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  • av Andreas Schachner
    627,-

    In this two-volume work, Schachner has prepared a handbook and guide to the domestic architecture of prehistoric Anatolia. All significant architectural remains discovered in Anatolia and published before 1998 are described in details, and all are illustrated. Sites are commented and various types of buildings in different regions of Anatolia are established. This is the first synthesis of the subject and provides an up-to-date view of the architecture, but also of many other aspects of the archaeology of prehistoric Anatolia.Dieses Volume ist Teil eines Sets mit zwei Volumes: ISBN 9781841710211 (Band I); ISBN 9781841710228 (Band II); ISBN 9781841710204 (Bands I und II).

  • av Andreas Schachner
    627,-

    In this two-volume work, Schachner has prepared a handbook and guide to the domestic architecture of prehistoric Anatolia. All significant architectural remains discovered in Anatolia and published before 1998 are described in details, and all are illustrated. Sites are commented and various types of buildings in different regions of Anatolia are established. This is the first synthesis of the subject and provides an up-to-date view of the architecture, but also of many other aspects of the archaeology of prehistoric Anatolia.Dieses Volume ist Teil eines Sets mit zwei Volumes: ISBN 9781841710211 (Band I); ISBN 9781841710228 (Band II); ISBN 9781841710204 (Bands I und II).

  • av Rex Claire Kennard
    959,-

    This volume is part of a two volume set: ISBN 9781407388410 (Volume I); ISBN 9781407388427 (Volume II); ISBN 9780860544265 (Volume set).The Beaker problem is one of the oldest, and most celebrated, in European prehistoric archaeology.

  • av Barbara E. Barich
    1 176,-

    Barbara E. Barich with contributions by Massimo Baistrocchi, Giorgio Belluomini, Isabella Caneva, Angela E. Close, Achilles Gautier, Luigia Manfra, Bruno Marcolongo, Alberto M. Palmieri, Erhard Schulz and Sandra Y. Vons-Comis

  • av John W. Hedges
    598,-

    John W. Hedges with the collaboration of Bernard Bell and Beverley Smith and with appendices by Don Bramwell, Sarah Colley, Ste-phen Cracknell, Camilla Dickson, Barbara Noddle, Michael J. Stenhouse and David F. Williams

  • av Micha¿ Wasilewski
    482,-

    This is a new archaeological study of the volcanic region in southern Peru known as 'The Valley of the Volcanoes'. In the southern part of the Republic of Peru, in the Arequipa Departament, there extends the little-known until recently Valle de los Volcanes, or the Valley of the Volcanoes. It is around 65 km long and is located between a latitude of 15°05' and 15°41' S. It thus extends in a nearly southerly direction (along 72°20' W), between the massifs of Nevado Coropuna (6425 m above sea-level (a.s.l.)) to the west, and Cordillera Shila (around 5600 m a.s.l.) to the east, and drops from the edge of Altiplano (4900-5100 m a.s.l.) in the north, to the Colca River Canyon (around 1350 m a.s.l.) in the south. Administratively, the Valley of the Volcanoes currently lies in the territories of two Peruvian provinces. The larger part belongs to the Castilla Province, while a small area of puna to the north-west of the municipality of Umachulco, situated in the upper part of the valley, is found in the Condesuyos Province (Cayarani District). There are five districts - the smallest administrative units - in the territory of the valley: Ayo, Chachas, Andahua, Chilcaymarca and Orcopampa.

  • av Branko Kirigin
    945,-

    This is the third in a projected series of five volumes dedicated to the work of the Adriatic Islands Project (AIP). The first volume, The Archaeological Heritage of the Island of Hvar, Croatia was published bilingually, in English and Croatian (Gaffney et al. 1997). The second volume, The Archaeological Heritage of the Island of Brac, Croatia was published in English (Stanèiè et al. 1999). This volume builds on the achievements of these earlier publications. The work utilises, essentially, the same research methodologies developed for survey on Hvar and Brac. The continuing reliance of project staff on complex computer technologies to store and analyse the large project databases also remains, and the impact of the increasing sophistication of thesetechnologies for display of data can be seen in this publication. This book, covering prehistory to medieval times, is divided into two parts, reflecting the diverse nature of the areas under study. Part one deals with the most remote island group that fell within the project study area and includes the island of Vis and the smaller islands that have for centuries been associated with Vis; Bi¿evo, Svetac and Palagrüa. Part two deals specifically with the island of ¿olta. ¿olta lies just west of Brac and is the part of the project study area that is nearest to the mainland.

  • av Maurizio Forte
    771,-

    The Reconstruction of Archaeological Landscapes through Digital Technologies' presents 18 papers from the Italy-United States Workshop that took place in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, in November 2001.This workshop is made possible by grants from the J. M. Kaplan Fund, U.S.A., and the National Research Council, Italy.Sponsored by CNR (National Research Council - ITABC, Institute of Technologies Applied to Cultural Heritage, Roma, Italy) and Boston University's Center for Archaeological Studies, Center for Remote Sensing, and the Department of Archaeology (USA) with the collaboration of NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration).Organized by Kathryn Bard (BU), Farouk El Baz (BU - CRSA), Maurizio Forte (CNR-ITABC), Salvatore Garraffo (CNR-ITABC), P. Ryan Willams (Field Museum), James Wiseman (BU).Co-chairs: Farouk El Baz (BU - CRSA), Maurizio Forte (CNR-ITABC), James Wiseman (BU).

  • av Bozena Werbart
    482,-

    Any attempt to understand present-day European societies and a possible "European identity" must include an historical perspective. Many of the phenomena on the road from the Stone Age to urbanization and the "Cities of tomorrow" affecting Europe anditsdevelopment between c. 3000 and 500 BC appeared first in southeastern Mediterranean Europe (in the Aegean area), influenced by the cultures in the Eastern Mediterranean such as Anatolia, Egypt and the Levant. These seven papers from a session ofthe European Association of Archaeologists in Lisbon in 2000 focus on how these impulses were transmitted, what forms of interaction led to their spread and acceptance, and why certain societies did not accept them.

  • av R. E. Jones
    1 031,-

    22 papers from the conference 'Going over Old Ground: Perspectives on Archaeological, Geophysical and Geochemical Survey in Scotland', held at the Department of Archaeology, University of Glasgow, Scotland, August 2003.

  • av Anne Stevens Henshaw
    742,-

    A challenging piece of research that assesses the historical background to how the Inuit economy became integrated into the modern world.

  • av Tristan Arbousse Bastide
    482,-

    This work, in nine chapters, is a retrospective analysis of ditched rural structures (dating from Prehistoric to Gallo-Roman times) which have been traced since 1975 by aerial surveys over northern Brittany. As well as detailing aerial surveying techniques and archaeology, the study serves also as a comparative framework for similar structures located on both sides of the Channel. Aerial observation is particularly valuable as a means of detecting such remains, and this volume presents a detailed analysis of sites, combining text, graphics and statistics with numerous maps of the areas under study.

  • av Silvia Tomá¿ková
    685,-

    The starting point of this investigation was the striking absence in the archaeological literature of any detailed comparison between two significant Central European sites, despite their proximity in both geographical and temporal (roughly 30,000 to25,000 years before the present) terms. This silence was even more startling considering the fame that these two localities have enjoyed over the century since they were excavated - Willendorf II primarily in 1908, Dolni Vestonice starting in 1924 and continuing into the present. A sensitively written treatment, taking the author back across many borders.

  • av Agnès Lamotte
    742,-

    This volume is a study of the bi-face (stone tool) industries of northwest Europe in the mid-Pleistocene, especially around the basins of the Somme and the Escaut (in France and Belgium). Through detailed analysis, special emphasis is placed on production, function, and dating, in an attempt to relate the finds (and the lithic industries) to various habitation, and settlement periods.

  • av Nicolas Goepfert
    1 609,-

    The Moche culture (100-800 A.D.) developed on the northern Peruvian coast in an area spread over the Piura and Nepeña valleys. The zooarchaeological study of the faunal remains discovered in graves at four main ceremonial sites (Sipán, San José de Moro, El Brujo and Moche) has provided evidence of twelve sacrificed animal species: domestic taxa such as llamas, dogs and guinea pigs, and also wild species such as bats. A comparison of the zooarchaeological data with the iconographical corpus showed that animals served different ritual purposes, such as mortuary food and as guides for the deceased's soul into the afterlife; they were also symbolically considered as mediators between the world of the living and the dead. The study also comparesarchaeological data with other sources, such as ethnohistorical texts and ethnographical testimonies leading to a better understanding of the symbolical dimension represented by Andean animals.

  • av Jean-Philippe Faivre
    959,-

    This study concerns lithic technical systems during the Middle Palaeolithic (Final Glaciation) in the north-east Aquitaine basin (France). The analytical approach is based on a paradigm which shows the complexity of production schemes by technical and economical perspectives ('branched' chaîne opératoire). The results of this study show self-sufficient organizations of lithic production systems: each, with its own technical specifics, shows techno-economical adaptations in relation to differing eco-functional objectives achieved in different environments. This Mousterian lithic production approach gives a new understanding of the Mousterian variability in this landscape. The analysis adopted (technical and economic behaviour) also presents questions about stability or diversity of technical knowledge and economic understanding as practised by Mousterian groups during the Final Glaciation period.

  • av J. J. Díaz
    1 234,-

    Proceedings of a conference on the early archaeology of Cadiz, Spain, held in April 2008.

  • av Jocelyne Desideri
    858,-

    The Bell Beaker complex is defined, above all, by a ceramic style widespread across Europe during the 3rd millennium BC. In contrast to the preceding period, it represents an entity distinguished from other archaeological manifestations by its material culture, funeral practices and mode of diffusion. Its particularly vast geographic distribution has provoked different interpretations: a unique population invading Europe, the long-distance exchange of prestige goods, and the absence of a Bell Beaker population with only the diffusion of its cultural components. Osteoarchaeology makes it possible to test the first of these hypotheses, which proposes the diffusion of a culture by population displacement. The pertinent elements on the human skeleton must thus be identified for analysis. Here, the choice was made to analyze non-metric dental traits, anatomic variations observed on permanent and deciduous dentition. These are, in general, traits that are present or absent, or which reflectdifferent phases ofdevelopment. They can be positive structures, such as the presence of tubercles or ridges, or negative, such as grooves. Such traits can also vary in the number, position and size of cusps and roots. Based on results obtained fromstudies of archaeological material, the regions selected to test this hypothesis are the Czech Republic, Hungary, Switzerland, France and Spain.

  • av Chris Hewitson
    685,-

    The road improvements around the inner ring road of Derby (East Midlands, England) have led to the archaeological investigation of a number of sites over the past five years. These sites have included remains from the prehistoric, Roman, medieval and post-medieval periods, although the majority of the remains have related to the last 900 years. The work has allowed a picture of the development of the western side of Derby to be built up over the course of its evolution. In many respects the non-selectiverandom nature of the development has allowed disparate sites in location, function and chronology to be examined in the same project in a way that would not have been achieved by targeted research led investigation. This has allowed a broad picture of the area to emerge that may suggest patterns in the development of the city suburbs.

  • av Remza Ko¿¿evi¿
    381,-

    One private numismatic collection in Zagreb, Croatia was found to contain a group of silver items, which has all the characteristics of an authentic Roman hoard, including the usual scarcity of information about the circumstances of discovery and the specific location. Only the following is available in terms of relevant information about the hoard: this chance find comes from the Lower Danube region and was found in a pottery vessel removed from the earth at a depth of approximately 1.5 meters. The type, name and specific or at least approximate location of the site of discovery remain unknown, along with the type and form of the vessel into which the objects were places, and it is not absolutely certain whether the hoard represents an intact complete unit, or if it once perhaps contained other items. The hoard consists of 46 items made from a silver of high purity with a very little admixture of other metals. No analysis was undertaken of all the silver. The partial analysis carried out using x-ray fluorescence only on parts of the hook and eye on the braided wire necklace noted the presence of small inclusions of gold, lead, tin, copper, zinc, and iron, with traces of cadmium, chrome, palladium, and titanium. Although its composition has not been entirely verified, the very appearance, colour, and shine of the silver reveals the uniformity of its fineness, with a possibility of only minimal differences in percentages. All of the objects are in an excellent state of preservation.

  • av Judy Meade
    1 046,-

    The subject of this research is social change in Roman Britain in the Late Iron Age and the Romano-British period. Evidence from the Middle and Upper Ouse Valley is examined from the perspective of identity, a subject in which there is currently muchinterest amongst archaeologists. Identity emphasises the diversity of experience of both individuals and communities, and therefore spheres of life that might reveal continuation, discontinuity, or change in identity, are examined. The aim is to discover howLate Iron Age communities saw themselves, how they constructed their identity, and how this was transformed (if at all) with the coming of Rome. A second theme is that of population groups and their boundaries. Both aspects are examined using a landscapeapproach, drawing on the large corpora of data now available in Sites and Monuments Record Offices, excavation reports and archaeological journals.

  • av Pablo Gómez Ramos
    1 046,-

    Using methodology based on exhaustive research and critical view of the existing bibliography, as well as modern analytical methods such as optic and electronic microscopy and X-Ray fluorescence spectroscopy, this book examines metallurgy and smelting techniques used on Iberian peninsula from the Chalcolitic up to Roman Periods. The result is a broader picture showing unsophisticated metallurgy, simple smelting techniques based on the use of crucible-furnaces traces of which can be found in most settlements up to the Iron Age.

  • av Vicki Cummings
    771,-

    This volume presents the methodology and results for the excavations at Cairnderry and Bargrennan, south-west Scotland. A comparative chapter compares the excavation results from both sites, and presents interpretations of these results, particularly in terms of the architecture and the early Bronze Age mortuary practices. Chapter 5 considers the architecture of Cairnderry and Bargrennan in terms of wider trends in the construction of chambered cairns throughout the British Isles and throughout the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. Chapter 6 places the early Bronze Age activity at Cairnderry and Bargrennan within a local context by examining mortuary practices across Dumfries and Galloway. It focuses on comparisons with other sites where cremated bones were deposited and cinerary urns used and/or sites where cairns were constructed or re-used in the early Bronze Age. Chapter 7 provides a summary of conclusions as to the finds and revisits the problem of dating Bargrennan chambered cairns, before suggesting avenues for future research in Galloway. The appendices draw together the specialists reports on finds from the excavations (including a substantial contextualisation of some of the early Bronze Age artefacts), context descriptions and radiocarbon dating results.

  • av Hakan Oniz
    844,-

    This book includes papers from SOMA 2008 Proceedings of the XII Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology, Famagusta, North Cyprus, 5-8 March 2008.

  • av Jesús Bermejo Tirado
    641,-

  • av Doniert Evely
    685,-

    In commemoration of the work of Mervyn Popham this festschrift contains 22 essays concerned with the archaeology of Crete and Euboea. Studies include an examination of the role of Crete in Homeric epic, a consideration of the role of the little palace' and some ofthe Middle Minoan pottery found by Evans at Knossos is reexamined.

  • av Luca Bombardieri
    1 722,-

    This book presents the proceedings of the 16th Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology that took place in Florence, Italy, 1-3 March 2012.This volume is part of a two volume set: ISBN 9781407312040 (Volume I); ISBN 9781407312057 (Volume II); 9781407312064 (Volume set).

  • av William H. Waldren
    872,-

    This volume is part of a three volume set: ISBN 9781407392073 (Volume I); ISBN 9781407392080 (Volume II); ISBN 9781407392097 (Volume III); ISBN 9780860541875 (Volume set).

  • av William H. Waldren
    872,-

    This volume is part of a three volume set: ISBN 9781407392073 (Volume I); ISBN 9781407392080 (Volume II); ISBN 9781407392097 (Volume III); ISBN 9780860541875 (Volume set).

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