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The archaeology of northern Mesopotamia: the Hassuna-Samarra periodThompson, Barry Edward, 1945- January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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Account of a chemical examination of the Celtic antiquities in the collection of the Royal Irish Academy DublinMallet, John William. Wöhler, Friedrich, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Inaug.-Diss.)--University of Göttingen. / Under the direction of Professor Friedrich Wöhler. Includes bibliographical references.
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Les Monuments paléochrétiens de la CorseMoracchini-Mazel, Geneviève. January 1967 (has links)
Thèse--Lyon. / Bibliography: p. 128.
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De vulcano in olympum reductoWaentig, Ricardus. January 1877 (has links)
Diss. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Les Monuments paléochrétiens de la CorseMoracchini-Mazel, Geneviève. January 1967 (has links)
Thèse--Lyon. / Bibliography: p. 128.
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An interpretive framework for the early Iroquoian villageTimmins, Peter Andrew, 1958- January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF KHUZESTAN: SUSIANA PHASE COMMUNITY INTERACTIONThompson, Barry Edward, 1945- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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An interpretive framework for the early Iroquoian villageTimmins, Peter Andrew, 1958- January 1992 (has links)
A methodology is developed for the interpretation of complex Early Iroquoian villages based upon the analysis of site formation processes. This interpretive method is applied to a study of the Calvert site, a twelfth to thirteenth century Iroquoian village located in southwestern Ontario. Four phases in the occupational history of the village are reconstructed and changes in its economic and socio-political organization are examined through a comparative analysis of data from each construction phase. The systematic rebuilding and long-term use of the village indicate significant planning on the part of the Calvert people and suggest that at least some Early Iroquoian communities had developed higher levels of socio-political organization than have been attributed to them in the past. / The Calvert site is placed in its regional context and a model is proposed to explain the economic and socio-political changes observed between the Early and Middle Iroquoian periods in southwestern Ontario.
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Turquoise: its history and significance in the SouthwestMuir, Gertrude Hill January 1938 (has links)
No description available.
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THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE PREHISTORIC HOUSEHOLD IN THE PUEBLO SOUTHWEST: A CASE STUDY FROM TURKEY CREEK PUEBLOLowell, Julie Carol January 1986 (has links)
The Pueblo household in the American Southwest is examined at Hopi and Zuni and at the prehistoric pueblo of Turkey Creek. Cultural, economic, and environmental factors that influence household organization and function crossculturally are identified and organized into a framework suitable for investigation of households in the archaeological record. Early Hopi and Zuni ethnographic material is reorganized within the research framework thus established. The arrangement of activities in space by social unit is discussed and tabulated to serve as a convenient reference for archaeologists. This research framework directs examination of household dynamics in a unique prehistoric village, Turkey Creek Pueblo. Turkey Creek Pueblo is a 335 room thirteenth century ruin of which 314 rooms were excavated. Its broad and consistently reported room attribute data provide an extraordinary opportunity for understanding the social use of space in a large prehistoric community. Analysis of 31 room variables in 301 rooms reveals that patterning of room attributes is influenced by three interacting dimensionsroom function, temporal change, and intrapueblo areal differentiation. Both the raw data and the results of the computer procedures are tabulated to serve as a reference for comparative analysis. Household dwellings were composed of three room types- storage rooms (small with no hearth), habitation rooms (large with rectangular hearth), and miscellaneous activity rooms (mid-sized with circular hearth). A typical dwelling had one habitation room, one or two miscellaneous activity rooms, and two or three storage rooms. Considerable variability existed in the size and organization of dwellings. Architectural analysis further suggests that households at Turkey Creek Pueblo formed the basal level of a four-level organizational hierarchy that included the suprahousehold, the dual division, and the village. The activities that occurred within the physical spaces associated with these social units are assessed, as are the mechanisms of population aggregation and village abandonment.
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