A revolutionary approach to how we view Europe's prehistoric culture The peoples who inhabited Europe during the two millennia before the Roman conquests had established urban centers, large-scale production of goods such as pottery and iron tools, a money economy, and elaborate rituals and ceremonies. Yet as Peter Wells argues here, the visual world of these late prehistoric communities was profoundly different from those of ancient Rome's literate civilization and today's industrialized societies. Drawing on startling new research in neuroscience and cognitive psychology, Wells reconstructs how the peoples of pre-Roman Europe saw the world and their place in it. He sheds new light on how they communicated their thoughts, feelings, and visual perceptions through the everyday tools they shaped, the pottery and metal ornaments they decorated, and the arrangements of objects they made in their ritual places--and how these forms and patterns in turn shaped their experience. How Ancient Europeans Saw the World offers a completely new approach to the study of Bronze Age and Iron Age Europe, and represents a major challenge to existing views about prehistoric cultures. The book demonstrates why we cannot interpret the structures that Europe's pre-Roman inhabitants built in the landscape, the ways they arranged their settlements and burial sites, or the complex patterning of their art on the basis of what these things look like to us. Rather, we must view these objects and visual patterns as they were meant to be seen by the ancient peoples who fashioned them. -- "World Book Industry"
This volume presents the Late Bronze Age pottery from in and around House X, a large Minoan house at Kommos situated not far from the sea in South-Central Crete.
In such a way did those features characteristic of domestic sheep - such as greater fat and meat production , excess wool ( Figure 11.2 ) , and so on — begin to develop . By 9,000 years ago , the bones of domestic sheep had become ...
Barrett Site (41MM382) Assessment, Milam County (CSJ: 0590-05-027), Texas
As Nussbaum ( 1986 : 49 ) puts it , “ philosophy has traditionally been committed to an ' ascent from the perception of particulars to the intellectual grasp of universals . ” Philosophical proofs must be clear , logical — or at least ...
Eligibility Testing at Three Prehistoric Sites at Lynch Creek, Lampasas County, Texas
... Jerold, 72 Lower Paleolithic tools, 188-199 "Lucy," 157, 158, 161-162 Lyell, Charles, 70 Lyon, Patricia, 343 Macaques, 106, 114 MacDonald, George, 277 Mahale Chimpanzee Research, 120, 122 Malaria development of sickle-cell anemia, ...
This book explores the roles of agricultural development and advancing social complexity in the processes of state formation in China.
This text emphasizes discoveries that produced major insights into prehistory, with the selected sites acting signposts to the past to help students focus on human developments in prehistory and how archaeologists learn about the past" -- ...
Gherase M, Higham T, Bronk Ramsey C, van der Plicht I. 2003. An early modern human from the Pestera cu Oase, Romania. Proceedings ofthe National Academy ofSciences USA 100: 1 1231-1 1236. Trinkaus E, Ruff CB. 1989.
Rekonstruktion bronzezeitlicher Gießereitechniken mittels numerischer Simulation, gießtechnologischer Experimente und werkstofftechnischer Untersuchungen an Nachguss und Original