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Ana Z. Miller

Researcher at University of Évora

Publications -  124
Citations -  2696

Ana Z. Miller is an academic researcher from University of Évora. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cave & Cultural heritage. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 109 publications receiving 1941 citations. Previous affiliations of Ana Z. Miller include Universidade Nova de Lisboa & Spanish National Research Council.

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Bioreceptivity of building stones: a review.

TL;DR: It is suggested that a standardized laboratory protocol for evaluating stone bioreceptivity and definition of a stone biOREceptivity index are required to enable creation of a database on the primary bioreCEPTivity of stone materials.
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Biodiversity of cyanobacteria and green algae on monuments in the Mediterranean Basin: an overview

TL;DR: The results suggest that cyanobacteria and chlorophyta colonize a wide variety of substrata and that this is related primarily to the physical characteristics of the stone surface, microclimate and environmental conditions and secondarily to the lithotype.
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Effects of aging under field conditions on biochar structure and composition: Implications for biochar stability in soils.

TL;DR: This study aimed at illustrating the qualitative alterations of five different BCs aged during a 24-month field experiment located in Southwest Spain, revealing that BC recalcitrance was much lower than expected and, within the range of decades.
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Relating physical and chemical properties of four different biochars and their application rate to biomass production of Lolium perenne on a Calcic Cambisol during a pot experiment of 79 days

TL;DR: Considering costs due to production and transport of biochar, for all used chars with the exception of B3, the application of 10 t ha(-1) turned out as the most efficient for the crop and soil used in the present incubation experiment.
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Actinobacterial Diversity in Volcanic Caves and Associated Geomicrobiological Interactions.

TL;DR: The diversity was shown to be dominated by Actinomycetales, but also included several newly described orders, such as Euzebyales, and Gaiellales, which supports the commonly held belief that volcanic caves are an untapped resource for novel and rare Actinobacteria.