990 resultados para Early farming, hunter-gatherer, palaeoecology, phytoliths, pland macrofossils, Soust Asiathea


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Las investigaciones arqueológicas de Mendoza prestaron poca atención al piedemonte oriental de la precordillera en comparación con las realizadas en valles y sectores de precordillera. Sin embargo, el estudio de este sector resulta clave para entender los patrones de asentamiento-subsistencia de las sociedades cazadoras-recolectoras de la región. Por otro lado, si bien se han postulado modelos para explicar las modalidades de articulación entre tierras altas y bajas durante la prehistoria, no se han definido las variaciones en sentido diacrónico. En este trabajo se apunta a describir las características del registro arqueológico del ambiente del piedemonte oriental de la precordillera de Mendoza, y en particular, de un sitio localizado en la Quebrada de Papagayos, para, análisis de la tecnología lítica mediante, proponer hipótesis referidas a los modos de organización tecnológica y del asentamiento hace aproximadamente 3.000 años AP.

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Acknowledgments This work was funded by an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AH/K006029/1) grant awarded to Rick Knecht, Kate Britton and Charlotta Hillerdal (Aberdeen); an AHRC-LabEx award (AH/N504543/1) to KB, RK, Keith Dobney (Liverpool) and Isabelle Sidéra (Nanterre); the Carnegie Trust to the Universities of Scotland (travel grant to KB); and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. The onsite collection of samples was carried out by staff and students from the University of Aberdeen, volunteer excavators and the residents of Quinhagak. We had logistical and planning support for fieldwork by the Qanirtuuq Incorporated, Quinhagak, Alaska, and the people of Quinhagak, who we also thank for sampling permissions. Special thanks to Warren Jones and Qanirtuuq Incorporated (especially Michael Smith and Lynn Church), and to all Nunalleq project team members, in Aberdeen and at other institutions, particularly Charlotta Hillerdal and Edouard Masson-Maclean (Aberdeen) for comments on earlier versions of this manuscript, and also to Véronique Forbes, Ana Jorge, Carly Ameen and Ciara Mannion (Aberdeen) for their inputs. Thanks also to Michelle Alexander (York). Finally, thank you to Ian Scharlotta (Alberta) for inviting us to contribute to this special issue, to the Editor, and to three anonymous reviewers, whose suggestions and recommended changes to an earlier version of this manuscript greatly improved the paper.

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The authors describe rock art dating research in Australia using the oxalate method While the array of dates obtained (which range from c. 1200 to c. 25000 BP) show a satisfactory correlation with other archaeological data, there are mismatches which suggest that some motifs were often imitated by later artists, and/or that the mineral accretions continued to form periodically, perhaps continuously, as a regional phenomenon over a long period of time.

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The conference aimed to provide a forum for the exploration of barriers, borders and boundaries in Australian archaeological methods and practice, frameworks of interpretation and epistemological structures. Sessions were designed to have broad appeal to a range of archaeological stakeholders including academics, consultants, Indigenous peoples, students, cultural heritage managers and policy formulators.

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