840 resultados para Pottery, Prehistoric


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Bibliography: v. 3, p. [259]-268.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Directors: 1875-19 L. Pigorini (with P. Strobel, 1875-94, G. Chierici, 1875-85)--19 -34, P. Orsi.--1935-1941-42, U. Bellini and others.--1943- R. Paribeni and others.

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No more published.

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Reprint of 3 works originally published by the Walpole Society, New York: The ceramic collectors' glossary, by E.A. Barber, first published in 1914; The furniture collectors' glossary, by L.V. Lockwood, first published in 1913; and A silver collectors' glossary and a list of early American silversmiths and their marks, first published in 1917.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Series title varies slightly.

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Architecture.--Sculpture.--Painting.--Metal work.--Ivory and wood carving.--Glass and pottery.--Textile fabrics.--Mosaic.

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Strontium isotope analysis of skeletal material as a means to reconstruct prehistoric residential patterns has previously mainly been applied to populations with terrestrial diets. Here we present a model for populations with mixed marine/terrestrial diets, which is based on two-component mixing of strontium isotopes. Applying this model, we can estimate the original strontium isotope value of the terrestrial component of the diet. Accordingly it is possible to identify non-local individuals even if they had a mixed marine/terrestrial diet. The model is applied to tooth enamel samples representing nine individuals recovered from a passage grave in Resmo, on the island of Öland in the Baltic Sea, where at least five non-local individuals, representing at least two different geographical regions of origin, were identified. Non-local individuals were more frequent during the Bronze Age than during previous phases.

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This paper, focusing principally on post-Lapita times, outlines the course and outcomes of work undertaken over the last two decades in the West New Britain-Vitiaz Strait-north New Guinea coastal region. It presents two principal arguments. The first is that major periods of movement and abandonment documented in the archaeological sequences of this region from about 3,500 years ago coincide with the record of volcanism in the Talasea-Cape Hoskins area. The second is that the post-Lapita sequences of this region differ significantly from the post-Lapita sequences emerging in the island arc reaching from Manus via New Ireland to southern and eastern island Melanesia, which show continuous occupation and pottery production.