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Bone carving. --- Bone carving. --- Industries --- Industries. --- Ivoor. --- Ivory carving. --- Ivory carving. --- Germany.
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Bone carving --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Ivories, Ancient --- Ivory carving
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Art, Prehistoric --- Bone carving, Prehistoric --- Bone implements, Prehistoric --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Mesolithic period --- Tools, Prehistoric
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Neolithic period --- Bone implements, Prehistoric --- Bone carving, Prehistoric --- Valencia (Spain : Province) --- Antiquities --- Neolithic period - Spain - Valencia (Province) --- Bone implements, Prehistoric - Spain - Valencia (Province) --- Bone carving, Prehistoric - Spain - Valencia (Province) --- Valencia (Spain : Province) - Antiquities --- Neolithique --- Espagne
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Bone tool studies are at a crossroads. A current path is to go beyond the concatenation of methods or concepts borrowed from other disciplines and aim instead at a truly integrated approach that is more in line with the objectives of interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research. 0The papers in this volume follow this direction by adopting various forms of dialogue and integration between old and new methods and approaches, including technological analysis, usewear analysis, typology, zooarchaeology, stable isotope analysis, experimental archaeology or spatial analysis. They represent a mixture of methodological issues, case studies, and discussions of larger cultural and historical phenomena that span thousands of years and many parts of the World, from South Asia to the Near East and Europe, and from North to South America. The synergies deriving from these multi-perspective approaches lead to the repeated identification of diverse social aspects of past societies, including the identification of general social contexts of bone tool production and use, transmission of knowledge, the symbolic dimensions of artifacts, and intergroup relations as well as warfare and state formation processes.0All these papers grew out of communications presented at the 13th meeting of the Worked Bone Research Group (WBRG) on October 7th-13th, 2019, at the Département d?anthropologie, Université de Montréal, Canada. The WBRG is an official working group of the International Council for Archaeozoology (ICAZ) dealing with the study of worked faunal remains from archaeological sites.
Bone implements, Prehistoric --- Bone carving, Prehistoric --- Tools, Prehistoric --- Implements, Prehistoric --- Implements, utensils, etc., Prehistoric --- Prehistoric implements --- Prehistoric tools --- Bone engraving, Prehistoric --- Prehistoric bone carving --- Prehistoric bone engraving --- Industries, Prehistoric --- Prehistoric bone implements
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Dans cet ouvrage issu de sa thèse de doctorat, Carole Fritz présente la contribution remarquable que constitue l’observation au microscope électronique à balayage (ME8) pour l’étude de la gravure dans l’art mobilier magdalénien, démarche scientifique originale et rigoureuse ouvrant sur des voies de recherche particulièrement prometteuses.L’analyse méthodique d’une soixantaine d’objets en os et bois de cervidés issus de huit gisements du Magdalénien moyen et supérieur, répartis entre les Pyrénées, la Gironde et la Dordogne, est étayée par une iconographie inédite et très exceptionnelle. Elle conduit l’auteur à proposer de nouvelles réflexions sur la gestuelle de l’artiste magdalénien, sur les processus opératoires correspondant à des schémas mentaux et à des pratiques collectives, sur les modalités d’acquisition et de transmission des savoir-faire et. In fine, sur l’existence d’un phénomène artistique réfléchi au sein des sociétés de cette époque. In this work based on her doctoral thesis, Carole Fritz presents the remarkable contribution that observation with a scanning electron microscope brings to the study of engraving in Magdalenian portable art. This original and rigorous scientific approach opens up particularly promising paths of research. A corpus of sixty objects made of bone and antler, found at eight middle and upper Magdalenian sites m the area bounded by the Pyrénées, the Gironde estuary and the Dordogne river, is methodically analysed.On the basis of this analysis, backed by a previously unpublished and quite exceptional iconography, the author proposes fresh thinking on the artistic gestures of the Magdalenian period, on the operational processes corresponding to mental patterns and collective practices, on the modalities of acquisition and transmission of know-how and skills, and ultimately, on the existence of a thought-out artistic phenomenon in the societies of this epoch.
Art, Prehistoric --- Engraving --- Bone carving --- Magdalenian culture --- Art préhistorique --- Gravure --- Magdalénien --- Bone carving, Prehistoric --- Bone implements --- Tools, Prehistoric --- Issue --- Art préhistorique --- Magdalénien --- Magdalenian culture - France. --- Art, Prehistoric - France. --- Bone carving, Prehistoric - France. --- Bone implements - France. --- Tools, Prehistoric - France. --- Archaeology --- apprentissage --- silex --- os --- Dordogne --- stigmate microscopique --- structure des matériaux --- bois de cervidé --- expérimentation --- chaîne technique --- série gestuelle --- construction formelle --- Pyrénées --- Gironde
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Ethnology. Cultural anthropology --- art [fine art] --- Inuit [Canadian Arctic Native style] --- ethnic art --- Canada --- Arctica --- Bone carving. --- Inuit art. --- Inuit artists. --- Ivory carving. --- art [discipline]
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This book contextualizes ivory drill bows from the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History and National Museum of the American Indian, collected during the late 19th century from the Inuit of Western Alaska, with oral histories gathered from 40 contemporary Alaska Native contributors from Utqiaġvik, Point Hope, Kotzebue, Shishmaref, Nome, St. Michael, and Anchorage. Stories of hunting and community life are included along with illustrations of cultural heritage objects from the Carrie M. McLain Memorial Museum.
Art --- Art. --- Bone carving --- Bone carving. --- Inuit art --- Inuit art. --- Inuit artists --- Inuit artists. --- Inuit --- Inupiat art --- Inupiat art. --- Ivory carving --- Ivory carving. --- Yupik art --- Yupik art. --- Social aspects --- Material culture --- Carrie M. McLain Memorial Museum. --- National Museum of Natural History (U.S.). --- National Museum of the American Indian (U.S.). --- Smithsonian Institution --- Smithsonian Institution. --- Alaska --- Washington (D.C.).
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Os divinatoires --- S15/0304 --- S15/0305 --- Inscriptions, Chinese --- -Oracle bones --- -#SML: Paul Serruys --- Bone carving --- Divination --- Scapulimancy --- Chinese inscriptions --- China: Language--Oracle bones: rubbings, photographs, facsimiles --- China: Language--Oracle bones: collections and catalogues --- Bibliography --- Oracle bones --- Bibliography. --- #SML: Paul Serruys
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