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ePub Imaging Adornos: Classifications and Iconography of Saladoid Adornos from St Vincent, West Indies (British Archaeological Reports) download

by Iosif Moravetz

ePub Imaging Adornos: Classifications and Iconography of Saladoid Adornos from St Vincent, West Indies (British Archaeological Reports) download
Author:
Iosif Moravetz
ISBN13:
978-1841718811
ISBN:
1841718815
Language:
Publisher:
British Archaeological Reports (December 15, 2005)
Category:
Subcategory:
Social Sciences
ePub file:
1355 kb
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1488 kb
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oceedings{, title {Imaging adornos : classification and iconography of Saladoid .

oceedings{, title {Imaging adornos : classification and iconography of Saladoid adornos from St. Vincent, West Indies}, author {Iosif Moravetz}, year {2005} }. Iosif Moravetz. St Vincent's (Lesser Antilles, Caribbean) archaeological record is rich in images depicted by a variety of fired clay artefacts

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Are you sure you want to remove Imaging Adornos from your list? Imaging Adornos. Classification and Iconography of Saladoid Adornos from St. Vincent, West Indies (Bar International). Published January 2005 by Archaeopress.

This article aims to correct a number of archaeological misconceptions issuing from the Taíno-Carib dichotomy engrained within the discipline.

Island Rhythms: The Web of Social Relationships and Interaction Networks in the Lesser Antillean Archipelago between 400 . This article aims to correct a number of archaeological misconceptions issuing from the Taíno-Carib dichotomy engrained within the discipline. We examine the evidence for Late Ceramic Age (AD 800–1500) interactions between communities of the Greater and Lesser Antilles.

Founded in 1974, the BAR series is the largest series of academic archaeology in the world, covering all major aspects of academic archaeology worldwide

Archaeological Investigations on St Vincent and the Grenadines, West Indies. A Listing of Amerindian Settlements on the Island of Carriacou in the Southern Grenadines and a Report on the Most Important of These, Grand Bay, in Tekakis, .

Archaeological Investigations on St Vincent and the Grenadines, West Indies. The William L. Bryant Foundation American Studies. Report No. 8. Orlando: William Bryant Foundation. Vargas Arenas, I. and Sanoja Obediante, M. (ed. Proceedings of the 11th Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, Puerto Rico 1985. Fort de France, Martinique: International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, 242-259.

The West Indies were first settled from South America around 7,000 years ago and .

The Saladoid takes its name from the type site in the Orinoco valley of Venezuela where it is thought the people who brought ceramics to the West Indies originated. The earliest known Saladoid sites are in Montserrat, St. Martin, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. The Saladoid period is marked by horticulture, hunting and fishing, permanent villages, and pottery.

Latest volume of Archaeological Reports. Page/Article number: low to high Page/Article number: high to low Title Type Online publication date.

Cambrian Archaeological Association.

British Archaeological Reports. The British Archaeological Reports (BAR) is a book series of the archaeology of Britain published by BAR Publishing. The British Archaeological Reports (BAR) is a book series of the archaeology of Britain published by BAR Publishing YouTube Encyclopedic.

St Vincent's (Lesser Antilles, Caribbean) archaeological record is rich in images depicted by a variety of fired clay artefacts. Prominent among them are small modelled and incised zoomorphic heads known as "adornos" that decorated the rims, handles and exteriors of pottery vessels made by the first agriculturalists on the island (the Saladoid culture from the Venezuela area by 250 BC). This work sets out to contribute a systematic study of both a formal and descriptive classification, as well as an iconographic analysis of the basic images represented. Includes appendices of data.