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         Iberian Peninsula Archaeology:     more books (15)
  1. Greek Pottery from the Iberian Peninsula: Archaic and Classical Periods by Adolfo J. Dominguez, Carmen Sanchez, et all 2001-02
  2. Native Religion under Roman Domination: Deities, springs and mountains in the north-west of the Iberian Peninsula (bar s) by Elizabeth Richert, 2005-12-31
  3. Early Neolithic in the Iberian Peninsula BAR-S1857 (bar s) by Mariana Diniz, 2008-12-31
  4. Graphical Markers and Megalith Builders in the International Tagus, Iberian Peninsula BAR IS1765 (bar s) by Rodrigo de Balbin-Berhmann, Rosa Barroso-Bermejo, et all 2008-12-31
  5. Non-Flint Stone Tools and the Palaeolithic Occupation of the Iberian Peninsula (bar s) by N. Moloney, L. Raposo, et all 1996-12-31
  6. Prehistoric Mining and Metallurgy in SW Iberian Peninsula (bar s) by MArk A Hunt Ortiz, 2003-12-10
  7. Technical Systems of Lithic Production in the Lower and Middle Pleistocene of the Iberian Peninsula: Technological variability between north-eastern sites and Sierra de Atapuerca sites (bar s) by Xose Pedro Rodriguez, 2004-12-31
  8. Tecnologia litica del Paleolitico inferior del noreste de la Peninsula Iberica y sureste de Francia (bar s) by Joan Garcia Garriga, 2010-12-31
  9. Territorio Neolitico. Las primeras comunidades campesinas en la fachada oriental de la peninsula Iberica (ca. 5600-2800 cal BC) (bar s) by Gabriel Garcia Atienzar, 2009-12-31
  10. Iconografia nautica de la Peninsula Iberica en la Protohistoria (bar s) by Arturo Rey da Silva, 2009-12-31
  11. Hernando de Soto: Conquistador, Mississippi River, Southeastern United States, Lake Village, Arkansas, Hidalgo (Spanish nobility),Extremadura, Reconquista, Iberian Peninsula
  12. Heraldry for the Dead: Memory, Identity, and the Engraved Stone Plaques of Neolithic Iberia by Katina T. Lillios, 2008-09-01
  13. Santuarios y Rituales en la Hispania Celtica BAR S1963 by Silvia Alfaye Villa, 2009-12-31
  14. Colonial Encounters in Ancient Iberia: Phoenician, Greek, and Indigenous Relations

41. American Journal Of Archaeology / Article Abstract
archaeological program, Social Structure and Territory in Roman Iberia. The resultsof this program in two areas of the iberian peninsula where mining was
http://www.ajaonline.org/archive/106.4/orejas_almundena_and.html
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Volume 106 No. 4
January 2002
Abstract
Full Text

Current TOC
Past Issues Prerelease TOC
ARTICLE
Mines, Territorial Organization, and Social Structure in Roman Iberia: Carthago Noua and the Peninsular Northwest
Research into Roman provincial organization is inseparable from the study of the evolution of provincial social structures. The authors incorporate this perspective into the landscape archaeological program, "Social Structure and Territory in Roman Iberia." The results of this program in two areas of the Iberian peninsula where mining was practiced intensively during the Roman period, Carthago Noua in the southeast and the peninsular northwest, demonstrate that the Romans took various approaches to social and territorial organization in order to maximize the productivity of mining operations and to adapt to changes in those operations.
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42. Department Of Classics & Archaeology, FACULTY OF ARTS
A. Bonanno/Prof. A. Frendo/Dr N.Vella Levels 2 3 (BA II III). ARC 2030 TheArchaeology of the iberian peninsula (1 credit) Prof. RJ Harrison (Univ.
http://home.um.edu.mt/classics-archaeo/archaeologyunits02_03.html
UNIVERSITY OF MALTA
FACULTY OF ARTS
Department of Classics and Archaeology
List of Study-Units for academic year 2002-2003 Archaeology
    Semester I
    Level 1 (B.A. I)
  • ARC 1001* Introduction to Archaeology (4 credits)

  • Prof. A. Bonanno/Prof. A. Frendo/Dr N.Vella
  • ARC 2030 The Archaeology of the Iberian Peninsula (1 credit)

  • Prof. R.J. Harrison (Univ. of Bristol)
  • ARC 2014* The Development and Theory of Archaeology (2 credits)

  • Dr Nicholas C. Vella
  • ARC 2034 The Archaeology of the Western Mediterranean I (2 credits)

  • Dr N. Vella/ Prof. A. Bonanno
  • ARC 2004* Maltese Prehistory (2 credits)

  • Prof. A. Bonanno
  • ARC 2006* Roman Malta (2 credits)

  • Prof. A. Bonanno
  • ARC 3003#$ Classical Hebrew I (4 credits)
  • Prof. A. J. Frendo
  • ARC 2015 Monitored Fieldwork 4 weeks of excavations (3 credits)
  • Prof. A. Bonanno/Dr N. Vella
  • ARC 2025 Monitored Fieldwork 2 weeks of excavations (2 credits)
  • Prof. A. Bonanno/Dr N. Vella
  • CLA 1009# Latin Grammar and Reading (5 credits)
  • Mr D. Munro/Dr B. Vella
  • CLA 3008++ Classical Mythology Spread over 2 semesters (3 of 4 credits)
  • Mr Carmel Serracino/Mrs M. Zammit

43. Simposio
today in Lisbon to begin this International Symposium on the archaeology of Medieval Fittingbecause we meet on the Atlantic coast of the iberian peninsula.
http://www.ipa.min-cultura.pt/cnans/simposio/kbass.html
George F. Bass' Keynote Address
It is fitting that we meet here today in Lisbon to begin this International Symposium on the Archaeology of Medieval and Modern Ships of Iberian-Atlantic Tradition-fitting because we meet in conjunction with the Lisbon International Exposition, EXPO '98, with its theme: The oceans, a Heritage for the Future. Fitting because we meet on the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula. And especially fitting because we are in Lisbon, in Portugal, with its glorious history of naval power, where modern oceanic voyages really started. I can speak for many of us from other countries when I say how pleased we are for the opportunity to have already seen the new Portuguese National Center for Nautical and Underwater Archaeology, and now to be able to talk to and learn from both old and new colleagues in a city of such historic importance. For making all this possible we are grateful to the hard work and generosity of the Ministry of Culture, the Portuguese Institute of Archaeology, the Portuguese Commissariat at EXPO '98, and the Academia de Marinha, with a special word of thanks to the National Center for Nautical and Underwater Archaeology, and to the untiring Francisco Alves for the enormous task of coordinating it all. I suppose I was fated to be here before you, in this auditorium of the Portuguese Naval Academy, because I grew up in a house near our U.S. Naval Academy, where my father

44. References
Translate this page Cranial variation in the iberian peninsula and the Balearic Islands inferencesabout the results of preliminary research, Journal of Field archaeology 21 53
http://intarch.ac.uk/antiquity/jackes/references.html
This file is one of six making available supplementary material to the printed text of:

ANTIQUITY volume 71 number 273 (1997): 639-658.
The files are entitled:
Craniometry

Dates

Metric data

Non-metric data

References A further file reproduces the full text as printed in the paper publication: Printed References This list of references is for the supplementary material on the Internet; the printed text, both on paper and as an Internet file has its own references. Trabalhos de Antropologia e Etnologia Trabalhos de Antropologia e Etnologia (Porto) Arnaud, J.M. 1989. The Mesolithic communities of the Sado Valley, Portugal, in their ecological setting, in C. Bonsall (ed.), The Mesolithic in Europe: papers presented at the third international symposium : 614-31. Edinburgh: John Donald. Boletim da Sociedade Portuguesa de Espeleologia Bicho, N. 1994. The end of the Paleolithic and the Mesolithic in Portugal, Current Anthropology Bubner, T. 1986. Restos humanos de Carenque, O Cruz, D.J. da. 1988. O megalitismo do norte de Portugal, Trabalhos de Antropologia e Etnologia (Porto) 28: 15-56.

45. Southampton Archaeology - Research - Ave VAlley
A further information is available through Internet archaeology, and the ArchaeologicalData region lies on the Atlantic seaboard of the iberian peninsula at a
http://www.arch.soton.ac.uk/Research/AveValley/
University of Southampton
Department of Archaeology
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The Ave Valley Survey Project
Martin Millett, Francisco Queiroga, Kris Strutt, Jeremy Taylor and Steven Willis The aim of the survey is to investigate the Iron Age and Roman periods in the Ave valley in the Minho region of northern Portugal, through the application of surface survey techniques. Initial work utilized the field walking methods used in the Ager Tarraconensis survey with the aim of collecting comparable data. At a later stage more detailed studies of a representative selection of sites was undertaken through the use of geophysical and geochemical techniques. Fieldwork was carried out in four seasons between 1994 and 1997. A further information is available through Internet Archaeology , and the Archaeological Data Service
Location
The area selected for the survey comprises part of the basin of the Rio Ave which is the located in Entre-Douro-e-Minho region of northern Portugal (Fig. 1). The region lies on the Atlantic seaboard of the Iberian peninsula at a latitude of 41° 30' North. The Rio Ave discharges into the Atlantic at Vila do Conde c. 20km north of Porto. The survey area itself comprised a zone c. 20km wide running inland from the coast, bounded to the south by the Rio Ave and to the north by the Rio Cávado.
Figure 1 The geology of the region is dominated by two zones of granite between which is sandwiched a zone of metamorphic rocks which runs south-eastwards inland from the coast between Navais and Esposende (Fig. 2). The granites are variable in composition varying from medium/coarse to fine grained. A metaphorpic zone comprises principally schists, greywaches quartzites and conglomerates which contain a series of mineralized veins producing gold, tin, zinc and iron.

46. Friends Of Phanagoria
establishing themselves in the lands stretching from the iberian peninsula in the abase for training students, both British and Russian, in field archaeology.
http://www.sun.rhbnc.ac.uk/Classics/projects/phanagoria/leaflet.html
Friends of Phanagoria
A Meeting of East and West
The Classics Department at Royal Holloway , which has a long tradition of excellence in research, has concluded an agreement for a major collaborative project in classical archaeology. Recent political changes in eastern Europe have opened up to western scholars sites previously unavailable and have allowed academics from eastern and western Europe to exchange ideas freely. Against this background, archaeologists from Royal Holloway are working in Phanagoria together with their colleagues from the Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow. They will be assisted by archaeologists from other colleges within the University of London. This is an exciting new development for British scholarship - there has never been a British archaeological presence in this part of the world. The Classics Department will be carrying out the work under the aegis of the Royal Holloway Hellenic Institute, which is devoted to the study of Greece and the Greek tradition.
Where is Phanagoria?

47. Computer Applications In Archaeology, Conference 2002
Roman Cooking Ware from the Balearic Islands and the eastern iberian peninsula. TheNottingham Trent University M Cau, Department of archaeology and Prehistory
http://www.caa2002.gr/abstracts_papers/108.html
108. "Mixed-mode" approaches to the grouping of ceramic artefacts using S-Plus
C.C. Beardah, M.J. Baxter, I. Papageorgiou and M.A. Cau
At CAA2000 we presented a paper showing how, with the aid of powerful statistical software
such as S-Plus, traditional methods of exploratory multivariate analysis can be used alongside,
or in combination with, a technique designed specifically for grouping ceramic artefacts by
chemical composition. This was followed at CAA2001 by a discussion of how S-Plus can be
used to address issues involved in the clustering of such artefacts on the basis of categorical
data arising from the analysis of petrographic thin-sections. Now, in the final instalment of
this trilogy of papers, we present possible approaches to the inclusion of both petrographic
and geochemical data in a statistical analysis of artefact compositional data. Two such

48. Alexandria Archaeology Museum - Discovering The Decades: 1790s
Alexandria archaeology Looks Back at 250 Years of Alexandria History. quantitiesof grain were transshipped to the Caribbean, iberian peninsula and Europe.
http://oha.ci.alexandria.va.us/archaeology/decades/ar-decades-1790.html
Discovering the Decades: 1790s
Alexandria Archaeology Looks Back at 250 Years of Alexandria History The 1790s Points in Time
  • 1790: The first U.S. census taken; Alexandria's population is 2748, and nearly 22% are African Americans; Congress passes a naturalization act; first successful water-powered cotton mill erected; first patent granted 1790-1795: Warfare between the U.S. Army and the Indians of the old Northwest 1791: First Bank of the United States founded; Bill of Rights is ratified; first internal revenue tax; Vermont becomes a state 1792: Construction of the White House begins; U.S. mint established at Philadelphia; Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin 1793: First federal fugitive slave law; Neutrality Act; Thomas Jefferson invents the moldboard plow 1794: Whisky Rebellion 1795: First practical industrial steam engine in the U.S. 1797: First U.S. medical journal published 1798-1800: The Quasi-War with France 1799: George Washington dies
Points in Time At the dawn of a new decade Alexandrians were delighted to fete Ambassador Thomas Jefferson at Wise's Tavern (201 North Fairfax Street) upon his return from France in March 1790. During the ceremony Mayor William Hunter delivered these welcoming remarks: "As a commercial town, we feel ourselves particularly indebted to you for the indulgences which your enlightened representations to the Court of France have secured to our trade. You have freed commerce from its shackles..." Jefferson's reply acknowledged his guests' hospitality: "Accept my sincere thanks for yourself and the worthy citizens of Alexandria, for their kind congratulations on my return to my native country. I am happy to learn that they have felt benefit from the encouragements to our commerce which have been given by an allied nation...."

49. Documenta Praehistorica XXVIII
Department of archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. Rethinkingthe Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the iberian peninsula a view from
http://www.ff.uni-lj.si/arheologija/neolitik/documenta/v28.html
Documenta Praehistorica XXVIII, 2001
Neolithic studies 8
The agricultural transition and the origins of Neolithic society in Europe
Marek Zvelebil Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield, UK The transition to farming in Southeast Europe: perspectives from pottery
Mihael Budja Department of Archaeology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia The "when", the "where" and the "why" of the Neolithic revolution in the Levant
Avi Gopher Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology, Israel
Shahal Abbo Dept. of Field Crops, Faculty of Agriculture, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Simcha Lev-Yadun S. Lev-Yadun, Dept. of Biology, University of Haifa, Israel Mesolithic to Neolithic in Greece. Continuity, discontinuity or change of course?
Kostas Kotsakis Department of Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece Re-thinking the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Iberian peninsula: a view from the West
Luiz Oosterbeek Instituto Politécnico de Tomar, Landscape Management Department, Estrada da Serra, Tomar Recent research on early farming in central Europe
Peter Bogucki School of Engineering and Applied Science, Princeton University, USA

50. Portugal Resources
and Nancy L. Benco Islamic settlement in North Africa and the iberian peninsula. ofPreliminary Research, an abstract from the Journal of Field archaeology.
http://archaeology.miningco.com/library/atlas/blportugal.htm
zfp=-1 About Homework Help Archaeology Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
Archaeology
with K. Kris Hirst
Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Archaeology Glossary Book Catalog Guide to Graduate Schools ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
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Portugal
Sites Universities Researchers Culture History ... Geography and Maps Archaeological Sites Angra Bay
Côa Valley Rock-Engravings

Two articles attempting to establish a reasonable date for this controversial art work, in Antiquity.
A Victory for Rock Art in Portugal
an article in the Society for American Archaeology Bulletin.
World Heritage Site
named 1998.
Côa Valley
From the Instituto Português de Arqueologia, information on the Côa Valley. English and Portuguese. Conimbriga Roman occupation; site includes a brief photographic tour through the standing structures, from the Universidade de Coimbra. English. Megaliths of Portugal From Jan Bily's Megalithic Pages, information and numerous photos of megalithic structures throughout the country.

51. Ten Things I Learned At Clovis And Beyond - Archaeology
been occasional comparisons of Clovis technology to the Middle Paleolithic Solutreancultures of the iberian peninsula. Subscribe to the archaeology Newsletter.
http://archaeology.miningco.com/library/weekly/aa103199.htm
zfp=-1 About Homework Help Archaeology Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
Archaeology
with K. Kris Hirst
Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Archaeology Glossary Book Catalog Guide to Graduate Schools ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
Subscribe to our newsletter.
Advertising Free Credit Report
Free Psychics

Advertisement
As I sit in my hotel room on a crisp night in Santa Fe, New Mexico, my mind reels from the impact of the Clovis and Beyond conference . From October 28 through 31st, 1999, nearly 1,200 people converged on the Sweeney Conference center, to discuss, debate, and scrap over just who were the first people to colonize the American continents. They also came to show their goodies; a whole room was set aside to bring together for the first time people who, like me, are fascinated by the hidden history of the American continent migration. Since my brain is still reeling, I'll restrict this column to a brief list of the top ten things I learned in the last 48 hours. In the long tradition of top ten lists, I'll start with the minor shocks and end with the major earthquake of the weekend. 10. Various attendees were extremely displeased with the presentation of the

52. Archaeology - Portugal
Return to History / archaeology Home Egypt • Mali • Ghana Portugal haslong stood in the shadow of her powerful neighbor on the iberian peninsula.
http://www.travelplansintl.com/arch.portugal.html

Return to History / Archaeology Home

Brazil
Egypt Mali ... Vietnam
PORTUGAL AND SPAIN WORLD HERITAGE
Click on map to view larger)
Portugal has long stood in the shadow of her powerful neighbor on the Iberian Peninsula. With 3,000 years of history dating to the time when Greek and Phoenician traders established settlements here, Portugal was once part of the Roman Empires. It was not until the mid-12th century that Portugal emerged as a nation with its own culture and language, only to become a super power in the New World by the 15th century.
You can journey along the picturesque Douro river on the M.S. Douro Prince . Completely rebuilt in 2002, the ship is a comfortable, first-class 48-passenger riverboat, an ideal size, perfectly suited the river itself with its low bridges and small locks.
Now it is your turn to discover Portugal and venture into the western edge of Spain, revealing the very heart of Iberia along one of the greatest rivers.
TOUR HIGHLIGHTS:
Thirteen-day/twelve-night program
Round-trip, economy-class air transportation from Chicago to Lisbon

53. Archaeolo
Archeology of de iberian peninsula. Romarch Major gateway for 'for Web resourceson the art and archaeology of early Italy and the Roman world, from the
http://www.flwi.rug.ac.be/IAHRG/Archaeology.htm
Archaeology and material sources
Last update on
Table of Contents
Bookmark these
Archaeology general
ArchNet ArchNet , Archaeological Research Institute (Arizona State University), http://archnet.asu.edu/ Archaeology On the Net (AON) Archaeology On the Net (AON) http://www.serve.com/archaeology/ ARGE Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe (ARGE) RUGroningen, http://odur.let.rug.nl/arge/ Arqueohispania JUAN TOVAR, Luis Carlos. Arqueohispania http://www.arqueohispania.org/ Archeology of de Iberian peninsula. Romarch
Major gateway for ' for Web resources on the art and archaeology of early Italy and the Roman world, from the earliest settlements to Late Antiquity
A very extensive gateway but very much behind schedule (the TOC was last updated on March 5, 1999 !).
Ceramics
Amphoras Project
Information on plain, unglazed, ceramic storage containers, with two handles, mostly pointed at the bottom, used to carry wine, oil, fish, and other commodities around the ancient Mediterranean. AMPHORAS is making available part of the archive collected by Virginia R. Grace at the excavations of the Agora at Athens, as well as some additional materials.
The material from Athens and Corinth is available for on line searches.

54. Arqueologia Medieval Cristã :: Medieval Christian Archaeology
Concerns the archaeologial data, in iberian peninsula,between VIII and XV centuries. Through written sources...... Translate this page Course
http://ncem.fcsh.unl.pt/cadeiras/arq_med_cri.html
Docente(s):
Rosa Varela Gomes Disciplina de Licenciatura ECTS: 6
Horas semanais: 3 Resumo do programa:
Course Description:
Concerns the archaeologial data, in Iberian Peninsula, between VIII and XV centuries. Through written sources and, specially, all available archaeological information, pretends to study space organization, the strategy and forms of soil occupation, as well the material culture. Bibliografia:

55. Rock Art And Prehistoric Archaeology
are all the other kinds of sources with which prehistoric archaeology usually deals Ifall engraved examples of the iberian peninsula are taken in consideration
http://www.uf.uni-erlangen.de/felskunst/rockarch.html
Rock Art and Prehistoric Archaeology
Considerations on an underestimated source of information
© Christian Introduction It is the intention of our article to raise interest in an underestimated kind of archaeological source and to show by means of a few examples how many information could be gained from it especially for the cultures of the Copper and Bronze Age.The possibilities for cognition considered in this paper apply to different levels, going from the simple study of facts to the understanding of cultural and religious relations. Of course, a critical reader will complain about premature conclusions and comparisons and demand more precise information. This would, however, require to discuss numerous objects and observations on very different material, like grave and hoard finds, pottery decorations, objects of jewellery etc., in its development in space and time. This cannot and will not be done here by obvious reasons. Reconstruction of the prehistoric reality When we talk about the typology of prehistoric tools we actually only discuss fragments of fragments. This means: our sources – stone tools, bronzes, pottery fragments from graves, hoards and settlements – provide only a tiny, random excerpt of the richness of a former culture whose value for their users we do not know. And even these testimonies handed down to us are still incomplete. We talk about objects of which only the durable parts were conserved and which have little to do with what people really held in their hands. This means we categorize the durable remains of items that existed once and try to find out what they can tell us about history, social history or religion (Eggert, Veil 1998). Rock art often can provide much more precise information about what they really looked like and about their formal variety because it does not show objects as fragments but in their real appearance. A few examples may illustrate what we mean.

56. FarShores Ancient Mysteries News: Wisconsin 'Dig' Adds Credence To Euro Origin O
than 18,000 years ago, said Dennis Stanford, curator of archaeology at the over whetherNorth America's first people came from the iberian peninsula of Europe
http://www.100megsfree4.com/farshores/aman.htm
FS AncientMysteries News Posted Mar 04.02 Wisconsin 'Dig' Adds Credence To
European Origin Of First Americans

[Original headline: Kenosha dig points to Europe as origin of first Americans] A contentious theory that the first Americans came here from Europe - not Asia - is challenging a century-old consensus among archaeologists, and a dig in Kenosha County is part of the evidence. The two leading proponents of the Europe theory admit that many scientists reject their contention, instead holding fast to the long-established belief that the first Americans arrived from Siberia via a now-submerged land bridge across the Bering Sea to Alaska. The first of the Europe-to-North America treks probably took place at the height of the last Ice Age more than 18,000 years ago, said Dennis Stanford, curator of archaeology at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, and Milwaukee native Bruce Bradley, an independent archaeological consultant and research associate of the Carnegie Museum. Stanford and Bradley contend that if the original migration came from Europe, it would be logical to find more older sites in the eastern United States, as has been the case in recent years.

57. IMJ
an annual publication of the Israel Museum’s archaeology wing, focuses to explorethe cultural and artistic heritage of the iberian peninsula, through these
http://www.imj.org.il/eng/archaeology/publications/
Publications of the Archaeology Wing
available from The Israel Museum Products Ltd. New We are proud to present the first volume of a new journal, Israel Museum Studies in Archaeology
Coffee Culture
Exhibition booklet, Hebrew/English, 48 pages, softcover The story of coffee - from the start of its cultivation in Yemen sometime in the 15th century to the most modern coffeehouses of today - as seen through paintings, drinking utensils, and coffee mills.
3 black and white photos, 18 color photos, and 1 illustration Maud Spaer
Ancient Glass in the Israel Museum:
Beads and Other Small Objects
with contributions by Dan Barag, Tallay Ornan, and Tamar Neuhaus
390 pages, English
This book covers 647 small ancient objects dating from the 2nd millennium BCE to the Islamic period. The objects include mostly beads and pendants, but also other personal objects such as seals, gems and amulets.
Yael Israeli with Dan Barag and Na'ama Brosh Ancient Glass in the Israel Museum: The Dobkin Collection and Other Objects 434 pages, Hebrew

58. European Association Of Archaeologists
Goldwork, inheritance, and agriculture in the late prehistory of the iberian peninsula. ColinRenfrew The identity of Europe in prehistoric archaeology.
http://www.e-a-a.org/jea2.htm
Journal of European Archaeology (JEA), 2 (1994)
JEA 2.1
Articles:
Alberto Cazzella : Dating the 'Copper Age' in the Italian peninsula and adjacent islands.
John Robb : Gender contradictions, moral coalitions, and inequality in prehistoric Italy.
: The bartered bride. Goldwork, inheritance, and agriculture in the late prehistory of the Iberian peninsula.
Heiko Steuer : The hierarchy of Alamannic settlements in the former limes region of south-western Germany to AD 500.
Ross Samson : Populous Dark-Age towns: the Finleyesque approach.
Lotte Hedeager : Warrior economy and trading economy in Viking-Age Scandinavia. Notes for intending contributors
JEA 2.2
Articles:
Colin Renfrew : The identity of Europe in prehistoric archaeology.
Michael Rowlands : Why do we need a European Association of Archaeologists?
Renata Grifoni Cremonesi : Observations on the problems related to certain cult phenomena during the Neolithic in the Italian peninsula.
Robin Skeates : Ritual, context and gender in Neolithic south-eastern Italy.
Douglass W. Bailey

59. Spain
The geography of the iberian peninsula dictates the nature brother Hasdrubal conquerthe entire peninsula up to photographs of art and archaeology during the
http://www.barca.fsnet.co.uk/spain.htm
Spain
http://www.usd.edu/~clehmann/pir/tarracon.htm "By a strange fortuity, Spain was the Peru of the ancient world. The horrors of the mines in South America, the sufferings of the Indians, were copied, so to speak, from the early history of the people who inflicted them. When the Phoenicians first entered the harbours of Andalusia they found themselves in a land where silver was used as iron. They loaded their vessel with the precious metal to the water’s edge, cast away their wooden lead-weighted anchor, and substituted a lump of pure silver in its stead. Afterwards factories were established, arrangements were made with the chiefs for the supply of labour, and the mining was conducted on scientific principles. The Carthaginians succeeded the Phoenicians, and remained, like them, only on the coast". http://www.exclassics.org/martyrdom/martc18.htm The geography of the Iberian peninsula dictates the nature of military activity there. As King Henry IV of France would observe, Spain is a country where "large armies starve and small armies get beaten." Large armies, in fact, could operate easily only along the coast or near major rivers, where waterborne transport eased logistical problems. As the Pyrenees seal of Spain from the rest of Europe, the central plateau likewise inhibits communications from the eastern and southern regions to the interior. For an army invading the peninsula from the northeast, the most advantageous approach follows the coast south as far as the Tader River. From there an army could continue south or turn inland to enter the valley of the Baetis.

60. SCDNR - Natural Resources News Archive
Home Page, Article LONDON A wild cat that roams the iberian peninsula, a dolphin Citywants to survey corridor's archaeology BRAZIL, BEN Post and Courier
http://www.dnr.state.sc.us/etc/ena/2000_september.html
Natural Resources News Archive
SCDNR is not affiliated with any of the publications mentioned on this page.
Subsequently, the availability of original Internet based articles is not guaranteed.
September 2000
Friday, September 29, 2000
Gore blasts Bush Alaska oil-drilling plan
FERRARO, THOMAS
The Environmental News Network, September 29, 2000
Home Page
Article
Democratic presidential nominee Al Gore rushed to the defense of Alaska's wilderness today against a renewed call by Republican foe George W. Bush to open the pristine area to oil drilling.
Bush unveils $7.1 billion energy program
WILSON, PATRICIA
The Environmental News Network, September 29, 2000
Home Page
Article
Vowing to correct years of "inattention and misplaced priorities," Republican George W. Bush unveiled a $7.1 billion energy plan today to open an Alaskan wilderness to drilling, develop alternative sources and coax other nations to provide steady oil supplies. Replenishment approved for N.C. beaches The Sun News Newspaper, September 29, 2000 Home Page Article Ocean Isle Beach commissioners' quest for sand moved toward victory Thursday. The bill needs President Clinton's signature, but N.C. Rep. Mike McIntyre, D-Lumberton, said Thursday the approval by a joint House/Senate conference committee makes the money a done deal.

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