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Ceramic thin-section analysis and Early Postclassic to Middle Postclassic discontinuity at Colha, BelizeReid, Elizabeth Katherine 12 November 2013 (has links)
Petrographic and Type:variety analyses of Colha ceramics are used to investigate changes in ceramic production technology and organization during the Early and Middle Postclassic. Postclassic sherds from Colha are grouped by petrofabric, surface treatment, and modes. This dissertation focuses on the petrofabric analysis of the ceramic sherds. The groupings are then compared to locally available raw materials. Changes in technological homogeneity, production specialization, and origin will be examined and related to the general economy of Postclassic Colha. / text
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Mixtec kingdoms in the Nochixtlán Valley: a preconquest to postconquest archeological perspectiveLind, Michael Don, 1942- January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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WHITE MOUNTAIN RED WARE: A STYLISTIC TRADITION IN THE PREHISTORIC POTTERYOF EAST CENTRAL ARIZONACarlson, Roy L., 1930- January 1961 (has links)
No description available.
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CERAMIC ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY: A PRELIMINARY STUDYSalem, Hamed Juma'h January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Abstract geometric design in the White Mountain red wares, A.D. 1000-1450Angleman, Frances Bridges, 1931- January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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Problems of presentation in archaeological researchEllis, John D. (John Dayduff), 1886- January 1953 (has links)
No description available.
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Development of human culture in the San Pedro River Valley, ArizonaDuffen, William Arnaman, 1907- January 1936 (has links)
No description available.
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Ancient potters in modern Veracruz, MexicoKrotser, Paula Homberger, 1913- January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Die kaiserzeitlich-frühvölkerwanderungszeitliche Keramik von Hildesheim-Bavenstedt / Pottery of the roman iron age and the early migration period from Hildesheim-BavenstedtDieke, Maren 01 December 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Cultural Transition in the Northern Levant during the Early Iron Age as Reflected in the Aegean-style Pottery at Tell TayinatJaneway, Brian 19 June 2014 (has links)
Did an invasion of the Sea Peoples cause the collapse of the Late Bronze Age palace-based economies of the Levant, as well as of the Hittite Empire? Renewed excavations at Tell Tayinat in southeast Turkey promise to shed new light on the critical transitional phase of the Late Bronze/Early Iron Age (c. 1200-1000 B.C.), a period which in the Northern Levant has until recently been considered a Dark Age, due in large part to the few extant textual sources relating to its history (Hawkins 2002: 143). Specifically, this thesis is based upon a stylistic analysis of a distinctive painted pottery known as Late Helladic IIIC (LH IIIC) excavated at the site. Its core is comprised of a diachronic study of the Tayinat ceramics tied into a synchronic comparison with sites across the region—the Amuq Valley, the Levantine coast, Anatolia, Cyprus, and the Aegean Sea basin. Two key objectives of the pottery analysis are to discern Aegean stylistic characteristics from those that are local, and to chronologically situate the assemblage on the basis of regional parallels.
What precisely was the nature of Iron I occupation at the site? Renewed excavations suggest that a rudimentary village settlement may have been constructed. Were the inhabitants that founded the Iron Age settlement immigrants that originated in areas to the west—Cyprus, Western Asia Minor, or the Greek Mainland—who were in
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search of more hospitable environs to settle? Or were they elements of the indigenous population forced to start anew after the socio-economic disruptions at the end of the Late Bronze Age? Perhaps they comprised a mixed population of both groups? Stylistic analysis of the painted ware would seem to support the third alternative, resulting in a hybrid style that fused Aegean shapes and motifs with local traditions. Did they simply relocate from the ruins of neighboring Tell Atchana (ancient Alalakh) or from other settlements in the Amuq Valley? Perhaps the movements were not en masse, but rather consisted of small elite groups or tradesmen that assimilated into the local economy, the result of a prolonged process of acculturation. The nature and relative amount of LH IIIC pottery in the Tayinat assemblage favors a traditional migration model. This research begins to fill a longstanding lacuna in the Amuq Valley and attempts to correlate with major historical and cultural trends in the Northern Levant and beyond.
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