Results 211 to 220 of about 9,045 (259)
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Bulletin for the Council for British Research in the Levant, 2017
The CBRL Travel Grant allowed me to complete analysis of the ground-stone tools from Kissonerga- Mosphilia and Kissonerga-Skalia in western Cyprus—two case study sites utilized in my PhD.
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The CBRL Travel Grant allowed me to complete analysis of the ground-stone tools from Kissonerga- Mosphilia and Kissonerga-Skalia in western Cyprus—two case study sites utilized in my PhD.
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Rock Sources of Ground Stone Tools of the Chalcolithic Period in Cyprus
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 1991Correct rock terminology applicable to Cyprus is defined and probable rock sources exploited in the Chalcolithic period are outlined. Igneous rocks for axes, adzes, and other tools demanding a hard rock include diabase, basalt, pyroxene andesite, microgabbro, and gabbro.
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Geochemical sourcing of granite ground stone tools from Belize
2018<p>Portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) provides a new alternative to destructive methods of raw material characterization, such as X-ray fluorescence (XRF), neutron activation analysis (NAA), and traditional thin section petrography, although its effectiveness on coarse-grained materials, such as granite, has been questioned.
Tawny Lynn Bailey Tibbits +5 more
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Investigations of a Ground Stone Tool Workshop at Pacbitun, Belize
2013The Ancient Maya site of Pacbitun is centrally located between the two major ecozones of the Belize River Valley and the Mountain Pine Ridge in west-central Belize. In June 2012, investigations began on a group of mounds, known as the Tzib Group, located outside of Pacbitun?s site core in order to investigate the group's potential as a locale for ...
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A Classification System for Ground Stone Tools from the Prehistoric Levant.
Paléorient, 1992Comparative studies of ground stone artifacts have been limited, due to widely varying terminology and typological schemes restricted to material from one or two specific sites. Most interim site reports describe such artifacts only briefly. Yet ground stone has important implications for the development of prehistoric technology and therefore deserves
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Some Scottish core-tools and ground-flaked implements of stone
Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 1940openaire +1 more source
2005
The article studies the ground stone tools found in the excavation of the Garamantian citadel of Aghram Nadharif, Libyan Sahara, Grinding stones are the most numerous class of artifacts collected from the site. The considerable quantity and variety of the material represent an important sample of chronologically homogeneous grinding equipment, allowing
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The article studies the ground stone tools found in the excavation of the Garamantian citadel of Aghram Nadharif, Libyan Sahara, Grinding stones are the most numerous class of artifacts collected from the site. The considerable quantity and variety of the material represent an important sample of chronologically homogeneous grinding equipment, allowing
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