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Sedentism, territorial circumscription, and the increased use of plant domesticates across Neolithic-Bronze Age Korea.
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ABSTRACT
As evidenced from the Korean archaeological record, there is an increased use of plant domesticates and a decrease in other food sources during the Holocene. These changes in overall human diet breadth culminate with the Late Neolithic-Bronze Age (c. 3500 b.p.) transition where dependence on hunted and gathered food packages decreases during the former period and full-scale agriculture becomes the norm during the latter cultural stage. This dietary shift appears...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Archeologist serves up the foods eaten during Bronze Age
The Boston Globe
; LONDON -- Stinging nettles are not everyone's cup of tea, but archeologist Mike Corbishley says they make a pretty good soup. He studies the food that Europeans ate during the Bronze Age thousands of years ago. He gathers the raw ingredients, cooks the dishes and eats them. "Nettle soup is
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Wood charcoal from Santorini (Thera): new evidence for climate, vegetation and timber imports in the Aegean Bronze Age.(Research)(Greek Islands archaeobotany studies)
Antiquity
; Bronze Age climate in the Aegean Palaeoclimatic reconstructions for the Bronze Age Aegean based on pollen analytical investigations from several sites in mainland Greece (Bottema 1974, 1982, 1990) have suggested climate conditions drier than at present, with a reversal to a wetter climate favouring
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Bronze Age finds stun digs director
Belfast Telegraph
; THE amount of material recovered at a Bronze Age archaeological dig in Mid-Ulster was today described as "phenomenal" by the man leading the recovery project. As bulldozers prepare the ground for the new [Pound]1.9m Mid- Ulster Sport Academy at the Loughry Estate, Cookstown, a team of
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WHEN EXPEDIENCY BROACHES RITUAL INTENTION: THE FLOW OF METAL BETWEEN SYSTEMIC AND BURIED DOMAINS.(Bronze Age social anthropological research, France and United Kingdom)
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
; The current interpretation of Bronze Age metalwork deposits relies on an opposition between deposits made ritually and those made with the utilitarian objective of temporary safe keeping. Tied to this distinction were the intentions, respectively, to leave buried in perpetuity, or to retrieve.
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The Bronze Age of La Mancha. (La Mancha, Spain)
Antiquity
; During the last 15 years, work in the region of La Mancha has revealed a density of Bronze Age settlement that had previously been completely unsuspected. Perhaps because of the relatively inhospitable climate of the Spanish Meseta, prehistorians of the Iberian Peninsula had been inclined to accept
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