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2015
Marques, A. C., L. Santos, M. N. Costa, J. M. Dantas, P. Duarte, A. Gonçalves, R. Martins, C. A. Salgueiro, and E. Fortunato. "{Office Paper Platform for Bioelectrochromic Detection of Electrochemically Active Bacteria using Tungsten Trioxide Nanoprobes}." Scientific Reports. 5 (2015): 9910. AbstractWebsite

Electrochemically active bacteria (EAB) have the capability to transfer electrons to cell exterior, a feature that is currently explored for important applications in bioremediation and biotechnology fields. However, the number of isolated and characterized EAB species is still very limited regarding their abundance in nature. Colorimetric detection has emerged recently as an attractive mean for fast identification and characterization of analytes based on the use of electrochromic materials. In this work, WO3 nanoparticles were synthesized by microwave assisted hydrothermal synthesis and used to impregnate non-treated regular office paper substrates. This allowed the production of a paper-based colorimetric sensor able to detect EAB in a simple, rapid, reliable, inexpensive and eco-friendly method. The developed platform was then tested with Geobacter sulfurreducens, as a proof of concept. G. sulfurreducens cells were detected at latent phase with an RGB ratio of 1.10 ± 0.04, and a response time of two hours.

Machado, J., J. Adamczewski-Musch, A. Blanco, K. Boretzky, P. Cabanelas, L. Cartegni, Ferreira R. Marques, P. Fonte, J. Fruehauf, D. Galaviz, M. Heil, A. Henriques, G. Ickert, D. Körper, L. Lopes, M. Palka, A. Pereira, D. Rossi, H. Simon, P. Teubig, M. Traxler, P. Velho, S. Altstadt, L. Atar, T. Aumann, D. Bemmerer, C. Caesar, A. Charpy, Z. Elekes, E. Fiori, I. Gasparic, J. Gerbig, K. Göbel, T. Heftrich, M. Heine, A. Heinz, M. Holl, A. Ignatov, J. Isaak, H. Johansson, A. Kelic-Heil, C. Lederer, S. Lindberg, B. Löher, J. Marganiec, M. Martensson, T. Nilsson, V. Panin, S. Paschalis, M. Petri, R. Plag, M. Pohl, G. Rastrepina, R. Reifarth, T. P. Reinhardt, M. Röder, D. Savran, H. Scheit, P. Schrock, J. Silva, D. Stach, F. Strannerdahl, R. Thies, A. Wagner, F. Wamers, and M. Weigand. "{Performance of timing Resistive Plate Chambers with protons from 200 to 800 MeV}." Journal of Instrumentation. 10 (2015): C01043. AbstractWebsite
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Santos, Lídia, Daniela Nunes, Tomás Calmeiro, Rita Branquinho, Daniela Salgueiro, Pedro Barquinha, LuÍs Pereira, Rodrigo Martins, and Elvira Fortunato. "{Solvothermal synthesis of gallium-indium-zinc-oxide nanoparticles for electrolyte-gated transistors.}." ACS applied materials {&} interfaces. 7 (2015): 638-46. AbstractWebsite

Solution-processed field-effect transistors are strategic building blocks when considering low-cost sustainable flexible electronics. Nevertheless, some challenges (e.g., processing temperature, reliability, reproducibility in large areas, and cost effectiveness) are requirements that must be surpassed in order to achieve high-performance transistors. The present work reports electrolyte-gated transistors using as channel layer gallium-indium-zinc-oxide nanoparticles produced by solvothermal synthesis combined with a solid-state electrolyte based on aqueous dispersions of vinyl acetate stabilized with cellulose derivatives, acrylic acid ester in styrene and lithium perchlorate. The devices fabricated using this approach display a ION/IOFF up to 1 × 10(6), threshold voltage (VTh) of 0.3-1.9 V, and mobility up to 1 cm(2)/(V s), as a function of gallium-indium-zinc-oxide ink formulation and two different annealing temperatures. These results validates the usage of electrolyte-gated transistors as a viable and promising alternative for nanoparticle based semiconductor devices as the electrolyte improves the interface and promotes a more efficient step coverage of the channel layer, reducing the operating voltage when compared with conventional dielectrics gating. Moreover, it is shown that by controlling the applied gate potential, the operation mechanism of the electrolyte-gated transistors can be modified from electric double layer to electrochemical doping.

Pavan, Michele, Sven R??hle, Adam Ginsburg, David A. Keller, Hannah-Noa Noa Barad, Paolo M. Sberna, Daniela Nunes, Rodrigo Martins, Assaf Y. Anderson, Arie Zaban, Elvira Fortunato, Sven Rühle, Adam Ginsburg, David A. Keller, Hannah-Noa Noa Barad, Paolo M. Sberna, Daniela Nunes, Rodrigo Martins, Assaf Y. Anderson, Arie Zaban, and Elvira Fortunato. "{TiO2/Cu2O all-oxide heterojunction solar cells produced by spray pyrolysis}." Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells. 132 (2015): 549-556. AbstractWebsite

Here we present for the first time a TiO2/Cu2O all-oxide heterojunction solar cell entirely produced by spray pyrolysis onto fluorine doped tin oxide (FTO) covered glass substrates, using silver as a back contact. A combinatorial approach was chosen to investigate the impact of the TiO2 window layer and the Cu2O light absorber thicknesses. We observe an open circuit voltage up to 350 mV and a short circuit current density which is strongly dependent of the Cu2O thickness, reaching a maximum of {\~{}}0.4 mA/cm2. Optical investigation reveals that a thickness of 300 nm spray pyrolysis deposited Cu2O is sufficient to absorb most photons with an energy above the symmetry allowed optical transition of 2.5 eV, indicating that the low current densities are caused by strong recombination in the absorber that consists of small Cu2O grains.

Nunes, Daniela, Lidia Santos, Paulo Duarte, Ana Pimentel, Joana V. Pinto, Pedro Barquinha, Patricia A. Carvalho, Elvira Fortunato, and Rodrigo Martins. "Room Temperature Synthesis of Cu2O Nanospheres: Optical Properties and Thermal Behavior." Microscopy and Microanalysis. 21 (2015): 108-119. AbstractWebsite
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Branquinho, Rita, Daniela Salgueiro, Ana Santa, Asal Kiazadeh, Pedro Barquinha, Luis Pereira, Rodrigo Martins, and Elvira Fortunato. "Towards environmental friendly solution-based ZTO/AlOx TFTs." Semiconductor Science and Technology. 30 (2015). AbstractWebsite
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Blanco, A., J. Adamczewski-Musch, K. Boretzky, P. Cabanelas, L. Cartegni, Ferreira R. Marques, P. Fonte, J. Fruehauf, D. Galaviz, M. Heil, A. Henriques, G. Ickert, D. Körper, L. Lopes, M. Palka, A. Pereira, D. Rossi, H. Simon, P. Teubig, M. Traxler, P. Velho, S. Altstadt, L. Atar, T. Aumann, D. Bemmerer, C. Caesar, A. Charpy, Z. Elekes, E. Fiori, I. Gasparic, J. Gerbig, K. Göbel, T. Heftrich, M. Heine, A. Heinz, M. Holl, A. Ignatov, J. Isaak, H. Johansson, A. Kelic-Heil, C. Lederer, S. Lindberg, B. Löher, J. Machado, J. Marganiec, M. Martensson, T. Nilsson, V. Panin, S. Paschalis, M. Petri, R. Plag, M. Pohl, G. Rastrepina, R. Reifarth, T. P. Reinhardt, M. Röder, D. Savran, H. Scheit, P. Schrock, J. Silva, D. Stach, F. Strannerdahl, R. Thies, A. Wagner, F. Wamers, and M. Weigand. "{Performance of timing resistive plate chambers with relativistic neutrons from 300 to 1500 MeV}." Journal of Instrumentation. 10 (2015): C02034. AbstractWebsite
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Wojcik, Pawel Jerzy, Lidia Santos, Luis Pereira, Rodrigo Martins, and Elvira Fortunato. "{Tailoring nanoscale properties of tungsten oxide for inkjet printed electrochromic devices.}." Nanoscale. 7 (2015): 1696-708. AbstractWebsite

This paper focuses on the engineering procedures governing the synthesis of tungsten oxide nanocrystals and the formulation of printable dispersions for electrochromic applications. By that means, we aim to stress the relevancy of a proper design strategy that results in improved physicochemical properties of nanoparticle loaded inks. In the present study inkjet printable nanostructured tungsten oxide particles were successfully synthesized via hydrothermal processes using pure or acidified aqueous sol-gel precursors. Based on the proposed scheme, the structure and morphology of the nanoparticles were tailored to ensure the desired printability and electrochromic performance. The developed nanomaterials with specified structures effectively improved the electrochemical response of printed films, resulting in 2.5 times higher optical modulation and 2 times faster coloration time when compared with pure amorphous films.

Amaro, Pedro, Filippo Fratini, Laleh Safari, Aldo Antognini, Paul Indelicato, Randolf Pohl, and Jose Paulo Santos. "Quantum interference shifts in laser spectroscopy with elliptical polarization." Physical Review A. 92 (2015): 062506-5. AbstractWebsite
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Morais, Ana Rita C., Joana Vaz Pinto, Daniela Nunes, Luísa B. Roseiro, Maria Conceição Oliveira, Elvira Fortunato, and Rafał Bogel-Łukasik. "{Imidazole: Prospect Solvent for Lignocellulosic Biomass Fractionation and Delignification}." ACS Sustainable Chemistry {&} Engineering (2015). AbstractWebsite
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Amaro, Pedro, Beatrice Franke, Julian J. Krauth, Marc Diepold, Filippo Fratini, Laleh Safari, Jorge Machado, Aldo Antognini, Franz Kottmann, Paul Indelicato, Randolf Pohl, and Jose Paulo Santos. "Quantum interference effects in laser spectroscopy of muonic hydrogen, deuterium, and helium-3." Physical Review A. 92 (2015): 022514-7. AbstractWebsite
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Guerra, M., S. C. Pé-Leve Santos, A. M. E. Barroso, C. P. S. Fonseca, M. Eloy Cruz, P. Amaro, J. L. Figueirinhas, M. L. Carvalho, and J. P. Santos. "Spatially resolved determination of toxic trace elements in plants of Panasqueira mining region using micro X-ray fluorescence." Microscopy and Microanalysis. 21 (2015): 54-55. AbstractWebsite
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Amaro, Pedro, Beatrice Franke, Julian J. Krauth, Marc Diepold, Filippo Fratini, Laleh Safari, Jorge Machado, Aldo Antognini, Franz Kottmann, Paul Indelicato, Randolf Pohl, and José Paulo Santos. "{Quantum interference effects in laser spectroscopy of muonic hydrogen, deuterium, and helium-3}." Physical Review A. 92 (2015): 022514. AbstractWebsite
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Foth, Christian, Serjoscha W. Evers, Ben Pabst, Octávio Mateus, Alexander Flisch, Mike Patthey, and Oliver W. M. Rauhut. "New insights into the lifestyle of \\textitAllosaurus (Dinosauria: Theropoda) based on another specimen with multiple pathologies." PeerJ. 3 (2015): e940. AbstractWebsite

Adult large-bodied theropods are often found with numerous pathologies. A large, almost complete, probably adult \\textitAllosaurus specimen from the Howe Stephens Quarry, Morrison Formation (Late Kimmeridgian–Early Tithonian), Wyoming, exhibits multiple pathologies. Pathologic bones include the left dentary, two cervical vertebrae, one cervical and several dorsal ribs, the left scapula, the left humerus, the right ischium, and two left pedal phalanges. These pathologies can be classified as follows: the fifth cervical vertebra, the scapula, several ribs and the ischium are probably traumatic, and a callus on the shaft of the left pedal phalanx II-2 is probably traumatic-infectious. Traumatically fractured elements exposed to frequent movement (e.g., the scapula and the ribs) show a tendency to develop pseudarthroses instead of a callus. The pathologies in the lower jaw and a reduced extensor tubercle of the left pedal phalanx II-2 are most likely traumatic or developmental in origin. The pathologies on the fourth cervical are most likely developmental in origin or idiopathic, that on the left humerus could be traumatic, developmental, infectious or idiopathic, whereas the left pedal phalanx IV-1 is classified as idiopathic. With exception of the ischium, all as traumatic/traumatic-infectious classified pathologic elements show unambiguous evidences of healing, indicating that the respective pathologies did not cause the death of this individual. Alignment of the scapula and rib pathologies from the left side suggests that all may have been caused by a single traumatic event. The ischial fracture may have been fatal. The occurrence of multiple lesions interpreted as traumatic pathologies again underlines that large-bodied theropods experienced frequent injuries during life, indicating an active predatory lifestyle, and their survival perhaps supports a gregarious behavior for \\textitAllosaurus. Alternatively, the frequent survival of traumatic events could be also related to the presence of non-endothermic metabolic rates that allow survival based on sporadic food consumption or scavenging behavior. Signs of pathologies consistent with infections are scarce and locally restricted, indicating a successful prevention of the spread of pathogens, as it is the case in extant reptiles (including birds).

Ameller, David, Xavier Franch, Cristina Gómez, João Araújo, Richard Berntsson Svensson, Stefan Biffl, Jordi Cabot, Vittorio Cortellessa, Maya Daneva, Daniel Mendez Fernández, Ana Moreira, Henry Muccini, Antonio Vallecillo, Manuel Wimmer, Vasco Amaral, Hugo Brunelière, Loli Burgueño, Miguel Goulão, Bernhard Schätz, and Sabine Teufl. "Handling Non-Functional Requirements in Model-Driven Development: An Ongoing Industrial Survey." 23rd International Conference on Requirements Engineering (RE'15) - RE: Next! Ottawa, Canada: IEEE Computer Society, 2015.
Ghisolfi, A., F. Condello, C. Fliedel, V. Rosa, and P. Braunstein. "Facile and Room-Temperature Activation of Csp3-Cl Bonds by Cheap and Air-Stable Nickel(II) Complexes of (N-Thioether) DPPA-Type Ligands." Organometallics. 34.11 (2015): 2255-2260. AbstractWebsite
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Foth, Christian, Serjoscha Evers, Ben Pabst, Octávio Mateus, Alexander Flisch, Mike Patthey, and Oliver W. M. Rauhut. "New insights into the lifestyle of Allosaurus (Dinosauria: Theropoda) based on another specimen with multiple pathologies." PeerJ PrePrints. 3 (2015): e824v1. Abstractfoth_et_al_2015_peerj-preprints-824.pdfWebsite

Adult large-bodied theropods are often found with numerous pathologies. A large, almost complete, probably adult Allosaurus specimen from the Howe Stephens Quarry, Morrison Formation (Late Kimmeridgian–Early Tithonian), Wyoming, shows multiple pathologies. Pathologic bones include the left dentary, two cervical vertebrae, one cervical and several dorsal ribs, the left scapula, the left humerus, right ischium, and two left pedal phalanges. These pathologies can be classified as follows: the fifth cervical vertebra, the scapula, several ribs and the ischium are traumatic, and a callus on the shaft of the left pedal phalanx II-2 is traumatic-infectious. Traumatically fractured elements exposed to frequent movement (e.g. the scapula and the ribs) show a tendency to develop pseudarthroses instead of callus healing. The pathologies in the lower jaw and a reduced flexor tubercle of the left pedal phalanx II-2 are most likely traumatic or developmental in origin. The pathologies on the fourth cervical are most likely developmental in origin or idiopathic, that on the left humerus is infectious or idiopathic, whereas left pedal phalanx IV-1 is classified as idiopathic. With exception of the ischium, all traumatic / traumatic-infectious pathologic elements show unambiguous evidences of healing, indicating that the respective pathologies did not cause the death of this individual. Alignment of the scapula and rib pathologies from the left side suggests that all may have been caused by a single traumatic event. The ischial fracture may have been fatal. The occurrence of multiple traumatic pathologies again underlines that large-bodied theropods experienced frequent injuries during life, indicating an active predatory lifestyle, and their survival perhaps supports a gregarious behavior for Allosaurus. Signs of infections are scarce and locally restricted, indicating a successful prevention of the spread of pathogens, as it is the case in extant reptiles (including birds).

Pereira, Pedro, Fábio Passos, and Helena M. Fino. "Optimization-Based Design of RF-VCOs with Tapered Inductors." Performance Optimization Techniques in Analog, Mixed-Signal, and Radio-Frequency Circuit Design. Eds. Mourad Fakhfakh, Esteban Tlelo-Cuautle, and Maria Helena Fino. Hershey, PA, USA: IGI Global, 2015. 134-157. Abstract

Voltage-Controlled Oscillators (VCOs) are widely used in wireless transceivers. Due to the stringent specifications regarding phase-noise, LC-VCOs are usually adopted. The need for maximizing phase-noise as well as minimizing the power consumption makes imperious the adoption of optimization-based design methodologies. For the optimization of the LC-VCO characteristics, special attention must be paid to the integrated inductor design, since its quality factor may have a strong influence in the LC-VCO phase-noise. Furthermore, designers must ensure that the higher limit of VCO operating frequency is sufficiently below the inductor resonant frequency. In this chapter, a study on the influence of the quality factor of the inductors on the LC-VCO overall behavior is presented. Then, optimization of integrated inductors by exploring the inductor geometric layout is presented. Finally, results obtained for the design of an LC-VCO in 130nm Technology using a previously optimized inductor are presented.

Fliedel, C., V. Rosa, F. M. Alves, A. M. Martins, T. Avilés, and S. Dagorne. "P,O-Phosphinophenolate zinc(ii) species: Synthesis, structure and use in the ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of lactide, ε-caprolactone and trimethylene carbonate." Dalton Transactions. 44.27 (2015): 12376-12387. AbstractWebsite
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Nunes, D., A. Pimentel, JV Pinto, T. R. Calmeiro, S. Nandy, P. Barquinha, L. Pereira, P. A. Carvalho, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "Photocatalytic behavior of TiO2 films synthesized by microwave irradiation." Catalysis Today (2015). AbstractWebsite

Titanium dioxide was synthesized on glass substrates from titanium (IV)isopropoxide and hydrochloride acid aqueous solutions through microwave irradiation using as seed layer either fluorine-doped crystalline tin oxide (SnO2:F) or amorphous tin oxide (a-SnOx). Three routes have been followed with distinct outcome: (i) equimolar hydrochloride acid/water proportions (1HCl:1water) resulted in nanorod arrays for both seed layers; (ii) higher water proportion (1HCl:3water) originated denser films with growth yield dependent on the seed layer employed; while (iii) higher acid proportion (3HCl:1water) hindered the formation of TiO2. X-ray diffraction (XRD) showed that the materials crystallized with the rutile structure, possibly with minute fractions of brookite and/or anatase. XRD peak inversions observed for the materials synthesized on crystalline seeds pointed to preferred crystallographic orientation. Electron diffraction showed that the especially strong XRD peak inversions observed for TiO2 grown from the 1HCl:3water solution on SnO2:F originated from a [001] fiber texture. Transmittance spectrophotometry showed that the materials with finer structure exhibited significantly higher optical band gaps. Photocatalytic activity was assessed from methylene blue degradation, with the 1HCl:3water SnO2:F material showing remarkable degradability performance, attributed to a higher exposure of (001) facets, together with stability and reusability.

Kauf, T., V. Rosa, C. Fliedel, R. Pattacini, N. Deibel, T. Avilés, B. Sarkar, and P. Braunstein. "Reactivity of TCNE and TCNQ derivatives of quinonoid zwitterions with Cu(I)." Dalton Transactions. 44.12 (2015): 5441-5450. AbstractWebsite
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Nunes, D., L. Santos, P. Duarte, A. Pimentel, JV Pinto, P. Barquinha, P. A. Carvalho, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "Room Temperature Synthesis of Cu2O Nanospheres: Optical Properties and Thermal Behavior." Microscopy and Microanalysis. 21.01 (2015): 11. Abstract

The present work reports a simple and easy wet chemistry synthesis of cuprous oxide (Cu2O) nanospheres at room temperature without surfactants and using different precursors. Structural characterization was carried out by X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy coupled with focused ion beam and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. The optical band gaps were determined from diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. The photoluminescence behavior of the as-synthesized nanospheres showed significant differences depending on the precursors used. The Cu2O nanospheres were constituted by aggregates of nanocrystals, in which an on/off emission behavior of each individual nanocrystal was identified during transmission electron microscopy observations. The thermal behavior of the Cu2O nanospheres was investigated with in situ X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry experiments. Remarkable structural differences were observed for the nanospheres annealed in air, which turned into hollow spherical structures surrounded by outsized nanocrystals. FAU - Nunes, Daniela

Santos, Lídia, Pawel Wojcik, Joana V. Pinto, Elamurugu Elangovan, Jaime Viegas, LuÍs Pereira, Rodrigo Martins, and Elvira Fortunato. "Structure and Morphologic Influence of WO3 Nanoparticles on the Electrochromic Performance of Dual-Phase a-WO3/WO3 Inkjet Printed Films." Advanced Electronic Materials (2015): n/a-n/a. AbstractWebsite

The optimization of tungsten trioxide (WO3) nanoparticles produced via hydrothermal synthesis for application in electrochromic (EC) devices is reported. The structure and morphology of the nanoparticles are controlled by changing the acidity of the aqueous solvent added to the sol-gel precursor (peroxopolytungstic acid) during synthesis. Orthorhombic hydrated WO3 nanorods or monoclinic WO3 nanoslabs are obtained when HCl is added, while synthesis only in aqueous medium results in a mixture of both types of polymorphs. Dual-phase thin films are processed by inkjet printing deposition of the nanoparticles in flexible polyethylene terephthalate substrate with indium tin oxide coating (ITO PET) followed by the deposition of the precursor solution. When compared with purely amorphous tungsten oxide films, the dual phase ones present higher optical densities and improved capacity, and cyclability stability. The best results, obtained for orthorhombic hydrated nanoparticles (ortho-WO3·0.33H2O), are due to its high surface area and improved conductivity. Additionally, the ex situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) lithiation studies show evidence of a higher distortion of the monoclinic when compared with the orthorhombic crystallographic structure, which contribute to the inferior EC performance. These results validate the use of inkjet printing deposition with low processing temperatures for EC dual-phase thin films containing optimized nanoparticles which are compatible with low-cost substrates.

Strganac, C., LL Jacobs, M. J. Polcyn, KM Ferguson, O. Mateus, Olímpio A. Gonçalves, M. - L. Morais, and T. da Silva Tavares. "Stable oxygen isotope chemostratigraphy and paleotemperature regime of mosasaurs at Bentiaba, Angola." Netherlands Journal of Geosciences. FirstView (2015): 1-7. Abstractstrganac_etal2015_stable_oxigen_isotopes.pdfWebsite

ABSTRACT Stable oxygen isotope values of inoceramid marine bivalve shells recovered from Bentiaba, Angola, are utilised as a proxy for paleotemperatures during the Late Cretaceous development of the African margin of the South Atlantic Ocean. The δ18O values derived from inoceramids show a long-term increase from –3.2‰ in the Late Turonian to values between –0.8 and –1.8‰ in the Late Campanian. Assuming a constant oceanic δ18O value, an ∼2‰ increase may reflect cooling of the shallow marine environment at Bentiaba by approximately 10°. Bentiaba values are offset by about +1‰ from published records for bathyal Inoceramus at Walvis Ridge. This offset in δ18O values suggests a temperature difference of ∼5° between coastal and deeper water offshore Angola. Cooler temperatures implied by the δ18O curve at Bentiaba coincide with the stratigraphic distribution of diverse marine amniotes, including mosasaurs, at Bentiaba.