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result(s) for
"Kácha, Petr"
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Organisms Attached to Conulariid Thecae from the Upper Ordovician of the Barrandian Area (Czech Republic)
2023
In the middle Sandbian and lower Katian (Upper Ordovician) rocks of the Barrandian area, the fossil remains of conulariids are relatively abundant. Their thecae were sometimes used as solid surfaces for the attachment of epizoans, mostly craniid brachiopods of the genus Petrocrania, more rarely also echinoderms Hemicystites and Agelacrinites, and bryozoans Ceramopora and Spatiopora. The orientation of shells of Petrocrania suggests that conulariids (mostly belonging to the genus Archaeconularia) were dead at the time of the brachiopod attachment, their thecae were partly fragmentary and secondarily replaced. A find of Pseudoconularia grandissima attached to the theca of the cystoid Codiacystis is also reported.
Journal Article
Accumulations of Fossil Cephalopod Shells and Attached Epizoans from Some Late Ordovician Localities (Barrandian Area, Czech Republic)
by
Kácha, Petr
,
Marek, Jaroslav
,
Šarič, Radko
in
Katian
,
Letná Formation
,
orthoconic cephalopods
2023
As yet undescribed accumulations of shells of orthoconic cephalopods, which are in some aspects comparable to cephalopod limestones known from the Silurian and Lower Devonian of the Barrandian area and other regions of the world, occur in the Letná and Zahořany formations (middle Sandbian and lower Katian stages, Upper Ordovician, central Bohemia). These accumulated shells are often colonized by sessile organisms. Only a small proportion of these organisms could be attached to shells of alive cephalopods; the majority of them used empty shells as solid substrates. The most abundant epizoan is the cystosporate bryozoan of the genus Ceramopora that often overgrows the cephalopod shells extensively. Holdfasts of the genus Sphenothallus and problematic fossils assigned to the genus Conchicolites are common. Rarer epibionts include the bryozoan Spatiopora, the cystoid echinoderm Codiacystis and the brachiopod Ptychopeltis. Varying sizes of bryozoan colonies occurring on the same cephalopod shell point to several recurring attachment events, probably reflecting reproduction cycles.
Journal Article
Fire Safety and Impact and Frost Resistance of Basalt Fiber-Reinforced Polysiloxane Matrix Composite Processed under Partial Pyrolysis Conditions
by
Strachota, Adam
,
Ševčík, Libor
,
Černý, Martin
in
Basalt
,
Chemical properties
,
Composite materials
2024
The study focuses on developing a fiber-reinforced composite that would exhibit good mechanical properties and climate resistance, and fire safety parameters would surpass commonly used fiber-reinforced polymers. The subject of development is a polysiloxane thermoset matrix reinforced with basalt fibers, which is processed by partial pyrolysis at 650 °C after curing. The heat release rate test showed virtually zero heat released, and the toxicity test showed only a very low amount of carbon monoxide. The flammability test showed no ignition, no radiation, and no glow. Composites for mechanical tests were prepared in three variants differing in the distribution of reinforcement. Due to the intended use of the composite for thin-walled panels or shells of buildings, the mechanical properties were compared in identical tests with fiber cement plates. The flexural strength of the composites was 3 to 10 times, and the impact energy was 10 to 100 times higher than the values measured on fiber cement, depending on the type and orientation of the composite. The flexural strength measured after 240 freeze–thaw conditioning cycles is higher than fiber cement by 1.3 to 2 times. The climate resistance of the composite should be the subject of further development.
Journal Article