Ceramics in Circumpolar Prehistory
Technology, Lifeways and Cuisine
Herausgeber: Jordan, Peter; Gibbs, Kevin
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Ceramics in Circumpolar Prehistory
Technology, Lifeways and Cuisine
Herausgeber: Jordan, Peter; Gibbs, Kevin
- Gebundenes Buch
The book is for archaeologists interested in the adaptations and social lives of people in the prehistoric Circumpolar North. It is also targeted at archaeologists and historians interested in the history of technologies, specifically pottery cooking technologies, and the motivations and obstacles that lay behind their adoption into new regions.
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The book is for archaeologists interested in the adaptations and social lives of people in the prehistoric Circumpolar North. It is also targeted at archaeologists and historians interested in the history of technologies, specifically pottery cooking technologies, and the motivations and obstacles that lay behind their adoption into new regions.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Archaeology of the North
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 246
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 259mm x 216mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 682g
- ISBN-13: 9781107118249
- ISBN-10: 1107118247
- Artikelnr.: 52820509
- Archaeology of the North
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 246
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 259mm x 216mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 682g
- ISBN-13: 9781107118249
- ISBN-10: 1107118247
- Artikelnr.: 52820509
1. Cold winters, hot soups and frozen clay: understanding the emergence of
ceramic traditions across the Circumpolar North Kevin Gibbs and Peter
Jordan; 2. Why did northern foragers make pottery?: Investigating the role
of incipient Jomon ceramics within wider hunter-gatherer subsistence
strategies in prehistoric Japan Junzo Uchiyama; 3. Vessels on the Vitim:
'Neolithic' ceramics in eastern Siberia V. M. Vetrov and P. N. Hommel; 4.
Maritime nomads of the Baltic Sea: ceramic traditions, collective
identities and prehistoric cuisine Sven Isaksson, Kevin Gibbs, and Peter
Jordan; 5. The paradox of pottery in the remote Kuril Islands Erik
Gjesfjeld; 6. Understanding the function of container technologies in
prehistoric SW Alaska Marjolein Admiraal and Rick Knecht; 7. Ethnographic
and archaeological perspectives on the use life of Northwest Alaskan
pottery Shelby Anderson; 8. An exploration of arctic ceramic and soapstone
cookware technologies and food preparation systems Liam Frink and Karen
Harry; 9. Ceramic use by middle and late woodland foragers of the Maritime
Foragers Michael Deal, Thomas Farrell, Latonia Hartery, Alison Harris and
Michael Sanders; 10. Prestige foods and the adoption of pottery by
Subarctic foragers Mathew Boyd, Megan Wady, Andrew Lints, Clarence Surette
and Scott Hamilton; 11. Use of ceramic technologies by circumpolar
hunter-gatherers: current progress and future research prospects Brian
Hayden.
ceramic traditions across the Circumpolar North Kevin Gibbs and Peter
Jordan; 2. Why did northern foragers make pottery?: Investigating the role
of incipient Jomon ceramics within wider hunter-gatherer subsistence
strategies in prehistoric Japan Junzo Uchiyama; 3. Vessels on the Vitim:
'Neolithic' ceramics in eastern Siberia V. M. Vetrov and P. N. Hommel; 4.
Maritime nomads of the Baltic Sea: ceramic traditions, collective
identities and prehistoric cuisine Sven Isaksson, Kevin Gibbs, and Peter
Jordan; 5. The paradox of pottery in the remote Kuril Islands Erik
Gjesfjeld; 6. Understanding the function of container technologies in
prehistoric SW Alaska Marjolein Admiraal and Rick Knecht; 7. Ethnographic
and archaeological perspectives on the use life of Northwest Alaskan
pottery Shelby Anderson; 8. An exploration of arctic ceramic and soapstone
cookware technologies and food preparation systems Liam Frink and Karen
Harry; 9. Ceramic use by middle and late woodland foragers of the Maritime
Foragers Michael Deal, Thomas Farrell, Latonia Hartery, Alison Harris and
Michael Sanders; 10. Prestige foods and the adoption of pottery by
Subarctic foragers Mathew Boyd, Megan Wady, Andrew Lints, Clarence Surette
and Scott Hamilton; 11. Use of ceramic technologies by circumpolar
hunter-gatherers: current progress and future research prospects Brian
Hayden.
1. Cold winters, hot soups and frozen clay: understanding the emergence of
ceramic traditions across the Circumpolar North Kevin Gibbs and Peter
Jordan; 2. Why did northern foragers make pottery?: Investigating the role
of incipient Jomon ceramics within wider hunter-gatherer subsistence
strategies in prehistoric Japan Junzo Uchiyama; 3. Vessels on the Vitim:
'Neolithic' ceramics in eastern Siberia V. M. Vetrov and P. N. Hommel; 4.
Maritime nomads of the Baltic Sea: ceramic traditions, collective
identities and prehistoric cuisine Sven Isaksson, Kevin Gibbs, and Peter
Jordan; 5. The paradox of pottery in the remote Kuril Islands Erik
Gjesfjeld; 6. Understanding the function of container technologies in
prehistoric SW Alaska Marjolein Admiraal and Rick Knecht; 7. Ethnographic
and archaeological perspectives on the use life of Northwest Alaskan
pottery Shelby Anderson; 8. An exploration of arctic ceramic and soapstone
cookware technologies and food preparation systems Liam Frink and Karen
Harry; 9. Ceramic use by middle and late woodland foragers of the Maritime
Foragers Michael Deal, Thomas Farrell, Latonia Hartery, Alison Harris and
Michael Sanders; 10. Prestige foods and the adoption of pottery by
Subarctic foragers Mathew Boyd, Megan Wady, Andrew Lints, Clarence Surette
and Scott Hamilton; 11. Use of ceramic technologies by circumpolar
hunter-gatherers: current progress and future research prospects Brian
Hayden.
ceramic traditions across the Circumpolar North Kevin Gibbs and Peter
Jordan; 2. Why did northern foragers make pottery?: Investigating the role
of incipient Jomon ceramics within wider hunter-gatherer subsistence
strategies in prehistoric Japan Junzo Uchiyama; 3. Vessels on the Vitim:
'Neolithic' ceramics in eastern Siberia V. M. Vetrov and P. N. Hommel; 4.
Maritime nomads of the Baltic Sea: ceramic traditions, collective
identities and prehistoric cuisine Sven Isaksson, Kevin Gibbs, and Peter
Jordan; 5. The paradox of pottery in the remote Kuril Islands Erik
Gjesfjeld; 6. Understanding the function of container technologies in
prehistoric SW Alaska Marjolein Admiraal and Rick Knecht; 7. Ethnographic
and archaeological perspectives on the use life of Northwest Alaskan
pottery Shelby Anderson; 8. An exploration of arctic ceramic and soapstone
cookware technologies and food preparation systems Liam Frink and Karen
Harry; 9. Ceramic use by middle and late woodland foragers of the Maritime
Foragers Michael Deal, Thomas Farrell, Latonia Hartery, Alison Harris and
Michael Sanders; 10. Prestige foods and the adoption of pottery by
Subarctic foragers Mathew Boyd, Megan Wady, Andrew Lints, Clarence Surette
and Scott Hamilton; 11. Use of ceramic technologies by circumpolar
hunter-gatherers: current progress and future research prospects Brian
Hayden.