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This is the only volume to present significant results of research into the Pleistocene of the Western Desert of Egypt. Research on Pleistocene prehistoric remains in Dakhleh Oasis began during survey in the 1978 Dakhleh Oasis Project (DOP) season, with discovery of the ubiquity of stone artefacts. Dedicated work by both prehistorians and environmentalists continued until 2011. Comparative DOP reconnaissance and geological work in Kharga Oasis began in 1987, which morphed into the Kharga Oasis Prehistory Project (KOPP) in 2001. Papers on the Pleistocene research are focused on geoarchaeological and palaeo-environmental data, reporting on different aspects of the off-site fieldwork conducted in the oases. Pleistocene finds and sequence are included. Detailed analyses of palaeolakes, the meteoritic Dakhleh Event, chronometric dating, and the'empty desert hypothesis'employ state of the art research strategies and techniques to provide important information on Pleistocene human uses and habitability in the Western Desert. A summary paper and a Catalogue of Pleistocene localities recorded in the Dakhleh Oasis survey are provided.The volume will be a major contribution to the publication of the results of several decades of work in a region where fieldwork is now increasingly difficult. This will be the only volume in which the significant results of the research into the Pleistocene of the Western Desert of Egypt appear. This has been undertaken under the auspices of the Dakhleh Oasis Project and its off-shoot The Kharga Oasis Prehistory Project. The preliminary results have been presented at various conferences and in articles that have all been well received. They incorporate state of the art research strategies and dating techniques. The volume will be a major contribution to the publication of the results of several decades of work in a region where fieldwork is now increasingly difficult.
Archaeological geology --- Paleoecology --- Lake sediments --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Western Desert (Egypt) --- Dakhla Oasis (Egypt)
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"Ce livre explore la place des oasis de Dakhla et Kharga dans l'Égypte et l'empire ottomans. Il entend contribuer à la réflexion sur les caractéristiques et les limites de la notion d'ottomanité, vue par les habitants de cette région qui, du Caire, paraissait lointaine et isolée. Il s'appuie sur plusieurs ensembles d'archives privées, en grande partie inédits, complétés par les récits de voyageurs et la documentation de l'époque contemporaine. En dépit de leur éloignement de la Vallée du Nil et de leur milieu naturel très spécifique, les Oasis étaient encadrées sur les plans administratif et judiciaire de la même manière que le reste de l'Égypte. Leur fiscalité était spécifique, comme l'étaient leurs ressources, avant tout agricoles. En raison de la menace de raids bédouins, elles abritaient une importante garnison. Le livre étudie les effets de cette présence militaire sur la société oasienne des XVIe-XVIIIe siècles, et montre l'effacement graduel des spécificités ottomanes, puis de leur mémoire, au cours du XIXe siècle"
Egypt --- Dakhla Oasis (Egypt) --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- History --- Khargèh, Oasis de (Égypte) --- Dakhla (Égypte ; oasis) --- Égypte
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Tombs --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Antiquities --- Al-Kharijah (Egypt : Oasis) --- El Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Great Oasis (Egypt) --- Khargeh (Egypt : Oasis) --- Kharijah (Egypt : Oasis) --- Outer Oases (Egypt) --- Wāḥāt al-Khārijah (Egypt : Oasis) --- Antiquities. --- Tombs - Egypt - Kharga (Oasis) --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) - Antiquities
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Christian antiquities --- Christian cemeteries --- Antiquités chrétiennes --- Cimetières chrétiens --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Kharghèh (Egypte : Oasis) --- Antiquities. --- Antiquités
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The Great Oasis of Egypt provides the first full study of the Dakhla and Kharga Oases in antiquity, written by participants in several of the current archaeological projects in this region. The oases were closely tied to Egypt and to each other, but not always easy to control, and their agricultural productivity varied with climatic conditions. The book discusses the oases' geology, water resources, history, administration, economy, trade connections, taxation, urbanism, religion, burial practices, literary culture, and art. New evidence for human health and illness from the cemeteries is presented along with a synthesis on the use of different types of cloth in burial. A particular emphasis is placed on pottery, with its ability to tell us both about how people lived and how far imports and exports can be seen from the shapes and fabrics, and both literature and art suggest full participation in the culture of Greco-Roman Egypt.
Antiquities. --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Dakhla Oasis (Egypt) --- Egypt --- Antiquities --- Oases --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Al-Kharijah (Egypt : Oasis) --- El Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Great Oasis (Egypt) --- Khargeh (Egypt : Oasis) --- Kharijah (Egypt : Oasis) --- Outer Oases (Egypt) --- Wāḥāt al-Khārijah (Egypt : Oasis) --- al-Dakhilah (Egypt) --- Dakhilah Oasis (Egypt) --- Dakhleh Oasis (Egypt) --- ed Dakhla (Egypt) --- el Dakhla (Egypt) --- E-books
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Tombs --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Tombeaux --- Kharga (Egypt : Oasis) --- Social conditions. --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Paléoanthropologie --- Tombes --- Égypte --- Douch (Égypte ; site archéologique) --- Civilisation --- 332 av. J.-C.-640 --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Paléoanthropologie --- Égypte --- Douch (Égypte ; site archéologique)
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