118 resultados para Summer theater.
Resumo:
The Mediterranean region has been identified as a global warming hotspot, where future climate impacts are expected to have significant consequences on societal and ecosystem well-being. To put ongoing trends of summer climate into the context of past natural variability, we reconstructed climate from maximum latewood density (MXD) measurements of Pinus heldreichii (1521–2010) and latewood width (LWW) of Pinus nigra (1617–2010) on Mt. Olympus, Greece. Previous research in the northeastern Mediterranean has primarily focused on inter-annual variability, omitting any low-frequency trends. The present study utilizes methods capable of retaining climatically driven long-term behavior of tree growth. The LWW chronology corresponds closely to early summer moisture variability (May–July, r = 0.65, p < 0.001, 1950–2010), whereas the MXD-chronology relates mainly to late summer warmth (July–September, r = 0.64, p < 0.001; 1899–2010). The chronologies show opposing patterns of decadal variability over the twentieth century (r = −0.68, p < 0.001) and confirm the importance of the summer North Atlantic Oscillation (sNAO) for summer climate in the northeastern Mediterranean, with positive sNAO phases inducing cold anomalies and enhanced cloudiness and precipitation. The combined reconstructions document the late twentieth—early twenty-first century warming and drying trend, but indicate generally drier early summer and cooler late summer conditions in the period ~1700–1900 CE. Our findings suggest a potential decoupling between twentieth century atmospheric circulation patterns and pre-industrial climate variability. Furthermore, the range of natural climate variability stretches beyond summer moisture availabilityobserved in recent decades and thus lends credibility to the significant drying trends projected for this region in current Earth System Model simulations.
Resumo:
Substantial effort has recently been put into the development of climate reconstructions from tree-ring stable carbon isotopes, though the interpretation of long-term trends retained in such timeseries remains challenging. Here we use detrended δ13C measurements in Pinus uncinata tree-rings, from the Spanish Pyrenees, to reconstruct decadal variations in summer temperature back to the 13th century. The June-August temperature signal of this reconstruction is attributed using decadally as well as annually resolved, 20th century δ13C data. Results indicate that late 20th century warming has not been unique within the context of the past 750 years. Our reconstruction contains greater am-plitude than previous reconstructions derived from traditional tree-ring density data, and describes particularly cool conditions during the late 19th century. Some of these differences, including early warm periods in the 14th and 17th centuries, have been retained via δ13C timeseries detrending - a novel approach in tree-ring stable isotope chronology development. The overall reduced variance in earlier studies points to an underestimation of pre-instrumental summer temperature variability de-rived from traditional tree-ring parameters.
Resumo:
Antike Theater und Masken online enthält etwa 800 Farbfotografien von antiken Theatern und 600 von Masken aus den Ländern rund um das Mittelmeer, aus Westeuropa und aus zahlreichen Museen. Die Sammlung des Basler Theaterhistorikers Karl Gotthilf Kachler (1906-2000) entstand zwischen dem Ende der 1950er-Jahre und dem Beginn der 1980er-Jahre auf zahlreichen Forschungsreisen. Er übergab 1999 die ursprünglich über 5’000 Diapositive dem Institut für Theaterwissenschaft der Universität Bern zur Bearbeitung. Im Jahr 2003 erschien im Chronos Verlag Zürich der Katalog Antike Theater und Masken mit einer beiliegenden DVD, die eine repräsentative Auswahl von 1’400 am ITW durch Sara Aebi und Regula Brunner thematisch kontextualisierten und kommentierten Fotografien zeigte. Die Herausgabe von Antike Theater und Masken online erfolgt durch Andreas Kotte, Direktor des ITW Bern und Projektleiter.