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Antiquity 322

Auteur--

EditorCarver M.De Saegher R.

Jaar2009

PublicatietypeAflevering

SerieAntiquity

Volume322

Subtitel--

Pagina’s899-1245

UitgeverAntiquity Trust

PlaatsCambridge

ISBN--

Citation key--

Trefwoorden--

Plaatsgegevens

Exemplaar75593 ReknummerT-2-2-b

Inhoud
The emergence of pottery in Africa during the tenth millennium cal BC: new evidence from Ounjougou (Mali) 905-917
Huysecom E., Rasse M., Lespez L., Neumann K., Fahmy A., Ballouche A., Ozainne S., Maggetti M., Tribolo Ch. & Soriano S.
  • The emergence of pottery in Asia and Africa , pp. 905-906
  • The Early Holocene sequence at Ounjougou , p. 906
  • Discussion: emergence of pottery south of the Sahara , pp. 911-915

The archaeology of Western Sahara: results of environmental and archaeological reconnaissance 918-934
Brooks N., Clarke J., Garfi S. & Pirie A.
  • The Early Holocene (c. seventh-ninth millennia bp) (Lithics, Ceramics) , pp. 921-924
  • The mid-late Holocene (c. sixth millennium bp onwards) (Occupation sites, Burial sites) , pp. 924-930

Ochre and hide-working at a Natufian burial place 935-954
Dubreuil L. & Grosman L.
  • The tools . Raw material, morphology and manufacture , p. 937
  • The tools . Macroscopic use-wear , pp. 937-939
  • The tools . Low and high magnification observations and comparison with experimental objects , pp. 940-942
  • Possible tool function . Hide-processing and ground stone tools , pp. 942-944
  • Possible tool function . Experiments of hide-processing with basalt ground stones , pp. 944-947
  • Possible tool function . Hide-processing and ochre , pp. 948-949

Floor sequences in Neolithic Makri, Greece: micromorphology reveals cycles of renovation 955-967
Karkanas P. & Efstratiou N.

Mass cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture at Herxheim (Palatinate, Germany) 968-982
Boulestin B., Zeeb-Lanz A., Jeunesse C., Haack F., Arbogast R-M. & Denaire A.

Sourcing African ivory in Chalcolithic Portugal 983-997
Schuhmacher T.X., Cardoso J.L. & Banerjee A.
  • Cultural, chronological and economic context of the ivory objects , pp. 984-987
  • Sourcing the ivory , p. 989

Rooting for pigfruit: pig feeding in Neolithic and Iron Age Britain compared 998-1011
Hamilton J., Hedges R.E.M. & Robinson M.
  • Pigs and woodland , pp. 999-1000
  • Pigs and stable isotopes , pp. 1000-1002
  • Pigs and fungi: a hypothesis , pp. 1002-1004
  • Modelling pig diets , p. 1004
  • Comparison of model results with observed values , pp. 1004-1008

Development of metallurgy in Eurasia 1012-1022
Roberts B.W., Thornton C.P. & Pigott V.C.
  • Metals, origins and chronologies , pp. 1013-1016
  • Raw materials, technology and techniques , pp. 1016-1018
  • Metallurgical transmission , pp. 1018-1019

From sheep to (some) horses: 4500 years of herd structure at the pastoralist settlement of Begash (south-eastern Kazakhstan) 1023-1037
Frachetti M. & Benecke N.
  • Domestic mammals (Sheep/goat, Cattle, Horse, Bactrian camel, Dog) , pp. 1027-1031
  • Wild mammals and birds , pp. 1032-1034
  • Discussion: herd structure and landscape use through time , pp. 1034-1035

Conflicting evidence? Weapons and skeletons in the Bronze Age of south-east Iberia 1038-1051
Aranda-Jiménez G., Montón-Subías S. & Jiméne-Brobeil S.
  • Argaric material culture: settlements and defence , pp. 1039-1040
  • Burials, weapons ans warriors , pp. 1040-1044
  • Skeletal bodies , pp. 1045-1047

For Gods or men? A reappraisal of the function of European Bronze Age shields 1052-1064
Molloy B.
  • New experiments with replica shields (Leather shield, The Bronze shields) , pp. 1057-1060

The ornamental trousers from Sampula (Xinjiang, China): their origins and biography 1065-1075
Wagner M., Bo W., Tarasov P., Westh-Hansen S.M., Völling E. & Heller J.
  • Characteristics of the warrior-and-centaur textile , pp. 1066-1068
  • Archaeological context of the Sampula textile , p. 1068
  • Dating of the mass burials at Sampula , p. 1069
  • The origin of the warrior-and-centaur tapestry , pp. 1069-1070
  • The origin of other grave goods in Sampula , pp. 1070-1073

Aristophanes and stable isotopes: a taste for freshwater fish in Classical Thebes (Greece)? 1076-1083
Vika E., Aravantinos V. & Richards M.P.

Pre-Columbian geometric earthworks in the upper Purús: a complex society in western Amazonia 1084-1095
Pärssinen M., Schaan D. & Ranzi A.
  • Geoglyphs in the floodplain , pp. 1090-1091

New light on the Anglo-Saxon succession: two cemeteries and their dates 1096-1108
Hills C.M. & O'Connell T.C.

High prestige Royal Purple dyed textiles from the Bronze Age royal tomb at Qatna, Syria 1109-1118
James M.A., Reifarth N., Mukherjee A.J., Crump M.P., Gates P.J., Sandor P., Robertson F., Pfälzner P. & Evershed R.P.
  • Detection and characterisation of Royal Purple in the tomb sediments , p. 1112
  • Discovery of purple dyed woven fabrics , pp. 1112-1113
  • Royal Purple in prehistory , p. 1114

Isotopes and individuals: diet and mobility among the medieval Bishops of Whithorn 1119-1133
Müldner G., Montgomery J., Cook G., Ellam R., Gledhill A. & Lowe C.

Landscapes of death: GIS modelling of a dated sequence of prehistoric cemeteries in Västmanland, Sweden 1134-1143
Löwenborg D.

The Acropolis and its new museum 1144-1151
James N.

A brief history of TAG 1152-1162
Gaydarska B.
  • The creation of a database , p. 1153
  • Gender balance , pp. 1158-1159
  • The internationalisation of TAG , pp. 1159-1160

Sex, symmetry and silliness in the bifacial world 1163-1169
Hayden B. & Villeneuve S.

Symmetry is sexy: reply to Hodgson's 'Symmetry and humans' 1170-1175
Burriss R.P.
  • Symmetry, attractiveness and health , pp. 1170-1172
  • The several signals of symmetry , pp. 1172-1173
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