{ "access": { "embargo": { "active": false, "reason": null }, "files": "public", "record": "public", "status": "open" }, "created": "2018-05-16T10:40:27.030413+00:00", "custom_fields": { "journal:journal": { "pages": "2-26", "title": "Archaica", "volume": "5" } }, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "files": { "count": 1, "enabled": true, "entries": { "Archaica_2017-05_01_Zivaljevic_et_al.pdf": { "checksum": "md5:9d903ff934e16934cdb4b81925e5d903", "ext": "pdf", "id": "7f1f0392-f9bf-4a9b-a246-d2ad3e81cbab", "key": "Archaica_2017-05_01_Zivaljevic_et_al.pdf", "metadata": null, "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 1255628 } }, "order": [], "total_bytes": 1255628 }, "id": "1247906", "is_draft": false, "is_published": true, "links": { "access": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/access", "access_links": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/access/links", "access_request": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/access/request", "access_users": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/access/users", "archive": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/files-archive", "archive_media": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/media-files-archive", "communities": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/communities", "communities-suggestions": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/communities-suggestions", "doi": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1247906", "draft": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/draft", "files": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/files", "latest": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/versions/latest", "latest_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/1247906/latest", "media_files": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/media-files", "parent": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247905", "parent_doi": "https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.1247905", "parent_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/1247905", "requests": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/requests", "reserve_doi": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/draft/pids/doi", "self": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906", "self_doi": "https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.1247906", "self_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/1247906", "self_iiif_manifest": "https://zenodo.org/api/iiif/record:1247906/manifest", "self_iiif_sequence": "https://zenodo.org/api/iiif/record:1247906/sequence/default", "versions": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/1247906/versions" }, "media_files": { "count": 0, "enabled": false, "entries": {}, "order": [], "total_bytes": 0 }, "metadata": { "creators": [ { "affiliations": [ { "name": "BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "\u017divaljevi\u0107", "given_name": "Ivana", "identifiers": [ { "identifier": "0000-0002-0873-7950", "scheme": "orcid" } ], "name": "\u017divaljevi\u0107, Ivana", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "Laboratory for Bioarchaeology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade; BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Dimitrijevi\u0107", "given_name": "Vesna", "identifiers": [ { "identifier": "0000-0001-8121-5457", "scheme": "orcid" } ], "name": "Dimitrijevi\u0107, Vesna", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "Museum of Vojvodina, Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Radmanovi\u0107", "given_name": "Darko", "name": "Radmanovi\u0107, Darko", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Jovanovi\u0107", "given_name": "Jelena", "identifiers": [ { "identifier": "0000-0001-6134-8180", "scheme": "orcid" } ], "name": "Jovanovi\u0107, Jelena", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "Museum of Vojvodina, Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Balj", "given_name": "Lidija", "name": "Balj, Lidija", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Pendi\u0107", "given_name": "Jugoslav", "name": "Pendi\u0107, Jugoslav", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Ivo\u0161evi\u0107", "given_name": "Bojana", "name": "Ivo\u0161evi\u0107, Bojana", "type": "personal" } }, { "affiliations": [ { "name": "BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad; Laboratory for Bioarchaeology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Stefanovi\u0107", "given_name": "Sofija", "identifiers": [ { "identifier": "0000-0001-7434-8788", "scheme": "orcid" } ], "name": "Stefanovi\u0107, Sofija", "type": "personal" } } ], "description": "
The domestication of plants and animals, and subsequent the changes that they had triggered om human societies, plays a crucial role in archaeological narratives on processes of Neolithization. Given that Neolithic communities are generally perceived as “pastoral-agricultural”, hunting activities are usually interpreted as sporadic, occasional, seasonal, and even anomalous. In this paper, we argue that subsistence strategies and human-animal interaction were far more diverse, and (micro)regionally and culturally specific. The paper focuses on the site of Golokut-Vizi\u0107, which stands out in relation to other Star\u010devo sites by its specific location within the hilly and forest landscape of the Fruška Gora mountain, as well as by high frequency of wild animals within the faunal sample. By incorporating existing and new results of archaeozoological analyses (namely taxonomic composition and seasonality), stable isotope analyses and archaeological data on settlement patterns (architectural features and artifacts), we examine ecological, economic and social context of animal exploitation at Golokut, and problematise the hunting-stockbreeding dichotomy in the context of the Early Neolithic on the territory of Vojvodina and the Central Balkans.
", "funding": [ { "award": { "acronym": "BIRTH", "id": "00k4n6c32::640557", "identifiers": [ { "identifier": "https://cordis.europa.eu/projects/640557", "scheme": "url" } ], "number": "640557", "program": "H2020", "title": { "en": "Births, mothers and babies: prehistoric fertility in the Balkans between 10000 \u2013 5000 BC" } }, "funder": { "id": "00k4n6c32", "name": "European Commission" } } ], "languages": [ { "id": "srp", "title": { "en": "Serbian" } } ], "publication_date": "2017-12-17", "publisher": "Zenodo", "resource_type": { "id": "publication-article", "title": { "de": "Zeitschriftenartikel", "en": "Journal article" } }, "rights": [ { "description": { "en": "The Creative Commons Attribution license allows re-distribution and re-use of a licensed work on the condition that the creator is appropriately credited." }, "icon": "cc-by-icon", "id": "cc-by-4.0", "props": { "scheme": "spdx", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode" }, "title": { "en": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International" } } ], "subjects": [ { "subject": "Golokut-Vizi\u0107" }, { "subject": "Early Neolithic" }, { "subject": "faunal remains" }, { "subject": "hunting" }, { "subject": "stockbreeding" }, { "subject": "seasonality" }, { "subject": "symbolism" } ], "title": "Hunting, herding and the significance of animals in Golokut: new analysis of faunal remains" }, "parent": { "access": { "owned_by": { "user": 46507 } }, "communities": { "entries": [ { "access": { "member_policy": "open", "members_visibility": "public", "record_policy": "open", "review_policy": "open", "visibility": "public" }, "children": { "allow": false }, "created": "2018-04-03T20:25:01.415344+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "id": "3d285e66-2e1a-4981-940a-acba0f452458", "links": {}, "metadata": { "curation_policy": "", "page": "The ERC BIRTH project investigate the key biological and cultural mechanisms affecting fertility rates resulting the Neolithic Demogaphic Transition, the major demographic shift in human evolution. We integrate skeletal markers with micro-nutritional and macro-scaled cultural effects on fertility rates during the Early-Middle Holocene (10000-5000 BC) in the Central Balkans. Human, animal and plant remains, will be analysed using methods from bioarchaeological, forensic, chemical sciences in order to: 1) Investigate variability in the pattern of birth rates (number of pregnancies, interval(s) between them and the duration of the reproductive period) through histological analysis of irregularities in tooth cementum of women; 2) Determine paleoobstetric and neonatal body characteristics, health status and nutrition through analysis of skeletal remains; 3) Determine micronutritional changes during the Early-Middle Holocene through trace element (Zn, Ca and Fe) analysis; 4) Investigate the micro and macronutritional value of prehistoric foodstuffs, through an analysis of animal and plant remains and to compare the nutritional intake in relation to health and fertility; 5) Establish a chronology of the NDT in the Balkans by summed radiocarbon probability distributions; 6) Explore the possible role of culture in driving fertility increases, through analysis of community attitudes to birthing trough investigation of neonate graves and artifact connected to the birthing process. Given that the issues of health and fertility are of utmost importance in the present as they were in the past, the BIRTH project offers new understanding of biocultural mechanisms which led to fertility increase and novel approaches to ancient skeletal heritage, and emphasizes their great potential for modern humanity.
", "title": "Births, mothers and babies: prehistoric fertility in the Balkans between 10000 \u2013 5000 BC" }, "revision_id": 0, "slug": "birth", "updated": "2018-04-03T20:32:45.979084+00:00" }, { "access": { "member_policy": "open", "members_visibility": "public", "record_policy": "open", "review_policy": "open", "visibility": "public" }, "children": { "allow": false }, "created": "2018-06-21T06:56:52.725740+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "id": "7cf0432f-50d3-41c6-b4df-22d447dd41a9", "links": {}, "metadata": { "curation_policy": "The researcher shall deposit their published articles on Zenodo following the legal aspects on self-archiving and Open Access on repositories. If you need further assistance please contact igadjanski@biosense.rs.
\r\n", "page": "Recognizing that ICT today plays a pivotal role in ensuring sustainable, smart and inclusive growth of agriculture, the Research and Development Institute for Information Technologies in Biosystems, also known as the BioSense Institute, has been founded to focus multidisciplinary, game-changing and needs-driven research and disseminate it to a global ecosystem of forward-looking stakeholders. BioSense cross-fertilizes two most promising sectors in Serbia: ICT and agriculture. Multidisciplinary research is performed in the fields of micro and nanoelectronics, communications, signal processing, remote sensing, big data, robotics and biosystems, with a common goal to support the development of sustainable agriculture and create a positive impact to the lives of people. Bio-Sense advances and integrates all that ICT can offer today – nanomaterials, low-cost miniature sensors, satellite imaging, robotics, big data analytics – to provide as much information as possible to the agricultural sector. The final goal of BioSense is to incorporate all efforts and results of various research groups into a unique BioSense integrated system for agricultural monitoring.
\r\n\r\nhttps://biosens.rs
", "title": "BioSense Institute - Research and Development Institute for Information Technologies in Biosystems" }, "revision_id": 0, "slug": "biosense_institute", "updated": "2020-07-22T12:43:59.545872+00:00" }, { "access": { "member_policy": "open", "members_visibility": "restricted", "record_policy": "open", "review_policy": "closed", "visibility": "public" }, "children": { "allow": true }, "created": "2022-11-23T15:53:29.436323+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "id": "f0a8b890-f97a-4eb2-9eac-8b8a712d3a6c", "links": {}, "metadata": { "curation_policy": "The EU Open Research Repository serves as a repository for research outputs (data, software, posters, presentations, publications, etc) which have been funded under an EU research funding programme such as Horizon Europe, Euratom or earlier Framework Programmes.
\nThe community is managed by CERN on behalf of the European Commission.
\nZenodo’s general policies and Terms of Use apply to all content.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository accepts all digital research objects which is a research output stemming from one of EU’s research and innovation funding programmes. The funding programmes currently include:
\nHorizon Europe (including ERC, MSCA), earlier Framework Programmes (eg Horizon 2020) as well as Euratom.
\nIn line with the principle as open as possible, as closed as necessary both public and restricted content is accepted. See note on how Zenodo handles restricted content.
\nEU programme beneficiaries are eligible to submit content to the community. The community supports three types of content submissions:
\nSubmission via an EU Project Community (through user interface or programmatic APIs).
\nSubmission directly to the EU Open Research Repository.
\nAutomated harvesting from existing Zenodo content.
\nA representative of an EU project may request an EU Project Community and invite other project participants as members of the community. The project community is linked to one or more European Commission grants. All records in the project community are automatically integrated into the EU Open Research Repository immediately upon acceptance into the project community.
\nAny user may submit a record directly to the EU Open Research Repository. The submission will be moderated by Zenodo staff for compliance with the minimal required metadata requirements and its correctness.
\nRecords found among Zenodo’s existing content will on a regular basis automatically be integrated if they are found to comply with the requirements. The submissions through this method are integrated into the EU Open Research Repository with delay in a fully automated way.
\nRecords in the EU Open Research Repository are required to comply with the following minimal metadata requirements:
\nVisibility: Both public and restricted (with or without embargo and/or access request)
\nResource types: All resource types.
\nLicenses: Public and embargoed records MUST specify a license.
\nFunding information: Records MUST specify at least one grant from the European Commission.
\nCreators: Creators SHOULD be identified with a persistent identifier (e.g. ORCID, GND, …), and affiliations SHOULD be identified with a persistent identifier (e.g. ROR, ISNI, …)
\nSubjects: Records SHOULD specify one or more fields of science from the European Science Vocabulary.
\nAll submissions will undergo automated curation checks for compliance with the policy. Submissions through project communities are reviewed by the project community. Submission directly to the EU Open Research Repository is reviewed by Zenodo staff.
\nCommunity curators may at any point edit metadata of the records in the community without notice through human or automated processing. The curators may at their sole discretion remove records from the community that are deemed not to comply with the content and curation policy or which are deemed of insufficient quality.
\nThe content and curation policy is subject to change by the community owner at any time and without notice, other than through updating this page.
", "description": "Open repository for EU-funded research outputs from Horizon Europe, Euratom and earlier Framework Programmes.", "organizations": [ { "id": "00k4n6c32" } ], "page": "The EU Open Research Repository is a Zenodo-community dedicated to fostering open science and enhancing the visibility and accessibility of research outputs funded by the European Union. The community is managed by CERN on behalf of the European Commission.
\nThe mission of the repository is to support the implementation of the EU's open science policy, providing a trusted and comprehensive space for researchers to share their research outputs such as data, software, reports, presentations, posters and more. The EU Open Research Repository simplifies the process of complying with open science requirements, ensuring that research outputs from Horizon Europe, Euratom, and earlier Framework Programmes are freely accessible, thereby accelerating scientific discovery and innovation.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository serves as a complementary platform to the Open Research Europe (ORE) publishing platform. Open Research Europe focuses on providing a publishing venue for peer-reviewed articles, ensuring that research meets rigorous academic standards. The EU Open Research Repository provides a space for all the other research outputs including data sets, software, posters, and presentations that are out of scope for ORE. This holistic approach enables researchers to not only publish their findings but also share the underlying data and materials that support their work, fostering transparency and reproducibility in the scientific process.
\nCurrently in its pilot phase and set to be fully operational during autumn 2024, the EU Open Research Repository is constantly evolving. Efforts are committed to integrating cutting-edge features, including automated curation checks and FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) assistance, to further support the research community. The goal is to provide researchers with a simple goto solution for making their publicly funded research open and as FAIR as possible.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository is funded by the European Union under grant agreement no. 101122956(HORIZON-ZEN). For more information about the project see https://about.zenodo.org/projects/horizon-zen/.
", "title": "EU Open Research Repository (Pilot)", "type": { "id": "organization" }, "website": "https://research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu" }, "revision_id": 16, "slug": "eu", "theme": { "brand": "horizon", "enabled": true, "style": { "font": { "family": "Arial, sans-serif", "size": "16px", "weight": 600 }, "mainHeaderBackgroundColor": "#FFFFFF", "primaryColor": "#004494", "primaryTextColor": "#FFFFFF", "secondaryColor": "#FFD617", "secondaryTextColor": "#000000", "tertiaryColor": "#e3eefd", "tertiaryTextColor": "#1c5694" } }, "updated": "2024-03-20T06:47:47.577483+00:00" } ], "ids": [ "3d285e66-2e1a-4981-940a-acba0f452458", "7cf0432f-50d3-41c6-b4df-22d447dd41a9", "f0a8b890-f97a-4eb2-9eac-8b8a712d3a6c" ] }, "id": "1247905", "pids": { "doi": { "client": "datacite", "identifier": "10.5281/zenodo.1247905", "provider": "datacite" } } }, "pids": { "doi": { "client": "datacite", "identifier": "10.5281/zenodo.1247906", "provider": "datacite" }, "oai": { "identifier": "oai:zenodo.org:1247906", "provider": "oai" } }, "revision_id": 8, "stats": { "all_versions": { "data_volume": 97938984.0, "downloads": 78, "unique_downloads": 70, "unique_views": 169, "views": 180 }, "this_version": { "data_volume": 95427728.0, "downloads": 76, "unique_downloads": 69, "unique_views": 166, "views": 177 } }, "status": "published", "updated": "2021-03-17T20:47:13.402654+00:00", "versions": { "index": 1, "is_latest": true } }