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Antiquity 337

Auteur--

EditorScarre C.

Jaar2013

PublicatietypeAflevering

SerieAntiquity

Volume337

Subtitel--

Pagina’s643-955

UitgeverAntiquity Trust

PlaatsCambridge

ISBN--

Citation key--

Trefwoorden--

Plaatsgegevens

Exemplaar114692 ReknummerT-2-2-b

Inhoud
Broad spectrum or specialised activity? : birds and tortoises at the Epipalaeolithic site of Wadi Jilat 22 in the eastern Jordan steppe 649-665
Martin L., Edwards Y. & Garrard A.

Rock art landscapes beside the Jubbah palaeolake, Saudi Arabia 666-683
Jennings R.P., Shipton C., Al-Omari A., Alsharekh A.M., Crassard R., Groucutt H. & Petraglia M.D.
  • Survey outcome . Recent petroglyphs , pp. 670-671
  • Survey outcome . Thamudic petroglyphs , p. 671
  • Survey outcome . Late prehistoric petroglyphs , pp. 671-675
  • Survey outcome . Late prehistoric pictographs , p. 675
  • Survey outcome . Cupules, symbols and grinding slicks , pp. 675-677
  • Spatial analyses . Rock art and palaeolakes , pp. 677-680
  • Spatial analyses . Thamudic caravan routes , pp. 680-681

Surfaces and streets: phytoliths, micromorphology and changing use of space at Neolithic Catalhöyük (Turkey) 684-700
Shillito L.-M. & Ryan P.
  • Finely stratified midden layers in Level South P , pp. 686-688
  • Transition to reworked, trampled deposits, Level South P/Q , pp. 689-690
  • Trodden and constructed external surfaces, South R/S , pp. 690-692
  • Fire-spots and trampled animal dung , pp. 692-694

DNA evidence for multiple introductions of barley into Europe following dispersed domestications in Western Asia 701-713
Jones G., Charles M.P., Jones M.K., Colledge S., Leigh F.J., Lister D.A., Smith L.M.J., Powell W., Brown T.A. & Jones H.
  • Multiple origins of cultivated barley , pp. 703-704
  • The introduction of barley into Europe , pp. 704-708
  • Discussion, archaeological evidence and implications , pp. 708-710

Fourth-millennium-BC 'leopard traps' from the Negev Desert (Israel) 714-727
Porat N., Avner U., Holzer A., Shemtov R. & Horwitz L.K.
  • 'Leopard traps' , pp. 715-716
  • 'Leopard traps' in the 'Uvda Valley, southern Negev Desert (Israel) , pp. 717-719
  • OSL dating , p. 719

Melting snow patches reveal Neolithic archery 728-745
Callanan M.
  • Previous snow patch research in central Norway , pp. 730-732
  • Discussion: Neolithic archery , pp. 740-743
  • Melting snow patches , pp. 743-744

Distinguishing exploitation, domestication, cultivation and production: the olive in the third millenium Aegean 746-757
Margaritis E.
  • The olive in prehistoric Greece - evidence for cultivation and use , pp. 747-748
  • New assemblages , pp. 748-751
  • Wild theories: management and cultivation , pp. 751-753

Site of Baodun yields earliest evidence for the spread of rice and foxtail millet agriculture to south-west China 758-771
d'Alpoim Guedes J., Jiang M., He K., Wu X. & Jiang Z.
  • Archaeological context and methods , pp. 761-762

The meaning of material: ritual vessel assemblages in Chu burials of the fourth and third centuries BC, China 772-787
Beckman E.

Out of the Norwegian glaciers: Lendbreen - a tunic from the early first millennium AD 788-801
Vedeler M. & Bender Jorgensen L.
  • Description of the garment , pp. 790-794
  • Comparable garments , pp. 794-799

Pitch production during the Roman period: an intensive mountain industry for a globalised economy? 802-814
Orengo H.A., Palet J.M., Ejarque A., Miras Y. & Riera S.
  • The MPCV project , pp. 803-804
  • The pitch kilns , pp. 804-805
  • Literary and archaeological parallels , pp. 805-807
  • The production cycle , pp. 807-810
  • The supply system , pp. 811-812
  • Pitch and iron: an integrated economy , p. 812

Tangas of the Marajó (Brazil): ornamental pubic covers, their typology and meaning 815-828
Prous A.
  • Who wore the tanga? , pp. 823-826
  • The producers , pp. 826-827

From burials to population identity: archaeological appraisal of the status of a Lesser Antilles colonial cemetery (Baillif, Gaudeloupe) 829-839
Kacki S. & Romon T.
  • The cemetery , p. 831
  • Burial practices , pp. 831-834
  • Biological assessment , pp. 834-836

Estimating trajectories of colonisation to the Mariana Islands, western Pacific 840-853
Fitzpatrick S.M. & Callaghan R.T.

A Bayesian chronology for Great Zimbabwe: re-threading the sequence of a vandalised monument 854-872
Chirikure S., Pollard M., Manyanga M. & Bandama F.
  • From speculation to archaeological phasing , pp. 855-857
  • Impact of radiocarbon dating on the chronology of Great Zimbabwe , pp. 857-858
  • Uncontrolled excavations and loss of stratigraphic integrity , pp. 859-861
  • The stratigraphy of the Hill Complex and the Great Enclosure , p. 861
  • The radiocarbon dates from Great Zimbabwe , pp. 861-862
  • Bayesian approach , pp. 862-863
  • Results of the Bayesian analysis , pp. 863-867
  • Discussion: implications of the new chronology , pp. 867-870

Neanderthal self-medication in context 873-878
Hardy K., Buckley S. & Huffman M.

Inshore or offshore? Boating and fishing in the Pleistocene 879-895
  • Anderson A. : The antiquity of sustained offshore fishing , pp. 879-885
  • O'Connor S. & Ono R. : The case for complex fishing technologies: a response to Anderson , pp. 885-888
  • Bailey G.N. : Dynamic shorelines and submerged topography: the neglected variables , pp. 889-890
  • Erlandson J.M. : Interpreting archaeological fish remains , pp. 890-892
  • Anderson A. : Response to O'Connor and Ono, Bailey and Erlandson , pp. 892-895

The Chinese school of archaeology 896-904
Liangren Z.
  • The Marxist paradigm , pp. 897-898
  • The culture-historical paradigm and typology , pp. 898-900
  • Regional cultural genealogy , pp. 900-901
  • The multiple origins of Chinese civilisations , pp. 901-902
  • The Chinese school , pp. 902-903
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