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Migrations of nations --- Animal migration --- Nature conservation --- Conservation of natural resources --- Men --- Conservation of Natural Resources --- Animal Migration --- Migration, Animal --- Animal Migrations --- Migrations, Animal --- Homing Behavior --- Carrying Capacity --- Deforestation --- Desertification --- Environmental Protection --- Natural Resources Conservation --- Protection, Environmental --- Capacities, Carrying --- Capacity, Carrying --- Carrying Capacities --- Conservation, Natural Resources --- Natural Resources --- Human males --- Human beings --- Males --- Effeminacy --- Masculinity --- Animals --- Migration of animals --- Animal behavior --- Zoogeography --- Migratory animals --- Conservation of resources --- Natural resources --- Natural resources conservation --- Resources conservation, Natural --- Environmental protection --- Natural resources conservation areas --- Migrations --- Migration --- Conservation
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Animal emblématique des Pyrénées, le bouquetin peuple ses deux versants depuis les temps les plus anciens. En s’adaptant à cet environnement, une forme typiquement pyrénéenne Capra pyrenaica apparaît, il y a plusieurs millénaires. Consommé pendant la Préhistoire, le bouquetin est devenu, au cours du Paléolithique récent, une figure incontournable du bestiaire préhistorique. Nombre de ses représentations sont mondialement connues : bouquetins peints du Salon noir (grotte de Niaux, Ariège) ou sculptés sur dent de cachalot (grotte du Mas d’Azil, Ariège). L’aventure du bouquetin dans les Pyrénées se poursuit jusqu’à nos jours. Victime de chasses intensives, le « bouc » avait disparu de son versant nord au début du XXe siècle. De récents programmes de repeuplement, lancés par la région Occitanie y remédient avec succès. Rassemblant une cinquantaine de spécialistes de diverses nationalités, cet ouvrage, accessible au grand public, offre dans ce premier tome un panorama général allant de l’histoire fossile du bouquetin aux programmes actuels de réintroduction, en passant par son éthologie et son rôle dans l’iconographie préhistorique et médiévale. Le tome II, consacré aux seules représentations préhistoriques, en propose un inventaire détaillé totalement inédit et richement illustré. Cet ouvrage est dédié à Jean Clottes, préhistorien, Ariégeois, conservateur général du Patrimoine honoraire au ministère de la Culture et spécialiste international des grottes ornées. Emblematic animal of the Pyrenees, the Ibex has inhabited its two slopes since the most ancient times. By adapting to this environment, a typical Pyrenean form Capra Pyrenaica appeared several millennia ago. Consumed during Prehistory, the Ibex became, during the Upper Paleolithic, an unavoidable figure of the prehistoric bestiary. Many of its representations are world-famous: painted Ibex from Salon Noir (Niaux cave, Ariège) or sculpted on sperm whale teeth (Mas d’Azil cave, ariège). The adventure of Ibex in…
Bouquetin des Pyrénées. --- Art pariétal --- Clottes, Jean --- Mélanges et hommages. --- Pyrénées --- Arts & Humanities --- Archaeology --- parietal art --- Spain --- France --- history --- Italy --- Middle Ages --- prehistory --- Espagne --- Italie --- préhistoire --- Moyen-Âge --- art pariétal --- histoire
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Bone carving --- Tools, Prehistoric --- Prehistoric peoples --- Sculpture sur os --- Outils préhistoriques --- Homme préhistorique --- Tools --- Outillage --- Camps-Fabrer, Henriette --- Bone implements, Prehistoric. --- Tools, Prehistoric. --- Bone implements, Prehistoric --- Implements, Prehistoric --- Implements, utensils, etc., Prehistoric --- Prehistoric implements --- Prehistoric tools --- Prehistoric bone implements --- Outils préhistoriques --- Homme préhistorique --- Tools.
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This book illustrates the extraordinary diversity of ‘nomad lives’ in time and space, in a tribute to Claudine Karlin, comprising 28 texts signed by economists, geographers, historians or sociologists.These case studies, organized into five chapters, are invitations to meet women, men and children from all over the world. The first chapter focuses on characterizing nomads and nomadism through examples ranging from the Aka pygmies, hunter-gatherers in the Central African forest, Yakut and Kazakh herders from the Central Asian steppes, or “nomads of contemporary globalization”. The second concentrates on the material culture of camps, from the Chatelperronians in the Grotte du Bison at Arcy-sur-Cure (Yonne) to the Manteks, Kurds in contemporary Iraq. The third examines the territories and circuits inherent to nomad lives, from the first hominids of East Africa to the break in the fishing way of life brought about by the arrival of Europeans in the Magellan Strait. Magdalenian mobility trends in the Roc-aux-Sorciers (Vienne), changes in funerary practices during the Bronze and Iron Ages in the Central Asian steppes (Kazakhstan), the sexual division of labour among the Tchouktcha of Russian Siberia, etc.: the social relations with the living and the dead, in and outside the group, are the main themes of the last two chapters.But throughout the pages a single apparently simple but extremely complex question emerges. The book ends with an attempt to answer this question from the combined perspective of an archaeologist, an ethnologist and a sociologist. Because, in the end, what does being a nomad mean? Cet ouvrage vient illustrer des fragments de vies de peuples « nomades », passés et actuels, d’Afrique, d’Asie, des Amériques du nord et du sud ou d’Europe, sous différentes facettes (habitats, productions matérielles, organisation économique et territoriale, sociale, rites et croyances, art). Ce mode de vie a prévalu pendant des millions d'années avant qu'un autre,…
Anthropology --- ethnologie --- géologie --- préhistoire --- migrations --- sciences de l'homme --- ethnology --- geology --- prehistory --- migration --- human sciences
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