Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 19-20Department of Archaeology, 2004 - Archaeology |
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Page 124
... coffee , or only dry the water off and sell it green . Since the former method yields a higher price , most people prefer this . The beneficio process begins by peeling off the skin ... coffee producing area 124 Drinking coffee in Colombia.
... coffee , or only dry the water off and sell it green . Since the former method yields a higher price , most people prefer this . The beneficio process begins by peeling off the skin ... coffee producing area 124 Drinking coffee in Colombia.
Page 125
... coffee in a cayana ( a clay plate ) . The delicious smell of coffee revived stories of how coffee was prepared in the past . She told me how coffee was consumed by grinding the beans on a stone . The black drink was always sugared ...
... coffee in a cayana ( a clay plate ) . The delicious smell of coffee revived stories of how coffee was prepared in the past . She told me how coffee was consumed by grinding the beans on a stone . The black drink was always sugared ...
Page 130
... coffee and more importantly , to know how to distinguish coffee according to its properties of origin . In order to illustrate how the transmission of knowledge of coffee quality and technology are important in the formation of an ...
... coffee and more importantly , to know how to distinguish coffee according to its properties of origin . In order to illustrate how the transmission of knowledge of coffee quality and technology are important in the formation of an ...
Contents
Foreword | 1 |
How Little Does it Take to Represent a Face? | 9 |
Archaeology and Aesthetics | 12 |
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aesthetic experience aesthetic objects ancient Anthropology approach archaeological context Archaeological Review artefacts artist assemblages Avebury Britain British Bronze Age brooches burial Celtiberian cemeteries century coffee colonial concept construction consumption contemporary context Cornelia Parker created Deir el-Medina Department of Archaeology discussion drink early ethnicity evidence example excavation feasting Figure glass groups hapū heritage human hunter-gatherers identity illustrative representation images important individual interaction interpretation Iron Age Iron Age Britain khipu knowledge landscape landscape archaeology London Lundenwic Māori material culture mathematics means medieval Mesolithic modern monuments Museum nature Neolithic Oxford paintings particular past period perspective political pottery practice prehistoric produced region relations relationship represent Review from Cambridge Richard Long ritual Roman Roman Britain Routledge Saami sculpture Segeda settlement significant social society space stone structure symbolic theory traditional University of Cambridge University Press vessels whisky xenia Yolŋu