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      ArchaeologyNear Eastern ArchaeologyGeochemistryZooarchaeology
Abstract Although there are many archaeological and ethnographic evidences for the use of slate and similar rocks for flaking purpose, they raised little interest among specialists, leading to a general ignorance of specific problems... more
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      ArchaeologyExperimental ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological Science
Correlating archaeological finds with their associated stratigraphic context is elementary to modern excavation methods. Although micro-contextual approaches can provide invaluable perspectives, ascribing primary depositional status and... more
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    •   7  
      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceStatistical Analysis
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and... more
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    •   4  
      GeographyArchaeologyConceptual FrameworkArchaeological
This hardback book, well produced and printed on good quality paper with clear illustrations and photographs, is typical of the monographs produced by the Cambridge Archaeological Unit (CAU), it reports on excavations at Glebe Farm and... more
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    •   4  
      HistoryArchaeologyArtArchaeological
Research into animal bone density has provided the foundation for the assessment of post-depositional destruction of archaeological faunal assemblages. This paper presents bone mineral density values for caprid long bones as determined by... more
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    •   8  
      ArchaeologyGeochemistryComputed TomographyArchaeological Science
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    •   5  
      ArchaeologyGeophysicsRemote SensingArchaeological Prospection
The analysis of carbon isotope discrimination ( ) in crop seeds from archaeological sites may help to assess yield during early agriculture. Wheat was among the first crops to be domesticated in the Near East. Here, a yield model based on... more
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    •   13  
      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceNear East
The case study presented is a prime example of integrated geophysical–archaeological prospection. The aerial photographs available are complemented by non-destructive geomagnetic and geoelectric surveys with a reading distance of 0.5 m or... more
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      ArchaeologyGeophysicsArchaeological ProspectionGpr
The brick Chapel at St. Mary's City, Maryland, built around 1667, would have been an impressive structure on a colonial frontier where all the other buildings were built only of wood. While the building is no longer extant, the bricks... more
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      ArchaeologyGeochemistryTechnologyArchaeological Science
During the Late Holocene, a number of new technologies (single-piece fishhooks, toggling harpoons, plank canoes, etc.) are thought to have significantly enhanced the fishing capabilities of California coastal peoples. The single-piece... more
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      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceAccelerator Mass Spectrometry
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    • Archaeological
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      ArchaeologyArchaeological
The Roşia Montană ore deposit (Apuseni Mountains, Romania) is Europe’s largest Au–Ag deposit. It also corresponds to the Roman Alburnus Maior mining site, known by historians and archaeologists due to the discovery of dozens of Roman... more
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      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological SciencePb isotopes
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      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceNorth American archaeology
The magnetic susceptibility of a collection of 212 archaeological samples of burnt clay of different origin (burnt soil, ovens and bricks) taken from 60 archaeological sites from Bulgaria, were studied in order to determine factors which... more
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      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceMagnetic Susceptibility
We report here on a study of 57 fragments of wall painting excavated from the Temple of Venus (Pompeii). These samples were characterised by a wide range of analytical methods. Data showed that the palette is varied, although not so broad... more
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    •   7  
      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceAnalytical Method
Past human activities in cultural landscapes are often expressed by subtle variations in surface topography that reflect buried archaeological features.When seen from the air under low sunlight angles, resultant 'shadow marks' form a... more
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    •   6  
      ArchaeologyGeophysicsArchaeological ProspectionNorthern Great Plains
Non-destructive and destructive methods for determining the physical parameters of waterlogged wood such as the porosity, the water content, the wet and dry bulk densities plus the density of the cell wall material are presented.... more
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      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceDensity
During the Middle Ages northern Belgium and The Netherlands were gradually deforested. A steadily rising demand for quality timber obliged merchants to look for new timber sources. From the 13th century onwards, large volumes of timber... more
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      HistoryArchaeologyGeochemistryArt
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      ArchaeologyArchaeological
This paper presents a comprison of the isotopic values of eight pairings of hair keratin and bone collagen and 12 pairings of hair keratin and nail keratin taken from living humans resident in the U.K., with the aim of examining whether... more
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    •   6  
      ArchaeologyGeochemistryArchaeological ScienceNitrogen
Publications of computer applications in archaeology are reviewed for the period between 1990 and 1996 inclusive. The influence of technological developments on research effort is noted, and particular areas of growth are described. One... more
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      ArchaeologyComputer ApplicationTechnological DevelopmentArchaeological
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      ArchaeologyEthicsProperty RightsProperty
The practice of historical archaeology has exploded over the past two decades, and especially since 2000. Methodological advances and new theoretical insights mean that archaeological research requires periodic evaluation, and this... more
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      ArchaeologySocial InequalityInequalityScale
Inca specialist D'Altroy (2001, Uruk Mesopatamia and Its Neighbours: Cross-Cultural Interactions in the Era of State Formation, School of American Research, Santa Fe, NM, p. 445) has written, “Uruk Mesopotamia has stood as the model for... more
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      ArchaeologyEvolutionary theoryArchaeological
Spatial technology is integral to how archaeologists collect, store, analyze, and represent information in digital data sets. Recent advances have improved our ability to look for and identify archaeological remains and have increased the... more
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    •   9  
      ArchaeologyInformation TechnologyRemote SensingSpatial Analysis
Spanish colonial archaeology has undergone a fundamental shift since the Columbian Quincentenary due to the adoption of a bottom-up understanding of colonialism that emphasizes the analysis of local phenomena in a global context and the... more
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      ArchaeologyArchaeological
This article reviews recent archaeological research on warfare in prestate societies of native North America. This survey comprises six regions: Arctic/Subarctic, Northwest Coast, California, Southwest/Great Basin, Great Plains, and... more
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    •   9  
      ArchaeologyBioarchaeologyPrehistoryWarfare
Archaeological studies of Native American societies in the Chesapeake have recently incorporated a broader range of interpretive frames, including those that emphasize historical contingency and social interaction rather than cultural... more
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      ArchaeologySocial InteractionNative AmericanMammal
After almost three centuries of investigations into the question of what it means to be human and the historical processes of becoming human, archaeologists have amassed a huge volume of data on prehistoric human interactions. One of the... more
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    •   8  
      Economic HistoryArchaeologyInteractionHuman behavior
With the publication of two volumes on technology—L'Homme et la matière and Milieu et technique in 1943–45, and Le geste et la parole (translated into English in 1993 as Gesture and Speech)—-Leroi-Gourhan asserted himself as a major... more
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    •   4  
      ArchaeologyEvolutionary theoryArchaeologicalSocial Science
Occasionally the attacks, typically ambushes of smaU numbers of people, cumulatively resulted in numerous casualties. Variation in palisade strength is consistent with the organizational structure and warrior mobilization potential of... more
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    •   5  
      ArchaeologyOrganizational structureNorth Eastern North America ArchaeologyArchaeological
In this article we review the history of the terms and ideas that have been used to conceptualize Paleolithic art since the end of the 19th century. Between 1900 and 1970, prehistoric representations were typically divided into two main... more
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      ArchaeologyArchaeological
Bronze is the defining metal of the European Bronze Age and has been at the center of archaeological and science-based research for well over a century. Archaeometallurgical studies have largely focused on determining the geological... more
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    •   19  
      ArchaeologyArchaeometryBronze Age ArchaeologyArchaeology of Mining
Research during the past decade on Late Precontact societies (ca. A.D. 1000-1600/1700) in the Midcontinent, particularly Mississippian, Oneota, Fort Ancient, and Late Woodland, is strongly rooted in empirical approaches. While some of... more
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    •   6  
      ArchaeologyPolitical EconomyUnited StatesNorth America
This paper reviews the rapidly changing archaeology conducted in the central Andes over the last 5–7 years. Descriptive work remains at the core of much research. At a theoretical level, foreign archaeologists are more fully using... more
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      ArchaeologyArchaeological
The past decade has seen a veritable explosion in archaeological research on complex societies in Latin America. In 1993, Smith published an overview of research to that date; this article is one of two bringing that summary up to the... more
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    •   8  
      ArchaeologyCultural EvolutionEnvironmental ChangeLatin America
Occasionally the attacks, typically ambushes of smaU numbers of people, cumulatively resulted in numerous casualties. Variation in palisade strength is consistent with the organizational structure and warrior mobilization potential of... more
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    •   5  
      ArchaeologyOrganizational structureNorth Eastern North America ArchaeologyArchaeological
The Pacific Islands or Oceania, typically subdivided into Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, have witnessed a virtual explosion of archaeological research, as indicated by this review of the past 5 years' literature. Most recent work... more
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      ArchaeologyPacific IslandsArchaeological
Debates concerning sociopolitical organization in the North American Southwest are clarified and confounded by the conclusion that craft specialization was not always a sufficient condition of complexity in the region. Understanding the... more
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      ArchaeologyArchaeologicalNorth American
Page 1. Journal of Archaeological Research, Vol. 5, No. 2, 1997 Higher Ground: TheArchaeology of North American Platform Mounds Owen Lindauer 1 and John H. Blitz 2 Platform mounds, as forms of monumental architecture ...
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    •   4  
      ArchaeologyNative AmericanArchaeologicalNorth American
Research within the last 3 to 5 years is summarized for the southern part of the southwestern United States and adjacent northwest Mexico. In an effort to identify important new sources of information, the literature of contract... more
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    •   6  
      ArchaeologyResidential MobilityUnited StatesCommunity Organization
Theoretical frames for modeling prehispanic Mesoamerican economies have been informed mostly by political economy or agency approaches. Political economy models examine the ways in which power is constructed and exercised through the... more
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      ArchaeologyPolitical EconomyRegional IntegrationEconomic System
St Mary's Church, Broughton, Lincolnshire, incorporates an eleventh-century tower-nave church. A description of the tower was carried out in 2007 as part of an MA dissertation at the University of York. It is reproduced here, together... more
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    • Archaeological
Cultural resource management (CRM) work accounts for most of the archaeology conducted in the United States. A diverse and somewhat fragmented field, CRM has nonetheless achieved a degree of institutional and organizational maturity. CRM... more
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    •   2  
      ArchaeologyArchaeological
The last decade has seen a surge in ceramic ethnoarchaeological studies worldwide, covering such important topics as ceramic production, technological change, ceramic use and distribution, and social boundaries. Some of the most exciting... more
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    •   18  
      ArchaeologyCeramic TechnologyTaphonomySymbolic boundaries and social boundaries
We take a critical perspective in discussing recent publications on the archaeological study of the ancient state-level societies of Latin America. For some topics, such as intensive agriculture and exchange, data are far ahead of theory,... more
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      ArchaeologyLatin AmericaSocial organizationNew World
In the 1970s and 1980s, regional analysis was an influential part of archaeological research, providing a discrete set of geographical tools inspired by a processual epistemological and interpretive perspective. With the advent of new... more
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    •   12  
      ArchaeologySpatial AnalysisGeographic Information ScienceHistorical Ecology
Archaeologists conductbzg research on the Pleistocene and early Holocene prehistory of Southwest Asia have made a formidable series of new discoveries and fresh insights since 1987. This article examines recent progress and shortcomings... more
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    •   5  
      ArchaeologyLate PleistoceneEarly HoloceneArchaeological