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Grave-Goods

2021
Britain is internationally renowned for the high quality and exquisite crafting of its later prehistoric grave goods (c. 4000 BC to AD 43). Many of prehistoric Britain's most impressive artefacts have come from graves. Interred with both inhumations and cremations, they provide some of the most durable and well-preserved insights into personal identity
Cooper, Anwen   +4 more
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Grave Goods

Marketing Theory, 2020
Arts-based research challenges inquirers into marketplace behavior to address the ontological turn in the social sciences by representing their understanding of consumption in an aesthetic key. Unfolding from the premise that experience is an assemblage, this short story examines the phenomenon of vibrant matter through an exploration of entangled ...
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Eaton Grave Goods

2021
Images of grave goods associated with burials from the Eaton site. For details on these burials, see the 1995 NAGPRA report from Eaton, I.D. 373225. The average diameter of the stone beads = 9 mm. Both the beads and the teeth were given the catalog number E260, with the exception of one tooth which was designated E242,
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Graves and grave-goods

2015
It has been stressed that the archaeological remains of the dead in a formal grave represent only the final stage in what may well have been a protracted and complex series of stages in funerary ritual. From this final stage, however, the archaeologist is potentially able to make an informed assessment of several aspects of the prevailing funerary ...
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Figure 4.51. Distribution of burials with grave goods

2021
Figure 4.51.
Nick Stoodley, Stephen R. Cosh
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Contextualizing Grave Goods

2013
Abstract The material culture of mortuary practices is one of the central sources at our disposal in the archaeological interpretation of past societies. The purpose of this chapter is thus to present a number of theoretical considerations deemed relevant to the study of grave goods. A short review of previous and contemporary approaches
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Bronze Grave Goods from Norcia

Etruscan Studies, 2011
Bronze vessels and others bronze artifacts, now in the National Archaeological Museum of Spoleto, unpublished, belong to a grave from the necropolis of Norcia, extended in a large area known as 'Piano di Santa Scolastica'. Associations of these artifacts are very interesting and indicate, often, contexts belonging to individuals of Celtic ethnicity.
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