World Prehistory and Archaeology

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology
    By Michael Chazan

    ... NY; (left): Werner Forman/Art Resource, NY; Page 297: The Print Page 298: De Agostini Picture Library/G. Dagli Orti/ Page 299: Courtesy of Stanley Klassen.; Page 300 Kenneth Garrett/DanitaDelimont/Newscom; Page 302 (top): Kenneth ...

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology: Pathways Through Time
    By Michael Chazan

    Cherry, J. “Polities and Palaces: Some Problems in Minoan State For– mation.” In Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-Political Change, edited by C. Renfrew and J. Cherry, 19–46. ... Clark, J. D., and S. A. Brandt, eds.

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology: Pathways Through Time
    By Michael Chazan

    In 1732, the French naturalist Antoine de Jussieu compared the thunderstones with stone tools from the American Islands and ... In 1797, John Frere reported on the discovery of elephant remains together with stone tools (what he called ...

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology: Pathways Through Time
    By Michael Chazan

    In the final configuration , one set of bluestones was arranged in the shape of a honhoe on the inside of the trilithon , and another was erected between the trilithons and the Saren Circle . Two concentric rings of pits were excavated ...

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology
    By Michael Chazan

    Grayson, Donald K. The Establishment of Human Antiquity. New York: Academic Press, 1983. Grayson, Donald K., and David J. Meltzer. “Clovis Hunting and Large Mammal Extinction: A Critical Review of the Evidence.

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology: Pathways Through Time
    By Michael Chazan

    ... 13.7 Kenneth Garrett/National Geographic Stock; 13.8 Illustration by David Carballo, used with permission; 13.9 Look at Sciences; 13.10 Peabody Museum, Harvard University; 13.11 KENNETH GARRETT/National Geographic Creative; ...

  • World Prehistory and Archaeology: Books a La Carte Edition
    By Michael Chazan

    The cornerstone of this book presents an integrated picture of prehistory as an active process of discovery--where methodological issues are not relegated to the opening chapters alone.