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  2. Animals and Archaeology: 3. Early Herders and Their Flocks

Animals and Archaeology: 3. Early Herders and Their Flocks

Juliet Clutton-Brock and Caroline Grigson 1984 © BAR Publishing
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Series
  • BAR pre-2020
  • BAR International Series pre-2020
ISBN(s)
  • 9780860542599 (paperback)
  • 9781407335575 (ebook)
BAR Number
  • S202
Subject
  • Agriculture / Farming / Husbandry / Land-use / Irrigation
  • Early Modern and Modern
  • Prehistory (general titles only)
  • Western Europe and Britain
  • Mediterranean
  • Bronze Age and Iron Age
  • Archaeozoology / Bioarchaeology / Osteoarchaeology
  • Africa
  • Neolithic / Chalcolithic
  • Levant / Near East
  • Theory and Method (general titles)
  • Food and Drink / Diet
  • Multiperiod
  • Trade / Exchange / Travel / Economy
  • Central and South Asia
  • Landscape Archaeology
Citable Link
  • Table of Contents

  • Stats

  • Front Cover
  • Copyright
  • Table of Contents
  • Preface
  • One: Time, Social Relationships and the Exploitation of Animals: Anthropolgical Reflections of Prehistory
  • Two: La Contribution de l'Archeozoologie a l'Estimation des Quantities de Norriture: Evaluation du Nombre Initial d'Individus
  • Three: The Art of Corse Herding: Archaeological Insights from Recent Pastoral Practices on West Mediterannean Islands
  • Four: Le Parcage des Moutons et des Chevres au Neolithique Ancien et Moyen dans le Sud de la France
  • Five: Premiers Donnees sur le Debut de l'Elevange du Mouton, de la Chevre et du Porc dans le Sud de la Corse (France)
  • Six: Marker Genes, Indices of Genetic Archaism, and Migration Models of Animal Populations After Domestican, With Special Reference to Sheep in the Middle East, Europe, and Africa
  • Seven: Sheep Representations, Written Records and Wool Measurements
  • Eight: Moglichkeiten und Grenzen des Tierbildes Als Archaozoologische Quelle
  • Nine: Commensal Animals and Human Sedentism in the Middle East
  • Ten: The Selection of South-West Asian Animal Domesticates
  • Eleven: A New Look at Childe's Oasis-Propinquity Theory
  • Twelve: Seasonality Among Neolithic Hunter-Gatherers in Southern Sinai
  • Thirteen: Computer Simulation of Herding Systens as an Interpretive and Heuristic Device in the Study of Kill-Off Strategies
  • Fourteen: The Dromedary and Bactrian Camel in Levantine Historical Settings: The Evidence from Tell Jemmeh
  • Fifteen: The Dromedary in Modern Pastoral Societies and Implications for its Process of Domestication
  • Sixteen: The Role of the Camel in Israel's Early History
  • Seventeen: Some Remarks on the Possible Development of Bos Tarus Breeds in the Near East
  • Eighteen: Theoretical Determinants of a Herder's Decisions: Modeling Variation in the Sheep/ Goat Ratio
  • Nineteen: Thes Are Our Goats: The Origins of Herding in West Central Iran
  • Twenty: The Advent of Milk and Wool Production in Western Iran: Some Speculations
  • Twenty-One: Meat Distribution at the Highland Iranian Urban Center of Tal-E Malyan
  • Twenty-Two: Animal Domestication in the Middle East: A View from the Eastern Margin
  • Twenty-Three: Holcene Faunal Material from India with Special Reference to Domesticated Animals
  • Twenty-Four: The Faunal Background of the Chalcolithic Culture of Western India
  • Twenty-Five: Animal Domestication in Neolithic China
  • Twenty-Six: Iron Age Herders of the Northern Transvaal, South Africa, in the First Millenium A.D.
  • Twenty-Seven: On the Origin and Early Development of Camelid Pastoralism in the Andes
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