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E-book
Author Kościuk-Załupka, Julia

Title The Usage of Ochre at the Verge of Neolithisation from the near East to the Carpathian Basin
Published Oxford : Archaeopress, 2023

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Description 1 online resource (232 p.)
Contents Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright page -- Contents Page -- List of Figures -- Figure 1. The examples of ochre fragments, derived from geological layers, bearing yellow and red hues (photo by author). -- Figure 2. Map of Levantine sites mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 3. Map of the Turkish sites mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 4. Map of the discussed sites in the Balkans and Southern Carpathian Basin (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author)
Figure 5. Map of the Carpathian sites, mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 6. Map of the Levantine outcrops mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 7. The outcrop in the vicinity of At Tafilah, Jordan (photo: author). -- Figure 8. Map of the Anatolian outcrops mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 9. Ochre outcrop, spotted in the vicinity of Aksaray (photo: author)
Figure 10. Map of the Balkan outcrops mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 11. The ferruginous mineralisation documented in the vicinity of Gradetz, Bulgaria (photo: author). -- Figure 12. Map of the Carpathian outcrops mentioned in the text (credits: Google Earth, pins marked by author). -- Figure 13. The ferruginous mineralisation noticed between Lovas and Alsóörs, Hungary (photo: author). -- Figure 14. Graph of the cluster analysis conducted for the data obtained for the archaeological samples from Israel
Cophenetic correlation coefficiency= 0.9557. -- Figure 15. The graph of the PCA (principal component analysis) for the data, obtained for the archaeological samples from Israel, with six groups marked. -- Figure 16. Cluster analysis graph, obtained for the results of the archaeological and natural samples from Turkey -- cophenetic correlation coefficiency = 0.9744. -- Figure 17. The PCA graph for the archaeological and natural samples from Turkey. -- Figure 18. Cluster analysis graph obtained for the natural samples from Bulgaria -- cophenetic correlation coefficiency= 0.9635
Figure 19. PCA graph obtained for the results of natural samples from Bulgaria, with eight groups marked. -- Figure 20. Cluster analysis graph, obtained for the natural samples from Romania -- cophenetic correlation coefficiency= 0.9539. -- Figure 21. PCA analysis graph, obtained for the natural samples from Romania. -- Figure 22. Cluster analysis graph, obtained for the archaeological and natural samples from Serbia -- cophenetic correlation coefficiency = 0.9355. -- Figure 23. PCA graph, obtained for the archaeological and natural samples from Serbia, with five groups marked
Figure 24. Pictures taken under the optical microscope for the samples from Bükkábrány-Bánya VII: A -- sample 323-338
Summary This volume explores the cultural meaning of ochre among the societies of the Late Epipalaeolithic/Mesolithic and the Early Neolithic from the Levant to the Carpathian Basin
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Subject Art, Prehistoric -- Social aspects
Ocher.
Archaeology.
ocher (inorganic material)
archaeology.
Antiquities
Archaeology
Ocher
SUBJECT Middle East -- Antiquities. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh90004414
Pannonia Region -- Antiquities
Subject Europe -- Pannonia Region
Middle East
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781803273372
1803273372