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Zoroastrian Cave as Heritage for the Long-Term Preservation of Identity and Social Cohesion of This Minority Community Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Hamid Azizi Bondarabady, Majid MontazerZohouri
Zoroastrians are one of Iran's religious minorities, who managed to survive pressures and adversities during many centuries after the rise of Islam. Despite threats and dangers, this minority always tried to resist the pressures and maintain their identity and social cohesion with some measures. Aqda Cave is one of the examples of material culture left by the Zoroastrians, which can be very helpful
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Food and Labour under Imperial Rule: Unravelling the Food Landscape of Transplanted Workers (mitmaqkuna) in the Inka Empire Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Di Hu, Víctor Felix Vásquez Sánchez, Teresa Esperanza Rosales Tham, Katherine L. Chiou, Rob Cuthrell, Kylie E. Quave
The Inka empire's expansion incorporated diverse cultural and ecological elements in microcosmic representations of their empire. Imperial practices included the resettlement of communities from various regions into labour enclaves near Inka ceremonial, administrative and economic hubs. This degree of imperial control might suggest a limitation on Inka subjects’ freedom to integrate non-local food
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Neighbours of the Apsaros Fort. Local Tribes on the Black Sea Coast during the Principate Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Radosław Karasiewicz-Szczypiorski
In the second half of the first century ce, the Romans built a fort at the mouth of the river Apsaros on the coast of Colchis. A Roman garrison was stationed there also in the second century and first half of the third. One of the reasons for fortifying the estuary of the river, given by both Pliny the Elder and Arrian, was the immediate vicinity of the kingdom of Iberia. Both Roman authors also described
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Textiles and Staple Finance in the Near East and the Southern Levant Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Alex Joffe
Textiles have long been recognized as a key feature in the economic and social development of early complex societies. Many comparative dimensions, however, remain unexplored, including within the ancient Near East. Unlike contemporary societies in Syria and Mesopotamia, wool was not used as a staple finance good in the Early Bronze Age southern Levant (c. 3700–2000 bce) since the landscape could not
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Beyond Urban Hinterlands. Political Ecology, Urban Metabolism and Extended Urbanization in Medieval England Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-04 Ben Jervis
Drawing on insights from contemporary urban theory, this contribution questions where medieval urbanization took place. It is proposed that urbanization is a process which extends beyond towns and cities, which are merely a representation of a more expansive and transformative process. Through discussion of building stone, grain production, salt extraction, woodland management and mineral exploitation
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The Maya Ajawtaak and Teotihuacan Hegemony c. 150–600 ce Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-04 Trenton D. Barnes
This study considers the role played by Teotihuacan in the emergence of the office of the Classic Maya ajawtaak, or ‘lords’. I argue that the synthesis of this office at the site of Tikal was influenced by the building of Teotihuacan's Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent between about 180 and 230 ce. Prior to and in concert with this building's construction, Teotihuacanos orchestrated the sacrifice of
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Water Regimes and Infrastructures: A Transhistorical Archaeology of the Desaguadero River, Bolivia Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-04 Scott C. Smith, Maribel Pérez Arias
This article uses tensions over the construction of a flow-regulation infrastructure built to control outflow from Lake Titicaca into the Desaguadero River, on the border between Peru and Bolivia, as a case study to explore the ways that relationships to water emerge and are contested. We argue that a nuanced understanding of tensions arising from this infrastructure requires us to recognize the long-term
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How Long Does a Memory Last? Bayesian Chronological Modelling and the Temporal Scope of Commemorative Practices at Aeneolithic Monjukli Depe, Turkmenistan Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-10-29 Ilia Heit
In this paper the history of one house and a human burial in the prehistoric settlement of Monjukli Depe, Turkmenistan, serves as a case study for the use of Bayesian chronological modelling to approach the reach of past memories. The method combines relative and absolute chronological data and aims not only at a more precise and robust chronology of past events, but also allows estimations of duration
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The Past Is Not What It Used to Be: Contemporary Myths, Cold War Nostalgia and Abandoned Soviet Nuclear Bases Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-10-25 Grzegorz Kiarszys
This article delves into the contemporary social perception of the three abandoned Soviet Cold War tactical nuclear bases in Poland, focusing on often overlooked phenomena in archaeological studies such as the contemporary myths (folk tales, contemporary legends, modern folklore, etc.) and nostalgia that have emerged around these sites. While contemporary myths and nostalgia are distinct phenomena
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The Beginning of Time Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-18 Karenleigh A. Overmann
The present analysis focuses on the material component of time, the devices used for measuring and counting it. The biological basis for subjective, experiential time is first reviewed, as are early strategies found cross-culturally for measuring and counting time objectively. These strategies include timekeeping by natural phenomena, using tallies to keep track of small periods of time, harnessing
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Secrets Buried in the Pits: Ritual Activities in Western Anatolia in the First Half of the Second Millennium bce Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Ümit Gündoğan
Western Anatolian ritual pits provide valuable insights into socio-cultural, economic and symbolic practices during the Early to Middle Bronze Age. Findings in feasting pits, such as carbonized seeds and animal bones, indicate a strong link between ritual and food. Standing stones, altars and carefully arranged artefacts suggest a symbolic and sacred dimension beyond mere ceremonies. The pits from
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In Pursuit of the Analytical Unit. Island Archaeology as a Case Study Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Manuel Calvo-Trias
The present study offers an epistemological and ontological historiographical review of the concept of the unit of analysis using island archaeology as a case study. We carry out a critical investigation to lay out the main ideas used to define units of analysis, and we consider the discourse that has emerged between this and other fields when defining such a concept. From an epistemological point
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The Efficacy of Roman Silver in Iron Age Scotland: An Object Trajectory for Spiral Rings Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-11 Jenna Martin
This paper uses material efficacy as an analytical position to consider how silver helped to shape large-scale historical trajectories in Iron Age Scotland. Roman silver entered Scotland as imperial matter beginning in the first century ad and later inspired an assemblage of indigenous wearable silver in the fourth–fifth centuries. I investigate the human–silver collaborations involved in the transition
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Toward a Poetics of Maya Art and Writing Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-06-03 Michael D. Carrasco
This article identifies large-scale chiastic and bracketing structures in contemporary, colonial and Classic Maya verbal art and literature. These structures are composed of the repetition of lines, verses and stanzas that frame sections of texts and sometimes images. Initially, the argument focuses on an ethnopoetic analysis that directs attention to such forms in modern and colonial narrative and
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Historical Dimensions of Rock Art: Perspectives from ‘Peripheries’ Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-22 María Cruz Berrocal, Diego Gárate
Research on rock art around the world takes for granted the premise that rock art, as a product of the Upper Palaeolithic symbolic revolution, is a natural behavioral expression of Homo sapiens, essentially reflecting new cognitive abilities and intellectual capacity of modern humans. New discoveries of Late Pleistocene rock art in Southeast Asia as well as recent dates of Neandertal rock art are also
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The Use of Balances in Late Andean Prehistory (ad 1200–1650) Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-20 Jordan A. Dalton
Studies of balances (scales) in Europe, Asia and northern Africa have found that their use is not exclusively tied to state control or market exchange, but rather grew and evolved through interactions among bureaucrats in centralized states, merchants, artisans and local leaders. Research on balances from Andean South America can contribute to an understanding of the diverse roles and functions of
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Images and Agency: Dynamics of Early Celtic Art and the Axial Age of Eurasia Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-10 Peter S. Wells
This paper argues for a new way of thinking about Early Celtic art in the context of changes taking place throughout Eurasia during the fifth and fourth centuries bce. It applies ideas of anthropologist Alfred Gell, among others, regarding art as a stimulus to action. It asks, in the spirit of papers by Chris Gosden and W.J.T. Mitchell, ‘what did the art do’? The paper argues that this complex new
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Evaluating the Evidence for Lunar Calendars in Upper Palaeolithic Parietal Art Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-22 April Nowell, Paul Bahn, Jean-Loïc Le Quellec
In this paper, we examine the lunar calendar interpretation to evaluate whether it is a viable explanation for the production of Upper Palaeolithic parietal art. We consider in detail the history of this approach, focusing on recently published variations on this interpretation. We then discuss the scientific method and whether these recent studies are designed to address the research questions necessary
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‘Everything In Its Right Place’—Selective Depositions in Bronze Age Southwest Sweden Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-22 Peter Skoglund, Courtney Nimura, Christian Horn
Hoards have played a significant role in our narratives of the European Bronze Age, but their purpose and meaning have been the source of much debate. These debates have been positively impacted by studies that investigate the ways in which hoards are connected to specific landscape contexts. In this paper, we discuss the outcome of one such in-depth field study of 62 Bronze Age metalwork deposition
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Did Homo erectus Have Language? The Seafaring Inference Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-16 Rudolf Botha
Various authors have claimed over the years that Homo erectus had language. Since there is no direct evidence about the matter, this claim represents the conclusion of a multi-step composite inference drawn from putative non-linguistic attributes of the species. Three maritime behaviours are central among these attributes: crossing open seas to get to insular islands such as Flores in the Indian ocean
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Object Biographies, Object Agency and a Local Community's Encounter with and Response to Foreign Commodities: The Pithoi from LB Tel Burna as a Case Study Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-15 Matthew Susnow, Chris McKinny, Itzhaq Shai
This study investigates the effects that an encounter with a foreign object can have on local traditions. Notions of object agency and object biographies will be utilized to address what happens when people become entangled with new things: the new context can have an impact on the newly introduced object, and those newly introduced objects can similarly impact locals and their traditions. The Late
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Monumental Walls, Sovereign Power and Value(s) in Pharaonic Egypt Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-15 Oren Siegel
Large walling projects are among the most visible features in the archaeological record. However, enclosure walls remain relatively under-theorized relative to other monumental buildings. In an attempt to move beyond simple explanations that analyse walls solely as defensive features or symbols, I link monumental walls to notions of sovereign power and action-oriented theories of value(s). Using examples
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Dances with Zigzags in Toro Muerto, Peru: Geometric Petroglyphs as (Possible) Embodiments of Songs Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-03 Andrzej Rozwadowski, Janusz Z. Wołoszyn
Southern Peru is home to one of the richest sites with rock art in South America—Toro Muerto. A unique aspect of the iconography of the petroglyphs of the site is the figures of dancing humans, the so-called danzantes, which are additionally frequently associated with geometric motifs, mostly variants of zigzag lines. Drawing upon intriguing data recorded during Reichel-Dolmatoff's research in Colombia
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The Mandate for Speculation: Responding to Uncertainty in Archaeological Thinking Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Tim Flohr Sørensen, Marko M. Marila, Anna S. Beck
The aim of the article is to reframe speculation from being seen as synonymous with unacademic conjecture, or as a means for questioning consensus and established narratives, to becoming a productive practical engagement with the archaeological and responding to its intrinsic uncertainties. In the first part of the article, we offer a review of speculation in the history of archaeological reasoning
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Angara Style Rock Art: The Evolution of a Regional Emblematic and Syncretic Style Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-26 Lynda D. McNeil
Rebutting previous claims, the paper employs comparative stylistic analysis and palaeoenvironmental data to argue that Angara style rock art originated in the Mongolian Altai during the Upper Palaeolithic (13,000–10,300 bp) where it evolved in situ. Around 8200–7300 bp, drought forced the hunter-gatherers who created Angara style rock art to migrate to the Upper Yenisey and the Selenga and Angara basins
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Folk Magic and the Haunting of the Second World War in Finnish Lapland Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-21 Vesa-Pekka Herva, Oula Seitsonen, Iain Banks, Gabriel Moshenska, Tina Paphitis
This article engages with certain peculiar finds and features that we have documented at former German WWII military camps in Finnish Lapland, with a particular emphasis on an excavated assemblage that has affinities to traditional ritual (sacrificial) practices. The relevant finds and features date from the post-war period, but they are meaningfully associated with WWII sites. We consider the possible
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Figurative Representations in the North European Neolithic—Are They There? Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-18 Rune Iversen, Valeska Becker, Rebecca Bristow
This article offers a comprehensive survey of figurative finds from Neolithic northern Europe. The survey shows that the immediate absence of figurative representation in the region is real and that the almost complete lack of figuration stands out from the previous Mesolithic and the contemporary northern and northeastern European Neolithic hunter-gatherer groups. Furthermore, the absence of figurative
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The Future of Periodization. Dissecting the Legacy of Culture History Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-18 Gavin Lucas, Orri Vésteinsson
This paper discusses the future role of periodization in the wake of recent critiques of culture-historical chronologies concurrent with the rise of high-definition radiocarbon dating. It is argued that periodization has two distinct facets, a narrative function and a dating function, which should be separated. Archaeology may eventually be able to abandon the latter, but not the former. However, the
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Bridlington Boulevard Revisited: New Insights into Pit and Post-hole Cremations in Neolithic Britain Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-15 Jake T. Rowland, Jess E. Thompson
The majority of excavated human remains from Neolithic Britain emanate from monumental sites. However, it is increasingly recognized that multiple funerary practices are often attested within these monuments, and that diverse treatment of the dead is evident contemporaneously at non-monumental sites. In this paper, we highlight such variation in non-monumental funerary practices in Neolithic Britain
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Wounded Animals and Where to Find Them. The Symbolism of Hunting in Palaeolithic Art Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-12 Olivia Rivero, Miguel García-Bustos, Georges Sauvet
Representations of wounded animals and humans in European Upper Palaeolithic art have traditionally been conceived as figures related to the hunting activities of hunter-gatherer societies. In this paper, we propose an analysis of Franco-Cantabrian figurative representations showing signs of violence between 35,000 and 13,000 cal. bp to qualify the interpretations of hunting and death in Palaeolithic
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An Anarchist Archaeology of Equality: Pasts and Futures Against Hierarchy Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-11 Aris Politopoulos, Catherine J. Frieman, James L. Flexner, Lewis Borck
Scholars of the past frame the ‘origins’ or evolution of inequality, usually using archaeological or anthropological evidence as a basis for their arguments, as an intentional, inevitable, important step towards the development of states, implicitly framed as the pinnacle of human political and economic achievement. Anarchist archaeologies reject the idea of hierarchy as a positive or inevitable evolutionary
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Texts, Politics and Identities: New Challenges on Iron Age Ethnicity. A Case from Northwest Iberia Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-11 Samuel Nión-Álvarez
This paper presents an approach to the study of European Iron Age ethnicity, a core topic for several decades which has begun to lose interest in the last years. A review of some of the uncertainties involved in the archaeology of ethnicity, focused on several key issues, is proposed. Moreover, some relevant topics that are usually undermined are suggested in order to address new challenges in the
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An Argaric Tomb for a Carpathian ‘Princess’? Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Juan A. López Padilla, Francisco Javier Jover Maestre, Ricardo E. Basso Rial, María Pastor Quiles
Around 120 years ago, a burial was discovered in the Argaric settlement of San Antón, 60 km southeast of Alicante (Spain). Although it was similar to many others recorded during more than a century of research, some gold objects found made this burial exceptional in the Iberian Bronze Age funerary record. Based on the most recent archaeological data, this article reviews both the context and the whole
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Commentary Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Kathleen Sterling
Greer offers an excellent primer on some Black Studies scholars’ critiques of humanism, for which he uses the label ‘counter-humanism’ after Erasmus (2020), distinguishing these approaches from ‘posthumanism.’ He identifies two primary strains of posthumanism relevant to archaeological interpretation, symmetrical archaeology and posthuman feminism, though examples of the latter are drawn from a broader
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Comments Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Susan Pollock
Matthew Greer offers us a powerful, refreshing and thought-provoking critique of posthumanist approaches in archaeology as he sees them through the lens of Black Studies. He asks us to leave aside—temporarily—concerns with anthropocentrism to concentrate instead on the human side of the equation, while nonetheless positioning himself in line with posthumanist efforts to dismantle the human–non-human
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On Striving as Readers: A Response to Greer Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Christopher Witmore
The capacity of northern European gentlemen scholars educated in the love of wisdom, human dignity, friendship and rationality to treat their fellow human beings with irreconcilable prejudice and hold to ghastly beliefs of racial superiority, which legitimated violence, exploitation and extermination elsewhere, is one of the great tragedies of humanism. That the images of the human cultivated in texts
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Commentary Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Craig N. Cipolla
Does non-anthropocentrism necessitate a turn away from marginalized people? This is a crucial question, asked lately by a growing number of archaeologists. Some see a turn toward things as a turn away from people, while others take a more nuanced view. Greer falls into the latter group, exploring this question by highlighting important contributions and corrections from Black Studies. Although the
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Reflections on a Counter-Humanist Archaeology: A Commentary on Greer 2023 Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Lindsay M. Montgomery
In ‘Humanist Missteps’, Matthew Greer makes the pointed observation that non-anthropocentric frameworks, including symmetrical, object-oriented and posthuman feminist archaeologies, have primarily focused on deconstructing the human–non-human binary while failing to problematize humanist assumptions about who counts as Human. At the core of Greer's argument is the matter of citational practice: which
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Humanist Missteps, A Black Studies Critique of Posthumanist Archaeologies Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Matthew C. Greer
Posthumanist archaeologies have attempted to move beyond humanist conceptions of the human for over a decade. But they have done so by primarily focusing on the ontological split between humans and non-human things. This only addresses one part of humanism, as Black studies scholars have long argued that it also equates humanity writ large with white, economically privileged, cis-gendered, heterosexual
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Reply: Citational Politics and the Future of Posthumanist Archaeologies Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Matthew C. Greer
I want to begin by thanking Craig Cipolla, Lindsay Montgomery, Susan Pollock, Kathleen Sterling and Christopher Witmore for their responses. I am honoured to be in conversation with such thoughtful and insightful scholars. In my reading, two main themes emerged from their comments—citational politics and what the future of posthumanist archaeologies might look like. To conclude our discussion of archaeology
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When the Foreign Becomes Familiar: The Glass Bead Assemblage from Madjedbebe, Northern Australia Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Mirani Litster, Lynley A. Wallis, Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation
By investigating the materiality of colonial encounters, specifically the consumption of introduced commodities by Indigenous peoples, archaeologists can explore questions concerning value, agency, consumer choice and localization. This has the significant capacity to broaden understandings of intercultural encounters and challenge colonial narratives. Glass beads represent one of the earliest foreign
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Gold and Silver: Relative Values in the Ancient Past Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-11-28 James Ross, Leigh Bettenay
We have documented more than 200 relative values of gold and silver across almost 3000 years (2500 bce–400 ce) to establish value benchmarks for essentially pure metal. Our aim is to improve understanding of ancient economies by enabling regional and temporal comparisons of these relative values. First, we establish silver as an early, reliable benchmark for valuing gold of varying purity before implementation
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Visible Wealth in Past Societies: A Case Study of Domestic Architecture from the Hawaiian Islands Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-11-07 Mark D. McCoy, Joseph L. Panuska
Domestic architecture is increasingly revisited as a source of data about wealth inequality in the distant past via the Gini coefficient, a statistical tool often used in economics to compare income inequality. Many areas—including South America, Africa, South Asia and Oceania—remain under-sampled, making it difficult to develop a more complete picture of ancient political economies. In this paper
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The Constructed Desert: A Sacred Cultural Landscape at Har Tzuriaz, Negev, Israel Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Lior Schwimer, Roy Galili, Naomi Porat, Guy Bar-Oz, Dani Nadel, Steven A Rosen
Past and present cultures perceive their natural landscape as an integral and vital component of their complex worlds, while particular landscape features and associated monuments built in selected locales become sacred and revered through stories, legends and rituals embedded in mundane and ceremonial events. The hyper-arid Har Tzuriaz area in the southern Negev, Israel, offers a case study of culture-geographic
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Posthuman Archaeology and Rock Art Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-10-16 José Chessil Dohvehnain Martínez-Moreno
This paper aims to contribute to the current debate about Posthumanism in archaeology, arguing for the potential that Posthumanism can have for the study of rock art. Through a case study in San Luis Potosí, Mexico, this work seeks to explore a posthuman approach to rock art as vibrant and relational assemblages, through affects as relational agencies and non-human personhood and ritual landscape as
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Conversations with Caves: The Role of Pareidolia in the Upper Palaeolithic Figurative Art of Las Monedas and La Pasiega (Cantabria, Spain) Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-09-21 Izzy Wisher, Paul Pettitt, Robert Kentridge
The influence of pareidolia has often been anecdotally observed in examples of Upper Palaeolithic cave art, where topographic features of cave walls were incorporated into images. As part of a wider investigation into the visual psychology of the earliest known art, we explored three hypotheses relating to pareidolia in cases of Late Upper Palaeolithic art in Las Monedas and La Pasiega Caves (Cantabria
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An Archaeology of Traces Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-09-13 Bruce Routledge
Archaeology is centrally concerned with the tension between material remains in the present and a reconstructed past. This tension is captured by the concept of a trace, namely a contemporary phenomenon that references the past through some sort of epistemic intervention. Traces are deceptively complex in terms of both their epistemology and their ontology and hence worthy of detailed exploration.
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Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean World at the Turn of the First Millennium ce: Networks, Commodities and Cultural Reception Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Krisztina Hoppál, Bérénice Bellina, Laure Dussubieux
Archaeological materials from the Mediterranean world in Southeast Asia are scarce and their social context and cultural implications are rarely considered, while objects in Mediterranean style are often misinterpreted or overlooked. Concomitant to the increasing implementation of laboratory analysis, the range of new evidence, especially coming from recently excavated sites in Thailand and Myanmar
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Acheulean Handaxes in Medieval France: An Earlier ‘Modern’ Social History for Palaeolithic Bifaces Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-07-11 Alastair Key, James Clark, Jeremy DeSilva, Steven Kangas
Handaxes have a uniquely prominent role in the history of Palaeolithic archaeology, and their early study provides crucial information concerning the epistemology of the field. We have little conclusive evidence, however, of their investigation or societal value prior to the mid seventeenth century. Here we investigate the shape, colour and potential flake scarring on a handaxe-like stone object seen
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A Small Rural Travel Stopover at the Late Postclassic Maya Site of Mensabak, Chiapas, Mexico: Overland Trade, Cross-Cultural Interaction and Social Cohesion in the Countryside Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-07-03 Joel W. Palka
A small rural stopover along overland Maya and Aztec trade and travel routes was identified in surveys and excavations at adjacent settlements and shrines at Mensabak, Chiapas, Mexico. This collection of Late Postclassic to Spanish conquest-era (c. ad 1350–1650) Maya sites are similar in function to rural Old World and Andean caravan stopovers, such as caravanserai and way stations, where travellers
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On the Periphery of the Inka Empire: Spatial Arrangement at the Pre-Hispanic Rock-art Site of Villavil 2 (Catamarca, Argentina) Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-23 César Parcero-Oubiña, Pastor Fábrega-Álvarez, Julieta Lynch
This paper describes the analysis of the Late Prehispanic rock-art site of Villavil 2 (Catamarca, Argentina). Despite its modest and inconspicuous nature, this is one of the few examples of rock-art sites known in the area to date. The relationship of the site with the surrounding landscape and the distribution of rock art throughout the site are analysed using a combination of GIS and 3D modelling
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Using Topic Modelling to Reassess Heritage Values from a People-centred Perspective: Applications from the North of England Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-15 Martina Tenzer, John Schofield
The historic environment—comprising a palimpsest of landscapes, buildings and objects—carries meaning and plays a crucial role in giving people a sense of place, identity and belonging. It represents a repository of ever-accumulating collective and individually held values—shared perceptions, experiences, life histories, beliefs and traditions. These social or private values are mostly ascribed by
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Hanging over the Void. Uses of Long Ropes and Climbing Rope Ladders in Prehistory as Illustrated in Levantine Rock Art Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-08 Manuel Bea, Dídac Roman, Inés Domingo
Direct or indirect evidence of ropemaking are scarce in European prehistory. Only a few references to Middle or Upper Palaeolithic remains are known to us, with more examples towards the Holocene. The archaeological contexts of ropes offer little information about possible uses, as the activities they are used for are often archaeologically invisible. However, some rock-art traditions shed some light
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Making Wonder in Miniature: A New Approach to Theorizing the Affective Properties and Social Consequences of Small-Scale Artworks from Hellenistic Babylonia Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-05-29 Stephanie M. Langin-Hooper
This article proposes an interpretive framework of paradox and wonder as a new approach to understanding the affective properties and social consequences of miniature objects in the archaeological record. Building upon current scholarly theories of miniatures as inherently intimate, this approach accounts for how small-scale artworks were also designed and deliberately manufactured to elude user attempts
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Minds on Fire: Cognitive Aspects of Early Firemaking and the Possible Inventors of Firemaking Kits Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-05-29 Marlize Lombard, Peter Gärdenfors
Thus far, most researchers have focused on the cognition of fire use, but few have explored the cognition of firemaking. With this contribution we analyse aspects of the two main hunter-gatherer firemaking techniques—the strike-a-light and the manual fire-drill—in terms of causal, social and prospective reasoning. Based on geographic distribution, archaeological and ethnographic information, as well
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Social Exclusion in Ancient Egypt: A Sociological Approach Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-05-29 Beatriz Jiménez Meroño
Social exclusion has been faced in modern societies as a phenomenon to be prevented in terms of equality. However, it can also be explored in past societies, where some individuals could confront situations of marginalization and exclusion. Previous scholars have accepted or rejected the existence of social exclusion in Ancient Egypt, although none of them has employed a theoretical framework to study
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Life and Death of the Macrolithic Tools from the Third-millennium cal. bc Necropolis of La Orden-Seminario in Southwest Spain Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-05-25 Francisco Martínez-Sevilla, José Antonio Linares-Catela
Macrolithic tools are linked to daily activities and, fundamentally, to settlements, hence their importance for the study of Late Prehistoric societies. However, these objects are also associated with funerary contexts, but have not often been analysed holistically. This paper studies an assemblage of macrolithic elements from three collective tombs from the third millennium cal. bc at the site of
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Error or Minority? The Identification of Non-binary Gender in Prehistoric Burials in Central Europe Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-05-24 Eleonore Pape, Nicola Ialongo
Gender is under focus in prehistoric archaeology, with traditional binary models being questioned and alternatives formulated. Quantification, however, is generally lacking, and alternative models are rarely tested against the archaeological evidence. In this article, we test the binary hypothesis of gender for prehistoric Central Europe based on a selection of seven published burial sites dating from
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From Typology and Biography to Multiplicity: Bracers as ‘Process Objects’ Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-05-11 Christina Tsoraki, Huw Barton, Rachel J. Crellin, Oliver J.T. Harris
In this article we put forward an alternative account of the famous wristguards, or bracers, of the European Early Bronze Age. Combining new materialism with empirical microwear analysis, we study 15 examples from Britain in detail and suggest a different way of conceptualizing these objects. Rather than demanding they have a singular function, we treat these objects as ‘multiplicities’ and as always
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The Proceduralization of Hominin Knapping Skill: Memorizing Different Lithic Technologies Cambridge Archaeological Journal (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2023-04-20 Antoine Muller, Ceri Shipton, Chris Clarkson
Reconstructing the technical and cognitive abilities of past hominins requires an understanding of how skills like stone toolmaking were learned and transmitted. We ask how much of the variability in the uptake of knapping skill is due to the characteristics of the knapping sequences themselves? Fundamental to skill acquisition is proceduralization, the process whereby skilful tasks are converted from