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This book covers an extensive region of East Siberia, considering prehistoric ethno-cultural and social processes through the development of rock art styles and traditions. It addresses the questions of why rock art is created, why specific styles and traditions emerge and why changes in rock art occur. These questions are explored through anthropological perspectives on ethnicity, identity, and symbolism. A reader will find a comprehensive overview of the developments of rock art research in Siberia as well as detailed accounts of the regional archaeology in the Bronze/Iron ages, the Neolithic, and partially the Late Paleolithic. Importantly, this study is primarily fieldwork-based, presenting information on 108 rock art sites in Yakutia and Trans-Baikal. It is a major contribution to Siberian and global rock art research and suggests new directions for future rock art research.
"This volume is an extended conference report of a meeting ... at the University of Bradford in December 1987"--P. xii.
L'industrie 'Nivel 11' de la province de Santa Cruz (Argentine). Technologie lithique et traces d'utilisation.
Spine title: Upper Paleolithic spatial structure.
Twelve papers considering cultural responses to long-term environmental change in all parts of Africa (North Africa, the Nile Valley, the Sahara, Sudan, East Africa, the Congo Basin and Southern Africa)
Chronology, cultural affinity, physical anthropology, translated from the Russian.
"AEA ... 1985 annual conference ... took place at Slot Assumburgh, Heemskerk, in the Netherlands, from 20th-23rd September"--Introd.
An archaeological survey in Middle Egypt.
A study focusing on early prehistoric Europe and modern ethnographic accounts.
Summary of the cemetery with more detailed account of Roman period use (inscriptions, pottery, etc.).
Originally presented as the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Berkeley, 1986.
"The 1987 Computer Applications in Archaeology (CAA) conference, held at the University of Leicester"--P. xiii.
Symposium in honor of Carl Vilhelm Hartman, held in Carnegie Museum's Section of Anthropology.
Originally presented as the author's thesis (M.A.)--New York University, 1986.
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