19,994,130 research outputs found

    2018. Biagi P. 2018 Introduzione

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    Introduzione al volume dell'Arma dell'Aquila, una caverna del Finalese scavata nel NOvecet

    Atti della Società per la Preistoria e Protostoria della regione Friuli-venezia Giulia

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    Sei lavori di M. Olenkovsky, D. Kiosak, N. Kotova, O. Tubolsev, A. Lunardi, E. Starnini, P. Biagi, C. d'Amico, G. Bartolomei, A. Giro

    P. Biagi - Uneasy Riders: With Alexander and Nearchus from Pattala to Rhambakia

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    The scope of this paper is to interpret the road followed by Alexander\ud and Nearchus on their way back to Babylon from the Indus delta to the country of\ud the fi sh-eaters (Gedrosia). To achieve this goal both classical sources and personal\ud fi eldwork experience in Lower Sindh and Las Bela province of Balochistan were\ud taken into consideration. Given the absence of archaeological fi nds attributable to\ud the Hellenistic period, the unreliability of most of the classical chronicles that were\ud written centuries after the death of Alexander, the landscape changes that aff ected\ud the aforementioned territories during the last two millennia, and the controversial\ud results obtained by fi eldwork by British offi cers and geographers during the period\ud of their conquest of the region, our data on the Macedonian retreat from the country\ud is very poor. Nevertheless, just a few topics can be reinterpreted on the basis of the\ud fi eld evidence acquired during the last 10 years. They regard the way, and the speed\ud Nearchus moved from the mouth of the Indus to Las Bela, and a few data regarding\ud the way Alexander crossed the Hab river, and probably camped along the shores of\ud present-day Lake Siranda

    P. Biagi, B.A. Voytek 2018 - THE CHIPPED STONE ASSEMBLAGES FROM ARMA DELL’AQUILA (FINALE LIGURE, SAVONA)

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    The chipped stone assemblage from the excavations carried out by C. Richard at Arma dell’Aquila consists of a small number of artefacts retrieved from both the Neolithic and Upper Palaeolithic (Early Epigravettian and Aurignacian) layers. The artefacts were obtained from several raw material sources, which varied according to the different occupation periods. The industry has been studied from both typological and traceological points of view, in order to interpret the local or non-local manufacture of the chipped stone tools, and understand the activities carried out throughout the different periods during which the site was settled

    2018. Starnini E., Biagi, P. 2018 -I REPERTI CERAMICI DELL’ARMA DELL’AQUILA (FINALE LIGURE, SAVONA)

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    This paper presents the results of the study of the ceramic assemblages retrieved during the excavations carried out at Arma dell’Aquila at present stored in the collections of Finale Archaeological Museum. They are represented mainly by vessels attributable to the Impressed Ware and Square-Mouthed Pottery Cultures. Some fragments show that the rock shelter was utilised also during later prehistoric period, up to the Bronze Age, similarly to what is known from other Finalese caves

    Introduzione al Mesolitico della Lombardia

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    Museo Archeologico di Cavriana: a cura di A. Piccoli e P. Gasperini con la collaborazione di P. Biagi e M. Tizzoni - ISSN

    Introduzione al Neolitico della Lombardia

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    Museo Archeologico di Cavriana: a cura di A. Piccoli e P. Gasperini con la collaborazione di P. Biagi e M. Tizzoni - ISSN

    Collana Fondazione Marco Biagi

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    La collana si propone la pubblicazione di saggi riguardanti temi di studio fatti oggetto dell'attività di ricerca scientifica svolta dalla Fondazione universitaria Marco Biagi e dal gruppo di studiosi che vi operano

    P. Biagi, E. Starnini 2018 - L’ARMA DELL’AQUILA (FINALE LIGURE, SAVONA) NEL QUADRO DELLE CONOSCENZE DELL’ALTO TIRRENO TRA PALEOLITICO SUPERIORE E MEDIO OLOCENE: UN BILANCIO A 70 ANNI DAGLI SCAVI

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    The authors summarize the results of the interdisciplinary approach to the study of the material remains from the first half of the 1900s excavations at Arma dell’Aquila. As already emphasized by famous archaeologists of that époque, this site represents one of the focal points to understand the pace and modes of the prehistoric human settlement along the coast of the northern part of the Tyrrhenian Sea. A series of radiocarbon measurements allowed to date to the Protoaurignacian the most ancient human presence in the rock shelter unearthed by Richard-Chiappella, confirming that also the Finalese was involved in the arrival of the first AMH, and attributing to an early phase of the Epigravettian the subsequent Upper Pleistocene frequentation of the site. The cave was later and intermittently settled during the Holocene, with alternate periods of frequentations, abandonments and burial use of the space during the Neolithic
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