This paper reports the results of an archaeometric study of the crystalline marbles used in the Roman city of Banasa (Morocco). On‐site surveys allowed a detailed inspection of the monuments of the ancient city and sampling of the different marble lithotypes used for architectural purposes and sculptures. The inventory was completed by the study of both the grey‐and‐white streaked or spotted marble items stored in the warehouse of the archaeological site and of those currently exhibited at the National Archaeological Museum of Rabat. Provenance determination of 28 samples was carried out by means of a multi‐method approach combining mineralogical–petrographic data and C–O stable isotope analyses as the first step, and cathodoluminescence microscopy as a complementary technique to verify possible unusual alternative origins of some marbles. The analytical results obtained were compared with both the most reliable international databases and the few available studies dealing with the use of marble in other Roman towns in Morocco (e.g., Volubilis, Thamusida and Sala‐Chellah). They point to a variety of classical marble sources such as Carrara, Mount Penteli, Paros, Marmara and probably Mount Filfila (Algeria), and prove a significant import of Iberian lithotypes.
Este trabajo, producto de una investigación realizada en el Instituto de Comunicación y Diseño (INCOD) de la Universidad Argentina de la Empresa (UADE), se dirige a describir algunos de los procesos de producción de sentido que guían la selección y preferencia de programas en el telespectador adolescente. Es intención avanzar aquí sobre los modos en que un ciclo de vida ejerce su influencia modalizando y condicionando el encuentro que mantiene con la televisión. Nos interesa describir especialmente el modo en que la adolescencia se convierte en una vía de aproximación al actor que se encuentra en la recepción de medios. Para ello hacemos explícito primero nuestro enfoque, circunscribimos una programación que constituye «la pantalla adolescente de la televisión de aire local de 2008» y nos detenemos en las reglas que la adolescencia activa en la recepción de sus programas.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.