Ochres were the most common source materials for pigments used in Palaeolithic rock art paintings. This work analyses the petrographic and geochemical signatures of different ochre samples from outcrops inside Tito Bustillo Cave and the Monte Castillo Caves using the most common techniques (petrography, XRD, SEM–EDS and ICP–MS) in archaeological pigment characterization studies. The results obtained permit the identification and characterization of the different source ochre types and, furthermore, allow the establishment of mineralogical and geochemical proxies for the study of questions related to ochre characterization, formation processes and provenance.
Does rock shape matter to the mitigation effects of trees on rockfall hazards? This question must be resolved in order to better quantify the protective role of mountain forests against rockfall. To probe this question we investigate a single rock-tree interaction using non-smooth, hard-contact mechanics that allows us to consider rock shape at impact. The interaction of equant shaped rocks with cylinder-like tree stems is modelled. The equant shaped rocks are close to spherical but have a certain shape variability governed by the rock's surface area ratio and aspect ratio. This work serves as an important follow-up study to the existing investigations from Toe et al. (Landslides 14: 1603(Landslides 14: -1614(Landslides 14: , 2017, where the effects of trees on block propagation are numerically investigated using spherical shaped rocks. The objective of our simulations is to understand how and to what extent, shape will influence energy dissipation and trajectory change. The primary results include: surface area ratio plays a more important role than aspect ratio in determining the rock's post-impact dynamics. The primary parameters governing the rock kinematics after impact (i.e. block's energy reduction, reflected rotational
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