·5 and greater and with an intensity of VII or greater is overlaid on Robert Drews' map of sites destroyed in these same regions during the so-called “Catastrophe” near the end of the Late Bronze Age, it is readily apparent that virtually all of these LBA sites lie within the ...
Cavers, G. (2006) 'Late bronze and iron age lake settlement in Scotland and Ireland: The development of the 'crannog' in the north and west', Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 25(4), 389-412.Cavers, M. G. 2006. "Late Bronze and Iron Age Lake Settlement in Scotland and Ireland: The ...
Present-day people from England and Wales have more ancestry derived from early European farmers (EEF) than did people of the Early Bronze Age1. To understand this, here we generated genome-wide data from 793 individuals, increasing data from the Mi
red dot marks coring site Egelsee. Top right: Map overview of Switzerland (Wikimedia Commons2011) with coring site (red dot) and other relevant palaeoecological sites mentioned in the text (yellow dots); Moossee (Rey et al.2020); Colle Gnifetti (Brugger et al.2021). Bottom left: Detail ...
Fig. 1: Geographical locations, genetic analyses and chronology of newly reported ancient Copper Age, Eneolithic and Early Bronze Age individuals. a, Map of sites and relevant archaeological cultures discussed in the text. Maps were made with Natural Earth (https://naturalearthdata.com).b, PCA ...
Map after Kaptijn (2009). The area is situated in a rift valley with an altitude that ranges between −350 m and −200 m asl, that is well below sea level. Temperature and potential evaporation are high. The predominantly westerly winds, coming from the Mediterranean, bring rain to ...
Differences in genetic affinities between the ancient Anatolian populations. We plot the highest and lowest 40 values ofD(population 1, population 2; test, Mbuti)on the map. Circles mark ancient populations and triangles present-day ones. “Test” share more alleles withpopulation 1when values ar...
TeManyWaysbetweenLateBronzeAgeAegeans andLevants NicolleE.Hirschfeld TrinityUniversity,nhirschf@trinity.edu Followthisandadditionalworksat:h p://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/class_faculty PartoftheClassicsCommons isArticleisbroughttoyouforfreeandopenaccessbytheClassicalStudiesDepartmentatDigitalCommons@Trinity.It...
On the map above you can see where Giltspur Street enters at the southern end of Smithfield and to the west is an angle known as Pie, or Pye, Corner. This is where the flames of the Great Fire of London (1666) finally flickered and died out. The fact that it began in Pudding ...
The Bronze Age of Central Europe was a period of major social, economic, political and ideological change. The arrival of millet is often seen as part of wider Bronze Age connectivity, yet understanding of the subsistence regimes underpinning this dynami