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Antiquity 377

Auteur--

Editor--

Jaar2020

PublicatietypeAflevering

SerieAntiquity

Volume377

Subtitel--

Pagina’s1125-1398

UitgeverAntiquity Trust

PlaatsCambridge

ISBN--

Citation key--

Trefwoorden--

Plaatsgegevens

Exemplaar127449 Reknummer32

Inhoud
Guest Editorial 1127-1132
Bose P., Bhattacharya S., Joshi P., Salunke M. & Thakar C.

Who painted that? The authorship of Schematic rock art at the Los Machos rockshelter in southern Iberia 1133-1151
Martínez-Sevilla F., Arqués M., Jordana X., Malgosa A., Lozano Rodríguez J. A., Sánchez Romero M., Sharpe K. & Carrasco Rus J.

No pottery at the western periphery of Europe: why was the Final Mesolithic of Britain and Ireland aceramic? 1152-1167
Elliott B., Little A., Warren G., Lucquin A., Blinkhorn E. & Craig O. E.
  • Proposition 1. 'Ceramic technologies were not adopted because there was no contact between Britain, Ireland, and continental Europe during the fifth millennium cal BC' , pp. 1154-1156
  • Proposition 2. 'Britain and Ireland lack the optimum environmental conditions for pottery adoption' , p. 1156
  • Proposition 3. 'Hunter gatherers in Britain and Ireland lacked the "economic affluence" to necessitate ceramics' , pp. 1156-1157
  • Proposition 4. 'Pre-existing cooking and container technologies were deemed superior to ceramics in Britain and Ireland' , p. 1157
  • Proposition 5. 'Mesolithic populations in Britain and Ireland were too mobile for pottery' , pp. 1157-1158
  • Proposition 6. The maritime character of connections played an active role in pottery dispersal , pp. 1158-1159
  • Proposition 7. 'Mesolithic pottery exists in Ireland and Britain, we have just failed to recognise it' , p. 1159
  • Proposition 8. 'The raw materials needed to make pottery were less accessible in Britain and Ireland compared with other areas of Europe' , pp. 1159-1161
  • Proposition 9. 'Low population densities in Britain and Ireland prevented the spread of new technologies generally' , pp. 1161-1162

Migrations or local interactions? Spheres of interaction in third-millennium BC Central Europe 1168-1185
Kolár J.
  • Interactions at the edge of the Corded Ware culture zone (Interactions reflected by pottery, Interactions reflected by lithics) , pp. 1171-1178

Death is not the end: radiocarbon and histo-taphonomic evidence for the curation and excarnation of human remains in Bronze Age Britain 1186-1203
Booth T. J. & Brück J.
  • Radiocarbon dating , pp. 1188-1198
  • Histological analysis , pp. 1198-1199

The agroecology of an early state: new results from Hattusha 1204-1223
Diffey C., Neef R., Seeher J. & Bogaard A.
  • Results . Assemblage overview , pp. 1208-1210
  • Results . Compositional analysis , pp. 1210-1212
  • Results . Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of cereals , pp. 1212-1214
  • Results . Functional ecological analysis of weeds and intensity of cultivation , pp. 1214-1215
  • Results . Combining the results of crop stable isotope and functional weed ecological analysis , pp. 1215-1219
  • Discussion . The range of crop-husbandry regimes , p. 1219
  • Discussion . The politics of taxation , pp. 1219-1220

Phoenician lime for Phoenician wine: Iron Age plaster from a wine press at Tell el-Burak, Lebanon 1224-1244
Orsingher A., Amicone S., Kamlah J., Sader H. & Berthold C.
  • Winemaking and the Phoenicians: an introduction , pp. 1224-1226
  • Tell el-Burak and its plastered installations , pp. 1226-1227
  • From the Levant to the Western Mediterranean: wine installations and plaster , pp. 1227-1233
  • Archaeometric investigation of plastered installations at Tell-el-Burak , pp. 1233-1237
  • Technology of plaster production at Telle el-Burak , pp. 1237-1238
  • Plaster traditions in the Levant , pp. 1238-1241

Make a desert and call it peace: massacre at the Iberian Iron Age village of La Hoya 1245-1262
Fernández-Crespo T., Ordoño J., Llanos A. & Schulting R. J.
  • Human remains in non-funerary contexts , pp. 1248-1251
  • Evidence for trauma , pp. 1251-1253
  • The massacre defined , pp. 1253-1256
  • Causes and timing of the attack , pp. 1256-1258
  • Consequences and wider impacts , pp. 1258-1259
  • Assessing the extent of violence beyond La Hoya , p. 1259

Summary justice or the King's will? The first case of formal facial mutilation from Anglo-Saxon England 1263-1277
Cole G., Ditchfield P. W., Dulias K., Edwards C. J., Reynolds A. & Waldron T.
  • The Oakridge cranium: archaeological context and dating , p. 1265
  • Osteological assessment: age at death, biological seks and evidence of trauma , pp. 1265-1270
  • Landscape context , pp. 1271-1272
  • An Anglo-Saxon outcast? , pp. 1272-1273
  • Mutilation in the Anglo-Saxon legal context , pp. 1273-1274

Constructing and deconstructing the Gokstad mound 1278-1295
Cannell R. J. S., Bill J. & Macphail R.
  • Discussion (The mound materials, Building down, building bridges) , pp. 1290-1292

An estuarine tidescape of production: terrestrial laser scanning of fixed fishing structures and a tide mill in the Léguer Estuary, Brittany 1296-1313
Lobb M., Brown T., Leyland J., Bernard V., Daire M.-Y. & Langouët L.

What's that smell? New directions for materials studies 1314-1324
Newstead S. & Casimiro T. M.
  • The 'smell of things' , pp. 1315-1316
  • Pottery, smell, obsession , pp. 1316-1321
  • Recognition and recording , pp. 1321-1322
  • Smells and materiality , p. 1323

Sherds as archaeobotanical assemblages: Gua Sireh reconsidered 1325-1336
Barron A., Datan I., Bellwood P., Wood R., Fuller D. Q. & Denham T.

The future of archaeology, interdisciplinarity and global challenges 1337-1348
Kerr S.
  • Funding global challenges , pp. 1338-1339
  • Inter-discipline and interdisciplinarity , pp. 1339-1340
  • Archaeology and global challenges , pp. 1340-1343
  • Discussion: the future of archaeology , pp. 1343-1345

Pathways to past ways: a positive approach to routeways and mobility 1349-1359
Bell M. & Leary J.

An ode to conference proceedings from the U.S. Southwest 1360-1362
Ortman S. G.

Archaeologies of dispossession: removal, resettlement, community formations 1363-1366
Singleton T. A.
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