Results 161 to 170 of about 5,812 (209)
Diets, stress, and disease in the Etruscan society: Isotope analysis and infantile skeletal palaeopathology from Pontecagnano (Campania, southern Italy, 730-580 BCE). [PDF]
Riccomi G +6 more
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Excavations at Caerau Hillfort, Cardiff, South Wales, 2015: an interim report [PDF]
Davis, Oliver, Sharples, Niall
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Lines of Enquiry: Linear Organisation of the High Lea Farm Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery [PDF]
Bennett, G.A., Gale, John
core
How ancient DNA may help in understanding the origin and spread of agriculture [PDF]
europepmc +1 more source
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Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 1990
Summary. The origins of four Hampshire hillforts are examined and their relationships to linear ditch systems are defined. Comparable sites are briefly considered. From this evidence a pattern of change covering the first half of the first millennium BC can be distinguished beginning with open settlement and ending with strongly defended hillforts set
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Summary. The origins of four Hampshire hillforts are examined and their relationships to linear ditch systems are defined. Comparable sites are briefly considered. From this evidence a pattern of change covering the first half of the first millennium BC can be distinguished beginning with open settlement and ending with strongly defended hillforts set
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Shaftoe Crags Hillfort, Northumberland
2022Northern Archaeology, 07.2, 43 ...
Sellers, Paul +3 more
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Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 1994
Summary.Hillforts constitute a dominant element in the settlement pattern of Iron Age Wessex. This paper examines the nature of hillforts in the light of recent excavations, and seeks to demonstrate how, over the Early and Middle Iron Age (c. 600–100 BC), these focal places acquired a range of functions central to the articulation of the socio‐economic
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Summary.Hillforts constitute a dominant element in the settlement pattern of Iron Age Wessex. This paper examines the nature of hillforts in the light of recent excavations, and seeks to demonstrate how, over the Early and Middle Iron Age (c. 600–100 BC), these focal places acquired a range of functions central to the articulation of the socio‐economic
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Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1975
For many years excavations within British prehistoric settlement sites were largely confined to selective sampling of a very limited nature since this approach, it was thought, offered the best chance of locating an intensively occupied area from which dating evidence and perhaps even the ground plan of a structure might be recovered.
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For many years excavations within British prehistoric settlement sites were largely confined to selective sampling of a very limited nature since this approach, it was thought, offered the best chance of locating an intensively occupied area from which dating evidence and perhaps even the ground plan of a structure might be recovered.
openaire +1 more source

