- Samenvatting
This volume has been written in honour of Professor Annelou van Gijn in order to celebrate her distinguished career as an archaeologist and, above all, as an expert in the study of material culture. Annelou started her research with the use-wear analysis of prehistoric flint from the Netherlands, and she extended her interests in every possible direction: time, space, materials and technologies. This volume has been compiled to reflect the broad oeuvre of her work. It focuses on the biographies of a wide range of artefact types made from an equally wide range of materials from Mesolithic and Neolithic Europe, but also glimpses beyond into other periods and geographic regions. The papers focus on different aspects of artefact biographies including raw material acquisition, artefact production, use, and discard, and even the afterlife of objects in our modern society. The objects in question include quotidian tools such as querns and harvesting tools, adhesives that held objects together, and elaborate objects such as maceheads, jewellery, and flint superblades. Whatever the subject of Annelou’s individual publications, at the heart of all of her work is the love of objects and the stories that they have to tell us. The stories in this bundle are a testament of her contagious enthusiasm.
- Productinformatie
Binding : Paperback
Distributievorm : Boek (print, druk)
Formaat :
Niet bekend
Aantal pagina's :
220
Uitgeverij :
Sidestone Press
ISBN :
9789464261516
Datum publicatie : 05-2024
- Inhoudsopgave
A fascination with mundane things. A retrospective of the life and career of Professor Annelou van Gijn Annemieke Verbaas & Ben Chan Forty years on: Functional analysis of stone artefacts and the Annelou Van Gijn – Australian connection Richard Fulagar &Judith Field Wear formation on shell ornaments: mechanical and actualistic experiments, two complementary approaches Leïla Hoareau & Sylvie Beyries Conifer tar in the late Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic of north-western Europe Geeske H.J. Langejans, Diederik Pomstra, Thierry Ducrocq, Antony Haskins & Paul R.B. Kozowyk Vlaardingen culture or Stein group? From object biographies to communities of practice Lasse van den Dikkenberg If flint axes were so valuable, were axe fragments used as ‘small change’? Some insights on the exchange of flint axes and axe-flint in the Vlaardingen settlements of the Dutch coastal region Rob Houkes Diverging productions or not? A preliminary exploration of the chemical composition of Neolithic Vlaardingen Pottery Dennis Braekmans Colouring the past. Two remarkable finds of Lousberg flint in the Low Countries Luc Amkreutz & Leo Verhart A small camp-site of the Late Mesolithic in the Scheldt valley: results of an integrated analysis Éva Halbrucker & Philippe Crombé Ask the stones. Harvesting technologies from the Early Neolithic site of La Marmotta (Lake of Bracciano, Italy) Juan F. Escuela Gibaja, Niccolò Mazzucco, Bernard Gassin, Denis Guilbeau, Gerard Remolins & Mario Mineo What points can tell. Artefact biographies of barbed bone and antler points from Mesolithic Doggerland Merel Spithoven, Joannes Dekker & Alessandro Aleo Reconstructing the biographies of querns within Linearbandkeramik and Blicquy-Villeneuve-Saint-Germain households through technological and use-wear analysis Caroline Hamon Object histories in prehistoric Britain: a stone macehead from the West Kennet Avenue occupation site, southern Britain Christina Tsoraki, Richard E Bevins, Rob Ixer, Nick Pearce, Joshua Pollard & Ben Chan Flint superblades – biography and function: A case study from Bulgaria Maria Gurova Things objects can do. Taking an itinerary approach to artefact biographies for utilizing the cognitive, social and emotional magic of historical objects for contemporary society Monique H. van den Dries & Yvonne M.J. Lammers-Keijsers
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