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Featured researches published by Fabiana M. Oliveira.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2015

Marine reservoir effect on the Southeastern coast of Brazil: results from the Tarioba shellmound paired samples.

Kita Macario; Rosa Souza; Orangel A. Aguilera; C. Carvalho; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Eduardo Q. Alves; Ingrid S. Chanca; Edson Silva; Katerina Douka; J. Decco; D.C. Trindade; Aguinaldo N. Marques; R. M. Anjos; F.C. Pamplona

On the Southeastern coast of Brazil the presence of many archaeological shellmounds offers a great potential for studying the radiocarbon marine reservoir effect (MRE). However, very few such studies are available for this region. These archaeological settlements, mostly dating from 5 to 2 kyr cal BP, include both terrestrial and marine remains in good stratigraphic context and secure association, enabling the comparison of different carbon reservoirs. In a previous study the chronology of the Sambaqui da Tarioba, located in Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, was established based on marine mollusc shells and charcoal samples from hearths, from several layers in two excavated sectors. We now compare the different materials with the aim of studying the MRE in this region. Calibration was performed with Oxford software OxCal v4.2.3 using the marine curve Marine13 with an undetermined offset to account for local corrections for shell samples, and the atmospheric curve SHCal13 for charcoal samples. The distribution of results considering a phase model indicates a ΔR value of -127 ± 67 (14)C yr in the 1 sigma range and the multi-paired approach leads to a mean value of -110 ± 94 (14)C yr.


Radiocarbon | 2014

Chronological Model of a Brazilian Holocene Shellmound (Sambaqui da Tarioba, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

Kita Macario; Rosa Souza; D.C. Trindade; J. Decco; T. A. Lima; Orangel A. Aguilera; Aguinaldo N. Marques; Eduardo Q. Alves; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Ingrid S. Chanca; C. Carvalho; R. M. Anjos; F.C. Pamplona; Edson Silva

Since the beginning of the Holocene, hunter-gatherers have occupied the central-south Brazilian coast, as it was a very productive estuarine environment. Living as fishers and mollusk gatherers, they built prehistoric shellmounds, known as sambaqui, up to 30 m high, which can still be found today from the Espirito Santo (21°S) to Rio Grande do Sul (32°S) states, constituting an important testimony of paleodiversity and Brazilian prehistory. The chronology of the Sambaqui da Tarioba, situated in Rio das Ostras, Rio de Janeiro, is discussed herein. Selected well-preserved shells of Iphigenia brasiliana and charcoal from fireplaces in sequential layers were used for radiocarbon dating analysis. Based on a statistical model developed using OxCal software, the results indicate that the settlement occupation begun most probably around 3800 cal BP and lasted for up to 5 centuries.


Radiocarbon | 2015

POTENTIAL USE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SNAIL SHELLS FOR THE CALCULATION OF LOCAL MARINE RESERVOIR EFFECT

C. Carvalho; Kita Macario; Maria Isabela Oliveira; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Ingrid S. Chanca; Eduardo Q. Alves; Rosa Souza; Orangel A. Aguilera; Katerina Douka

Shellmounds are archaeological sites found across the Brazilian coast and form an important record of the human occupation of this area during the Holocene. The presence of both terrestrial and marine remains within the same archaeological context enables the comparison of different carbon reservoirs. There is only a small number of similar studies for the coast of south-southeastern Brazil. Previous work was based on the analysis of pre-bomb shells from museum collections and paired charcoal/marine shells from archaeological sites. This article assesses the potential use of terrestrial shells as representative of atmospheric carbon reservoir in the calculation of the marine reservoir effect (MRE) of the southeastern Brazilian coast. The presence of both terrestrial and marine shells over several archaeological layers represents a great potential for calculating reservoir corrections and their temporal variation. DOI: 10.2458/azu_rc.57.18365


Scientific Reports | 2016

The use of the terrestrial snails of the genera Megalobulimus and Thaumastus as representatives of the atmospheric carbon reservoir

Kita Macario; Eduardo Q. Alves; Carla Roberta de Oliveira Carvalho; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; David Chivall; Rosa Souza; Luiz Ricardo L. Simone; Daniel C. Cavallari

In Brazilian archaeological shellmounds, many species of land snails are found abundantly distributed throughout the occupational layers, forming a contextualized set of samples within the sites and offering a potential alternative to the use of charcoal for radiocarbon dating analyses. In order to confirm the effectiveness of this alternative, one needs to prove that the mollusk shells reflect the atmospheric carbon isotopic concentration in the same way charcoal does. In this study, 18 terrestrial mollusk shells with known collection dates from 1948 to 2004 AD, around the nuclear bombs period, were radiocarbon dated. The obtained dates fit the SH1-2 bomb curve within less than 15 years range, showing that certain species from the Thaumastus and Megalobulimus genera are reliable representatives of the atmospheric carbon isotopic ratio and can, therefore, be used to date archaeological sites in South America.


Radiocarbon | 2013

THE BRAZILIAN AMS RADIOCARBON LABORATORY (LAC-UFF) AND THE INTERCOMPARISON OF RESULTS WITH CENA AND UGAMS

Kita Macario; P. R. S. Gomes; R. M. Anjos; Carla R. Carvalho; Roberto Linares; Eduardo Q. Alves; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Maikel D. Castro; Ingrid S. Chanca; M F M Silveira; Luiz Carlos Ruiz Pessenda; L M B Moraes; T B Campos; Alexander Cherkinsky


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2015

Advances in the graphitization protocol at the Radiocarbon Laboratory of the Universidade Federal Fluminense (LAC-UFF) in Brazil

Kita Macario; Fabiana M. Oliveira; C. Carvalho; Guaciara M. Santos; Xiaomei Xu; Ingrid S. Chanca; Eduardo Q. Alves; Renata M. Jou; Maria Isabela Oliveira; Bruna B. Pereira; Vinicius N. Moreira; Marcelo Costa Muniz; Roberto Linares; P. R. S. Gomes; R. M. Anjos; Maikel D. Castro; Leandro dos Anjos; Aguinaldo N. Marques; Luiz Augusto F. Rodrigues


Quaternary Geochronology | 2015

Radiocarbon reservoir corrections on the Brazilian coast from pre-bomb marine shells

Eduardo Q. Alves; Kita Macario; Rosa Souza; Alexandre Dias Pimenta; Katerina Douka; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Ingrid S. Chanca; Rodolfo José Angulo


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2014

Understanding Holocene variations in the vegetation of Sao Joao River basin, southeastern coast of Brazil, using phytolith and carbon isotopic analyses

Heloisa Helena Gomes Coe; Kita Macario; Jenifer Garcia Gomes; Fabiana M. Oliveira; P. R. S. Gomes; Carla R. Carvalho; Roberto Linares; Eduardo Q. Alves; Guaciara M. Santos


Radiocarbon | 2015

MARINE RESERVOIR CORRECTIONS ON THE SOUTHEASTERN COAST OF BRAZIL: PAIRED SAMPLES FROM THE SAQUAREMA SHELLMOUND

Eduardo Q. Alves; Kita Macario; Rosa Souza; Orangel A. Aguilera; Ana Carolina Goulart; Rita Scheel-Ybert; Caroline Bachelet; C. Carvalho; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Katerina Douka


Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy | 2009

Methylmercury determination using a hyphenated high performance liquid chromatography ultraviolet cold vapor multipath atomic absorption spectrometry system

Reinaldo Calixto de Campos; Rodrigo A. Gonçalves; Geisamanda Pedrini Brandão; Marlo S. Azevedo; Fabiana M. Oliveira; Julio Cesar Wasserman

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Kita Macario

Federal Fluminense University

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Eduardo Q. Alves

Federal Fluminense University

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Ingrid S. Chanca

Federal Fluminense University

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Rosa Souza

Federal Fluminense University

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C. Carvalho

Federal Fluminense University

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Orangel A. Aguilera

Federal Fluminense University

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P. R. S. Gomes

Federal Fluminense University

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R. M. Anjos

Federal Fluminense University

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Roberto Linares

Federal Fluminense University

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