Untitled Document 3rd Congress on iberian archaeology 247. Thomas G. Schattner, of the iberianPeninsula 7. Lawrence Guy Straus, Manuel R. González Morales, http://www.gt.estt.ipt.pt/adecap/Publicationtable.htm
American Journal Of Archaeology / Article Abstract The temple was the treasure of Gadir, the most important Phoenician city on theIberian peninsula and one of the most significant sites in the far western http://www.ajaonline.org/archive/108.4/mierse_william_edwin.html
Iberian Peninsula iberian peninsula iberian peninsula READING AND TRAVEL GUIDE A colorful,shaded relief map of the entire iberian peninsula at a scale of 1700000. http://www.longitudebooks.com/find/d/1752/pc/Iberian Peninsula/mcms.html
B.A.R. Titles: CONTINENTAL EUROPE - Iberian Peninsula CONTINENTAL EUROPE iberian peninsula 78 title(s) Mid-Central Westerniberian Geographical Region 1990-1995 by Craig Merideth http://www.hadrianbooks.co.uk/subcategory.asp?subcatID=17&CategoryID=5&offset=50
B.A.R. Titles: CONTINENTAL EUROPE - Iberian Peninsula CONTINENTAL EUROPE iberian peninsula 78 title(s) Deities, springs andmountains in the north-west of the iberian peninsula http://www.hadrianbooks.co.uk/subcategory.asp?subcatID=17&CategoryID=5
British Archaeology, No 49, November 1999: Reviews BRITISH archaeology MAGAZINE LOGO in inscriptions from the Rhineland and theIberian peninsula, where they are clearly reflexes of a Roman tradition. http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba49/ba49book.html
Extractions: ISBN 07524-1403-8 hb Francis Pryor whisks the reader along with enthusiasm in the first major book on prehistoric farming in Britain since 1983. Anecdotal in style, it has much to do with the author's own experience with livestock and his clear wish to convey this to as many of the general archaeological readership as possible. In this respect it is something of a polemic. The stated aim is to discuss the millennium or so of `livestock farming that flourished during the Bronze Age' and the reader is swiftly and expertly guided through the transition from hunting to farming, through the notion of territory, to the world of symbolism and deliberate deposition. Based on the evidence from a number of excavations on the fen edge, the book uses the Etton causewayed enclosure, Welland Bank Quarry, and Flag Fen in particular, to chronicle farming practices from the Neolithic through to the early Iron Age. Most of the book is devoted to sheep farming. Pryor suggests that, unlike the loess-covered plains of central Europe, the climate and hilly landscape of Britain was more suited to stock control than agriculture. Cereals were certainly grown but it may have been in small quantities, perhaps in gardens, and more as an expression of the Neolithic way of life than for subsistence, but he misses a trick - or perhaps carefully avoids entering the debate on whether they were in fact grown for beer.
Palaeoethnology Of Iberian Peninsula Three great cultural currents affected the iberian peninsula from the Late In effect, relations with the iberian peninsula from Prehistory onwards, http://www.ucm.es/info/preh/complutum/co/rev_02-03b.htm
Extractions: Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION The various papers brought together in this work aim to provide a complete and up-to-date picture of the Palaeoethnology of the Iberian Peninsula as a whole. But the very diversity of the writers and particularly the complex problems raised by very different topics and Iberian regions (fig 1), also require an overview by way of conclusion, which is the purpose of this summary. Rather than a synthesis, impossible and inapplicable in these fields of study, it should be seen as a way of providing an overall idea that at least highlights both the points of agreement or greater coincidence, and the most significant problems and divergences. Both aspects, we believe, provide an interesting insight into our present state of knowledge and a useful starting point and stimulus for future progress of these studies. From this point of view, this summary about the Palaeoethnology of the Iberian Peninsula should be regarded as an editors' overview rather than an attempt to offer a synthesis of the views expressed by the various authors in their contributions. Instead it aims to enumerate the better known aspects of the Palaeoethnology of the Iberian Peninsula and at the same time to pinpoint the most problematic areas where future research is needed as a point of departure for future research. We have included graphic information - regional periodization (fig. 2, 3), maps showing different cultural elements and peoples distribution (fig. 5-8), and tables summarising the most significant cultural elements (fig. 9-14) - to support the text and to provide a starting point for a more critical archaeological view.
Assonet - Underwater Archaeology - The Secrets Of The Shallows already known thanks to the discovery of other wrecks, above all along theIberian peninsula (Estartit, north of Barcelona, Sa Nau Perduda, http://www.mclink.it/assoc/assonet/arcart/ukartsec.htm
Extractions: THE SECRETS OF THE SHALLOWS by Mario Mazzoli - A.S.S.O. - published on MONDO SOMMERSO magazine - 1992, April Some time ago in the underground we were glanging at the newspaper of an elderly lady who, despite the crush, continued to unperturbedly read an article which announced the approval of the law on voluntary workers. Civil defence, mediacl aid, cultural assets, finance, coordination, etc. Our minds immediately turned to the Secca dei Mattoni shallows between the islands of Ponza and Palmarola where, years ago, when we were still part of the underwater section of the ArcheoClub d'Italia , we carried out three excavation campaigns regarding an important Republican wreck. We taxed ourselves and made every effort, including some RAI television trasmissions, to finance the excavations which were kindly and wisely authorized by the Head of the Archaeological Service for Latium , Mrs. M. L. Veloccia Rinaldi. We remember the enormous bulk of work, the excellent quality of the results obtained compared with the briefness of our intervention, determined by tha lack of finance and by the large number of persons involved. We also reflected on the attempts to exclude voluntary workers from these activities because "... as you know, these things should be done by professionals (please read firms) and the voluntary workers could, perhaps, carry out the work of recognition, marking...."
PNAS -- Sign In Page The geographic situation of the iberian peninsula makes it a natural link The geographical proximity of the iberian peninsula to Africa makes the http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/102/24/8431
Extractions: This Article Abstract Figures Only Full Text (PDF) ... Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in ISI Web of Science Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Anderung, C. To view this item, select one of the options below: Sign In User Name Sign in without cookies. Purchase Short-Term Access Purchase this Article - You may access this article (from the computer you are currently using) for 2 days for US$10.00 Purchase Site Access - You may access all content in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Online (from the computer you are currently using) for 7 days for US$25.
Trabajos De Prehistoria INÉS SASTRE The processes of social complexity in the Northwest of the IberianPeninsula archaeology and written sources (99) Abstract http://www.ih.csic.es/publicaciones/tp/botones/indi/indi612_ing.htm
Extractions: Trabajos de Prehistoria, 61 (2), 2004. Index Editorial. Quality of Scientific Journals CONCEPCIÓN BLASCO BOSQUED: Rosario Lucas Pellicer (1937-2004) ROCIO PONCE, DENISSE ARGOTE, RENÉ E. CHÁVEZ and M.ª ENCARNACIÓN CÁMARA: Geophysical methods employed in urban archaeology prospecting: the Basílica de Nuestra Señora de la Salud, Patzcuaro, México Abstract One of the most interesting subjects in post-structural landscape studies is the analysis of the relationships between its natural and cultural components: the structuring of the landscape, with the identification of the social practices and patterns of movement that took part around them. These patterns depend both on the natural form of the terrain and on socio-cultural decisions. In relation to the settlement pattern and distribution of rock art sites in the central-Mediterranean coastal area of Spain, a method is proposed to evaluate the role of cultural aspects of landscape in computing least-cost paths. MARIA CRUZ BERROCAL: Research of the Rock Art from the point of view of geography: the neolithic painting of the Mediterranean area of the Iberian Peninsula
Equinox - Books - Book Details The IberianPeninsula represents a very particular case within the European context.Series Studies in the archaeology of Medieval Europe. http://www.equinoxpub.com/books/showbook.asp?bkid=181