Results 51 to 60 of about 1,058 (209)
Inscription funéraire trouvée à Gondreville (Loiret, cité des Sénons)
During the rescue archaeology operations on the A19 motorway, a little funerary building was found near a Roman road, in the commune of Gondreville (Loiret).
Monique Dondin‑Payre, Camille Scaon
doaj
ABSTRACT Morphological and morphometric analysis of archaeological animal hairs offers a nondestructive method to explore past clothing. We examined hair from two 18th‐century burial areas (SP03 and SP04) in Mazamet, France. SP03 specimens exhibited a continuous medulla, a low medullary index (0.2 ± 0.03) and cuticular features suggesting goat or ...
C. Michel +9 more
wiley +1 more source
Azerbaijan's independence in 1991 opened the way for preventive archaeological research. Fieldwork provided French researchers with the opportunity to introduce Azerbaijani student researchers and workers to their methods of packing, recording and ...
Bertille Lyonnet +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Funerary Textiles In Situ: Archaeological Perspectives
Abstract Despite the apparent rarity of organic remains in archaeology, textiles were an omnipresent type of material in past societies, and in funerary contexts especially, textiles played a prominent role. This is well illustrated in modern practices across the globe, but rarely the focus of archaeological enquiries.
Elsa Yvanez, Magdalena M. Wozniak
openaire +1 more source
ABSTRACT The Guanche mummies, ancient inhabitants of the Canary Islands, represent a significant part of the historical heritage preserved at the Museum of Nature and Archaeology (MUNA) in Tenerife, Spain. These mummies, subjected to artificial conservation practices, are of great interest to conservators seeking to understand their mummification ...
Benigno Sánchez +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Indigenous Collaborative, Consultative, and Community-Engaged Archaeology in the American Southeast
In October 2022 at the annual board meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference (SEAC), a new image policy for the journal Southeastern Archaeology was adopted that prohibited publication of photographs of funerary objects/belongings.
Jacob Holland-Lulewicz
doaj +1 more source
Archéologie funéraire de l’âge du Fer en Champagne-Ardenne
The region of Champagne-Ardenne is particularly rich in Iron Age burials. As a result, the region saw intense and destructive archaeological activity from the end of the 18th century onwards. The rapid growth of preventive archaeology from the late 1980s
Lola Bonnabel
doaj +1 more source
ABSTRACT Cremation became the dominant funerary practice in the Middle Danube Region during the Roman Period (RP) (1st–4th century) and reappeared in the Early Medieval Ages (EMA) (6th/7th–8th century). This study aims to reconstruct differences in cremation conditions from the Gbely‐Kojatín site (Slovakia, RP and EMA) and the Přítluky site (Czech ...
Katarína Hladíková +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Gender inequality in Ancient Rome through archaeometric studies of wine in funerary contexts
This article examines how the archaeometric and archaeological analysis of funerary assemblages in Roman tombs reveals gender inequality in Ancient Rome.
José Rafael Ruiz Arrebola
doaj +1 more source
The article is based on the recovery and reinterpretation of archaeological data from the Nubar Hamparțumian archival fonds found at the “ Vasile Pârvan” Institute of Archaeology in Bucharest. The documents contain information about 74 burials discovered
Crețu, C., Dabîca, M., Soficaru, A.
doaj +1 more source

