Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 18-19Department of Archaeology, 2002 - Archaeology |
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... identified , 98 % belong to domestic mammals , with cattle ( 50 % ) again the most common but with pig ( 34 % ) much better represented . Indeed in one area of the site , pig bones outnumber cattle . The reasons for this variability lie ...
... identified , 98 % belong to domestic mammals , with cattle ( 50 % ) again the most common but with pig ( 34 % ) much better represented . Indeed in one area of the site , pig bones outnumber cattle . The reasons for this variability lie ...
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... identified fish bones provide 46 % of the total number of bones identified . Such a high percentage of fish may also be expected if similar sampling was carried out in Novgorod . Cyprinids ( carp family ) and perch were also recovered ...
... identified fish bones provide 46 % of the total number of bones identified . Such a high percentage of fish may also be expected if similar sampling was carried out in Novgorod . Cyprinids ( carp family ) and perch were also recovered ...
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... identified in the bone assemblages and those mentioned specifically in the birch - bark documents . The most common local fish in the bone assemblages are either absent from the documents ( zander , perch ) or mentioned only once in the ...
... identified in the bone assemblages and those mentioned specifically in the birch - bark documents . The most common local fish in the bone assemblages are either absent from the documents ( zander , perch ) or mentioned only once in the ...
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aesthetic aesthetic objects animals Antiquity appear approach archaeology artefacts artist associated become bird Black body bog bodies bones bowl Britain British burial Cambridge century concept concerned considered construction contemporary context discussion early England English ethnicity Europe European evidence example excavations existence experience expression face Figure fish German groups human ideas identified identity illustrative images important individual interest interpretation issues Italy knowledge land landscape late living London Long material culture means medieval Museum nature objects origin Oxford particular past period perspective plague political possible practice present problem production question recent record reference regional relations remains represent representation Review Roman sculpture seen social society sources space species status structures suggests symbolic theory tradition understanding University Press York zooarchaeology