Papers by Kadriye Özçelik
ÖZET Rekabetin global boyuta dönüşmesi,şirketleri yeni stratejiler geliştirmeye yöneltmiştir.Bu b... more ÖZET Rekabetin global boyuta dönüşmesi,şirketleri yeni stratejiler geliştirmeye yöneltmiştir.Bu bağlamda 90’lı yıllarda hız kazanan şirket birleşmeleri ,günümüzde şirketlerin varlıklarını devam ettirebilmek için en fazla tercih ettiği yeni stratejilerden birisi haline dönüşmüştür. Şirket birleşmeleri daha çok ABD’de görülmekle birlikte ,ülkemizde özellikle son dönemlerde gittikçe daha çok görülmekte ve finans sektörü başta olmak üzere birçok sektörde şirketler açısından hızla yaygınlaşmaktadır. İşletme devir ve birleşmelerinde amaç ,işletmenin değerini arttırmaktır..Dolayısıyla devir ve birleşmelerde işletme değerinin tespit edilmesi ve birleşme işlemlerinin muhasebeleştirilmesi önem arz etmektedir.Konunun önemi, kapsadığı finansal işlemlerden doğmaktadır. Tezimde birinci bölümde öncelikle işletmelerin genel yapısı incelenmiştir.İkinci bölümde birleşme ve işlemleri hukuki yönden incelenmiş olup üçüncü bölümde Uluslar Arası Muhasebe Standartları ve Türkiye Muhasebe Standartlarının ol...
Antiquity, May 26, 2022
The Çanakkale-Balıkesir Coastline Palaeolithic Survey Project covers the Çanakkale and Balıkesir ... more The Çanakkale-Balıkesir Coastline Palaeolithic Survey Project covers the Çanakkale and Balıkesir coastlines of the Aegean. It aims to reveal Palaeolithic assemblages and their connection to the surrounding islands-primarily Lesbos. In 2021, four important findspots were detected on the Çanakkale coastline, and more than 500 lithics were uncovered, exhibiting the characteristics of large cutting tools, as well as pebble and prepared core technologies. These tools attest to the presence of hominins along the Çanakkale coastline during the Lower Palaeolithic.
L'Anthropologie, 2021
Abstract Western Anatolia is the poorest region in terms of Turkey's Palaeolithic finds. In t... more Abstract Western Anatolia is the poorest region in terms of Turkey's Palaeolithic finds. In the past years, only a few Palaeolithic artefacts were known from the surface in the provinces of Izmir, Manisa, Kutahya and Afyonkarahisar in western Anatolia. After the fossil Homo erectus skull fragment was found in the travertine deposits in Kocabas (Denizli) in 2002, the importance of the region more increased. After this important discovery, Dr. Kadriye Ozcelik started a Palaeolithic survey in Denizli and found a large number of chipped stone tools from the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic periods. Nevertheless, the last important Palaeolithic discovery in the region was made in Surmecik (Banaz-Usak) in 2015. This is an open-air campsite belonging to the Middle Palaeolithic period. Here is also a mining area where a mining operation is conducted. The chipped stone artefacts of the Surmecik Palaeolithic open-air campsite come from a clay layer between hematite and limonite deposits under a travertine layer of about 4.5–5 meters in thickness. Faunal remains represent mostly by equids species. All stages of Mousterian culture are clearly visible in this open-air campsite. Surmecik is the richest middle Palaeolithic open-air campsite in Turkey. The 83,002 lithic pieces were collected in the excavations carried out in 2016 and 2017. It is thought that the lithic assemblage will exceed 100,000 with the ongoing studies. The group of bifacial leaf points in this collection is seen in Turkey for the first time. Four master thesis studies started on the lithic material of Surmecik. It is planned to take some samples for dating analysis along with ongoing studies.
Lithic Technology
After the discovery of Homo erectus remains (circa 1.2 Ma) in Denizli, through examination of the... more After the discovery of Homo erectus remains (circa 1.2 Ma) in Denizli, through examination of their surviving material culture, many sites containing lithics which could be attributed to Homo erectus have been located. It have revealed quartz assemblages in the parts of Denizli connected to the Menderes and Gediz Massif. The assemblages detected in Buldan and Güney associate with Mode 1 and Mode 2 techno-complexes. As the first systematic bipolar knapping study in the Paleolithic of Turkey, techno-typological analyses supported by experimental analyses will be a guide for future studies. As a result of these analyses, bipolar knapping, freehand technique, and the alternate use of both could be suggested as strategies for dealing with environmental raw material limitations or as a technical behavioral choice. In this context, the lithic assemblages in question, with their specific characteristics, shed new light on the dispersal of the early hominins out of Africa.
Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi - DTCF Dergisi, 2017
Sociedad Geológica de España, 2021
The relatively large body dimensions of the remains, which are attributed to Procavia capensis (t... more The relatively large body dimensions of the remains, which are attributed to Procavia capensis (the rock hyrax) indicate that the climate was relatively cool and humid, more so than the region where the nearest extant neighbours survive, the subspecies Procavia capensis syriaca, which is a smaller animal living in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel.
Western Anatolia is the poorest region in terms of Turkey's Palaeolithic finds. In the past y... more Western Anatolia is the poorest region in terms of Turkey's Palaeolithic finds. In the past years, only a few Palaeolithic artefacts were known from the surface in the provinces of İzmir, Manisa, Kütahya and Afyonkarahisar in western Anatolia. After the fossil Homo erectus skull fragment was found in the travertine deposits in Kocabaş (Denizli) in 2002, the importance of the region more increased. After this important discovery, Dr. Kadriye Özçelik started a Palaeolithic survey in Denizli and found a large number of chipped stone tools from the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic periods. Nevertheless, the last important Palaeolithic discovery in the region was made in Sürmecik (Banaz-Uşak) in 2015. This is an open-air campsite belonging to the Middle Palaeolithic period. Here is also a mining area where a mining operation is conducted. The chipped stone artefacts of the Sürmecik Palaeolithic open-air campsite come from a clay layer between hematite and limonite deposits under a trave...
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2015
The human femur from Karain E Cave (Turkey) exhumed from a Mousterian level provided the opportun... more The human femur from Karain E Cave (Turkey) exhumed from a Mousterian level provided the opportunity to make an incursion into the structural morphology of a late adolescent, or a young adult, femoral shaft from the late Middle Pleistocene of Anatolia. Considering the chrono-ecogeographical context, this study focuses particularly on the endostructural morphological similarities between Karain and Neanderthal fossils. Comparative analysis shows that some femoral features of the Karain specimen are frequently observed in Neanderthals, in comparison to some Middle Pleistocene Homo and Middle/Upper Paleolithic modern humans. In particular, we note a high degree of circularity and a strong midshaft posteromedial reinforcement of cortical thickness on the medial side. According to the mapping of cortical thickness, this latter feature can be related to the medial spiral distribution pattern of cortical thickness in the mid-proximal shaft, which is present at Karain and in all Neanderthals available for this study. This spiral distribution was not identified in recent modern humans and may be absent from ancient Homo with femoral pilaster. The endostructural signature of Karain could indicate a similar biomechanical strain system to that of Neanderthals that could be linked to body shape. However, the presence of posteromedial reinforcement in Berg Aukas may point to an ancestral feature and may be independent of latitude. A larger comparative sample should further clarify the taxonomical, biomechanical, and chrono-ecogeographical origins of the structural femoral features observed in an evolutionary Neanderthal context from MIS 7-9 in Karain. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Anadolu (Anatolia), 2003
La Problématique de l'époque paléolithique supérieur dans la Grotte Karain " B &... more La Problématique de l'époque paléolithique supérieur dans la Grotte Karain " B " Les recherches faites jusqu'à présent prouvent qu'on distingue trois différentes phases culturelles dans la séquence pléistocène de la grotte Karain B: des industries du Paléolithique moyen, du Paléolithique supé-rieur et de l'Epi-paléolithique. Phase I: (les unités géologiques P III 1 et P III 2) Il s'agit du Moustérien de type Zagros ou dit " de Ka-rain ". Les plus importants outils de cette phase sont représentés par des racloirs de plusieurs types, des denticules et des pointes moustériennes. La technique Levallois y est intensivement utilisée. P III 3, ap-paraît comme une phase de transition entre les industries moustériennes de type Zagros et charentiennes. En ce qui concerne P IV, on peut l'attribuer au Paléolithique moyen (type charentien) par l'existence des racloirs formés par des retouches scaliformes sur des supports épais. Phase II: Cette phase est caractérisée par des grattoirs carénés et des grattoirs à museau épais. Parmi les outils, les lamelles à retouches fines sont abondantes. L'état irrégulier et grossier des déchets de taille ne nous permet pas d'attribuer cette phase à un Aurignacien classique. İl s'agit plutôt d'un faciès local.
Comptes Rendus Palevol, 2017
Western Anatolia is the poorest region in terms of Turkey's Palaeolithic finds. In the past years... more Western Anatolia is the poorest region in terms of Turkey's Palaeolithic finds. In the past years, only a few Palaeolithic artefacts were known from the surface in the provinces of İzmir, Manisa, Kütahya and Afyonkarahisar in western Anatolia. After the fossil Homo erectus skull fragment was found in the travertine deposits in Kocabaş (Denizli) in 2002, the importance of the region more increased. After this important discovery, Dr. Kadriye Özçelik started a Palaeolithic survey in Denizli and found a large number of chipped stone tools from the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic periods. Nevertheless, the last important Palaeolithic discovery in the region was made in Sürmecik (Banaz-Uşak) in 2015. This is an open-air campsite belonging to the Middle Palaeolithic period. Here is also a mining area where a mining operation is conducted. The chipped stone artefacts of the Sürmecik Palaeolithic open-air campsite come from a clay layer between hematite and limonite deposits under a travertine layer of about 4.5–5 meters in thickness. Faunal remains represent mostly by equids species. All stages of Mousterian culture are clearly visible in this open-air campsite. Sürmecik is the richest middle Palaeolithic open-air campsite in Turkey. The 83,002 lithic pieces were collected in the excavations carried out in 2016 and 2017. It is thought that the lithic assemblage will exceed 100,000 with the ongoing studies. The group of bifacial leaf points in this collection is seen in Turkey for the first time. Four master thesis studies started on the lithic material of Sürmecik. It is planned to take some samples for dating analysis along with ongoing studies.
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Papers by Kadriye Özçelik