e9e. Ici, nous avons propos\u00e9 la combinaison de donn\u00e9es environnementales (climat, sol, g\u00e9ographie et topographie) avec de multiples donn\u00e9es satellitaires (indices de v\u00e9g\u00e9tation optiques, fluorescence induite par le soleil (SIF), temp\u00e9rature de surface du sol (LST) et profondeur optique de la v\u00e9g\u00e9tation micro-ondes (VOD)) dans le cadre pour estimer le rendement des cultures de ma\u00efs, de riz et de soja dans le nord-est de la Chine, et leur valeur unique et leur influence relative sur la pr\u00e9diction du rendement ont \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e9valu\u00e9es. Deux m\u00e9thodes de r\u00e9gression lin\u00e9aire, trois m\u00e9thodes d'apprentissage automatique (ML) et un mod\u00e8le d'ensemble ML ont \u00e9t\u00e9 adopt\u00e9s pour construire des mod\u00e8les de pr\u00e9diction de rendement. Les r\u00e9sultats ont montr\u00e9 que les m\u00e9thodes individuelles de ML surpassaient les m\u00e9thodes de r\u00e9gression lin\u00e9aire, le mod\u00e8le d'ensemble de ML a encore am\u00e9lior\u00e9 les mod\u00e8les de ML uniques. De plus, les mod\u00e8les avec plus d'intrants ont obtenu de meilleures performances, la combinaison de donn\u00e9es satellitaires avec des donn\u00e9es environnementales, qui expliquaient respectivement 72\u00a0%, 69\u00a0% et 57\u00a0% de la variabilit\u00e9 du rendement du ma\u00efs, du riz et du soja, a d\u00e9montr\u00e9 des performances de pr\u00e9diction du rendement sup\u00e9rieures \u00e0 celles des intrants individuels. Alors que les donn\u00e9es satellitaires ont contribu\u00e9 \u00e0 la pr\u00e9diction du rendement des cultures principalement au d\u00e9but de la pointe de la saison de croissance, les donn\u00e9es climatiques ont fourni des informations suppl\u00e9mentaires principalement \u00e0 la pointe de la fin de la saison. Nous avons \u00e9galement constat\u00e9 que l'utilisation combin\u00e9e de l'IVE, du LST et du SIF a am\u00e9lior\u00e9 la pr\u00e9cision du mod\u00e8le par rapport au mod\u00e8le d'IVE de r\u00e9f\u00e9rence. Cependant, les indices de v\u00e9g\u00e9tation bas\u00e9s sur l'optique partageaient des informations similaires et ne fournissaient pas beaucoup d'informations suppl\u00e9mentaires au-del\u00e0 de l'IVE. Les pr\u00e9visions de rendement en cours de saison ont montr\u00e9 que les rendements des cultures peuvent \u00eatre pr\u00e9vus de mani\u00e8re satisfaisante deux \u00e0 trois mois avant la r\u00e9colte. La g\u00e9ographie, la topographie, la VOD, l'IVE, les param\u00e8tres hydrauliques du sol et les param\u00e8tres nutritifs sont plus importants pour la pr\u00e9diction du rendement des cultures.", "keywords": ["Atmospheric sciences", "Climate", "Multi-source satellite data", "Normalized Difference Vegetation Index", "Engineering", "Pathology", "Climate change", "Urban Heat Islands and Mitigation Strategies", "Linear regression", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Vegetation Monitoring", "Ecology", "Geography", "Statistics", "Agriculture", "Geology", "Remote Sensing in Vegetation Monitoring and Phenology", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Remote sensing", "Aerospace engineering", "Archaeology", "Physical Sciences", "Metallurgy", "Medicine", "Seasons", "Global Vegetation Models", "Biomass Estimation", "Regression analysis", "Vegetation (pathology)", "Crops", " Agricultural", "Environmental Engineering", "Environmental data", "Yield (engineering)", "Zea mays", "Environmental science", "Machine learning", "FOS: Mathematics", "Crop yield", "Biology", "Global Forest Drought Response and Climate Change", "FOS: Environmental engineering", "Predictive modelling", "Food security", "FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences", "15. Life on land", "Agronomy", "Materials science", "Yield prediction", "Satellite", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "Growing season", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries", "Mathematics"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Zhenwang Li, Lei Ding, Donghui Xu,", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/34998760"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Science%20of%20The%20Total%20Environment", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "34998760", "name": "item", "description": "34998760", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/34998760"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-04-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "50|r3730f562f9e::23feb5e32a544615e35b6aab7f63c7b4", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:26:40Z", "type": "Dataset", "title": "130910-99 Simested", "description": "This record describes ancient sites and monuments as well archaeological excavations undertaken by Danish museums. Excerpt of the Danish description of events: 1887 : Middelstor rund H\u00f8j i Overdelen gravet af sydlige Halvdel.1892 : H\u00f8j, temmelig ur\u00f8rt.1953 : H\u00f8j, 2,25 m h\u00f8j, 16 m bred i \u00f8-v, 9 m bred i n-s. H\u00f8jens sydlige tredjedel til skel er sl\u00f8jfet. Fra top ned over sv-siden et 5 m bredt, indtil 0,50 m dybt eftergroet sk\u00e5r. Lyngkl\u00e6dt i hede.1887 : Middelstor rund H\u00f8j i Overdelen gravet af sydlige Halvdel.1892 : H\u00f8j, temmelig ur\u00f8rt.1953 : H\u00f8j, 2,25 m h\u00f8j, 16 m bred i \u00f8-v, 9 m bred i n-s. H\u00f8jens sydlige tredjedel til skel er sl\u00f8jfet. Fra top ned over sv-siden et 5 m bredt, indtil 0,50 m dybt eftergroet sk\u00e5r. Lyngkl\u00e6dt i hede.", "keywords": ["Haug", "Funerary", "Archaeology", "burial mound", "Round barrow", "Rundh\u00f8j"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Vesthimmerlands Museum", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/50|r3730f562f9e::23feb5e32a544615e35b6aab7f63c7b4"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "50|r3730f562f9e::23feb5e32a544615e35b6aab7f63c7b4", "name": "item", "description": "50|r3730f562f9e::23feb5e32a544615e35b6aab7f63c7b4", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/50|r3730f562f9e::23feb5e32a544615e35b6aab7f63c7b4"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "PMC10039844", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:28:00Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2023-03-25", "title": "Evaluating the impacts of sustainable land management practices on water quality in an agricultural catchment in Lower Austria using SWAT", "description": "Abstract <p>Managing agricultural watersheds in an environmentally friendly manner necessitate the strategic implementation of well-targeted sustainable land management (SLM) practices that limit soil and nonpoint source pollution losses and translocation. Watershed-scale SLM-scenario modeling has the potential to identify efficient and effective management strategies from the field to the integrated landscape level. In a case study targeting a 66-hectare watershed in Petzenkirchen, Lower Austria, the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) was utilized to evaluate a variety of locally adoptable SLM practices. SWAT was calibrated and validated (monthly) at the catchment outlet for flow, sediment, nitrate-nitrogen (NO3\uffe2\uff80\uff93N), ammonium nitrogen (NH4\uffe2\uff80\uff93N), and mineralized phosphorus (PO4\uffe2\uff80\uff93P) using SWATplusR. Considering the locally existing agricultural practices and socioeconomic and environmental factors of the research area, four conservation practices were evaluated: baseline scenario, contour farming (CF), winter cover crops (CC), and a combination of no-till and cover crops (NT\uffe2\uff80\uff89+\uffe2\uff80\uff89CC). The NT\uffe2\uff80\uff89+\uffe2\uff80\uff89CC SLM practice was found to be the most effective soil conservation practice in reducing soil loss by around 80%, whereas CF obtained the best results for decreasing the nutrient loads of NO3\uffe2\uff80\uff93N and PO4\uffe2\uff80\uff93P by 11% and 35%, respectively. The findings of this study imply that the setup SWAT model can serve the context-specific performance assessment and eventual promotion of SLM interventions that mitigate on-site land degradation and the consequential off-site environmental pollution resulting from agricultural nonpoint sources.</p", "keywords": ["Agricultural and Biological Sciences", "Soil", "Context (archaeology)", "Engineering", "Water Quality", "Soil water", "Water Science and Technology", "Watershed Management", "2. Zero hunger", "Geography", "Ecology", "Life Sciences", "Soil and Water Assessment Tool", "Agriculture", "Hydrology (agriculture)", "6. Clean water", "Soil Erosion and Agricultural Sustainability", "Water resource management", "Hydrological Modeling and Water Resource Management", "Water quality", "Archaeology", "Austria", "Physical Sciences", "SWAT model", "Environmental Monitoring", "Cartography", "Conservation of Natural Resources", "Biogeochemical Cycling of Nutrients in Aquatic Ecosystems", "Drainage basin", "Nitrogen", "Soil Science", "Streamflow", "Article", "Environmental science", "Soil quality", "Machine learning", "Environmental Chemistry", "Civil engineering", "Biology", "Nonpoint source pollution", "Soil science", "15. Life on land", "Watershed Simulation", "Watershed management", "Watershed", "Computer science", "Geotechnical engineering", "13. Climate action", "FOS: Biological sciences", "Environmental Science", "Land use", "FOS: Civil engineering"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/PMC10039844"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Environmental%20Monitoring%20and%20Assessment", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "PMC10039844", "name": "item", "description": "PMC10039844", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/PMC10039844"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2023-03-25T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "cd18803b91f0b7e2a4ce9d5cddd9fd86", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"license": "Open Access", "updated": "2026-05-01T16:29:41Z", "type": "Report", "title": "Si ven a alguien vivo.: Cr\u00f3nicas III", "description": "The phrase 'if you see someone alive, tell them the same', left her scarred. Jenny could not imagine seeing her comrades dead, those with whom she had shared part of her life. The lieutenants had died and several of their comrades had fallen with them. Jenny and Maritza ran as they had never run before. They didn't care about anything. 'But this image will never be erased from my mind: in the middle of the run we made, Yuli, one of our youngest comrades, only eight years old, was coming up with her arm shattered and begging not to be left to die. But she didn't even finish these words when one of those guerrilla sons of bitches shot her in the back. Maritza and I were paralyzed; there was nothing left of the race we had been running, only the mere agitation of breathing. I thought, then, that my moment had come. Those were the longest seconds of my life. All I could think about was my mother, how she would be, if she would have found out what was happening, because in a small town everything is known' (Fragment of a chronicle).", "keywords": ["Guerra; guerrillas; muerte; pueblos", "thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History"], "contacts": [{"organization": "Alzate, Gabriel Jaime, Sanclemente Rugeles, Eva Mar\u00eda, Fajardo Bastidas, Melissa, Ram\u00edrez Arana, Valentina, Cruz Paez, Tatiana Alejandra, Cort\u00e9s Escobar, Stephanie, Holgu\u00edn Reyes, Natalia, Ayala Garc\u00e9s, Nathalia, Rend\u00f3n Echeverry, Mauricio, Rocha Ruiz, Laura, Hidalgo Niebles, Camilo Andr\u00e9s, Losada Su\u00e1rez, Juliana, Orejuela Reyes, Jenny Patricia, Trigueros Gir\u00f3n, Stephania, Zuluaga Obando, Cindy, Silva L\u00f3pez, Catalina Alexandra, Restrepo Delgado, Carlos Arturo, G\u00f3mez Londo\u00f1o, Ana Mar\u00eda, Alzate Ochoa, Gabriel Jaime, L\u00f3pez, Katherine, S\u00e1nchez Zapata, Alejandra, Izquierdo Moreno, Diana Marcela,", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/cd18803b91f0b7e2a4ce9d5cddd9fd86"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "cd18803b91f0b7e2a4ce9d5cddd9fd86", "name": "item", "description": "cd18803b91f0b7e2a4ce9d5cddd9fd86", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/cd18803b91f0b7e2a4ce9d5cddd9fd86"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2011-09-20T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "a2403622bc0a850fe0f9105e7f8acf07", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-01T16:33:37Z", "type": "Dataset", "title": "180414-109 Guldager", "description": "This record describes ancient sites and monuments as well archaeological excavations undertaken by Danish museums. Excerpt of the Danish description of events: 0000 : Digevoldinger.[Sb.] Numrene 81-114 er supplement ved l\u00e6rer Alfred Kaae, tidligere Torsted (journal nr 473/64 <N01, danske privatsamlinger>) Se endvidere: A. Kaae, Torsted, 1945 (eget forlag, Kronhede pr. Ulfborg). En r\u00e6kke enkeltfund er ikke indf\u00f8rt i sb, se herom Kaaes 'protokol, i Topografisk Arkiv <(N01)>.", "keywords": ["Landbruk", "Primary subsistence", "Archaeology", "Marksystem", "Field system"], "contacts": [{"organization": "ARKVEST Ark\u00e6ologi Vestjylland", "roles": ["creator"]}]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/urn:repox.www.kulturarv.dkSites:http://www.kulturarv.dk/fundogfortidsminder/site/65743"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "a2403622bc0a850fe0f9105e7f8acf07", "name": "item", "description": "a2403622bc0a850fe0f9105e7f8acf07", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/a2403622bc0a850fe0f9105e7f8acf07"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}], "links": [{"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "This document as GeoJSON", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Archaeology&offset=50&f=json", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"rel": "alternate", "type": "text/html", "title": "This document as HTML", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Archaeology&offset=50&f=html", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection URL", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"type": "application/geo+json", "rel": "prev", "title": "items (prev)", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Archaeology&offset=0", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"rel": "last", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "items (last)", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Archaeology&offset=99", "hreflang": "en-US"}], "numberMatched": 99, "numberReturned": 49, "distributedFeatures": [], "timeStamp": "2026-05-02T08:41:49.996433Z"}