Results 41 to 50 of about 5,929 (229)

Gupta period terracotta plaque with depiction of mythical bird, Noh, Rajasthan

open access: yes, 2017
This terracotta panel would have formed part of a frieze on the exterior wall of a late fourth or early fifth century CE temple (Gupta period). It hails from the archaeological site of Noh in district Bharatpur, Rajasthan, and is currently housed at the ...
Laxshmi Greaves
core   +1 more source

Bridging the Late Antique Gap in Northwest Arabia: New Archaeological Evidence on the Occupation of Wādī al‐Qurā (al‐ʿUlā [AlUla], Saudi Arabia) Between the Third and Seventh Centuries CE

open access: yesArabian Archaeology and Epigraphy, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT In 2019, the Dadan Archaeological Project (CNRS/RCU/AFALULA) identified a Late Antique village 1 km south of ancient Dadan in the al‐ʿUlā valley (northwest Saudi Arabia). Three excavation seasons at this site (2021–2023) have uncovered a massive building constructed in the late third or early fourth cent.
Jérôme Rohmer   +11 more
wiley   +1 more source

Proposed Marketing Strategy for Terracotta

open access: yes, 2022
Urban life which is synonymous with traffic jams, congestion, and busyness causes boredom. This boredom can have an impact on decreasing one's productivity at work.
Larso, Dwi; School of Business and Management, Institut Teknologi Bandung   +1 more
core   +1 more source

Dancing Down the Eyelashes of the Sun: Nuxalk Governance, Language, and the Museum Public

open access: yesMuseum Anthropology, Volume 49, Issue 2, Fall 2026.
ABSTRACT This review suggests that Nuxalk Strong: Dancing Down the Eyelashes of the Sun reframes the ethnographic gallery as a site of protocol rather than as a trophy case. Co‐curated by Snxakila—Clyde Tallio (Nuxalk Nation) and Jennifer Kramer (UBC MOA), the exhibition centers law, lineage, and language to present belongings and supernatural beings ...
Cheyanne Brown Armstrong, Mark Turin
wiley   +1 more source

Gupta period terracotta plaque with depiction of male bust, Pawāyā

open access: yes, 2017
This plaque dates to circa the late fourth century CE during the Gupta period. It once decorated the outer wall of a temple at Pawāyā (ancient Padmāvatī), in the Gwalior district of Madhya Pradesh.
Laxshmi Greaves
core   +1 more source

Ceramic Production and Geodiversity in Iron Age Iberia: An Archaeometric Study of Pottery from Castrejón de Capote (SW Spain)

open access: yesArchaeometry, Volume 68, Issue 4, Page 659-673, August 2026.
ABSTRACT The hillfort of Castrejón de Capote is one of the best investigated settlements of Late Iron Age southwest Iberia. Located in the territory that the classical sources attributed to the Celtici, it was occupied between the early 4th and the 1st centuries bce.
Beatrijs de Groot   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Terracotta Sculpture on the Riga Stock Exchange Façade: Interpretation of Content and Form

open access: yesActa Academiae Artium Vilnensis, 2021
The article discusses sculptural decoration of the façades of the Riga Stock Exchange building (1852–1860, architect Harald Bosse), which consists of terracotta sculptures and medallions with emblematic and allegorical content created in the ...
Ojārs Spāritis
doaj   +1 more source

Gupta period terracotta plaque with depiction of celestial, Pawāyā

open access: yes, 2017
This plaque dates to circa the late fourth century CE during the Gupta period. It once decorated the outer wall of a temple at Pawāyā (ancient Padmāvatī), in the Gwalior district of Madhya Pradesh.
Laxshmi Greaves
core   +1 more source

An Archaeometric Approach to Reveal Organic Compounds via GC‐MS Analyses of Two Discovered Incense Burners at Daba Al‐Bayah

open access: yesArchaeometry, Volume 68, Issue 4, Page 804-810, August 2026.
ABSTRACT This study focuses on two terracotta incense burners discovered in the Daba Al‐Bayah necropolis in the Musandam Peninsula (Oman), associated with an Iron Age collective tomb (LCG‐2). Through gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC‐MS), the organic residues preserved within these artifacts were analyzed to investigate their use and ...
Francesco Genchi   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Predator Experience Shapes Behaviour: Comparing Stone Wētā (Hemideina maori) Populations With and Without Weka (Gallirallus australis hectori)

open access: yesEcology and Evolution, Volume 16, Issue 7, July 2026.
Map of Lake Wānaka showing the locations of Mou Tapu and Mou Waho, the two islands where Hemideina maori were sampled, with an inset image of a female H. maori. Mou Tapu is free of introduced mammalian predators and weka (Gallirallus australis hectori), whereas Mou Waho hosts an introduced population of weka.
Sheri Johnson   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

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