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Physical Sciences and Mathematics

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Katherine A Szabo

Articles 1 - 10 of 10

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Pottery Technology At Linaminan, Katherine Szabo, Timothy Vitales Jan 2013

Pottery Technology At Linaminan, Katherine Szabo, Timothy Vitales

Katherine A Szabo

No abstract provided.


Invertebrate Remains From Linaminan, Katherine Szabo Jan 2013

Invertebrate Remains From Linaminan, Katherine Szabo

Katherine A Szabo

No abstract provided.


The Archaeology Of Linaminan, Central Palawan: A Preliminary Report On Excavations, Eusebio Dizon, Katherine Szabo Jan 2013

The Archaeology Of Linaminan, Central Palawan: A Preliminary Report On Excavations, Eusebio Dizon, Katherine Szabo

Katherine A Szabo

No abstract provided.


People Of The Ancient Rainforest: Late Pleistocene Foragers At The Batadomba-Lena Rockshelter, Sri Lanka, Nimal Perera, Nikos Kourampas, Ian Simpson, Siran Deraniyagala, David Bulbeck, Johan Kamminga, Jude Perera, Dorian Fuller, Katherine Szabo, Nuno Oliveira Jan 2013

People Of The Ancient Rainforest: Late Pleistocene Foragers At The Batadomba-Lena Rockshelter, Sri Lanka, Nimal Perera, Nikos Kourampas, Ian Simpson, Siran Deraniyagala, David Bulbeck, Johan Kamminga, Jude Perera, Dorian Fuller, Katherine Szabo, Nuno Oliveira

Katherine A Szabo

Batadomba-lena, a rockshelter in the rainforest of southwestern Sri Lanka, has yielded some of the earliest evidence of Homo sapiens in South Asia. H. sapiens foragers were present at Batadomba-lena from ca. 36,000 cal BP to the terminal Pleistocene and Holocene. Human occupation was sporadic before the global Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Batadomba-lenas Late Pleistocene inhabitants foraged for a broad spectrum of plant and mainly arboreal animal resources (monkeys, squirrels and abundant rainforest snails), derived from a landscape that retained equatorial rainforest cover through periods of pronounced regional aridity during the LGM. Juxtaposed hearths, palaeofloors with habitation debris, postholes, excavated …


Engraved Prehistoric Conus Shell Valuables From Southeastern Papua New Guinea: Their Antiquity, Motifs And Distribution, Wal Ambrose, Fiona Petchey, Pamela Swadling, Harry Beran, Elizabeth Bonshek, Katherine Szabo, Simon Bickler, Glenn Summerhayes Jan 2013

Engraved Prehistoric Conus Shell Valuables From Southeastern Papua New Guinea: Their Antiquity, Motifs And Distribution, Wal Ambrose, Fiona Petchey, Pamela Swadling, Harry Beran, Elizabeth Bonshek, Katherine Szabo, Simon Bickler, Glenn Summerhayes

Katherine A Szabo

In the early 1900s thirteen engraved Conus shell valuables were dug from prehistoric midden mounds in Oro Province. Since the early 1970s nineteen undated surface finds have been found in the northern Massim of Milne Bay Province. When three artifacts became available for AMS radiocarbon dating, provided they were restored after sampling to their original visual appearance, a specialist team was assembled and this paper reports its findings regarding the thirty-two shells. The paper covers sampling and conservation, dating (including new information on the local oceanic reservoir effect), distribution, art, depositional and cultural histories. These distinctive Conus shell valuables are …


Shell Artefacts And Shell-Working Within The Lapita Cultural Complex, Katherine A. Szabo Jan 2013

Shell Artefacts And Shell-Working Within The Lapita Cultural Complex, Katherine A. Szabo

Katherine A Szabo

Despite a consistent presence in the archaeological record of the Lapita cultural complex, and their omnipresence in the associated literature, the nature and range of shell artefacts recovered from Lapita sites has only been partially summarized at best. Considering the categories of raw material choice, working techniques, formal artefact types and curation, this article summarizes our current knowledge and points to areas for further research.


Molluscan Remains From Fiji, Katherine Szabo Jan 2013

Molluscan Remains From Fiji, Katherine Szabo

Katherine A Szabo

Shell recovered from archaeological sites can give valuable insight to issues of site formation, taphonomy, subsistence, the nature of the environment and environmental change over time. Here, I present a series of shell analyses that can assist in the investigation of several research issues, focusing primarily on ecological issues.


Foraging-Farming Transitions At The Niah Caves, Sarawak, Borneo, Graeme Barker, Llindsay Lloyd-Smith, Huw Barton, Franca Cole, Chris Hunt, Philip Piper, Ryan Rabett, Victor Paz, Katherine Szabo Jan 2013

Foraging-Farming Transitions At The Niah Caves, Sarawak, Borneo, Graeme Barker, Llindsay Lloyd-Smith, Huw Barton, Franca Cole, Chris Hunt, Philip Piper, Ryan Rabett, Victor Paz, Katherine Szabo

Katherine A Szabo

The Niah Caves in Sarawak, Borneo, have captured evidence for people and economies of 8000 and 4000 years ago. Although not continuous on this site, these open two windows on to life at the cultural turning point, broadly equivalent to the transition fromMesolithic to Neolithic. They have much in common, inferring that the occupants, perhaps belonging to an older maritime dispersal, had a choosy appetite for the Neolithic package.


The Fish Bone Remains, Geoffrey Clark, Katherine Szabo Jan 2013

The Fish Bone Remains, Geoffrey Clark, Katherine Szabo

Katherine A Szabo

Fisheries are a fundamental part of Remote Oceanic economies and lifeways, used for different types of fishing, invertebrate capture and collection, and the gathering of marine plants. Where no bones or calcareous parts remain, these activities are invisible to archaeologists, but modern studies of marine exploitation in Fiji and elsewhere in the Pacific (e.g. Rawlinson et al. 1994; Dalzell et al. 1996) indicate that a good portion of activities should leave traces in the archaeological record. As with marine mollusca, tropical Indo-Pacific fish species diversity is high. However unlike the mollusca, our inability to identifY remains beyond the family level …


Molluscs In A World Of Islands: The Use Of Shellfish As A Food Resource In The Tropical Island Asia-Pacific Region, Katherine Szabo, Judith Amesbury Jan 2013

Molluscs In A World Of Islands: The Use Of Shellfish As A Food Resource In The Tropical Island Asia-Pacific Region, Katherine Szabo, Judith Amesbury

Katherine A Szabo

The vast Asia-Pacific region, spanning from the islands of Indonesia and Borneo in the west through Melanesia, Micronesia, andWest Polynesia in the east, is a panorama of water and islands. Encompassing the “coral triangle”, this region is the most speciose of the global marine biogeographic provinces with a mosaic of high-biomass habitats such as mangrove swamps and coral reefs as well as rocky shores, seagrass meadows and beaches. The importance of molluscs across this region, as a consistent source of food as well as providing raw materials for artefacts, can hardly be overestimated. The western parts of this region have …