Academic literature on the topic 'Chipped Stone Technology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Chipped Stone Technology"

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Feinman, Gary M., Linda M. Nicholas, and Helen R. Haines. "Socioeconomic Inequality and the Consumption of Chipped Stone at El Palmillo, Oaxaca, Mexico." Latin American Antiquity 17, no. 2 (2006): 151–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25063045.

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AbstractIn prehispanic Mesoamerica, basic utilitarian artifacts, such as non-obsidian chipped stone tools, have rarely been considered outside the realms of technology or the economics of manufacture and circulation. Yet in recent excavations of residential terraces at the Classic period hilltop settlement of El Palmillo, Oaxaca, we have noted spatial patterning in the distribution of chipped stone tools that parallels variation previously observed in a range of nonlocal goods including obsidian, marine shell, and greenstone. Compared to the inhabitants of terraces situated near the base of th
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Hatfield, Virginia. "Chipped Stone Technology and the Colonization of the Aleutian Archipelago." Arctic Anthropology 48, no. 2 (2012): 113–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/arc.2012.0006.

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Neubauer, Fernanda. "Late archaic hunter-gatherer lithic technology and function (chipped stone, ground stone, and fire-cracked rock)." Revista de Arqueologia 30, no. 1 (2017): 260–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.24885/sab.v30i1.514.

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This doctoral research highlights the complicated trajectories of hunter-gatherers by offering a case study from an understudied but rich hunter-gatherer landscape, the Late Archaic period (c. 5,000-2,000 BP) on Grand Island in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, United States. Although there is a paucity of Late Archaic period archaeological data from the mainland of the Upper Peninsula, recent excavations by the Grand Island Archaeological Program (GIAP), directed by James M. Skibo (Illinois State University) and co-directed by Eric C. Drake (Hiawatha National Forest), have yielded a sizable body of
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Andrefsky, William. "Cascade Phase Lithic Technology: An Example from the Lower Snake River." North American Archaeologist 16, no. 2 (1995): 95–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/5jg4-bxd1-mjub-a214.

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Chipped stone artifact data from several Cascade phase sites located on the lower Snake River are analyzed to evaluate lithic technological characteristics of the early Cascade phase. Interpretations based upon the stone tool assemblages suggest traditional generalizations about the early Cascade phase require some rethinking. Specifically, tool type and debitage type analysis indicate that early Cascade phase settlement organization was not necessarily oriented to a local riverine setting, rather, early Cascade phase populations were highly mobile and visited major river drainages during only
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Rollefson, G. O. "Neolithic Chipped Stone Technology at 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan : The Status of the PPNC Phase." Paléorient 16, no. 1 (1990): 119–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/paleo.1990.4526.

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Kakavakis, Odysseas. "Lithics in the Neolithic archaeology of Greece: Capturing the social dynamics of chipped stone technology." SHARE: Studies In History, Archaeology, Religion And Conservation 2, no. 1 (2015): 31. http://dx.doi.org/10.18573/share.6.

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Stemp, W. James, and Eleanor Harrison-Buck. "Pre-Maya Lithic Technology in the Wetlands of Belize: The Chipped Stone from Crawford Bank." Lithic Technology 44, no. 4 (2019): 183–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01977261.2019.1629173.

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Rose, Jeffrey I. "New Evidence for the Expansion of an Upper Pleistocene Population out of East Africa, from the Site of Station One, Northern Sudan." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 14, no. 2 (2004): 205–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774304000137.

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Evidence for a hunter-gatherer range-expansion is indicated by the site of Station One in the northern Sudan, a surface scatter of chipped stone debris systematically collected almost 40 years ago, though not studied until present. Based on technological and typological correlates in East Africa, the predominant use of quartz pebbles for raw material, and the production of small bifacial tools, the site can be classified as Middle Stone Age. While often appearing in East African assemblages, quartz was rarely used in Nubia, where ferrocrete sandstone and Nile pebble were predominantly used by
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LaBelle, Jason M., and Cody Newton. "Cody Complex foragers and their use of grooved abraders in Great Plains and Rocky Mountains of North America." North American Archaeologist 41, no. 2-3 (2020): 63–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0197693120923538.

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Comparison of Late Paleoindian sites of the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains reveals 36 site components from 28 sites containing ground stone tools, including nine Cody Complex examples. Much of the ground stone use appears related to generalized activity, as few items have functionally specific forms. However, the Cody components have an unexpectedly higher number of grooved abraders as compared to other complexes. We note that Paleoindian examples contain wider u-shaped grooves compared to Late Prehistoric/Protohistoric abraders related to arrow production. We argue that Paleoindian abraders
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Goodale, Nathan Buchanan, Ian Kuijt, and Bill Finlayson. "Results from the 2001 Excavations at Dhra', Jordan: Chipped Stone Technology, Typology, and Intra-Assemblage Variability." Paléorient 28, no. 1 (2002): 125–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/paleo.2002.4742.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Chipped Stone Technology"

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Ataman, Kathryn. "Chipped stone assemblage from Can Hasan III : a study in typology, technology and function." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.394823.

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McCartney, Carole. "The analysis of variability in 'simple core technologies' : case studies of chipped stone technology in post-PPN assemblages from the Levant." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/20667.

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Flake based chipped stone assemblages demonstrating simple reduction methods and techniques dominate post-PPN periods throughout the Levant. These 'simple core technologies' are dismissed as 'ad-hoc', simply representative of a devolution in technological progress following the sophistication of the PPN Naviform blade technology. Few assemblages with simple core technologies have been analyzed in detail providing no real understanding of the shift from production of prismatic blades to highly variable flake products. Recent archaeological theory asks us to discover variability generated by ind
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Kaldahl, Eric James 1971. "Ecological and consumer group variation in expedient chipped stone technology of the Pueblo period: An exploratory study in the Silver Creek drainage, Arizona." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/278495.

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Lithic raw material variety and abundance reveals the technological utility of different source materials from 20 chipped stone surface collections in the Silver Creek area of east-central Arizona, from sites dating between the 9th and 14th centuries. A rich raw material environment obviates distance-from-source constraints, freeing debitage analysis from traditional spatial interpretations regarding the intensity of reduction. Rather the intensity of reduction and the frequency of distinct material types in each assemblage reflects the impact of social organization, community size, exchange a
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Galhardo, Danilo Alexandre. "Tecnologia lítica: estudo da variabilidade em sítios líticos do nordeste do estado de São Paulo." Universidade de São Paulo, 2010. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/71/71131/tde-30042010-163940/.

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O objetivo do presente trabalho é o estudo da tecnologia de produção artefatual lítica lascada e suas cadeias operatórias em sítios líticos a céu aberto localizados no nordeste do Estado de São Paulo. Inicialmente foi levantada a bibliografia amadora e especializada dentro da área de estudo, dedicando atenção às tecnologias líticas produtivas e procurando nelas tópicos como preferências locacionais dos sítios líticos e os tipos de matérias-primas e seus suportes; em outras palavras, as economias de matéria-prima levadas a cabo pelos artesãos. Todo o aporte teórico-metodológico do conceito de c
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Bélanger, Jonathan. "Étude technologique et morphologique de la cornéenne dans le sud du Québec : le cas de la carrière préhistorique du mont Royal (BjFj-97) à Montréal." Thèse, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/9109.

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Le site de la carrière du mont Royal (BjFj-97), découvert en 1993 par Yvon Codère et inventorié en 1997 par l’équipe d’Ethnoscop Inc., constitue une énigme archéologique intéressante pour quiconque s’intéresse à la préhistoire de l’île de Montréal et de sa région adjacente. Lors des activités archéologiques de 1997, quelques idées furent émises quant à son affiliation chronologique et sa nature, suggérant une occupation remontant à l’Archaïque terminal (4000 à 3000 AA) orientée vers l’extraction et la transformation de la cornéenne, une pierre métamorphique résultant de la transformation du su
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Book chapters on the topic "Chipped Stone Technology"

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Rollefson, Gary O. "Prehistoric Chipped-Stone Technology." In Near Eastern Archaeology. Penn State University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/j.ctv1bxh52q.42.

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Kadowaki, Seiji, Farhad Guliyev, and Yoshihiro Nishiaki. "Chipped Stone Technology of the Earliest Agricultural Village in the Southern Caucasus:." In Proceedings of the 9th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvc76zz7.56.

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Carr, Philip J., and Andrew P. Bradbury. "Stone Tool Life Meets Everyday Life." In Investigating the Ordinary. University Press of Florida, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683400219.003.0010.

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Often, the lives of people in the past were constrained by their basic everyday needs and what they needed to accomplish. This chapter considers both how people conducted certain minimal activities everyday to meet those needs and how those activities left traces in the archaeological record. An Organization of Technology model articulates the archaeological record (artifact form and distribution) not only through activities and technological strategy but also through other considerations. The authors explore the possibilities of how examining the everyday life of an individual in the past just from discarded Lithics is possible: from the stone’s first procurement for the manufacture of chipped stone tools, to the stone’s use in various activities before it’s either (eventually) discarded or reused, to the stone’s finally recovery by archaeologists.
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Verschuur, Gerrit L. "The Birth of the Earth." In Impact! Oxford University Press, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195101058.003.0008.

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As we apprehend the likelihood of an almost inconceivable cosmic impact occurring again at some time in the future, it is worth considering how we got to be here in the first place. The quest for an explanation of our origins is, of course, as old as the ability of humans to conceptualize questions and consider answers. Our species has probably been able to do that for hundreds of thousands of years, since well before evidence of its ability to comprehend was etched in cave paintings, perhaps back in an age when stone tools began to be patiently chipped out of flint rock. But when questions about origins were first hesitatingly formulated, answers could only be invented. There was no way any human beings could have known back then what we know now about the nature of the universe and its contents. Our collective ability to understand the world in which we live received an enormous impetus starting about 400 years ago when the scientific method for approaching reality was first practiced. That was when it was discovered that through experiment and observation, and above all through measurement, it became possible to unravel the secrets of the universe. That was when Galileo first pointed a telescope at the heavens, William Gilbert experimented with natural magnets, and Johannes Kepler discovered the laws of planetary motion. Since then, our species has gathered a stunning new perspective on the nature of this universe and its origins, a perspective that has relegated to the back burner of human thought most of the fantasies that have so long held sway over the human mind. As a result of the high technology that has emerged during this century, scientists have learned to probe into the depths of matter and into the farthest reaches of space. In the course of this exploration, astronomers, in particular, have learned that the universe has its roots in awesome violence and that the birth of the earth and moon were accompanied by what, from our perspective, would be considered catastrophic events. Were anything remotely similar to occur today, all life on earth would be instantly terminated.
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