Showing 41 - 60 results of 149 for search '"Volga Region"', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
  1. 41

    Paleoclimatic Changes and their Influence on Cultural and Historical Processes during the Neolithic – Eneolitic in the Caspian and Lower Volga Regions by Marianna A. Kulkova, Alexander A. Vybornov

    Published 2024-08-01
    “…The cultural traditions of the Dzhangar and Kairshak types, appeared during the short-term “critical” episode of climate deterioration in the semi-desert zone, continued to develop in the Orlovka culture, formed in the steppe zone of the Lower Volga region. The formation of the Caspian culture, transitional from Neolithic to Chalcolithic, begins about 5500 cal BC in the Northern Caspian. …”
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  2. 42

    Leisure in the Daily Life of Various Ethnic Groups of the Urban Population of the Volga Region during the First World War by Ekaterina Yu. Semenova

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The author reconstructs the leisure activities of national communities that permanently lived and arrived in the Volga region at the outbreak of the First World War. …”
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  3. 43

    Lead “Contamination / Ligature” Threshold Evaluation in Copper-Based Alloys of the Golden Horde Monuments from the Lower Volga Region by Kseniya S. Kovaleva

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…A study of 647 copper and copper-based alloy utensil showed that unrefined contaminated copper and its alloys with tin and zinc with a 2–3% average lead content were used for forging in addition to refined copper during the Golden Horde period in the Lower Volga region. Tin bronze and triple, multicomponent bronzes with a 3.5% average lead content were the main casting alloys. …”
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    Variability of Scots pine (<i>Pinus sylvestris</i> L.) plus trees in the Middle and Upper Volga Region with the use of ISSR markers by O. V. Sheikina, E. M. Romanov

    Published 2024-04-01
    “…The results of the research prove that the level of genetic diversity, the structure of genetic variability, and the nature of differentiation of plus trees are consistent with those previously elicited for natural populations of Scots pine in the Middle and Upper Volga region.…”
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