Results 101 to 110 of about 682 (158)
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Diet and attrition in the natufians
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1972AbstractThere is a high correlation between the rate of dental attrition and the physical consistency of the diet. Hypotheses concerning types of diet and methods of food preparation in prehistoric populations may therefore be tested by comparing attrition rates in the specimens under investigation with standards derived from groups of known dietary ...
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Natufian collective burial practice and cranial pigmentation: A reconstruction from Azraq 18 (Jordan) [PDF]
The collective grave from Azraq 18 in Jordan provides an exceptional case-study of Natufian burial treatment from a site outside what was traditionally regarded as the core settlement area of the Mediterranean zone.
Fanny Bocquentin, Andrew Garrard
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NATUFIAN FORAGERS IN THE LEVANT
2013This large volume presents virtually all aspects of the Epipalaeolithic Natufian culture in a series of chapters that cover recent results of field work, analyses of materials and sites, and synthetic or interpretive overviews of various aspects of this important prehistoric culture.
Ofer Bar-Yosef, François R. Valla
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Current Anthropology, 2016
Ritual practice plays crucial social roles in human societies by communicating information about social status, calming tensions, and integrating communities. Although communication occurs through the act of ritual performance itself, the archaeological record rarely has the resolution to identify individual ritual actions.
Leore Grosman, Natalie D. Munro
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Ritual practice plays crucial social roles in human societies by communicating information about social status, calming tensions, and integrating communities. Although communication occurs through the act of ritual performance itself, the archaeological record rarely has the resolution to identify individual ritual actions.
Leore Grosman, Natalie D. Munro
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On Sedentism and Cereal Gathering in the Natufian
Current Anthropology, 1994Discussion et critique d'un ouvrage se rapportant a la mobilite saisonniere et a l'agriculture du Levant dans la culture Irano-touranienne des Natoufiens a la fin du Paleolithique superieur et pendant l ...
Daniel E. Lieberman, Ofer Bar-Yosef
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Annual Review of Anthropology, 1991
The Natufian entity was first identified and described in the early 1930s by D. Garrod (39) following her excavations at the Shukba Cave in the Samaria (Figure 1). Other assemblages identified as Natufian were subsequently uncovered within the boundaries of what was to become identified as the Natufian core area, encompassing the Galilee, Mt.
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The Natufian entity was first identified and described in the early 1930s by D. Garrod (39) following her excavations at the Shukba Cave in the Samaria (Figure 1). Other assemblages identified as Natufian were subsequently uncovered within the boundaries of what was to become identified as the Natufian core area, encompassing the Galilee, Mt.
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On Mousterian and Natufian Burials in the Levant
Current Anthropology, 1993Critique de l'argumentation de l'article de Belfer-Cohen et Hovers paru dans C.A.1993/33, sur le caractere volontaire des sepultures d'Homo Sapiens archaique.
Harold L. Dibble, Philip G. Chase
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The Natufian Culture in the Levant
Journal of Field Archaeology, 1994Daniel E. Lieberman +2 more
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