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the ‘archaeological record’

Metabolic Stable Isotope Fractionation: Biogeochemical Approaches to Diagnosing Sickle Cell and Thalassemia Anemia in the Archaeological Record

Metabolic Stable Isotope Fractionation: Biogeochemical Approaches to Diagnosing Sickle Cell and Thalassemia Anemia in the Archaeological Record

... pathophysiology of sickle cell and thalassemia anemia, as well as many of the resulting co- morbidities, may affect the amount of carbon dioxide produced by CR, and therefore the concentration of both dissolved carbon ...

284

"Promiscuous Smoking": Interpreting Gender and Tobacco Use in the Archaeological Record

"Promiscuous Smoking": Interpreting Gender and Tobacco Use in the Archaeological Record

... (1997) ""Promiscuous Smoking": Interpreting Gender and Tobacco Use in the Archaeological Record," Northeast Historical Archaeology : Vol... "Promiscuous Smoking":[r] ...

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Using traditional biometrical data to distinguish West Palearctic wild boar and domestic pigs in the archaeological record: new methods and standards

Using traditional biometrical data to distinguish West Palearctic wild boar and domestic pigs in the archaeological record: new methods and standards

... the archaeological record: cows (Bos taurus), dogs (Canis familiaris) and pigs (Sus ...from archaeological remains have been commonly assessed using traditional size measurments of teeth and bones ...

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Evidence of the Niantic Indians in the Archaeological Record

Evidence of the Niantic Indians in the Archaeological Record

... The reported sites con- taining Niantic pottery are confined to the area surrounding Peconic Bay (the Baker Hill site may be discounted for the purpose of establishing a [r] ...

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A World of C4 Pathways: On the Use of δ13C Values to Identify the Consumption of C4 Plants in the Archaeological Record

A World of C4 Pathways: On the Use of δ13C Values to Identify the Consumption of C4 Plants in the Archaeological Record

... Martin’s roles as a research leader extended to several stints as head of the Department of Archaeol- ogy, chairing the Faculty of Archaeology and Anthro- pology and serving as a long-term member of the Managing ...

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Disease Stigma in the Archaeological Record: A Review of Current Research

Disease Stigma in the Archaeological Record: A Review of Current Research

... As mentioned previously, the other mortuary difference most easily observable in archaeological work is the manner of burial. Hadley (2010) relates several Anglo-­‐ Saxon examples of prone, rather than supine, ...

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Interpretation

Interpretation

... consequences of the emergence of interpretive archaeology, which foregrounded the role of the interpreting archaeologist in the present, was to construct a vision of past human agents as essentially “interpreting ...

5

"Every Man Turned Out in the Best He Had": Clothing and Buttons in the Historical and Archaeological Records of Johnson's Island Prisoner-of-War Depot, 1862-1865

"Every Man Turned Out in the Best He Had": Clothing and Buttons in the Historical and Archaeological Records of Johnson's Island Prisoner-of-War Depot, 1862-1865

... and archaeological records, evi- dence is found of pre-imprisonment clothing and the adoption of new garments within the ...the archaeological record of their experience over ...

19

Betti_unc_0153M_17269.pdf

Betti_unc_0153M_17269.pdf

... the archaeological record to those in the historical record is a way to understand the influence of the dominant discourse of childhood on enslaved ...

100

Site Layout and Recording

Site Layout and Recording

... After the site itself, the artifact constitutes the most important part of the archaeological record.. When it comes from the ground, every artifact has certain at[r] ...

6

Pathways to Equity: An Auto-Ethnographic and Narrative Study of Teacher Educator and Preservice Teachers in a One-Credit Course and Community-Based Field Experience

Pathways to Equity: An Auto-Ethnographic and Narrative Study of Teacher Educator and Preservice Teachers in a One-Credit Course and Community-Based Field Experience

... I will use historical sources that detail normative eighteenth century tactics and compare these to the behavior seen in the archaeological record at Fort Motte and then evaluate indi[r] ...

181

The bashful and the boastful : prestigious leaders and social change in Mesolithic Societies

The bashful and the boastful : prestigious leaders and social change in Mesolithic Societies

... How then might we interpret signs of what we term ‘status’ in burial? Interpreting the burial record is perhaps one of the most challenging areas of the archaeological record (Parker Pearsen 1999, ...

48

Perception and archaeology : an investigation of the role played by perceptual factors in aracheaological interpretation

Perception and archaeology : an investigation of the role played by perceptual factors in aracheaological interpretation

... the archaeological record, art, and environment, it seems that the people living in north western Europe during the last Ice Age were hunters rather then hunter-gatherers, that their ide[r] ...

126

Paleolithic archaeology of the Solent River

Paleolithic archaeology of the Solent River

... Palaeolithic archaeological agenda in the region has to be the discovery and study of such deposits, for they surely exist somewhere beyond the very few locations where biological evidence has already been ...the ...

6

Multiple approaches to the study of bifacial technologies.

Multiple approaches to the study of bifacial technologies.

... E lsewhere I have put forth a reduction model to explain the variability in biface shape (McPherron 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000). The model links the intensity of bifa- cial reduction with variability in biface shape. It is ...

304

Financial Intermediation and Economic Growth: Bank Credit Maturity and Its Determinants

Financial Intermediation and Economic Growth: Bank Credit Maturity and Its Determinants

... Taken as a whole, gross generalizations and assumptions have resulted from the adoption of the “chiefdom” concept in Mississippian research. By breaking these models apart, it is possible to understand how social ...

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The Development of Human Creativity Cognitive Substrates of the Upper Paleolithic Archaeological Record

The Development of Human Creativity Cognitive Substrates of the Upper Paleolithic Archaeological Record

... There is evidence that other hominids had the capacity for tool-making, and, by extension, the capacity for some of the cognitive functions associated with tool-making. Hominids such as Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis ...

10

Subsistence archaeobotany: food production and the agricultural transition in East Timor

Subsistence archaeobotany: food production and the agricultural transition in East Timor

... the archaeological and anthropological work undertaken, researchers were often “out of touch” with the most modern practices elsewhere in the world, and many (like António de Almeida), engaged in a  ...

387

Informing Science: The International Journal of an Emerging Transdiscipline

Informing Science: The International Journal of an Emerging Transdiscipline

... of archaeological information on the Internet, but they have a distinctive character, closely related to the modes of research and communica- tion peculiar to the ...

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Study of the bryological flora at the archaeological site of Chellah, Morocco

Study of the bryological flora at the archaeological site of Chellah, Morocco

... Abstract—The Chellah archaeological site in Rabat, listed as a cultural asset since 2012 on UNESCO's World Heritage List, is subject to significant biodeterioration. The aim of this study is to identify the ...

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