Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 12-13Department of Archaeology, 1993 - Archaeology |
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Page 33
... associated ritual or grave goods , should be indicative of hierarchical social ties and an expanded temporal envelope . Simple inhumation may be associated with emotion and need not be symbolic ( Dibble and Chase 1993 ) . When burial ...
... associated ritual or grave goods , should be indicative of hierarchical social ties and an expanded temporal envelope . Simple inhumation may be associated with emotion and need not be symbolic ( Dibble and Chase 1993 ) . When burial ...
Page 34
... associated with a Middle Palaeolithic technology , are both anatomically modern humans . As Middle Palaeolithic burials are , without exception , associated with relatively rich occupation floors , they include cultural material from ...
... associated with a Middle Palaeolithic technology , are both anatomically modern humans . As Middle Palaeolithic burials are , without exception , associated with relatively rich occupation floors , they include cultural material from ...
Page 11
... associated with women and those associated with children . Women have often been regarded as passive reproducers and children as the passive products of reproduction , while the economic activities of both have often been neglected ...
... associated with women and those associated with children . Women have often been regarded as passive reproducers and children as the passive products of reproduction , while the economic activities of both have often been neglected ...
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adult African ancient Anthropology Antiquity archaeological record Archaeological Review archaeology argued Bamangwato Basarwa behaviour Binford burial Cambridge University Press cemeteries century child childhood cognitive complex concepts construction context contributions debate Deir el Medina discipline discussion early economic Egyptian emotional Europe evidence evolution evolutionary example excavations female gender groups heritage Hodder hominid hunter-gatherers iconography ideology important individual infanticide interpretation Iron Age issues Journal kgotla London male Maori Marulamantsi material culture Mellars Meroitic Mesolithic Middle Palaeolithic missionaries modern humans Neanderthals Neolithic Nubia organisation Oxford past perception period perspective political post-modern post-processual Post-Processual Archaeology practice Prehistory present processual archaeology production recognised region relations representation Review from Cambridge ritual role Serowe settlement Shanks social society structure suggests symbolic temporal theoretical theory Tilley tombs tradition transition University of Cambridge Upper Palaeolithic volume Western women Zvelebil