We establish some common fixed point theorems for mappings satisfying an α-ψ-ϕcontractive condition in generalized metric spaces. Presented theorems extend and generalize manyexisting results in the literature.
Erratum to “Common fixed points for α-ψ-φ-contractions in generalized metric spaces”
In Example 1 of our paper [V. La Rosa, P. Vetro, Common fixed points for α-ψ-ϕcontractions in generalized metric spaces, Nonlinear Anal. Model. Control, 19(1):43–54, 2014] a generalized metric has been assumed. Nevertheless some mistakes have appeared in the statement. The aim of this note is to correct this situation.
Pottery from the Late Minoan I kiln at Haghia Triada in the Mesara Plain, southern Crete, was analysed by a range of techniques, comprising thin‐section petrography, scanning electron microscopy, X‐ray diffraction, X‐ray fluorescence and neutron activation analysis. The project characterizes the ceramic fabrics and probable raw materials, correlates paste recipes with shape, reconstructs the firing conditions of the kiln and establishes a chemical reference group, taking into account post‐burial alteration and contamination. Comparison of the reference group formed with that from the neighbouring, broadly contemporary, kiln at Kommos shows an unexpected differentiation of the two kilns.
We establish some fixed point theorems for mappings satisfying Geraghty-type contractive conditions in the setting of partial metric spaces and ordered partial metric spaces. Presented theorems extend and generalize many existing results in the literature. Examples are given showing that these results are proper extensions of the existing ones.
This paper presents preliminary results of measurements of chemical composition of pigments on the Middle Minoan pottery coming from Festos and Hagia Triada excavations. The measurements were carried out 'in situ' with the use of the PIXE-alpha spectrometer, with Po-210 radioisotope as a source of sample excitation, built at Laboratorio Nazionale del Sud. The method of measurements is described in detail and the limits are discussed. The preliminary results confirm the use of the reduced iron technique to obtain the black slips and of the talc to produce the white ones. Similarly, the presence of Manganese in some orange pigments can be associated with the use of red ochre mixed to talc, the latter being used as whitening material.
This paper reports the results obtained applying absolute dating methodologies and mineralogical, petrographical and micropalaeontological characterization techniques to prehistoric pottery sherds varying in age from the Sicilian Middle Neolithic to Bronze Age. All samples came from the archaeological area of Milena (Caltanissetta, Sicily); those of the Bronze Age were found on a site with a precise stratigraphic succession. The investigation has contributed to the determination of an absolute chronology for the Milena prehistoric period. The data provide, for the first time in Sicily, absolute dates covering a wide spectrum of cultures following one another in the same area and, for the Bronze Age site, correlated to the precise stratigraphic succession. The petrographical and mineralogical analyses allowed not only the identification of the principal constituents of the pottery, but also the formulation of some hypotheses regarding the specific manufacturing techniques of different epochs. The microfacies, obtained from the presence of fossils in the groundmass of the pottery, were also analysed and compared with the microfauna present in the Miocene clays outcropping in the area. The data identified local Messinian clay as the raw material probably used in the manufacture of the pottery and also support the presence, already assumed by archaeologists, of imported Mycenaean pottery, thus supporting the dates obtained on pottery taken from the same stratum.
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