Sign up
Forgot password?
FAQ: Login

Levine Marsha, Renfrew Colin, Boyle Katie (ed.) Prehistoric steppe adaptation and the horse

  • pdf file
  • size 16,14 MB
  • added by
  • info modified
Levine Marsha, Renfrew Colin, Boyle Katie (ed.) Prehistoric steppe adaptation and the horse
McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2003. — 428 p.
ISBN: 1-902937-09-0.
ISSN: 1363-1349.
Perhaps the most significant achievements of the symposium were: to bring into focus various points of view on Central Eurasian archaeology; to highlight the gaps in our knowledge; and to illustrate the differences in approach used by various scholars — differences which are at least partly related to the academic traditions to which they belong. Most importantly, the symposium makes explicit the obvious advantages of working together in collaborative projects — in the field, in laboratories and at meetings such as this — where differing points of view can be aired and debated.
Focusing on Central Eurasian Archaeology: East Meets West.
Marsha Levine.
Environment and Ecology.
Steppe and Forest-steppe Belt of Eurasia: Holocene Environmental History.
Konstantin V. Kremenetski.
Green Grows the Steppe: How can Grassland Ecology Increase our Understanding of Human–Plant Interactions and the Origins of Agriculture.
Mim A. Bower.
Horse Exploitation on the Eurasian Steppe.
Organic Residue Analysis of Lipids in Potsherds from the Early Neolithic Settlement of Botai, Kazakhstan.
Stephanie N. Dudd, Richard P. Evershed & Marsha Levine.
Chapter 5 Eneolithic Horse Rituals and Riding in the Steppes: New Evidence.
David W. Anthony & Dorcus R. Brown.
Horse Exploitation in the Kazakh Steppes during the Eneolithic and Bronze Age.
Norbert Benecke & Angela Von Den Driesch.
The Exploitation of Horses at Botai, Kazakhstan.
Sandra L. Olsen.
Geomorphological and Micromorphological Investigations of Palaeosols, Valley Sediments
and a Sunken-floored Dwelling at Botai, Kazakhstan.
Charly French & Maria Kousoulakou.
A Note on the Early Evidence for Horse in Western Asia.
Joan Oates.
Were the Donkeys at Tell Brak (Syria) Harnessed with a Bit?
Juliet Clutton-Brock.
Equids in the Northern Part of the Iranian Central Plateau from the Neolithic to Iron Age: New Zoogeographic Evidence.
Marjan Mashkour.
A Walk on the Wild Side: Late Shang Appropriation of Horses in China.
Kathryn M. Linduff.
The Horse in Late Prehistoric China: Wresting Culture and Control from the ‘Barbarians’.
Victor H. Mair.
Horseback Riding: Man’s Access to Speed?
Ute Luise Dietz.
Subsistence and the Origins of Pastoralism.
Origins of Pastoralism in the Eurasian Steppes.
Origins Of Pastoralism In The Eurasian Steppes.
Elena E. Kuzmina.
The Horse and the Wheel: the Dialectics of Change in the Circum-Pontic Region and Adjacent Areas, 4500–1500 BC.
Andrew Sherratt.
The Importance of Fish in the Diet of Central Eurasian Peoples from the Mesolithic.
to the Early Iron Age.
Tamsin O’Connell, Marsha Levine & Robert Hedges.
Correlations between Agriculture and Pastoralism in the Northern Pontic Steppe Area.
during the Bronze Age.
Kateryna P. Bunyatyan.
Palaeoethnobotanical Evidence of Agriculture in the Steppe and the Forest-steppe of East Europe in the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age.
Galina Pashkevich.
First Cattle-breeders of the Azov-Pontic Steppes.
Volodymyr N. Stanko.
Farmers and Pastoralists of the Pontic Lowland during the Late Bronze Age.
Yakov P. Gershkovich.
The Economic Peculiarities of the Srubnaya Cultural-historical Entity.
Vitaliy V. Otroshchenko.
Srubnaya Fauna and Beyond: a Critical Assessment of the Archaezoological Information from the East European Steppe.
Arturo Morales Muñiz & Ekaterina Antipina.
Yamnaya Culture Pastoral Exploitation: a Local Sequence.
Natalia I. Shishlina.
Problems of Inhabiting Central Eurasia: Mesolithic–Eneolithic Exploitation of the Central Eurasian Steppes.
Gerald Matyushin.
The Steppes of the Urals and Kazakhstan during the Late Bronze Age.
Svetlana Zdanovich.
  • Sign up or login using form at top of the page to download this file.
  • Sign up
Up