Results 321 to 330 of about 566,201 (362)
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Archaeology and Australian Megafauna

Science, 2001
Roberts et al . ([1][1]) suggested an age date of around 46.4 thousand calendar years ago (ka) for extinction of at least six genera of Australian megafauna based on dated articulated remains. Since the exploitation of animals by people inherently involves the disarticulation of faunal remains ...
J, Field, R, Fullagar
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Truth and Archaeology: Justification in Archaeology

2019
Many causes have been proposed for the transition to agriculture but how can archaeologists debate rival interpretations of the record with a seat-of-your-pants theoretical methodology? Truth is a concept that has been the subject of considerable thought and analysis by philosophers for millennia and is a conceptual resource that archaeologists can ...
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Archaeology and Politics / Archaeology and Degrowth

2019
Ce texte analyse comment les valeurs de la société néo-libérale ont déterminé l’évolution de la pratique archéologique en France, qu’elle soit de recherche ou préalable aux travaux d’aménagement. Il appelle à la définition d’une archéologie différente, dans un monde sans croissance.
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Islamic Art and Archaeology*

Review of Middle East Studies, 1968
Like most other fields, the study of Islamic art is both the beneficiary and the victim of its own past. Like many fields, it is affected in various more or less successful ways by developments and needs in related areas of learning. Like all fields, it is tied to the quality and idiosyncrasies of the men who practice it.
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Archaeology and cognitive evolution

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2002
Archaeology can provide two bodies of information relevant to the understanding of the evolution of human cognition – the timing of developments, and the evolutionary context of these developments. The challenge is methodological. Archaeology must document attributes that have direct implications for underlying cognitive mechanisms. One example of such
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Biomolecular archaeology and lipids

World Archaeology, 1993
Abstract Medium‐sized biomolecules, particularly lipids, can frequently be detected in ancient materials. The structures and compositions of mixtures of lipids can provide direct evidence for their origin, and hence, evidence for human activity in the past. An important concept in the field of biomolecular archaeology of lipids is that of ‘biomarkers’.
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Beowulfand Archaeology

Medieval Archaeology, 1957
Medieval Archaeology, 1, 57 ...
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The archaeology of climate change: The case for cultural diversity

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2021
Ariane Burke   +2 more
exaly  

Dowsing and archaeology

Archaeological Prospection, 1998
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