Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 68
pro vyhledávání: '"Rupert A. Housley"'
Autor:
Ruby Cerón-Carrasco, Julian Augley, Nyree Finlay, Catherine Smith, Jeremy Huggett, Dene Wright, W. Graham Jardine, Susan Ramsay, Rupert A. Housley, Peter J. Wright
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 85:83-114
For over 120 years, the shell middens of western Scotland and the series of open-air sites on Oronsay have been the focus of debate in European Mesolithic studies. This paper challenges the significance of Oronsay in light of results from the geophys
Autor:
Victoria C. Smith, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Christine Lane, Rupert A. Housley, A. Mark Pollard
Publikováno v:
Quaternary Science Reviews. 118:33-47
An open-access database has been set up to support the research project study- ing the ‘Response of Humans to Abrupt Environmental Transitions’ (RESET). The main methodology underlying this project was to use tephra layers to tie together and syn
Publikováno v:
Quaternary Geochronology. 20:99-108
The discovery of a cryptotephra (nonvisible volcanic horizon) in a windblown sand archaeological site in Poland highlights how luminescence and tephrostratigraphy may combine to better refine the chronology of such sites. In this study we identify a
Autor:
Alison MacLeod, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Lauren J. Davies, Dorota Nalepka, J. John Lowe, Mirosław Masojć, Aleksandra Jurochnik, Clive Gamble, Rupert A. Housley, Paul Lincoln
Publikováno v:
Quaternary Science Reviews. 77:4-18
This paper presents the first late Quaternary locality in the present-day territories of Poland where multiple cryptotephra layers have been identified. Located near Wegliny in southwest Poland, study of the Lateglacial gyttja deposits reveals the pr
Autor:
Mareike Cordula Stahlschmidt, Falko Turner, Klaus Breest, Stephan Veil, Rupert A. Housley, Knut Kaiser, Eileen Eckmeier, Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf
Publikováno v:
Geoarchaeology. 28:50-65
Changing river courses and fluctuations of the water table were some of the most fundamental environmental changes that humans faced during the Late Glacial, particularly as these changes affected areas intensively used for settlement and resource ex
Publikováno v:
Quaternary Geochronology, 6 (6)
Peat is notoriously difficult to radiocarbon date as it is composed of a heterogeneous mix of organic materials of different radiocarbon ages and at different stages of humification. Different chemical fractions (most frequently humin and humic acid)
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::d39188a38ed71252af64f05741ff9aff
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quageo.2011.08.003
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quageo.2011.08.003
Autor:
Timothy Darvill, Alex Bayliss, Debra Costen, Ellen Hambleton, Frances Healy, Rupert A. Housley, Linda O'Connell, Mark Pollard, Nicola Snashall, Alasdair Whittle, Vanessa Constant, Lorna Gray
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 77:139-204
Surveys and excavations in 1980–1 confirmed Peak Camp as a Neolithic enclosure on a flat promontory of the Cotswold escarpment overlooking the Severn Valley just 1 km south of Crickley Hill. Although heavily eroded by quarrying the site can be reco