نتایج جستجو برای: from neolithic to bronze age.

تعداد نتایج: 11881291  

Journal: :progress in biological sciences 2011
hamed vahdati nasab

mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid (mtdna) polymorphisms were examinedin bone samples of individuals buried inan early neolithic (c. 5800–4900 bce) hunter-gatherer cemetery, shamanka ii, located atthe southwestern tip of lake baikal, siberia. the mainobjective was to compare the mtdna polymorphisms observed at shamanka ii to those previously reportedfrom the lokomotiv (early neolithic) and ust...

2017
Sylvain Mazet Pascal Paoli

The aim of this study is to apprehend the function of the stone enclosures during the Neolithic and the Bronze Age. Some enclosures well positioned in the Corsican chronology have been chosen to show an evolution of their dimensions, of dry-stone techniques used and of the function of the structures excavated within enclosures. The results prove that during the Neolithic, the whole habitat is i...

2001
Patrick Clay

This document comprises a Stage 2 resource assessment and draft research agenda for the Neolithic and Bronze Age (Early – Middle) of the East Midlands. It builds upon the assessments for Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Rutland and Northamptonshire presented at a seminar at County Hall, Leicester on 28.1.1999 (Bishop 1999; Chapman 1999, Clay 1999a; Membury 1999; Myers ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2017
Corina Knipper Alissa Mittnik Ken Massy Catharina Kociumaka Isil Kucukkalipci Michael Maus Fabian Wittenborn Stephanie E Metz Anja Staskiewicz Johannes Krause Philipp W Stockhammer

Human mobility has been vigorously debated as a key factor for the spread of bronze technology and profound changes in burial practices as well as material culture in central Europe at the transition from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. However, the relevance of individual residential changes and their importance among specific age and sex groups are still poorly understood. Here, we present a...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2017
Amy Goldberg Torsten Günther Noah A Rosenberg Mattias Jakobsson

Dramatic events in human prehistory, such as the spread of agriculture to Europe from Anatolia and the late Neolithic/Bronze Age migration from the Pontic-Caspian Steppe, can be investigated using patterns of genetic variation among the people who lived in those times. In particular, studies of differing female and male demographic histories on the basis of ancient genomes can provide informati...

2014
Cristina Gamba Eppie R. Jones Matthew D. Teasdale Russell L. McLaughlin Gloria Gonzalez-Fortes Valeria Mattiangeli László Domboróczki Ivett Kővári Ildikó Pap Alexandra Anders Alasdair Whittle János Dani Pál Raczky Thomas F. G. Higham Michael Hofreiter Daniel G Bradley Ron Pinhasi

The Great Hungarian Plain was a crossroads of cultural transformations that have shaped European prehistory. Here we analyse a 5,000-year transect of human genomes, sampled from petrous bones giving consistently excellent endogenous DNA yields, from 13 Hungarian Neolithic, Copper, Bronze and Iron Age burials including two to high (~22 × ) and seven to ~1 × coverage, to investigate the impact of...

2015
Philipp W. Stockhammer Ken Massy Corina Knipper Ronny Friedrich Bernd Kromer Susanne Lindauer Jelena Radosavljević Fabian Wittenborn Johannes Krause Peter F. Biehl

The transition from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age in Central Europe has often been considered as a supra-regional uniform process, which led to the growing mastery of the new bronze technology. Since the 1920s, archaeologists have divided the Early Bronze Age into two chronological phases (Bronze A1 and A2), which were also seen as stages of technical progress. On the basis of the early...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2010
Jaime Lira Anna Linderholm Carmen Olaria Mikael Brandström Durling M Thomas P Gilbert Hans Ellegren Eske Willerslev Kerstin Lidén Juan Luis Arsuaga Anders Götherström

Multiple geographical regions have been proposed for the domestication of Equus caballus. It has been suggested, based on zooarchaeological and genetic analyses that wild horses from the Iberian Peninsula were involved in the process, and the overrepresentation of mitochondrial D1 cluster in modern Iberian horses supports this suggestion. To test this hypothesis, we analysed mitochondrial DNA f...

Journal: :Collegium antropologicum 2004
Francesca Alhaique Michelangelo Bisconti Elisabetta Castiglioni Cristina Cilli Leone Fasani Giacomo Giacobini Renata Grifoni Antonio Guerreschi Andrea Iacopini Giancarla Malerba Carlo Peretto Alexandra Recchi Antonio Rocci Ris Annamaria Ronchitelli Mauro Rottoli Ursula Thun Hohenstein Carlo Tozzi Paola Visentini Barbara Wilkens

Several faunal assemblages excavated in deposits of different antiquity (from Lower Paleolithic to Bronze Age), located in Northern, Central and Southern Italy, were studied from the archeozoological and taphonomic point of view. Data obtained by different Authors allow reconstruction of subsistence strategies adopted by prehistoric humans in these areas and through time, in particular as far a...

Hamed Vahdati Nasab

Mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid (mtDNA) polymorphisms were examinedin bone samples of individuals buried inan early Neolithic (c. 5800–4900 BCE) hunter-gatherer cemetery, Shamanka II, located atthe southwestern tip of Lake Baikal, Siberia. The mainobjective was to compare the mtDNA polymorphisms observed at Shamanka II to those previously reportedfrom the Lokomotiv (early Neolithic) and Ust...

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