From 1994 the museum publishes a periodical scientific journal, Studi e Ricerche, as well as a series of monographs and articles of a naturalistic or archaeological interest.
Each year the Editorial Committee evaluates the publication of original contributions of high scientific value. Unpublished works in the field of natural sciences and archaeology are considered for publication, with preference for those pertinent to the Veneto region and in particular the area of Vicenza.
A maximum of 2 articles per Author/Co-Author will be considered for publication. The papers are first evaluated by the Editorial Board of the Journal, which submits them to peer review by external experts. Articles that do not respect the relevance of the journal or are clearly far from the quality standards of the Journal, may be directly rejected by the Editorial Board. The publication does not involve any cost for the Authors.
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Articles Database
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2022
Battiston R; Caneva A
Il primo Yacaré storia naturale e culturale del rapporto tra uomini e caimani tra Nuovo e Vecchio Mondo Journal Article
In: Studi e Ricerche, vol. 29, pp. 35-42, 2022, ISSN: 1127-3100.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: anthropology, conservation, crocodiles, education, history of science, iconographyn
@article{nokey,
title = {Il primo Yacaré storia naturale e culturale del rapporto tra uomini e caimani tra Nuovo e Vecchio Mondo},
author = {Roberto Battiston and Arianna Caneva},
editor = {Associazione Amici del Museo - Museo Civico “G. Zannato”},
url = {https://www.museozannato.it/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Battiston-R-Caneva-A-2022-Il-Primo-Yacare-storia-naturale-e-culturale-del-rapporto-tra-uomini-e-caimani-tra-Nuovo-e-Vecchio-Mondo.pdf},
issn = {1127-3100},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-12-31},
urldate = {2022-12-31},
journal = {Studi e Ricerche},
volume = {29},
pages = {35-42},
abstract = {RIASSUNTO
Viene qui presentata un’analisi diacronica della raffigurazione dei caimani nel Nuovo Mondo e del rapporto di questi animali con le popolazioni locali. Viene proposta una visione d’insieme a partire dalle rappresentazioni mitologiche dell’epoca precolombiana passando per la cartografia cinquecentesca e i diari degli esploratori europei, le descrizioni scientifiche pre e post linneane fino alla situazione culturale e conservazionistica attuale, focalizzandosi sulle aree più meridionali di distribuzione di questi animali. Di particolare interesse risulta infatti il basso corso del fiume Paraná dove si ipotizzano nuovi scenari di incontro e scontro tra caimani in potenziale espansione e sprawl urbano delle aree metropolitane in forte crescita. Vengono identificate ed evidenziate le prime rappresentazioni note di questi animali nell’arte rupestre preistorica americana e la prima immagine non nativa di un yacaré, utili a comprendere l’evoluzione culturale del rapporto tra uomini e caimani. Viene infine valutato il ruolo dei musei e dell’educazione ambientale in questo contesto.
The First Yacaré: natural and cultural history of the relationship between humans and caimans between the Old and New World
ABSTRACT
A diachronic analysis of the depiction of the caimans in the New World and the relationship of these animals with local populations is presented here. An overview, starting from the mythological representations of the pre-Columbian era, passing through sixteenth-century cartography and the diaries of European explorers, pre- and post-Linnean scientific descriptions, up to the current cultural and conservational situation, is given, contextualized with the southernmost areas of distribution of these animals. In fact, of particular interest is the lower part of the Paranȧ River where new scenarios of confrontation between: the potential expansion of caimans and urban sprawl of fast-growing metropolitan areas, are hypothesized. The earliest known representations of these animals in prehistoric American rock art and the first non-native image of a yacaré are identified and evidenced in the understanding of the cultural evolution of the relationship between humans and caimans. Finally, the role of museums and environmental education is discussed in this context. },
keywords = {anthropology, conservation, crocodiles, education, history of science, iconographyn},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Viene qui presentata un’analisi diacronica della raffigurazione dei caimani nel Nuovo Mondo e del rapporto di questi animali con le popolazioni locali. Viene proposta una visione d’insieme a partire dalle rappresentazioni mitologiche dell’epoca precolombiana passando per la cartografia cinquecentesca e i diari degli esploratori europei, le descrizioni scientifiche pre e post linneane fino alla situazione culturale e conservazionistica attuale, focalizzandosi sulle aree più meridionali di distribuzione di questi animali. Di particolare interesse risulta infatti il basso corso del fiume Paraná dove si ipotizzano nuovi scenari di incontro e scontro tra caimani in potenziale espansione e sprawl urbano delle aree metropolitane in forte crescita. Vengono identificate ed evidenziate le prime rappresentazioni note di questi animali nell’arte rupestre preistorica americana e la prima immagine non nativa di un yacaré, utili a comprendere l’evoluzione culturale del rapporto tra uomini e caimani. Viene infine valutato il ruolo dei musei e dell’educazione ambientale in questo contesto.
The First Yacaré: natural and cultural history of the relationship between humans and caimans between the Old and New World
ABSTRACT
A diachronic analysis of the depiction of the caimans in the New World and the relationship of these animals with local populations is presented here. An overview, starting from the mythological representations of the pre-Columbian era, passing through sixteenth-century cartography and the diaries of European explorers, pre- and post-Linnean scientific descriptions, up to the current cultural and conservational situation, is given, contextualized with the southernmost areas of distribution of these animals. In fact, of particular interest is the lower part of the Paranȧ River where new scenarios of confrontation between: the potential expansion of caimans and urban sprawl of fast-growing metropolitan areas, are hypothesized. The earliest known representations of these animals in prehistoric American rock art and the first non-native image of a yacaré are identified and evidenced in the understanding of the cultural evolution of the relationship between humans and caimans. Finally, the role of museums and environmental education is discussed in this context.