segunda-feira, 20 de setembro de 2010

European Journal of Archaeology 13/2

 

European Journal of Archaeology
Agosto 2010 13/2


Alan Saville: Editorial
pp.147-148

Eva Andersson Strand, Karin Margarita Frei, Margarita Gleba, Ulla Mannering, Marie-Louise Nosch & Irene Skals: Old Textiles — New Possibilities
pp. 149-173

Chris Scarre: Rocks of Ages: Tempo and Time in Megalithic Monuments
pp.  175-193

Carla Maria Braz Martins: The Mining Complex of Braçal and Malhada, Portugal: Lead Mining in Roman Times and Linking Historical Social Trends — Amphitheatre Games
pp. 195-216

Marta Caroscio: Archaeological Data and Written Sources: Lustreware Production in Renaissance Italy, a Case Study
pp.  217-244

Anthony Harding: Book Review Essay War and Weaponry in Prehistoric Europe: Heidi Peter-Röcher, Gewalt und Krieg im prähistorischen Europa. Beiträge zur Konfliktforschung auf der Grundlage archäologischer, anthropologischer und ethnologischer Quellen. (Universitätsforschungen zur prähistorischen Archäologie, Band 143, Bonn: Rudolf Habelt, 2007, 343 pp., pbk, ISBN 978 3 7749 3504 4) Susanne Weinberger, Warfare in the Austrian Weinviertel during the Early Bronze Age. (Wien: Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2008, 125 pp.)
pp. 245-248

Marta Caroscio: Book Review: Student Guides To Material Culture: Arthur Asa Berger, What Objects Mean. An Introduction to Material Culture. (Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press, 2009, 248 pp., pbk, ISBN 978 1 598 74411 8) Karen Harvey, ed., History and Material Culture. A Student’s Guide to Approaching Alternative Sources. (London and New York: Routledge, 2009, 224 pp.)
pp. 248-250

Björn Nilsson: Book Review: Wide-Ranging Perspectives On Archaeology and Material Studies: Linda M. Hurcombe, Archaeological Artefacts as Material Culture. (London and New York: Routledge, 2007, xvi + 286 pp., 67 figs, 10 tables, pbk, ISBN 978 0 415 32092 4) James M. Skibo and Michael Brian Schiffer, People and Things. A Behavioral Approach to Material Culture. (New York: Springer, 2008, xiii + 170 pp.)
pp.  250-253,

Raimond Thörn: Book Review: Dragos Gheorghiu, ed., Early Farmers, Late Foragers, and Ceramic Traditions: On the Beginning of Pottery in the Near East and Europe. (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009, 275 pp.)
pp.253-254,

Leonardo García Sanjuán: Book Review: Katina T. Lillios, Heraldry for the Dead. Memory, Identity, and the Engraved Stone Plaques of Neolithic Iberia. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2008, 218 + xi pp)
pp. 255-257,

Lolita Nikolova: Book Review: Svend Hansen, Bilder vom Menschen der Steinzeit. Untersuchungen zur anthropomorphen Plastik der Jungsteinzeit und Kupferzeit in Südosteuropa. Teil I: Text. Teil II: Tafeln 1—532. (Mainz: Philipp von Zabern [Archäologie in Eurasien, 20], 2007, 547 pp.)
pp.  257-259,

Oscar Aldred: Book Review: Barbara Bender, Sue Hamilton and Chris Tilley, eds, Stone Worlds. Narrative and Reflexivity in Landscape Archaeology. (Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press, 2007, 464 pp.)
pp.  259-261,

Teresa Chapa Brunet: Book Review: Barry Cunliffe, Chris Gosden, Rosemary A. Joyce, eds, The Oxford Handbook of Archaeology. (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2009, 1161 pp.)
pp. 261-263,

Anna McWilliams: Book Review: John Schofield and Wayne Cocroft, eds, A Fearsome Heritage: Diverse Legacies of the Cold War. (Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press [One World Archaeology, vol 50], 2007, 336 pp., illustr., hbk, ISBN 978 1 598 74258 9)
pp.263-265,

Diane Barthel-Bouchier: Book Review: Marie Louise Stig Sørensen and John Carman, eds, Heritage Studies: Methods and Approaches. (London and New York: Routledge, 2009, 360 pp.)
pp.  265-267

Manuel A. Fernández-Götz: Book Review: Ton Derks and Nico Roymans, eds, Ethnic Constructs in Antiquity: The Role of Power and Tradition. (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009. 344 pp.)
pp. 267-268,

Adela Mates: Book Review: Peter F. Biehl and Yuri Ya. Rassamakin, eds, Import and Imitation in Archaeology. (Langenweißbach: Beier & Beran [Schriften des Zentrums für Archäologie und Kulturgeschichte des Schwarzmeerraumes 11], 2008, 254 pp.)
pp. 268-270

William Meyer: Book Review: Jana Maříková-Kubková, Nathan Schlanger and Sonia Lévin, eds, Sites of Memory: Between Scientific Research and Collective Representations. Proceedings of the AREA Seminar at Prague Castle, February 2006. (Prague: Archeologický Ústav AV ČR [Castrum Pragense 8], 2008, 123 pp., )
pp. 270-272

Gavin Lucas: Book Review: Laurent Olivier, Le Sombre Abîme du Temps. (Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 2008, 303 pp.)
pp.  273-275

Sam TurnerBook Review: Ingunn Holm, Kathrine Stene and Eva Svensson, eds, Liminal Landscapes: Beyond the Concepts of ‘Marginality’ and ‘Periphery’. (Oslo: Unipub / Oslo Academic Press [Oslo Archaeological Series 11], 2009, 208 pp)
pp.  275-276

Anna-Karin Andersson: Book Review: Norman Yoffee, ed., Negotiating the Past in the Past. Identity, Memory, and Landscape in Archaeological Research. (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2007, 288 pp.)
pp. 276-277


Ir ao site do: JEA

quarta-feira, 8 de setembro de 2010

Journal of Material Culture Vol 15, nº 3



Journal of Material Culture 2010 15/3

Table of Contents

George F. Lau: The work of surfaces: object worlds and techniques of enhancement in the ancient Andes pp 259-286

Tom Rice: ‘The hallmark of a doctor’: the stethoscope and the making of medical identity pp.  287-301

Chris Wingfield: A case re-opened: the science and folklore of a ‘Witch’s Ladder’ pp. 302-322

Vesa-Pekka Herva: Maps and magic in Renaissance Europe pp. 323-343,

David Harvey: Broad Down, Devon: archaeological and other stories pp.  345-367




Ir ao site do JMC

O tempo dos Diadocos - Simposio Internacional


The Time of the Diadochi (323-281 BC)


V Internacional Simposium, UDC, 9-11 Setempter 2010
Thursday 9 September (rectorado)

9:30 Welcome Addresses & Inauguration

9:30 -10:15 Brian Boswoth presiding

Key note Speaker

10:15 -11:15 Victor Alonso Troncoso, presiding

John Walsh (University of Calgary): Continuity in a Time of Chaos

Frances Pownall (University of Alberta): Duris of Samos and the Diadochi

11:15 – 11:45 Coffee Break

11:45 – 13:15 Edward Anson presiding

Tom Boiy (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven: Diadoch History in Cuneiform Documentation

Brian Bosworth (Macquarie University, Sydney): Strabo and the Diadochi

Antonio Guzmán Guerra (Universidad Complutense de Madrid):
Peripheral People´s Utopies: A Review of Onesicritus Fragment 24th (FGrHist)
13:15 – 16 Lunch

16-18 Marek Olbrycht presiding

Joseph Roisman (Colby College, Waterville, ME): Eumenes of Cardia and Crateus: Enemies and Friends

Edward Anson (University of Arkansas at Little Rock): The Battle of Gabene: Eumenes´Inescapable Doom?

Franca Landucci (Università Cattolica di Milano): Seleucus vs Antigonus: Fighting to Death

Elizabeth Baynham (University of Newcastle): The Argyraspids: Tough Old Fighters, or Antigonid Myth?


18 - 18:30 Coffee Break

18:30 – 20 Frances Pownall presiding

Shane Wallace (University of Edinburgh): Between City, League, and King:
Adeimantos of Lampsakos and the Development of the Hellenistic Philos


Brian Sheridan (University of Ireland): How to win friends and influence People:
An Examination of the Mayor and Minor Figures of Diodorus´18 Book

Victor Alonso Troncoso (UDC): The Diadochi and the Zoology of Kingship



Friday 10 September (Escuela Superior de Náutica)

9:30 – 11 Antonio Gúzman Guerra presiding

Elisabettt Poddighe (Università di Cagliari): Ideology, Vocabulary and Forms of Political
 Communication between the Macedonian Rulers and the Greek Cities:
The Diagramma issued by Polyperchon to recall the Exiles and the return the Peace of Greek Cities (319 BC)


Paschalis Paschidis (KERA, Athens): Agora XVI 107 and the Role of the Greek Poleis
in the Assumption of the Royal Title by the Diadochi


Giuseppe Squillace (Universià della Calabria): Alexander the Great, Ptolemy I
and the Offering of Arms to Athena Lindia

11 – 11:30 Coffee Break

11:30 -13 Joseph Roisman presiding
Daniel Ogden (University of Exeter): The Ptolemaic Adoption of Agathos Daimon

Sabine Müller (Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel): The Developtment of the Female Element
 in the Political Self-Fashioning of the Diadochs

Timothy Howe (St Olaf College, Northfield, MN): Constructing Alexander.
The Diadochi, Invented Tradition, and Alexander´s Expedition to Siwah

13 -16 Lunch

16 – 17 Tom Boisy presiding

Marek Olbrycht (Univesytet Rzeszowski): Iranians in the Diadochi Period: Political, Military, and Cultural Factors

Luis Ballesteros Pastor (Universidad de Sevilla): Nullis umquam nisi domesticis regibus paruisse.
Cappadocia, Pontus and the Resistance to the Diadochi in Asia Minor


17 -17: 15 Break

17:15 – 19 Waldemar Heckel presiding
Alexander Meeus (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven): What we do not know about the Age of the Successors

L. Ballesteros Pastor, E. Baynham, F. Landucci Gattinoni, D. Ogden: Discussion and General Conclusions


Victor Alonso Troncoso: Closing Words

terça-feira, 7 de setembro de 2010

Novas Perspetivas sobre o Neolítico 1


New Light in the Dawn
a new perspective on the Neolithic Revolution in Southwest Asia

Trevor Watkins
Rhind Lectures 2009, Edimburgo


Resume: 

Desde que Gordon Childe criara o termo Revolução Neolítica (ou Agrícola), a investigação das origens e primórdios da agricultura no Lebante Mediterrâneo têm preocupado a gerações de arqueólogos/as. A pregunta de "por que, então? por que não antes?" continua a desafiar-nos. Recentes avanços na aplicação da teoria da evolução à psicologia cognitiva e a teoria cultural pode ser relacionado com o mundo material e simbólico que estas comunidades criaram durante este periodo da pre-historia.

Podemos ver como as pessoas naquela época começou a viver de uma maneira nova, porque a natureza das faculdades cognitivas e culturais tornam isso possível. Podemos explorar as complexidades conceituais da formação e manutenção destas novas comunidades e podemos definir essas inovações desde o ponto de vista da evolução cognitiva e cultural do ser humano, que permitiu o uso de uma cultura totalmente simbólica, seja na linguagem, ou na arte, a arquitetura, ou a ciência.


Introdução por Dr Barbara Crawford, Presidenta da Society of Antiquaries of Scotland



1. From economic to social and cultural revolution



2. From hunting and harvesting to cultivation, herding and domestication




+INFO no site:  Society of Antiquaries of Scotland

Novas Perspetivas sobre o Neolítico 2


New Light in the Dawn - Rhind Lectures 2009
Trevor Watkins



3.Settling down, staying together: from Epi-palaeolithic to Neolithic



4. Architecture, monuments and "theatres of memory"



5. Evolutionary context: the emergence of the modern humand mind




Novas Perspetivas sobre o Neolítico 3


New Light in the Dawn - Rhind Lectures 2009
Trevor Watkins



6. Putting the story together



Question and answer session




Novidades - Anthropological Theory


Anthropological Theory nº 10/3, Septembro 2010


-Un/knowing and the practice of ethnography: A reflection on some Western cosmo-ontological notions and  their anthropological application
  Jadran Mimica
  pp 203-228

- Cultural models and the dream: US Cinderellas and identity 
  Jeannette Mageo
  pp 229-246

-Of words and fog: Linguistic relativity and Amerindian ontology
  Magnus Course
  pp 247-263

-‘Heart of Darkness’: Current images of the DRC and their theoretical underpinning
 Patience Kabamba
pp 265-301 

-‘You aren’t the first and you won’t be the last’: Reflections on moral change in contemporary rural Ireland
 China Scherz
  pp 303-318 


Ir ao site de Anthropological Theory

Novidades - Journal of Archaeological Science





Journal of Archaeological Science Vol. 37, 11, Novembro 2010


-Technological traditions inferred from iron artefacts of the Xiongnu Empire in Mongolia
Jang-Sik Park, Eregzen Gelegdorj, Yeruul-Erdene Chimiddorj
pp 2689-2697

-Romita pottery revisited: a reassessment of the provenance of ceramics from Colonial Mexico by LA-MC-ICP-MS
Javier G. Iñañez, Jeremy J. Bellucci, Enrique Rodríguez-Alegría, Richard Ash, William McDonough, Robert J. Speakman
pp 2698-2704

-The use of SEM-EDS, PIXE and EDXRF for obsidian provenance studies in the Near East: a case study from Neolithic Çatalhöyük (central Anatolia)
Gérard Poupeau, François-Xavier Le Bourdonnec, Tristan Carter, Sarah Delerue, M. Steven Shackley, Jean-Alix Barrat, Stéphan Dubernet, Philippe Moretto, Thomas Calligaro, Marina Milić, Katsuji Kobayashi
pp 2705-2720

-Trauma and pathology of a buried dog from San Nicolas Island, California, U.S.A. Barney G. Bartelle, René L. Vellanoweth, Elizabeth S. Netherton, Nicholas W. Poister, William E. Kendig, Amira F. Ainis, Ryan J. Glenn, Johanna V. Marty, Lisa Thomas-Barnett, Steven J. Schwartz
pp 2721-2734

-A new approach to study the fuel used in hearths by hunter-gatherers at the Upper Palaeolithic site of Abri Pataud (Dordogne, France)
L. Marquer, T. Otto, R. Nespoulet, L. Chiotti
pp 2735-2746

-Le Grand Abri aux Puces, a Mousterian site from the Last Interglacial: paleogeography, paleoenvironment, and new excavation results
Ludovic Slimak, Jason E. Lewis, Evelyne Crégut-Bonnoure, Laure Metz, Vincent Ollivier, Pierre André, Julia Chrzavzez, Yves Giraud, Marcel Jeannet, Frédéric Magnin
pp 2747-2761

-On some remains of dog (Canis familiaris) from the Mesolithic shell-middens of Muge, Portugal,
Cleia Detry, João Luís Cardoso
pp 2762-2774

-On the origins of extractive metallurgy: new evidence from Europe
Miljana Radivojević, Thilo Rehren, Ernst Pernicka, Dušan Šljivar, Michael Brauns, Dušan Borić
pp 2775-2787

-Evidence for size increase in an exploited mollusc: humped conch (Strombus gibberulus) at Chelechol ra Orrak, Palau from ca. 3000–0 BP
Christina M. Giovas, Scott M. Fitzpatrick, Meagan Clark, Mira Abed
pp 2788-2798

-Burning wood or burning bone? A reconsideration of flotation evidence from Upper Palaeolithic (Gravettian) sites in the Moravian Corridor
David G. Beresford-Jones, Katherine Johnson, Alexander G. Pullen, Alexander J.E. Pryor, Jiří Svoboda, Martin K. Jones
pp 2799-2811

-Cattle mobility in prehistoric Britain: strontium isotope analysis of cattle teeth from Durrington Walls (Wiltshire, Britain)
Sarah Viner, Jane Evans, Umberto Albarella, Mike Parker Pearson
pp 2812-2820

-The integration of chronological and archaeological information to date building construction: an example from Shetland, Scotland, UK
Z. Outram, C.M. Batt, E.J. Rhodes, S.J. Dockrill
pp 2821-2830

-Assessing the effects of conservation treatments on short sequences of DNA in vitro
Julie A. Eklund, Mark G. Thomas
pp 2831-2841

-Wood identification of a wooden mask using synchrotron X-ray microtomography
Suyako Mizuno, Ryoji Torizu, Junji Sugiyama
pp 2842-2845

-Flies, Mochicas and burial practices: a case study from Huaca de la Luna, Peru J.-B. Huchet, B. Greenberg PP 2846-2856

-What novice knappers have to learn to become expert stone toolmakers Original
Núria Geribàs, Marina Mosquera, Josep Maria Vergès
pp 2857-2870

-Hazelnut economy of early Holocene hunter–gatherers: a case study from Mesolithic Duvensee, northern Germany
Daniela Holst
pp 2871-2880

-Stabilization of the Tlaltecuhtli monolith pigments
María Barajas, Pedro Bosch, Claudia Malvaéz, Cristina Barragán, Enrique Lima PP 2881-2886 Assessing the reliability of criteria used to identify postcranial bones in sheep, Ovis, and goats, Capra Melinda A. Zeder, Heather A. Lapham
pp 2887-2905

-Genetic characterization of an archaeological sheep assemblage from South Africa’s Western Cape
K. Ann Horsburgh, Allison Rhines
pp 2906-2910

-Cross-cultural interaction on Wuvulu Island, Papua New Guinea: the perspective from use-wear and residue analyses of turtle bone artifacts
Nina Kononenko, Robin Torrence, Huw Barton, Ariane Hennell
pp 2911-2919

-Diatoms as bioindicators of site use: locating turf structures from the Viking Age Rhonda R. Bathurst, Davide Zori, Jesse Byock
pp 2920-2928

-Modelling the Neolithic transition in a heterogeneous environment
M.A. Patterson, G.R. Sarson, H.C. Sarson, A. Shukurov
pp 2929-2937

-The role of time-lapse bathymetric surveys in assessing morphological change at shipwreck sites
Rory Quinn, Donal Boland
pp 2938-2946

-Phytolith evidence for hearths and beds in the late Mousterian occupations of Esquilleu cave (Cantabria, Spain)
Dan Cabanes, Carolina Mallol, Isabel Expósito, Javier Baena
pp 2947-2957


Ir ao site do JASC
 

quarta-feira, 1 de setembro de 2010

A Exaltação da Cabeça entre os Celtas - Livro

Dentro de todo eido de estudo há sempre algumas obras que pola sua relevância e significação para a investigação são consideradas como clássicos; são obras que foram pioneiras, ou bem são por abrirem um novo campo ou bem por oferecerem a primeira síntese duma nascente tema da estudo, ou bem por ser ambas coisas ao mesmo tempo.

Este ultimo é o casso de L´Exaltation de la Tête dans La Pensée et dans L´Art des Celtes de Pierre Lambrechts, na que se passava por primeira vez revista ao alongado acumulo de material que sobre a sacralidade do crânio existia no domínio céltico, desde a antiguidade e o registro arqueológico a literatura insular medieval, uma obra certamente muito recomendável e ainda de utilidade hoje em dia.

Em resume uma obra de referencia, como muitas outras nunca reeditada, e que queda aqui livremente ao vosso dispor para que a descarregar:

1ª PARTE: L´Aniconisme de L´Art Celtique


2ªPARTE: La Tête dans L´Art Plastique Celtique et Gallo-Romain



3ª PARTE: Le Thème de la Tête dans la Littérature Médiévale