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Ponds, rivers and bison freezers : evaluating a behavioral ecological model of hunter-gatherer mobility on Idaho's Snake River PlainHenrikson, Lael Suzann, 1959- 12 1900 (has links)
xviii, 326 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. A print copy of this title is available through the UO Libraries under the call number: KNIGHT GN799 .F6 H46 2002 / Archaeological evidence indicates that cold storage of bison meat was
consistently practiced on the eastern Snake River Plain over the last 8000 years.
Recent excavations in three cold lava tube caves have revealed a distinctive artifact
assemblage of elk antler tines, broken handstones, and bison bone in association with
frozen sagebrush features. Similar evidence has also been discovered in four other
caves within the region.
A patch choice model was utilized in this study to address how the long-term
practice of caching bison meat in cold caves may have functioned in prehistoric
subsistence patterns. Because the net return rate for bison was critical to the model,
the hunting success of fur trappers occupying the eastern Snake River Plain during
the early 1800s, as recorded in their daily journals, was examined and quantified. According to the model, the productivity of cold storage caves must be evaluated
against the productivity of other patches on the eastern Snake River Plain, such as
ephemeral ponds and linear river corridors from season to season and year to year.
The model suggests that residential bases occurred only within river resource
patches while ephemeral ponds and ice caves would contain sites indicative of
seasonal base camps.
The predictions of the model were tested against documented archaeological
data from the Snake River Plain through the examination of Geographic Information
Systems data provided by the Idaho Bureau of Land Management. The results of
this analysis indicate that seasonal base camps are directly associated with both
ephemeral and perennial water sources, providing strong support for the model's
predictions. Likewise, the temporal distribution of sites within the study area
indicates that climate change over the last 8000 years was not dramatic enough to
alter long-term subsistence practices in the region. The long-term use of multiple
resource patches across the region also confirms that, although the high return rates
for bison made them very desirable prey, the over-all diet breadth for the eastern
Snake River Plain was broad and included a variety of large and small game and
plant foods. Bison and cold storage caves were a single component in a highly
mobile seasonal round that persisted for some 8000 years, down to the time of
written history in the 19th Century. / Committee in charge: Dr. C. Melvin Aikens, Chair; Dr. Lawrence Sugiyama ;
Dr. Jon Erlandson ;
Dr. Dennis Jenkins ;
Dr. Cathy Whitlock ;
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Le Dr. Ernest Schneider et les gravures sur Grès de Luxembourg: étude du fonds documentaire inéditReichling, Conny 04 October 2013 (has links)
Les archives documentaires du dentiste luxembourgeois Dr. Ernest Schneider (1885-<p>1954) constituent la base du présent travail. Ce fonds a été abordé par les sciences historiques<p>et sociales dans la première et par la discipline de l'archéologie rupestre dans<p>la seconde partie. Ces archives sont uniques au Grand-Duché dans le sens qu'il s'agit du<p>seul fonds archéologique contenant des documents épistolaires et iconographiques au lieu<p>d'artéfacts provenant de prospections. Dans un premier temps, le fonds épistolaires a été<p>abordé par une analyse de réseaux. Cette approche a permis de déterminer qu'il s'agit<p>d'un registre de contacts constitué par Schneider plutôt que d'un réseau au sens propre.<p>Schneider ne montre en effet aucune volonté à soigner ses contacts établis. Les réseaux de<p>ses alteri forment finalement la source d'informations la plus importante de Schneider :<p>ses contacts entament des recherches par eux-mêmes et dans leurs cercles de connaissances<p>afin de trouver des réponses aux requêtes du dentiste.<p>La seconde partie est consacré au travail archéologique effectué par Schneider de 1927<p>à 1954. Plus précisément les résultats publiés par Schneider en 1939 dans la monographie<p>Material zu einer archäologischen Felskunde des Luxemburger Landes sont revus et mis<p>à jour. Dans cette partie, le contenu des archives épistolaires est utilisé afin de suivre le<p>raisonnement scientifique de Schneider et afin de déterminer quelles hypothèses de quels<p>contacts sont intégrées par Schneider dans la monographie. L'influence des correspondants,<p>surtout des préhistoriens, est clairement déterminée dans cette partie, car Schneider attribue<p>la totalité des gravures aux temps pré- et protohistoriques. Lui-même qualifie son<p>travail de synthèse de la Pré- et Protohistoire du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg. Cette<p>hypothèse de datation est réfutée dans le présent travail. En effet, tenant compte du support<p>et de la nature des tracés gravés, les gravures figuratives ne datent pas d'au-delà de<p>l'époque médiévale tardive. La majorité des gravures ont très probablement été réalisées<p>entre le 19e et le 21e siècle, surtout lors des deux guerres mondiales lorsque les soldats<p>ennemis et alliés étaient stationnés dans les contrées de la région du Grès de Luxembourg. / Doctorat en Histoire, art et archéologie / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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De la pierre au métal: archéologie des dépôts holocènes de l'abri de Shum Laka (Cameroun)Lavachery, Philippe January 1997 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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A non-destructive technical and stylistic comparative analysis of selected metal artefacts from the Ditsong national museum of cultural historyHarcombe, Aletta Maria 15 November 2018 (has links)
Text in English / The destructive nature of conventional analytical techniques, coupled with the finite nature of ancient/historical artefacts, has long restricted technical examinations of museum collections, mainly due to ethical constraints. However, over the past few decades, the application of Non-Destructive Evaluation (NDE) techniques has become increasingly popular within the fields of archaeology and cultural heritage diagnostics. The application of such techniques has facilitated the examination of objects that have long remained uninvestigated. However, this positive development also held a slight drawback, in that researchers tend to now focus on technical analyses alone, while excluding more traditional means of analyses, such as comparative stylistic analysis and surface investigation. By employing a combination of stylistic analysis, visual surface investigation (by means of SLR photography and digital microscopy) and nuclear imaging (by means of Microfocus X-Ray Computed Tomography), the thesis sets out to justify the application of mixed methodologies as part of a more holistic integrated authentication approach. Thus stated, the thesis presents a mixed-methodological approach towards the analysis of selected metal objects from the Ditsong National Museum of Cultural History in Pretoria, South Africa. The objects under investigation include a small collection of ancient Egyptian bronze statuettes, a Samurai helmet (kabuto) and mask (menpó), a European gauntlet, and an Arabian dagger (jambiya/khanjar). While all the objects are curated as part of the museum‘s archaeology and military history collections, the exact production dates, manufacturing techniques and areas of origin remain a mystery. By using a combination of techniques, the thesis aims to identify diagnostic features that can be used to shed light on their relative age, culturo-chronological framework and, by extension, their authenticity. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / D. Litt. et Phil.(Ancient Near Eastern Studies)
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Modelling prehistoric terrain Models using LiDAR-data: A geomorphological approachHöfler, Veit, Wessollek, Christine, Karrasch, Pierre 29 August 2019 (has links)
Terrain surfaces conserve human activities in terms of textures and structures. With reference to archaeological questions, the geological archive is investigated by means of models regarding anthropogenic traces. In doing so, the high-resolution digital terrain model is of inestimable value for the decoding of the archive. The evaluation of these terrain models and the reconstruction of historical surfaces is still a challenging issue. Due to the data collection by means of LiDAR systems (light detection and ranging) and despite their subsequent pre-processing and filtering, recently anthropogenic artefacts are still present in the digital terrain model. Analysis have shown that elements, such as contour lines and channels, can well be extracted from a highresolution digital terrain model.
This way, channels in settlement areas show a clear anthropogenic character. This fact can also be observed for contour lines. Some contour lines representing a possibly natural ground surface and avoid anthropogenic artefacts. Comparable to channels, noticeable patterns of contour lines become visible in areas with anthropogenic artefacts. The presented work ow uses functionalities of ArcGIS and the programming language R.¹ The method starts with the extraction of contour lines from the digital terrain model. Through macroscopic analyses based on geomorphological expert knowledge, contour lines are selected representing the natural geomorphological character of the surface. In a first step, points are determined along each contour line in regular intervals. This points and the corresponding height information which is taken from an original digital terrain model is saved as a point cloud. Using the programme library gstat, a variographic analysis and the use of a Kriging-procedure based on this follow.
The result is a digital terrain model filtered considering geomorphological expert knowledge showing no human degradation in terms of artefacts, preserving the landscape-genetic character and can be called a prehistoric terrain model.
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La caractérisation chimique de cherts du Bas-Saint-Laurent et de la Gaspésie : vers le développement d’une méthode d’analyse non destructriceLeclerc, Mathieu 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Mining Culture in Roman Dacia: Empire, Community, and Identity at the Gold Mines of Alburnus Maior ca.107-270 C.E.Pundt, Heather Ann 01 January 2012 (has links)
Trajan conquered Dacia in 106 CE and encouraged one of the largest colonization efforts in the history of the Roman Empire. The new province was rich in natural resources. Immigrants from Dalmatia, Moesia, Noricum, Pannonia, Greece, Syria, Bithynia, Italy, indigenous Dacians, and soldiers from Legio XIII Gemina participated in the extraction of gold from the Apuseni Mountains. The inhabitants of mining settlements around Alburnus Maior and the administrative center Ampelum coexisted under Roman governance but continued to mark their identities in multicultural communities. At Alburnus Maior the presence of wage laborers with access to outside materials and ideas created the opportunity for miners to communicate identity through mediums that have survived. A series of wax tablet legal contracts, altars, and funerary monuments can be combined with recent archaeological data from settlements, burials, and the mines themselves to formulate the broad view necessary to examine the intricacies of group and self-expression. Through this evidence, Alburnus Maior offers a case study for how mobility and colonization in the ancient world could impact identity. Due to the pressures of coping within a multicultural community, miners formed settlements that were central to their daily lives and facilitated the embodiment of state, community, and personal identities. Identity changes over time and can simultaneously communicate several ideas that are hard to categorize. This study approaches this challenge by looking from macro to micro contexts that influenced several expressions of identity. Chapter 2 begins with a historical background that explores the expansion of the Roman Empire and considers how different experiences of conquest influenced the colonists who immigrated to Dacia. The circumstances that led to the massive colonization of Dacia are also considered. Chapter 3 describes how the mines at Alburnus Maior were exploited, who was present, and assesses the impact of state officials, legionaries, and elite entrepreneurs on the formation and expression of state identity through cult, law, and language. The formation of immigrant communities and the working conditions that permeated everyday life at the mines are then considered in the next chapter. Settlement, cult, and religious membership are evaluated for their role in creating and articulating community identities. Chapter 5 then analyzes the personal and sometimes private expression of identity that appears in commemoration, naming conventions, and burial. The three levels of state, community, and personal identities often overlap and collectively show that the hybridization of ideas from several cultures was central to how those at Alburnus Maior negotiated their identity in the Roman Empire.
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Investigations at Kinlock (22SU526), a Freshwater Mussel Shell Ring in the Delta Region of MississippiCarlock, James Bradley 11 December 2015 (has links)
Kinlock is a freshwater mussel shell ring site located in Sunflower County in the Mississippi Delta. Little work has been done at freshwater mussel shell rings, and therefore little is known about them. This thesis uses four different data collection methods to answer questions of chronology, site layout, etc. These four methods are controlled surface collection, excavation, coring, and magnetometry. Based on the results of these methods, Kinlock was found to be a Woodland period mussel shell ring with a later Mississippian period component built on top of the shell. This later component consisted of five mounds situated around a plaza. It was also found that the plaza was planned and maintained from the Woodland period through the Mississippian period, until the site was abandoned.
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Pathways to Maize Adoption and Intensification in the Little Miami and Great Miami River ValleysWeiland, Andrew Welsh January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Maize And Stone A Functional Analysis Of The Manos And Metates Of Santa Rita Corozal, BelizeDuffy, Lisa Glynns 01 January 2011 (has links)
The manos and metates of Santa Rita Corozal, Belize are analyzed to compare traditional maize-grinding types to the overall assemblage. A reciprocal, back-and-forth grinding motion is the most efficient way to process large amounts of maize. However, rotary movements are also associated with some ground stone implements. The number of flat and trough metates and two handed manos are compared to the rotary-motion basin and concave type metates and one-handed manos to determine predominance and distribution. Flat is the predominant type and, together with the trough type, these grinding stones make up the majority of metates at the site. Manos are highly fragmented, but the two-handed variety is more common among those fragments able to be identified. While this would at first glance support a fully maize dependent subsistence, the presence of two additional non-reciprocal motion metate types and the fact that the trough metates are clustered in one sector of the site suggest that, in addition to maize, significant processing of other foods also occurred in association with these grinding stones.
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