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Antiquity 350

Auteur--

Editor--

Jaar2016

PublicatietypeAflevering

SerieAntiquity

Volume350

Subtitel--

Pagina’s283-564

UitgeverAntiquity Trust

PlaatsCambridge

ISBN--

Citation key--

Trefwoorden--

Plaatsgegevens

Exemplaar47428 ReknummerT-2-2-b

Inhoud
Neanderthals, trees and dental calculus: new evidence from El Sidrón 290-301
Radini A., Buckley S., Rosas A., Estalrrich A., de la Rasilla M. & Hardy K.
  • Discussion: contextualising the results . Accidental ingestion and extra-masticatory uses of teeth , pp. 293-294
  • Neanderthals and trees , pp. 294-296

Farming and foraging in Neolithic Ireland: an archaeobotanical perspective 302-318
McClatchie M., Bogaard A., Colledge S., Whitehouse N. J., Schulting R. J., Barratt P. & McLaughlin T. R.
  • Arable agriculture in Neolithic Ireland: the story so far , p. 303
  • Plant categories recorded , pp. 306-309
  • Cereal types present , pp. 309-311
  • Variety of crops present , pp. 311-313

Was the Iceman really a herdsman? The development of a prehistoric pastoral economy in the Schnals Valley 319-336
Putzer A., Festi D. & Oeggl K.
  • Palynological analyses , pp. 327-329
  • Results: human impact and grazing activity in the study area , pp. 329-331
  • Was the Iceman involved in pastoral economy? , pp. 331-332
  • If the Iceman was not involved in transhumance, why was he familiar with such high altitudes? , pp. 332-333

The dead of Stonehenge 337-356
Willis C., Marshall P., McKinley J., Pitts M., Pollard J., Richards C., Richards J., Thomas J., Waldron T., Welham K. & Pearson M. P.
  • Stonehenge's human remains , pp. 338-341
  • Ages of the individuals from Aubrey Hole 7 , pp. 341-343
  • Sex of the individuals in Aubrey Hole 7 , pp. 343-344
  • Pathology , pp. 344-346
  • Radiocarbon dating , pp. 346-349
  • Chronological modelling , pp. 349-350
  • The development of the cemetery , pp. 350-352
  • Cremation practices in Late Neolithic Britain (c. 3000-2500 BC) , pp. 352-353

Tracing the flows of copper and copper alloys in the Early Iron Age societies of the eastern Eurasian steppe 357-375
Hsu Y.-K., Bray P. J., Hommel P., Pollard A. M. & Rawson J.
  • Archaeometallurgy in the eastern steppe , pp. 358-360
  • An alternative chemical approach , pp. 360-362
  • The bronze data , pp. 362-363
  • Classification of copper groups , pp. 363-364
  • Reconstructing flows of metal , pp. 364-366
  • Distribution of alloy types , pp. 366-370
  • Typology and chemistry , pp. 370-371

Finding history: the locational geography of Ashokan inscriptions in the Indian subcontinent 376-392
Smith M. L., Gillespie T. W., Barron S. & Kalra K.
  • The function of stone inscriptions , p. 377
  • The importance of the Ashokan edicts for the history of Buddhism , p. 378
  • The inscriptions , pp. 378-382
  • Predictive modelling for archaeological discovery and the HYDE 3.1 database , pp. 382-383
  • HYDE 3.1 and the location analysis of the Ashokan edicts , pp. 383-388

Roman bazaar or market economy? : explaining tableware distributions through computational modelling 393-408
Brughmans T. & Poblome J.
  • Data: tableware distribution in the Roman East , pp. 395-397
  • Tableware distribution processes and social networks , pp. 397-400
  • MERCURY: an agent-based computational model of tableware distribution , pp. 400-401
  • Conclusions: simulating the 'grey zone' , pp. 404-406

Year 5 at Fukushima: a 'disaster-led' archaeology of the contemporary future 409-424
Schlanger N., Nespoulous L. & Demoule J.-P.
  • 'Disaster-led' archaeology , pp. 411-414
  • Decontamination galore , pp. 414-418

Special section: new dialogues about ancient Maya 425-503

Sky-earth, lake-sea: climate and water in Maya history and landscape 426-442
Luzzadder-Beach S., Beach T., Hutson S. & Krause S.
  • Environments , p. 427
  • The centrality of water , pp. 427-431
  • Climate change and proxies , pp. 431-434
  • Climate and culture , p. 434
  • Water management , pp. 434-435
  • Water management strategies , pp. 435-437

Through seeing stones: Maya epigraphy as a mature discipline 443-455
Houston S. & Martin S.
  • Apical ancestors , pp. 444-447
  • Witz to climb , pp. 452-453

Time tested: re-thinking chronology and sculptural traditions in Preclassic southern Mesoamerica 456-471
Inomata T. & Henderson L.
  • Middle Preclassic interaction (1000-350 BC) , pp. 459-462
  • Late Preclassic reorganisation (350-100 BC) , pp. 462-464
  • Terminal Preclassic development (100 BC-AD150) , pp. 464-468

The perduring Maya: new archaeology on early Colonial transitions 472-486
Oland M. & Palka J. W.
  • Conquered zone , pp. 475-476
  • Peripheral semi-conquered zones , pp. 477-480
  • Unconquered zone , pp. 480-482

Perceptions of the past within Tz'utujil ontologies and Yucatec hybridities 487-503
McAnany P. A. & Brown L. A.
  • Contested ontologies and the volition of heritage in Santiago Atitlán , pp. 489-493
  • Incorporative hybridity in Tahcabo , pp. 493-498
  • Discussion: Indigenous ontologies and subjects of heritage , pp. 498-501

Debating the Anthropocene 504-518
  • Braje T. J. : Evaluating the Anthropocene: is there something useful about a geological epoch of humans? , pp. 504-512
  • Zalasiewicz J. & Waters C. N. : Geology and the Anthropocene , pp. 512-514
  • Dalby S. : Re-evaluating the Anthropocene , pp. 514-515
  • Randall A. : Time, agency and the Anthropocene , pp. 516-517
  • Braje T. J. : A mid-twentieth-century Anthropocene makes the Holocene more important than ever , pp. 517-518

Replication for Chauvet Cave 519-524
James N.

More (and more) on Clovis 525-527
O'Brien M. J.

Transforming cremation? 528-531
Pearce J.

On the edge of the secular and the sacred: Hopewell mound-builder archaeology in context 532-534
Wymer D. A.

Indian archaeology in the shadow of the Babri Masjid 535-537
Gupta N.
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