SD Haddow, CJ Knüsel - Bioarchaeology International, 2017 - researchgate.net
The retrieval and re-deposition of elements of the human skeleton, especially the skull (ie, cranium and mandible), is a common feature of Neolithic Near Eastern funerary practices. A …
The social organization of the first fully sedentary societies that emerged during the Neolithic period in Southwest Asia remains enigmatic, 1 mainly because material culture studies …
The transition from a human diet based exclusively on wild plants and animals to one involving dependence on domesticated plants and animals beginning 10,000 to 11,000 y …
Recent bioarchaeological analyses at the Neolithic Anatolian site of Çatalhöyük have revealed considerable variation in skeletal completeness, preservation, articulation, and …
K Kay - Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 2020 - cambridge.org
Houses are rich resources for understanding prehistoric social structure. However, conventional working methods often handle houses as stable entities that reflect the nature …
Digital 3D modelling is increasingly common in archaeological recording, but building the models is only part of the story. Sharing and interacting with these digital representations is …
Archaeologists have adopted the Gini coefficient to evaluate unequal accumulations of material, supporting narratives modelled on modern inequality discourse. Proxies are …
A post medieval mass grave containing hundreds of skeletons, many of which belonging to non-adults, has been discovered. A large-scale multidisciplinary study has been …
M Hammad - Revista Acta Semiotica, 2023 - revistas.pucsp.br
Résumé Pour la période néolithique, la sédentarité des hommes est inférée de la présence de constructions durables groupées, identifiées comme villages, où des traces d'activité et …