-
Embodied Poverty: Bioarchaeology of the Brentwood Poor Farm, Brentwood, New Hampshire (1841–1868) American Antiquity (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-24 Alex Garcia-Putnam, Amy R. Michael, Grace Duff, Ashanti Maronie, Samantha M. McCrane, Michaela Morrill
Through a commingled, fragmentary assemblage of skeletal remains (MNI = 9) recovered from a 1999 salvage excavation, this article explores the lives and deaths of individuals interred at the Brentwood Poor Farm, Brentwood, New Hampshire (1841–1868). This work demonstrates that bioarchaeological analyses of smaller samples can provide nuanced accounts of marginalization and institutionalization even
-
Reading Colonial Transitions: Archival Evidence and the Archaeology of Indigenous Action in Nineteenth-Century California American Antiquity (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-24 Lee M. Panich, Gustavo Flores, Michael Wilcox, Monica V. Arellano
Archaeologists in North America and elsewhere are increasingly examining long-term Indigenous presence across multiple colonial systems, despite lingering conceptual and methodological challenges. We examine this issue in California, where archaeologists and others have traditionally overlooked Native persistence in the years between the official closing of the region's Franciscan missions in the 1830s
-
Geoglyphs in the Andean Central Coast: combining digital and traditional survey techniques Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-23 Angel Sanchez-Borjas, Christian Mesia-Montenegro, Joaquin Narvaez-Luna
-
Linear Pottery Culture sites west of the Oder river in the Federal state of Brandenburg, Germany Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-23 Erwin Cziesla
-
Warriors from the south? Arrowheads from the Tollense Valley and Central Europe Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-23 Leif Inselmann, Joachim Krüger, Franz Schopper, Lorenz Rahmstorf, Thomas Terberger
-
Restitution and repatriation as an opportunity, not a loss: some reflections on recent Southeast Asian cases Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-20 Stephen A. Murphy
-
DNA metabarcoding and macroremains from coprolites reveal insights into Middle and Late Holocene inhabitants of Bonneville Estates Rockshelter, Nevada Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Taryn Johnson, Bryan Hockett, Anna Linderholm
-
High-elevation sheep and goat provisioning on the Tibetan Plateau, 3000–2200 BP Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Zhengwei Zhang, Hongliang Lü, Shargan Wangdue, Xinzhou Chen, Li Tang, Hailun Xu, Jixiang Song, Petra Vaiglova, Xinyi Liu
-
Late Bronze Age crops from Çine-Tepecik, western Anatolia: insights into farming and political economy in the lands of Arzawa Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Tom Maltas, Sevinç Günel
-
Textiles, dates and identity in the late occupation of the Huacas de Moche, Peru Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Jeffrey Quilter, Carlos Rengifo, Moisés Tufinio, Enrique Zavaleta, Amy Oakland, Lizbeth Pariona Muñoz, Paul Szpak, Maria Goretti Mieites Alonso, Nobuko Shibayama, Anahi Maturana-Fernandez
-
INHILLDAUGAR: minimally invasive fieldwork and linguistic analysis on hillforts along the Daugava river Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-18 Jens Schneeweiß, Vanda Haferberga, Timo Ibsen, Piotr Kittel, Jerzy Sikora, Łukasz Musiaka, Hans Whitefield, Artur Ginter, Edyta Kalińska, Jacek Szmańda, Leonid Vyazov, Ilja Seržant
-
The Beginning of Time Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-18 Karenleigh A. Overmann
The present analysis focuses on the material component of time, the devices used for measuring and counting it. The biological basis for subjective, experiential time is first reviewed, as are early strategies found cross-culturally for measuring and counting time objectively. These strategies include timekeeping by natural phenomena, using tallies to keep track of small periods of time, harnessing
-
In Pursuit of the Analytical Unit. Island Archaeology as a Case Study Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Manuel Calvo-Trias
The present study offers an epistemological and ontological historiographical review of the concept of the unit of analysis using island archaeology as a case study. We carry out a critical investigation to lay out the main ideas used to define units of analysis, and we consider the discourse that has emerged between this and other fields when defining such a concept. From an epistemological point
-
Secrets Buried in the Pits: Ritual Activities in Western Anatolia in the First Half of the Second Millennium bce Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Ümit Gündoğan
Western Anatolian ritual pits provide valuable insights into socio-cultural, economic and symbolic practices during the Early to Middle Bronze Age. Findings in feasting pits, such as carbonized seeds and animal bones, indicate a strong link between ritual and food. Standing stones, altars and carefully arranged artefacts suggest a symbolic and sacred dimension beyond mere ceremonies. The pits from
-
Afterlives of discovery: tomb robberies, treasure and untangling Tutankhamun Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Campbell Price
Egyptology has been changing. At least in the way its practitioners present their findings to a broad public audience. A selection of recent publications for general-interest readership represents something of a reorientation of perspectives on the (Western-led) archaeological ‘discovery’ of Pharaonic Egyptian remains, and the opening up of a subtle counter-narrative, which is something of an anti-archaeology
-
At the edge of Neolithic transition: strategies of the Linearbandkeramik farmers in South Bohemia (Czechia) Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Václav Vondrovský, Michaela Ptáková, Petr Šída, Jiří Bumerl, Martin Pták, Lenka Kovačiková, Jindřich Prach, Jan Novák, Kristýna Budilová, Petr Pokorný
-
Crafting crossroads in Zagori (north-west Greece): Ottoman-era archaeology through a workshop in vernacular architecture Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Faidon Moudopoulos-Athanasiou, Ionas Sklavounos, Grigoris Koutropoulos
-
Excavating ancient pilgrimage at Nessana, Negev Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Yana Tchekhanovets
-
Regional variations in the demographic response to the arrival of rice farming in prehistoric Japan Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Enrico R. Crema, Simon Carrignon, Shinya Shoda, Chris J. Stevens
-
Improving archaeomagnetic interpretations by reusing magnetically oriented samples for micromorphological analysis Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Ada Dinçkal, Ángela Herrejón Lagunilla, Angel Carrancho, Cristo M. Hernández Gomez, Carolina Mallol
Here we present a novel approach that combines soil micromorphology with the analysis of magnetically oriented samples to improve the interpretation of archaeomagnetic results. The aim is to test whether irregular archaeomagnetic data can be examined with micromorphological soil analysis in a single sample methodology, allowing said archaeomagnetic data to contribute to more meaningful archaeological
-
FORMOR project: analysis of the formation of complex societies in Early Medieval Moravia Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-13 Jiří Macháček, Vladimír Sládek, Adéla Balcárková, Petr Dresler, Zuzana Hofmanová, Pavlína Ingrová, Martin Košťál, Vojtěch Nosek, Michaela Prišťáková, Renáta Přichystalová, Denisa Zlámalová
-
Ivories in the Late Chalcolithic Period and Their Significance for Understanding Contacts Between Egypt and the Southern Levant Journal of World Prehistory (IF 3.8) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 Danny Rosenberg, Rivka Chasan
-
The life and death of cremated infants and children from the Neo-Punic tophet at Zita, Tunisia Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 Jessica I. Cerezo-Román, Brett Kaufman, Glenys McGowan, Ali Drine, Thomas R. Fenn, Hans Barnard, Rayed Khedher, Sami Ben Tahar, Stacy Edington, Elyssa Jerray, Megan Daniels
-
‘Legion: life in the Roman Army’ The British Museum exhibition Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 M.C. Bishop
At a time when the Parthenon Sculptures refuse to go away (in every sense of the phrase) and uncatalogued items were allegedly found to have been sold off by a member of staff, The British Museum needs some good news. There must have been sighs of relief all round when their new exhibition in the (itself often controversial: Puffett 2023) BP Gallery, Legion: life in the Roman Army, opened to almost
-
Twenty-first-century light over the Indo-European homeland: triangulating language, archaeology and genetics Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 Rasmus G. Bjørn
The reviewed volumes represent the past and future of triangulating human prehistory. Both works address the integration of the knowledge embedded in the Indo-European group of languages into the interpretation of archaeological and genetic data, but approach this very differently. By enlisting the expertise of scholars from the three different fields, with 22 contributions from more than 40 scholars
-
“Vituð ér enn—eða hvat?” Do you want to know, or what? Understanding medieval Scandinavian relationships with the divine Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 Shannon Lewis-Simpson
The peoples who inhabited the worlds discussed in these two books, either in reality or within our imaginations, are at once slippery and certain. We may believe we have a grip on what the Norse/Viking worlds were about, only to have new evidence or a new approach to existing data challenge our views. These two books, The Norse myths that shape the way we think and The Norse sorceress: mind and materiality
-
The submerged Nabataean temple in Puteoli at Pozzuoli, Italy: first campaign of underwater research Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 Michele Stefanile, Michele Silani, Maria Luisa Tardugno
-
'JSDNE': A novel R package for estimating age quantitatively with the auricular surface by Dirichlet normal energy Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Jisun Jang, Enrico Mariconti, Rebecca Watts
Age estimation plays a significant role in forensic anthropology and bioarchaeology. However, widely-used traditional methods involving macroscopic observation suffer from subjectivity and statistical bias. The present research aims to minimize both issues by applying computational and mathematical approaches. A laser scanner was used to reconstruct 890 auricular surfaces of adult individuals from
-
Repetition, persistence and generality: problematising the endurance of medieval urbanity World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Ben Jervis
It is proposed that an approach to difference through repetition, inspired by the writing of Gilles Deleuze, provides a conceptual approach to understand the endurance of urban life in medieval Eng...
-
Moated site object detection using time series satellite imagery and an improved deep learning model in northeast Thailand Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-07 Hong Yang, Shaohua Wang, Shunli Wang, Pengcheng Zhao, Mingyao Ai, Qingwu Hu
Moated sites are crucial for revealing the formation of early civilizations and societies in Southeast Asia, and a significant amount of effort has been expended in investigating their distribution. This work is the first application of deep learning object detection methods to identify moated sites from time series satellite images. We presented multi-information fusion data (N-RGB) based on the fusion
-
Deep learning-based detection of qanat underground water distribution systems using HEXAGON spy satellite imagery Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-07 Nazarij Buławka, Hector A. Orengo, Iban Berganzo-Besga
Qanats are a remarkable type of ancient hydraulic structure for sustainable water distribution in arid environments that use subterranean channels to transport water from highland or mountainous areas. The presence of the qanat system is marked by a line of regularly spaced shafts visible from the surface, which can be used to detect qanats using satellite imagery. Typically, qanats have been documented
-
Sheep and goats taxonomic abundance trends in 1st millennium CE southern Italy: Multilevel bayesian modelling of NISP datasets Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-04 Roberto Ragno
The 1st millennium CE represents a period of significant change in the agricultural landscape of southern Italy. Sheep and goats are among the most common faunal remains recovered from archaeological excavations of this period, but the contribution of these animals to the agricultural economy (particularly wool production) is often discussed through textual sources. This paper synthesises caprine taxonomic
-
Practice beyond category: archaeologies of labor World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-09-04 Kim Bowes
Published in World Archaeology (Vol. 55, No. 1, 2023)
-
Labor as punishment: excavating labor within the southern convict lease system World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-09-04 V. Camille Westmont
The rebuilding of the US South following the US Civil War was only possible through widespread forced prison labor formalized as part of the Southern convict lease system. The convict lease system ...
-
The costs of transporting goods by different modes: A case study of pottery movement in late Roman Britain Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-03 Rob Wiseman, Scott G. Ortman, Olivia Bulik
There is a long-standing view that, in the Roman world, transport by sea and river was very much cheaper than by land. Previous analyses of transport costs have relied primarily on a few surviving historical records, notably the Edict on Maximum Prices issued by Diocletian in 301 CE. Here we outline an alternative method for deriving relative costs of transportation by different modes using materials
-
Chipped-Stone Crescents from the Terminal Pleistocene–Early Holocene of Far Western North America and the Transverse Projectile Point Hypothesis Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2024-08-31 Daniel S. Amick
-
Speiss at Amarna (Egypt, c. 1353–1336 BCE) – Exotic anachronism or cherished commodity? Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-30 Frederik W. Rademakers, Marie Vandenbeusch, Elvira Vassilieva, Frank Vanhaecke, Patrick Degryse
This paper presents the most comprehensive study of speiss from the Late Bronze Age world published so far, and the first detailed study of speiss from the Nile Valley overall. It combines the results of XRD, optical microscopy, SEM-EDS, trace element (ICP-OES and ICP-MS) and lead isotopic analysis to fully characterise two fragments of speiss from the 18th Dynasty capital Amarna in Egypt, now in the
-
Migration flows and concrete walls: an archaeological perspective on early migrant detention facilities. The C.P.T “Regina Pacis” (Italy, Puglia) World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-08-29 Emma Beatrice Farina, Francesco Iacono
Over the last few decades, Italy has been at the forefront of mass migration flows. Starting from the late 1990s, facilities for the detention and expulsion of undocumented migrants have been estab...
-
Multi-stage experiments in Bronze Age spear combat: insights on wear formation, trauma, and combat contexts Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-29 V. Gentile, C.J. van Dijk, O. Ter Mors
This paper presents and discusses an experimental investigation of Bronze Age spear combat, with a focus on the impacts of bronze points against each other and other materials such as wooden shafts and shields, and animal tissues which act as a proxy for the human body.
-
Some first observations on ant-nest morphology and micromorphology, the effects of wildfires, and their implications for the understanding of archaeological features Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-28 Hans Huisman, Hans Peeters, Jan-Willem de Kort, Jap Smits
Ants are among the soil mesofauna that cause significant bioturbation at the location of their nests. They can have significant impact on the preservation of soil features and on post-depositional artefact distribution. Moreover, there is discussion on the natural or anthropogenic nature of so-called ‘pit-hearth’ features dating to the Mesolithic. Such features are common in parts of the Netherlands
-
Stable Isotope Analysis and Chronology Building at the Hokfv-Mocvse Cultural Site, the Earliest Evidence for South Atlantic Shell-Ring Villages American Antiquity (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Carey J. Garland, Victor D. Thompson, Matthew D. Howland, Ted L. Gragson, C. Fred T. Andrus, Marcie Demyan, Brett Parbus
Circular shell rings along the South Atlantic coast of the United States are vestiges of the earliest sedentary villages in North America, dating to 4500–3000 BP. However, little is known about when Indigenous communities began constructing these shell-ring villages. This article presents data from the Hokfv-Mocvse Shell Ring on Ossabaw Island, Georgia. Although shell rings are often associated with
-
The Fremont Frontier: Living at the Margins of Maize Farming American Antiquity (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Kenneth B. Vernon, Peter M. Yaworsky, Weston McCool, Jerry D. Spangler, Simon Brewer, Brian F. Codding
The Fremont provide an important case study to examine the resilience of ancient farmers to climatic downturns, because they lived at the far northern margin of intensive maize agriculture in the American West, where the constraints on maize production are made abundantly clear. Using a tree-ring and simulation-based reconstruction of average annual precipitation and maize growing degree days, along
-
Beyond Inca roads: the Redes Andinas project explores complex palimpsests of Andean road networks Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Thibault Saintenoy
-
Isotopic and provenance analysis of Neolithic and Bronze Age shell disc beads from Ban Non Wat, north‐east Thailand Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Jelmer W. Eerkens, Charles Higham, Howard J. Spero
-
Ancient parasite analysis: Exploring infectious diseases in past societies Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-24 Piers D. Mitchell
Parasites are the causative agents of infectious diseases that have affected humans throughout our evolution. Some appear to have been ubiquitous in past societies around the globe, but others were only viable in distinct regions where the conditions suited their complex life cycles. This review considers how we can recover and identify ancient parasites, before interrogating the literature to explore
-
Leveraging the potential of charred archaeological seeds for reconstructing the history of date palm Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-24 S. Ivorra, M. Tengberg, V. Bonhomme, T. Kaczmarek, T. Pastor, J.-F. Terral, M. Gros-Balthazard
The analysis of seeds from archaeobotanical assemblages is essential for understanding the history of crop cultivation. However, the majority of these seeds are typically found charred, a condition that not only degrades DNA, which hinders genetic studies, but also distorts their morphological features, which may bias comparisons with uncharred modern samples. While the effects of charring on several
-
A method for defining dispersed community territories Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-23 Kenneth B. Vernon, Scott G. Ortman
The transition from dispersed to aggregated forms of settlement reflects a critical shift in the relative value of social and primary (food) modes of production. However, investigating trade-offs between these different forms of settlement requires estimates of the extent of community territories, including their nearby arable land. Here we demonstrate a simple algorithm to do that. Our algorithm is
-
“An Acre of Land to Plant or a Stick of Wood to Make a Fence or Fire”: An Archaeology of Mohegan Allotment American Antiquity (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-22 Craig N. Cipolla, James Quinn, Jay Levy
Although land loss is among the most profound impacts that settler colonialism had for Indigenous societies across North America, archaeologists rarely study one of the principal colonial mechanisms of land dispossession: allotment. This process forever altered the course of North American history, breaking up collectively held Indigenous lands into lots “owned” by individuals and families while further
-
Tasks, Knowledge, and Practice: Long-Distance Resource Acquisition at Goat Spring Pueblo (LA285), Central New Mexico American Antiquity (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-22 Suzanne L. Eckert, Deborah L. Huntley, Judith A. Habicht-Mauche, Jeffrey R. Ferguson
We examine provenance data collected from three types of geological resources recovered at Goat Spring Pueblo in central New Mexico. Our goal is to move beyond simply documenting patterns in compositional data; rather, we develop a narrative that explores how people's knowledge and preferences resulted in culturally and materially determined choices as revealed in those patterns. Our analyses provide
-
Vitamin D deficiency, pregnancy, and childbirth in early medieval Milan Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-21 Lucie Biehler-Gomez, Elisa Pera, Valentina Lucchetti, Laura Sisto, Beatrice del Bo, Mirko Mattia, Lucrezia Rodella, Giorgio Manzi, Anna Maria Fedeli, Alessandro Porro, Cristina Cattaneo
This paper explores the burden of osteomalacia on pregnancy and childbirth through two cases from early medieval urban Milan. Two skeletons of female individuals with skeletal deformities and associated with 25–36 gestational weeks fetuses, excavated from the and urban cemeteries and dated to the Early Middle Ages, were examined. Paleopathological and historical analyses were performed in a biocultural
-
Estimating the scale-dependent influence of natural terrestrial corridors on the positioning of settlements: A multi-scale study of Roman forts in Wales Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-19 Joseph Lewis
Natural terrestrial corridors have been shown to have influenced the positioning of past settlements. The scale at which this pattern-process relationship operates is often un-estimated and thus remains unclear. This paper proposes the comparison of multiple point process models as an approach for estimating the optimal scale at which this relationship is strongest. With this approach, it is revealed
-
Firefly synchronicity and platform mound building by indigenous peoples of the Florida Peninsula, USA World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Kendal Jackson, Jaime A. Rogers, Victor D. Thompson, Carey Garland, Margo Schwadron, Chandler O. Burchfield
Although archaeologists often highlight the capacity of our field to identify broad-scale patterning in human societies, critiques of social evolution led many to focus on shorter-term, local histo...
-
Sabarmati and its connection with the Harappan port Lothal and the Nal corridor: A study using multi-sensor data, cloud-computing and multi-platforms Journal of Archaeological Science (IF 2.6) Pub Date : 2024-08-14 Ekta Gupta, V.N. Prabhakar, Vikrant Jain
Lothal is situated approximately 30 km inland from the Gulf of Khambhat on the western coast of India in Gujarat. It served as a bustling port during the Bronze Age Harappan period (2600 BCE to 1900 BCE) and was connected to a series of Harappan production and distribution centres dotted along the Gulf of Kachchh and the Rann of Kachchh. Artefacts of foreign nature found in Lothal attest to its intercultural
-
High levels of consanguinity in a child from Paquimé, Chihuahua, Mexico Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Jakob Sedig, Meradeth Snow, Michael Searcy, José Luis Punzo Diaz, Steven LeBlanc, Frank Ramos, Laurie Eccles, David Reich
-
Historical and archaeogenomic identification of high-status Englishmen at Jamestown, Virginia Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Douglas W. Owsley, Karin S. Bruwelheide, Éadaoin Harney, Swapan Mallick, Nadin Rohland, Iñigo Olalde, Kathryn G. Barca, Andrew J. Ramsey, Deborah A. Hull-Walski, William M. Kelso, Jamie E. May, Nasreen Broomandkhoshbacht, Matthew Ferry, Ann Marie Lawson, Megan Michel, Jonas Oppenheimer, Kristin Stewardson, Fatma Zalzala, Vicki E. Simon, David M. Givens, Michael D. Lavin, David E. Reich
-
Human dispersal and plant processing in the Pacific 55 000–50 000 years ago Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Dylan Gaffney, Daud A. Tanudirjo, Erlin Novita Idje Djami, Zubair Mas'ud, Abdul Razak Macap, Tristan Russell, Moses Dailom, Yulio Ray, Thomas Higham, Fiona Bradshaw, Fiona Petchey, S. Anna Florin, Patrick Roberts, Mary Lucas, Monica Tromp, Karen Greig, Hermine Xhauflair, Alvaro Montenegro, Robert Hall, Clara Boulanger, Rintaro Ono, Annette Oertle, Denis Scholz, Megan Spitzer, Katherine Szabo, Irene
-
The Mortar Wreck: a mid-thirteenth-century ship, wrecked off Studland Bay, Dorset, carrying a cargo of Purbeck stone Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Tom Cousins
-
Unveiling Bishop Teodomiro of Iria Flavia? An attempt to identify the discoverer of St James's tomb through osteological and biomolecular analyses (Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain) Antiquity (IF 1.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Patxi Pérez-Ramallo, Ricardo Rodríguez-Varela, Alexandra Staniewska, Jana Ilgner, Maja Krzewińska, David Chivall, Tom Higham, Anders Götherström, Patrick Roberts
-
Archaeobotany in an era of change and challenge: potential and fragility of macro- and micro-remains World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 M Berihuete-Azorin, C Kerfant, E Allué, A Burguet-Coca, F Burjachs, I Expósito Barea, T Fernández Iriarte, B Garay Palacios, J Revelles, A Robledo, D Rodríguez Antón, C Speciale
Apart from helping us understand past communities’ response to climate change and their plant management resilience mechanisms, archaeobotanical information may also serve as a basis to rethink our...
-
Ottoman archaeology between the Self and the Other: archaeological ethnography and the transborder research potential of the SW Balkans World Archaeology (IF 1.8) Pub Date : 2024-08-13 Faidon Moudopoulos-Athanasiou
Religious syncretism alongside the coexistence of various groups of people and their shared material culture was a reality in the Ottoman-era Balkans. Such entanglements remain underrepresented in ...