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TREE-RING MATERIALS AS A BASIS FOR CULTURAL INTERPRETATIONSRobinson, William James January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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ASPECTS OF PREHISTORIC SOCIETY IN CHACO CANYON, NEW MEXICOVivian, R. Gwinn. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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AN INFORMATION-THEORETIC APPROACH TO THE SYSTEM DYNAMICS OF A PREHISTORICCULTURE IN EAST-CENTRAL ARIZONAGorman, Frederick John, 1943- January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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ECONOMIC AUTONOMY AND SOCIAL DISTANCE: ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCELeone, Mark P. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROBLEM OF DEFENSE: HISTORIC SETTLEMENT PATTERNS IN THE VAR VALLEY SYSTEM, SOUTHEASTERN FRANCEUngar, Catherine Anne, 1946- January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Evolving settlement-subsistence patterns in the Zagros region of Iraq and IranRippey, Charles David, 1938- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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The ancient pueblo culture of northern MexicoCarr, Fletcher Anderson, 1911- January 1935 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis and interpretation of the cotton textiles from Tonto National MonumentKent, Kate Peck January 1950 (has links)
No description available.
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The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia regionThom, Brian David 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis provides a model for understanding how social classes arose in the Gulf of
Georgia area. This model distinguishes how social status in rank and a class societies are
manifested and maintained in non-state, kin-based societies, drawing mainly from
ethnographic descriptions. The relationship between the living and the dead for making
status claims in both rank and class societies makes the archaeological study of mortuary
ritual important for investigating these relationships. I propose that burial mounds and
cairns, which were prominent in the region from 1500 to 1000 years ago, reflect a time when
status differentiation was defined mainly through social rank. Following this period, when
all forms of below-ground burials cease and above-ground graves become the dominant form
of mortuary practice, I propose that the historically recorded pattern of social class emerged.
Archaeological investigations of the burial mounds and cairns at the Scowlitz site have
provided the first fully reported instances of mound and cairn burials in this region. Using
less well reported data from over 150 additional burial mounds and cairns reported from
other sites in the region, evidence for the nature of status differentiation sought out. Patterns
in the burial record are investigated through discussing variation within classes of burials,
demography and deposition, spatial patterning, grave goods, and temporal variation. These
patterns and changes are then discussed within the context of the larger culture history of the
region, suggesting that the late Marpole or Garrison sub-phase may be defined as ending
around 1000 BP with the cessation of below-ground burial practices. The general patterns
observed in mound and cairn burials and the changes in mortuary ritual subsequent to their
being built generally support the idea of a shift from a rank to a class society. The thesis
provides a basis for further investigation of questions of social status and inequality in the
Gulf of Georgia region.
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Analyse d’un groupe de dépôts de l’helladique ancien II final, au lac Vouliagméni, Perakhoŕa, Grèce centraleMorin, Jacques, 1954- January 1983 (has links)
The goal of the present study is the description and analysis of the material found on the E. H. II site (Area A) situated near Lake Vouliagméni on the Perakhora peninsula. The study includes a description of the stratigraphy and architecture of the site and of the material (ceramics, lithics) found in the building. For the analysis of the material, statistics were widely used to give more precision to the descriptions. The objects were also compared to contemporaneous material. The conclusion consist of a functional analysis of each of the rooms of the building. / La présente étude a pour but de décrire et d’analyser le matériel retrouvé sur le site H. A. II (secteur A) situé près du lac Vouliagméni, dans la péninsule de Perakhora. L’ étude comprend une description de la stratigraphie et de l’architecture du site, ainsi que du matériel (céramique, lithique) contenu dans l’édifice. Au cours de l’analyse du matériel, on a fait un abondant usage des statistiques afin de donner plus de précision aux descriptions. Les objets ont aussi été mis en parallèle avec leurs contemporains. La conclusion consiste en une analyse fonctionnelle de chacune des pièces de l’édifice découvert.
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