Republic of Turkey (Country) (Geographic Keyword)
51-75 (1,454 Records)
This is an abstract from the "Political Geologies in the Ancient and Recent Pasts: Ontology, Knowledge, and Affect" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Factors of earthquakes in archaeology are often relegated to disaster and collapse narratives. Causality runs from the “natural” extreme to its human impacts. Following political ecology and Science and Technology Studies literatures and using the case of Helike, Greece, from the third millennium BCE to...
Anthropogenic Fire and the Origins of Agricultural Landscapes during the Neolithic Period (7,700–4,500 cal. BP) in Eastern Spain (2018)
Humans have intentionally set fires for millennia to transform the arrangement and diversity of resources within their landscapes, often altering the relationship between fire and ecosystems at multiple scales. Although scholars regularly identify human-altered fire regimes through paleoecological studies, archaeological research has not yet fully incorporated the spatial, temporal, and cultural dimensions of human-caused fire into discussions of the development of agricultural landscapes. This...
Anthropomorphic Figures in Arabian Rock Art (2019)
This is an abstract from the "SAA 2019: General Sessions" session, at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Rock art is vastly abundant in Arabia, and there are large concentrations of panels in key localities. Hail, Najran and Tabuk are the most prominent ones. These three localities house thousands of panels, which can be multi-period, and were done in various styles and engraving techniques. Anthropomorphic figures can give us an insight into these past...
Antiche officine del bronzo - materiali, strumenti, tecniche Atti del seminano dl studi ed esperimenti, Murlo, 26-31 juglio 1991 (1993)
This resource is a citation record only, the Center for Digital Antiquity does not have a copy of this document. The information in this record has been migrated into tDAR from the EXARC Bibliography, originally compiled by Roeland Paardekooper, and updated. Most of these records consist of a document citation and other metadata but do not have the documents themselves uploaded. If you have a digital copy of the document and would like to have it curated in tDAR, please contact us using the...
Apophatic Archaeology: The Materiality, Phenomenology, and Textuality of Caves in Early Medieval Britain (2024)
This is an abstract from the "New Work in Medieval Archaeology, Part 2: Crossing Boundaries, Materialities, and Identities" session, at the 89th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Although most discussions surrounding humans and caves in Britain begin in prehistory and end with the Roman period, archaeologists have uncovered evidence for early medieval activity across the island. Still, early medieval historians face a methodological problem in which—compared to the...
Appendix 3 - The Archaeology of Hittite Imperialism and Ceramic Production in Late Bronze Age IIA Tarsus-Gözlükule, Turkey (2014)
The raw data from instrumental neutron activation analysis conducted as part of the study "The Archaeology of Hittite Imperialism and Ceramic Production in Late Bronze Age IIA Tarsus-Gözlükule, Turkey". The analysis was conducted by the Archaeometry Laboratory at the Missouri University Research Reactor (MURR).
Appendix 4 - The Archaeology of Hittite Imperialism and Ceramic Production in Late Bronze Age IIA Tarsus-Gözlükule, Turkey (2014)
Appendix 4 of "The Archaeology of Hittite Imperialism and Ceramic Production in Late Bronze Age IIA Tarsus-Gözlükule, Turkey." Data collected using a portable x-ray fluorescence machine, the Tracer III-SD made by Bruker Laboratory.
Appendix 5 - The Archaeology of Hittite Imperialism and Ceramic Production in Late Bronze Age IIA Tarsus-Gözlükule, Turkey (2014)
Appendix 5 of "The Archaeology of Hittite Imperialism and Ceramic Production in Late Bronze Age IIA Tarsus-Gözlükule, Turkey". The data from re-firing tests that combined incremental increases in firing with the measurement of magnetic susceptibility.
Appendix C: Vegetation Survey, Localities (2010)
Descriptions of the places in which the plants were seen.
Appendix C: Vegetation Survey, Plant list (2010)
Database of plants of the Gordion region and locations in which they were seen (1988–2009).
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Barley measurements (2010)
Barley measurements from Gordion region.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Einkorn measurements (2010)
Einkorn measurements from Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Emmer measurements (2010)
Emmer measurements at Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Flax measurements (2010)
Flax measurements from Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Lentil measurements 1 (2010)
Lentil measurements from Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Lentil measurements 2 (2010)
Lentil Measurements from Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Naked wheat measurements (2010)
Naked wheat measurements from Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix D: Seed Measures, Other Poaceae measurements (2010)
Other Poaceae measurements from Gordion, Turkey.
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Data from hand-picked charcoal samples, Burned Buildings (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Data from hand-picked charcoal samples, Debris Samples (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples, Burned Buildings (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples, Debris Samples (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples, No Charcoal Samples Analyzed (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...
Appendix E: Charcoal Samples, Inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples, Poor Provenience (2010)
The tables in Appendix E include the inventory of hand-picked charcoal samples analyzed and their contents. Samples are numbered 1 to 209 in Column A or Row A in rough order by period and locus number. Following those samples are the ones from the floor deposits of the three burned buildings: 210 to 232 (Hellenistic “Abandoned Village,” YHSS 320, 330, 350), 233 to 260 (Early Phrygian Terrace Building 2A, YHSS 610, 620), 261 to 282 (Early Iron Age “BRH”= Burnt Reed House, YHSS 725), 283 to 403...