Results 1 to 10 of about 1,188,998 (347)

The Iron Age Today [PDF]

open access: yesInternet Archaeology, 2018
Thanks to investment in walking the landscape, aerial photography, geophysical survey and excavation, there is a baseline of information on the distribution and types of enclosed settlement and examples of high-quality site-based data, often revealing ...
Harold Mytum
doaj   +3 more sources

The contribution of diet and genotype to iron status in women:a classical twin study [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
This is the first published report examining the combined effect of diet and genotype on body iron content using a classical twin study design. The aim of this study was to determine the relative contribution of genetic and environmental factors in ...
Alexander J. Macgregor   +27 more
core   +15 more sources

Axes in the Funerary Ceremonies of the Northern Pontic Scythians

open access: yesArts, 2023
Axes were rare among the Scythians but are occasionally found in Scythian kurgans. Like other weapons, axes had practical as well as social and religious roles.
Marina Daragan, Sergei Polin
doaj   +1 more source

Transformation of the Funeral Rite of the Peoples of Central Asia on the Territory of North India During the Early Iron Age [PDF]

open access: yesГуманитарный вектор, 2022
The article is dedicated to the historiographical analysis of the transformation of funeral rite of the Pamir Sakas, Yuezhi, Indo-Scythians and Kushans in the process of their migration from Central Asia to the territory of Northern India.
Transformation of the Funeral Rite of the Peoples of Central Asia on the Territory of North India During the Early Iron Age
doaj   +1 more source

An Evaluation of Iron Age Ceramic Materials from the Erzurum-Çiğdemli Mounds in the Northeast Anatolia Region

open access: yesAnadolu Araştırmaları, 2022
The Çiğdemli Mound is located in the western part of Erzurum Plain, one of the largest plains of the Northeast Anatolia Region. It was uninterruptedly inhabited from the Bronze Age to the end of the Iron Age.
Rabia Akarsu
doaj   +1 more source

Ties between steppe and peninsula: Comparative perspective of the Bronze and Early Iron Ages of Мongolia and Кorea

open access: yesProceedings of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, 2020
This article describes the results of a comparative study of some monuments (settlement, dolmen, rock art) and some artifacts (pottery, arrowhead, dagger, bronze mirror, bead, whetstone) of the Bronze and Early Iron Ages of Mongolian steppe and Korean ...
Jamiyan-Ombo Gantulga
doaj   +1 more source

Ritual Deposit of the Sarmatian Age from the Barrow on the Lower Don Basin

open access: yesВестник Волгоградского государственного университета. Серия 4. История, регионоведение, международные отношения, 2020
Introduction. In 2007 the archaeological expedition of the State Autonomic Cultural Facility of Rostov Region “The Don Heritage” excavated burial ground Krasny IV in Aksay district of Rostov Region. In the mound of barrow No.
Mikhail V. Vlaskin   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

Ovaören-Yassıhöyük Excavations and a Chronological Overview of Development and Change in Central Anatolian Iron Age Architecture

open access: yesHöyük, 2023
Ovaören, located in geologically rich and diverse Cappadocia in Central Anatolia, represents an archaeological integrity consisting of three distinct units, 2.5 km south of the town of Ovaören in Gülşehir county of Nevşehir ...
S. Yücel Şenyurt   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

An Age of Iron – Agency, co-creation and environmental advocacy in lens-based practice

open access: yesScreenworks, 2023
Tahāroa is a tiny settlement to the South-West of the Kawhia harbor, in the North Island of Aotearoa-New Zealand. N.Z Steel first brokered an agreement with local tribe Ngāti Mahuta ki-te-Hauāuru in the 1970’s to extract the titanomagnetite from the ...
Becky Nunes
doaj   +1 more source

Investigating Pins of Iron Age of Iran and its Applications [PDF]

open access: yesDānishhā-yi būmī-i Īrān, 2019
Straight Pins have been repeatedly among the findings of the metal objects of the settlements, religious sites and cemeteries of the Iron Age of Iran. These artifacts have often been referred to as "Pins" in some of the available sources. In other cases,
کاظم ملازاده   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

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