04139 am 2201069 n 450 9910305146103321201809032-86580-256-610.4000/books.insep.1754(CKB)4100000007463777(FrMaCLE)OB-insep-1754(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/54962(PPN)234056126(EXLCZ)99410000000746377720190111j|||||||| ||| 0enguu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierNutrition and Performance in Sport Science at the Tip of the Fork /Christophe HausswirthParis INSEP-Éditions20181 online resource (476 p.) 2-86580-229-9 How to recover properly with food? How to eat during a trip abroad or during a training course in altitude? What to do to preserve your bone health? How to conciliate the ramadan and the training? How to lose weight cleverly? What sugars? What proteins?... As regards nutrition, athletes and their coaches ask themselves a lot of questions, and each of them deserves a clear answer! This is the main objective of this book, which gathered the world's greatest specialists of sports nutrition in order to bring the eagerly expected answers... Indeed, when the competition is tighter than ever, empiricism is no longer enough: the victory, which always depends on minute subtleties, requires rational choices, especially regarding food. And if sports victory is a legitimate aim, it should not be pursued at the expense of health: even today, athletes still put it at stake. Thereby, this is the second objective of this book: learning how to conciliate performance and body respect...Hospitality Leisure Sport & Tourismsportrecherchesanténutritionalimentationperformanceméthodehaut niveauéquilibrebalanceresearchhealthnutritionperformancebalancehealthsportresearchHospitality Leisure Sport & Tourismsportrecherchesanténutritionalimentationperformanceméthodehaut niveauéquilibrebalanceresearchhealthBaker Lindsay1300407Bigard Xavier1300408Boisseau Nathalie1300409Burke Louise M1300410Cox Gregory R1300411Durand Fabienne1300412Fosse Amélie1300413Guezennec Charles-Yannick1300414Hausswirth Christophe1300415Hawley John A175947Hercberg Serge1299677Heulin Axel1300416Jeukendrup Asker1300417Lenôtre École1300418Le Meur Yann1300419Louis Julien1300420Macnaughton Lindsay S1300421Malgoyre Alexandra1300422Maughan RJ1300423Meeusen Romain1300424Meur Yann Le1300425Mujika Iñigo1300426Nieman David C1300427Roelands Bart1300428Rousseau Véronique1300429Shirreffs Susan M1300430Tiollier Eve1300431Tipton Kevin D1300432Vincenzi Jean-Pierre de1300433Hausswirth Christophe1300415FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910305146103321Nutrition and Performance in Sport3025538UNINA03932oam 22006494a 450 991077899290332120221028180646.00-8173-8364-60-585-16398-7(CKB)111004368624176(EBL)547632(OCoLC)648711524(SSID)ssj0000111049(PQKBManifestationID)11137667(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000111049(PQKBWorkID)10074957(PQKB)10108666(OCoLC)44955169(MdBmJHUP)muse9129(MiAaPQ)EBC547632(EXLCZ)9911100436862417619940318d1995 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrBeyond subsistence[electronic resource] Plains archaeology and the postprocessual critique /edited by Philip Duke and Michael C. WilsonTuscaloosa University of Alabama Pressc19951 online resource (320 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-8173-0799-0 Includes bibliographical references (p. [241]-283) and index.Contents; Preface; Introduction: Postprocessualism and Plains Archaeology; Part I: Conceptual and Theoretical Perspectives; 1. Processual and Postprocessual Archaeology: A Brief Critical Review; 2. We Do Not Need Your Past! Politics, Indian Time, and Plains Archaeology; 3. Beyond Hearth and Home on the Range: Feminist Approaches to Plains Archaeology; 4. Taxonomic Determinism in Evolutionary Theory: Another Model of Multilinear Cultural Evolution with an Example from the Plains; 5. Predictive Modeling and Cultural Resource Management: An Alternative View from the Plains PeripheryPart II: Building Alternative Archaeologies6. Social and Political Causes for the Emergence of Intensive Agriculture in Eastern North America; 7. Great Plains Mound Building: A Postprocessual View; 8. Sing Away the Buffalo: Faction and Fission on the Northern Plains; 9. The Household as a Portable Mnemonic Landscape: Archaeological Implications for Plains Stone Circle Sites; 10. Medicine Wheels on the Northern Plains: Contexts, Codes, and Symbols; 11. Projectile Points as Cultural Symbols: Ethnography and Archaeology; Part III: Commentary; 12. Paradigm in the Rough13. Fighting Back on the PlainsReferences; Contributors; IndexThis volume presents a series of essays, written by Plains scholars of diverse research interests and backgrounds, that apply postprocessual approaches to the solution of current problems in Plains archaeology. Postprocessual archaeology is seen as a potential vehicle for integrating culture-historical, processual, and postmodernist approaches to solve specific archaeological problems. The contributors address specific interpretive problems in all the major regions of the North American Plains, investigate different Plains societies (including hunter-gatherers and farmers and tEnvironmental archaeologyGreat PlainsPhilosophySocial archaeologyGreat PlainsPhilosophyIndians of North AmericaGreat PlainsAntiquitiesIndians of North AmericaGreat PlainsSocial conditionsGreat PlainsAntiquitiesPostprocessual archaeology.Environmental archaeologyPhilosophy.Social archaeologyPhilosophy.Indians of North AmericaAntiquities.Indians of North AmericaSocial conditions.978.200497978/.00497Wilson Michael1948-1486270Duke P. G886377MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910778992903321Beyond subsistence3705699UNINA