Results 11 to 20 of about 118 (110)
Proceedings of the 93rd Annual Business Meeting of the American Association of Biological Anthropologists. [PDF]
American Journal of Biological Anthropology, Volume 188, Issue 3, November 2025.
Rector AL.
europepmc +2 more sources
Reconstructing Ancient Egyptian Diet through Bone Elemental Analysis Using LIBS (Qubbet el Hawa Cemetery). [PDF]
One of the most important advantages of LIBS that make it suitable for the analysis of archeological materials is that it is a quasi‐nondestructive technique. Archeological mandibles excavated from Qubbet el Hawa Cemetery, Aswan, were subjected to elemental analysis in order to reconstruct the dietary patterns of the middle class of the Aswan ...
Al-Khafif GD, El-Banna R.
europepmc +2 more sources
Abstract Objectives The Levantine Middle Bronze Age (MBA, circa 2000–1500 BCE) marks a period of increased trade and regional interaction, spurred on by technological developments. In light of previous research exhibiting limited mobility in Sidon, further investigation was conducted using biodistance analysis to understand local population history and
N. Maaranen +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract The location of Ghazali monastery away from the Nile valley within the relatively isolated environs of the Bayuda desert presents a landscape suggestive of mobility toward the monastery by those who chose to reside there as monks. To assess this potentiality, a sample of 37 individuals from the monastic cemetery (Cemetery 2) were analysed for ...
Robert J. Stark +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Jordanian migration and mobility in the Middle Bronze Age (ca. 2100–1550 BCE) at Pella
Abstract The site of Pella, located in the foothills of the east Jordan valley, was a prosperous city–state throughout the Middle Bronze Age (MBA, ca. 2000–1500 BCE). As part of a widespread trading network, Pella enjoyed extensive socio‐economic relationships with Egypt, Cyprus, and the Aegean, Anatolia, and Babylonia during this period.
Chris Stantis +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Objectives Found throughout the ancient Near East during the Middle Bronze Age (ca. 2000–1600 BCE), many modern scholars emphasize that weapon‐associated burials are ideological and symbolic associations, not reflections of occupation. However, the term “warrior burial” still carries interpretive value that misinforms popular perception.
Arwa Kharobi +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Fluency is one of the most important components of oral proficiency, which can be affected by a number of variables including frequency, duration, and place of pause phenomena. The present study aimed at investigating the effect of bilingualism on learning a foreign language from the angle of fluency and pausing patterns by comparing the pausing ...
Zahra Banitalebi +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Vladi mir Golenishchev’s travel to Egypt in autumn and winter 1890–1891 (new archival evidence)
The publication presents a document preserved at the Archives of Vladimir Golenishchev in Paris (Centre Wladimir Golénischeff, École Pratique des Hautes Études).
I. A. Ladynin
doaj +1 more source
Breve síntesis sobre la introducción de nuevo armamento en Egipto durante la dinastía XVIII
The traditional Egyptology emphasises that new weapons were introduced in Egypt during the Hyksos Period. If we studied the sources, we could conclude that, in their last phase, the Hyksos introduced horses and chariots, swords and daggers with inlaid ...
Javier Martínez Babón
doaj +1 more source
The Lower Nubian Egyptian Fortresses in the Middle Kingdom: A Strategic Point of View [PDF]
The Ancient Egypt was a highly militarized society that operated within various theaters of war. From the Middle Kingdom period to the following times, warfare was always present in the foreign and internal policy of the pharaohs and their officers.
Eduardo Ferreira
doaj +1 more source

