Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Archaeological Anthropology

PDF

2005

Institution
Keyword
Publication
Publication Type

Articles 1861 - 1890 of 1921

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Epv Op. 02-23 Lot Forms 2005, Yann Desailly-Chanson Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-23 Lot Forms 2005, Yann Desailly-Chanson

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-20 Lot Forms 2005, Yann Desailly-Chanson Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-20 Lot Forms 2005, Yann Desailly-Chanson

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-19 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-19 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-18 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-18 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-21 Lot Forms 2005, Yann Desailly-Chanson Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-21 Lot Forms 2005, Yann Desailly-Chanson

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-17 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-17 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-15 Lot Forms 2005, Ellen Bell Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-15 Lot Forms 2005, Ellen Bell

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-16 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-16 Lot Forms 2005, Lawrence Levan

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv Op. 02-14 Lot Forms 2005, Ellen Bell Jan 2005

Epv Op. 02-14 Lot Forms 2005, Ellen Bell

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 020 Deluca Field Notes 2005, Nathaniel Deluca Jan 2005

Epv 020 Deluca Field Notes 2005, Nathaniel Deluca

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 018 Mu Field Notes 2005, Yifei Mu Jan 2005

Epv 018 Mu Field Notes 2005, Yifei Mu

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 017 Hostenske Field Notes 2005, Mary Hostenske Jan 2005

Epv 017 Hostenske Field Notes 2005, Mary Hostenske

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 016 Hill Field Notes 2005, Brianna Hill Jan 2005

Epv 016 Hill Field Notes 2005, Brianna Hill

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 012 Levan Field Notes 2005, Lawrence Levan Jan 2005

Epv 012 Levan Field Notes 2005, Lawrence Levan

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 015 Charton Field Notes 2005, James Charton Jan 2005

Epv 015 Charton Field Notes 2005, James Charton

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 006 Geller Field Notes 2005, Pamela Geller Jan 2005

Epv 006 Geller Field Notes 2005, Pamela Geller

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 004 Escobar Morales Field Notes 2005, Santiago Escobar Morales Jan 2005

Epv 004 Escobar Morales Field Notes 2005, Santiago Escobar Morales

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 001 Bell Field Notes 2005, Ellen Bell Jan 2005

Epv 001 Bell Field Notes 2005, Ellen Bell

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Epv 002 Canuto Field Notes 2005, Marcello Canuto Jan 2005

Epv 002 Canuto Field Notes 2005, Marcello Canuto

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Pvc Op 177 Ceramic Analyses, Patricia Urban, Edward Schortman Jan 2005

Pvc Op 177 Ceramic Analyses, Patricia Urban, Edward Schortman

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Pvc Op 178 Ceramic Analyses, Patricia Urban, Edward Schortman Jan 2005

Pvc Op 178 Ceramic Analyses, Patricia Urban, Edward Schortman

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Pvc Op 174 Ceramic Analyses, Edward Schortman Jan 2005

Pvc Op 174 Ceramic Analyses, Edward Schortman

Four Valleys Archive

No abstract provided.


Reviews And End Matter Jan 2005

Reviews And End Matter

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

Ornaments from the Past: Bead Studies after Beck, Ian C. Glover , Helen Hughes Brock, and Julian Henderson (eds.) (2003), reviewed by Joan Eppen.


Front Matter Jan 2005

Front Matter

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

No abstract provided.


Necklaces Used In The Santería Of Cuba, Lourdes S. Domínguez Jan 2005

Necklaces Used In The Santería Of Cuba, Lourdes S. Domínguez

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

This article examines the necklaces used in the Afro-Cuban Rule of Orisha, more commonly known as Santería. This religion, created by African slaves brought to Cuba starting in the 16th century, combines aspects of Yoruba orisha worship and Spanish Catholicism. It allowed African religious beliefs and practices to survive despite the imposition of Catholic doctrine. One of the outcomes of this amalgamation is the practice of associating individual orishas (deities) with certain Catholic saints. Each orisha is represented by specific necklaces that incorporate particular bead forms, colors, and numbers.


Thirteen-Hundred-Year-Old Bead Adornments From Baar, Canton Zug, Switzerland, Katharina Müller Jan 2005

Thirteen-Hundred-Year-Old Bead Adornments From Baar, Canton Zug, Switzerland, Katharina Müller

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

In the year 2000, an Early Medieval (7th-century) cemetery containing more than 200 burials with rich grave goods was discovered in Baar, Canton Zug, Switzerland. Thanks to the painstaking methods used in the excavation and recording of the 2,985 glass, amber, coral, and amethyst beads found with the female burials, it was possible to reconstruct the necklaces and sewn-on appliqués they were part of. Comparisons with mosaic depictions of famous women—such as the Empress Theodora in San Vitale in Ravenna, Italy—suggest that the people of Baar imitated southern Alpine Byzantine bead jewelry fashion.


Elemental Analyses Of North American Glass Trade Beads, R. G.V. Hancock Jan 2005

Elemental Analyses Of North American Glass Trade Beads, R. G.V. Hancock

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

Although European-made glass trade beads can be sorted into bead varieties and studied in that manner on the basis of physical attributes, much more information can be obtained about them by means of chemical analysis. Such analyses produce chemical fingerprints that may be compared and grouped. Bead varieties that have matching chemistries were made using the same ingredients that probably came from the same sources, suggesting that they were made in a specific manufacturing center and probably during the same approximate time period. Using this information may help to establish with which European nationals specific indigenous people were dealing and …


Die Perle: A 1920s German Trade Journal, Anita Von Kahler Gumpert, Karlis Karklins Jan 2005

Die Perle: A 1920s German Trade Journal, Anita Von Kahler Gumpert, Karlis Karklins

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

Though short lived, the German trade journal, Die Perle, contains a wealth of information concerning the European bead and jewelry industry of the 1920s. Short articles provide insight into new machinery and apparatus for producing beads, natural and artificial materials for the production of beads and other ornaments, fashion trends, market reports, and numerous other topics. As well, there are several departments which deal with specific themes such as technical questions and sources of supplies. As the journals are in German, English summaries are provided for a representative sample of the articles to give the reader an idea of their …


Late 19th- And Early 20th-Century Manufacture Of Drawn Glass Tubing For Glass Beads, Lester A. Ross Jan 2005

Late 19th- And Early 20th-Century Manufacture Of Drawn Glass Tubing For Glass Beads, Lester A. Ross

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

Late 19th- and early 20th-century archaeological sites often contain machine-made drawn glass beads with unique shapes and perforations. Little information exists documenting when these beads were initially manufactured. Through an examination of hundreds of U.S. patents, it appears that the mechanized production of drawn beads could have occurred as early as the late 19th-century, but more likely, they were not mass produced until the end of World War I, after the invention of the Danner process for mechanically drawing glass tubing. Machine-made drawn beads with multiple sides and/or shaped perforations also appear to have been produced by the late-19th century, …


Captions And Color Plates (V. 17, 2005) Jan 2005

Captions And Color Plates (V. 17, 2005)

BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers

No abstract provided.