Results 261 to 270 of about 1,915,503 (324)
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The Archaeological Journal, 2020
Personal ornaments are an ubiquitous category of material culture throughout prehistory. The presence, and in some cases indications of long-term use, suggests that these objects held importance in...
Elizabeth Foulds
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Personal ornaments are an ubiquitous category of material culture throughout prehistory. The presence, and in some cases indications of long-term use, suggests that these objects held importance in...
Elizabeth Foulds
semanticscholar +1 more source
11 – The Glass from Kota Cina: New Elemental Compositions of Vessel Fragments and Personal Ornaments
ArchipelThe compositions of glass materials found at Kota Cina reveal two different trade networks for personal ornaments and vessels. The glass beads and bangles were manufactured in South Asia.
Laure Dussubieux, I. M. Geria
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1905
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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2019
A number of Middle Stone Age (MSA) assemblages in northern Africa, as well as a few in South Africa and the eastern Mediterranean, preserve small mollusk shells, most notably estuarine and marine members of the sub- family Nassariinae (e.g., Nassarius kraussianus, N. circumcinctus, and Tritia gibbosula).
Steele, Teresa E. +2 more
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A number of Middle Stone Age (MSA) assemblages in northern Africa, as well as a few in South Africa and the eastern Mediterranean, preserve small mollusk shells, most notably estuarine and marine members of the sub- family Nassariinae (e.g., Nassarius kraussianus, N. circumcinctus, and Tritia gibbosula).
Steele, Teresa E. +2 more
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Palaeolithic Personal Ornaments: Historical Development and Epistemological Challenges
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 2014Since the 1990s, archaeological publications concerned with Palaeolithic personal ornaments have diversified. This proliferation has resulted in an intense exploration of the multiple roles, whether symbolic, cultural or social, that these items might have played in prehistoric groups.
Oscar Moro Abadía, April Nowell
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Dress, personal decoration and ornament among the Ndlambe
1972(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Secrets of Achaemenid production of personal ornaments and vessels
, 2021E. A. Shablavina
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Personal Ornaments and Symbolism Among the Neanderthals
2012Abstract Central to the palaeontological definition of Homo neanderthalensis ( King, 1864 ) is the proposition that the physical difference in cranial anatomy bespeaks of a psychological difference placing the creature beyond the range of human variation in intelligence and morals.
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