Results 261 to 270 of about 840,716 (345)
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The Archaeology of the Bronze Age Levant, 2019
While examining the impact of metals over indigenous contexts, the author constructs a perspective about the Western End of the Iberian Peninsula in the Late Bronze Age.
R. Greenberg
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While examining the impact of metals over indigenous contexts, the author constructs a perspective about the Western End of the Iberian Peninsula in the Late Bronze Age.
R. Greenberg
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Merchants and Mercantile Society on Late Bronze Age Cyprus
American Journal of Archaeology, 2023In this study, we examine the emergence and role of merchants and mercantile society on Late Bronze Age Cyprus. We present various site features that reflect the presence or daily practices of merchants, and we consider objects such as weights, scales ...
A. B. Knapp, Nathan Meyer
semanticscholar +1 more source
Enclosed Late Bronze Age Habitation Site and Boundary Wall at Lough Gur, Co. Limerick
Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature, 2022:This report was compiled on the basis of a two-season excavation on an enclosed habitation site and adjacent wall on Knockadoon Hill. The enclosure is morphologically similar to sites excavated in the 1940s and 1950s and interpreted as Neolithic and ...
R. Cleary +6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Holocene, 2022
The emergence and intensification of transcontinental exchange during both the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age profoundly influenced the social history of Eurasia.
M. Ma +13 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The emergence and intensification of transcontinental exchange during both the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age profoundly influenced the social history of Eurasia.
M. Ma +13 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Quaternary International, 2020
The Ibiza and Formentera islands (Pityusic Islands, Balearic Archipelago, Spain) were colonised by continental Bell Beaker communities. These islands have no mineral resources for producing copper or tin-bronze objects locally, so their metals are a good
P. Sureda
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Ibiza and Formentera islands (Pityusic Islands, Balearic Archipelago, Spain) were colonised by continental Bell Beaker communities. These islands have no mineral resources for producing copper or tin-bronze objects locally, so their metals are a good
P. Sureda
semanticscholar +1 more source
Radiocarbon-Dating the Late Bronze Age: Cultural and Historical Considerations on Megiddo and Beyond
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental research, 2020Megiddo, with its tight stratigraphy and well-controlled ceramic typology, yielded more than half of the radiocarbon determinations for the time span of the Middle Bronze II to the Iron I in the southern Levant. Here we present two radiocarbon models for
Mario A. S. Martin +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
, 2020
We report the largest published dataset to date of Sn-isotopic compositions of Bronze Age artifacts (338) along with 150 cassiterite samples (75 new) from six potential tin ore sources from which the tin in these artifacts were thought to have likely ...
A. Mason +6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
We report the largest published dataset to date of Sn-isotopic compositions of Bronze Age artifacts (338) along with 150 cassiterite samples (75 new) from six potential tin ore sources from which the tin in these artifacts were thought to have likely ...
A. Mason +6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Chariots in late bronze age Greece
Antiquity, 1983The long-standing debate on the military use of chariots in Late Bronze Age Greece was joined in 1973 by P. A. L. Greenhalgh. In his provocative book, he argued that Mycenaean warriors using thrusting spears had fought at speed from massed chariots. At the same time he rejected as unrealistic Homer's descriptions of chariots as conveyances for warriors
M. A. Littauer, J. H. Crouwel
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, 2021
The study of silver, which was an important mean of currency in the Southern Levant during the Bronze and Iron Age periods (~1950–586 BCE), revealed an unusual phenomenon.
Tzilla Eshel +4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The study of silver, which was an important mean of currency in the Southern Levant during the Bronze and Iron Age periods (~1950–586 BCE), revealed an unusual phenomenon.
Tzilla Eshel +4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source

