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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven :Yale University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9959235879202883
    Format: 1 online resource (363 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 0-300-19856-6
    Content: This book was inspired by the author’s discovery of an extraordinary cache of letters from a soldier who was killed on the Western Front during the First World War. The soldier was his grandfather, and the letters had been tucked away, unread and unmentioned for many decades. Intrigued by the heartbreak and history of these family letters, Fletcher sought out the correspondence of other British soldiers who had volunteered for the fight against Germany. This resulting volume offers a vivid account of the physical and emotional experiences of seventeen British soldiers whose letters survive. Drawn from different regiments, social backgrounds, and areas of England and Scotland, they include twelve officers and five ordinary “Tommies.”   The book explores the training, journey to France, fear, shellshock, and life in the trenches as well as the leisure, love, and home leave the soldiers dreamed of. Fletcher discusses the psychological responses of 17- and 18-year-old men facing appalling realities and considers the particular pressures on those who survived their fallen comrades. While acknowledging the horror and futility the soldiers of the Great War experienced, the author shows another side to the story, focusing new attention on the loyal comradeship, robust humor, and strong morale that uplifted the men at the Front and created a powerful bond among them.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Front matter -- , Contents -- , List of Main Characters -- , Illustrations and Maps -- , Preface and Acknowledgements -- , Prologue -- , CHAPTER 1. 'Quiet Earnest Faces' The National Cause -- , CHAPTER 2. 'Glad to Go' Patriotic Idealism -- , CHAPTER 3. 'Ready to Go' Training -- , CHAPTER 4. 'Write as Often as You Can' Letters and Parcels -- , CHAPTER 5. 'Sticking it Out' Fear and Shell Shock -- , CHAPTER 6. 'A Certain Sense of Safety with Him' Leadership -- , CHAPTER 7. 'Such a Helpless Lot of Babes' Care for the Men -- , CHAPTER 8. 'Drops of his Blood on my Hand' Horror and Endurance -- , CHAPTER 9. 'I Merely Did my Duty' Discipline and Morale -- , CHAPTER 10. 'Very Gallant in Every Way' Early Losses -- , CHAPTER 11. 'Blighty, oh Blighty in about a Week' Leave -- , CHAPTER 12. 'I Am Serene, Unafraid' The Somme -- , CHAPTER 13. 'Capable of Finishing the Job' Battles of 1917-1918 -- , CHAPTER 14. 'The Men Cannot Grasp It' Armistice -- , CHAPTER 15. 'We Will Remember Them' Remembrance and Commemoration -- , CHAPTER 16. 'All the Best and Choicest and Unblemished' War Heroes -- , CHAPTER 17. 'Among the Happiest Years I Have Ever Spent' Survivors -- , Epilogue The Great War in Perspective -- , Notes -- , Bibliography -- , Index , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-300-19553-2
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-299-84130-9
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Santa Barbara, California :Greenwood, an imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC, | London :Bloomsbury Publishing (UK),
    UID:
    almafu_9961448668902883
    Format: 1 online resource (xxxiv, 238 pages).
    ISBN: 979-82-16-03927-3 , 979-82-16-16868-3 , 1-4408-5435-1
    Series Statement: Historical explorations of literature
    Content: Focusing on the war on the Western and Southern fronts and inclusive of material from all sides of the conflict, this book explores the novels and poems of significant soldier-writers alongside important contemporary historical documents. It provides context and explores thematic elements with primary source documents, such as diaries, letters, memoirs, newspaper and journal articles, speeches, and government publications.
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Series Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction and Background -- Chronology -- 1 Under Fire (Henri Barbusse, 1916) -- Synopsis of Under Fire -- Historical Background of Under Fire: The First Years of the Western Front in the First World War -- About Henri Barbusse -- Why We Read Under Fire -- Historical Explorations of Under Fire -- Documenting Under Fire -- Trench Warfare: The War of Attrition -- Document: General Erich von Falkenhayn, "Christmas Letter" to Kaiser Wilhelm II (1915) -- Document: Field-Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, Letter to Newspapers (May 1916) -- Document: Paul Painlevé, Speech on Failure of the French Army (July 7, 1917) -- Document: Field-Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, Order to Troops (April 11, 1918) -- Officers and Soldiers -- Document: Selections from the Notebooks of Corporal Louis Barthas (1915-1916) -- Document: Selections from the Diary of Arthur Graeme West (1916) -- Document: E. A. Mackintosh, "In Memoriam: Private David Sutherland" (1918) -- The Enemy -- Document: Fritz Kreisler, Four Weeks in the Trenches (1915) -- Document: Selections from the Notebooks of Corporal Louis Barthas (1915-1916) -- Document: Ernst Jünger, Storm of Steel (1920) -- Suggested Readings -- 2 All Quiet on the Western Front (Erich Maria Remarque, 1929) -- Synopsis of All Quiet on the Western Front -- Historical Background of All Quiet on the Western Front: The Last Years of the Western Front in the First World War -- About Erich Maria Remarque -- Why We Read All Quiet on the Western Front -- Historical Explorations of All Quiet on the Western Front -- Documenting All Quiet on the Western Front -- Governments at War -- Document: German Government, "Censorship Guidelines (Supplement)" (November 9, 1914). , Document: UK Government, "Defence of the Realm Consolidation Act" (November 27, 1914) -- Documents: U.S. Government, "Espionage Act" (1917) and "Sedition Act" (1918) -- Comradery -- Document: Selections from the Notebooks of Corporal Louis Barthas (1914-1918) -- Document: Siegfried Sassoon, Two Poems Written at Craiglockhart War Hospital, "Sick Leave" and "Banishment" (1918) -- Document: Ernst Jünger, Storm of Steel (1920) -- Survival: Masculinity and Manliness -- Document: Sophus Lange, Letters (1914-1915) -- Document: Franz Kreisler, Four Weeks in the Trenches (1915) -- Document: Ernst Jünger, Storm of Steel (1920) -- Suggested Readings -- 3 Poetry of the First World War: Rupert Brooke, "The Soldier" -- John McCrae, "In Flanders Field" -- Siegfried Sassoon, "The Redeemer" -- Wilfred Owen, "Dolce et Decorum Est -- Synopses of the Poems -- Historical Background of the Poems: "Oh, What a Literary War": Writers and the Western Front in the First World War -- About the Poets -- Why We Read These Poems -- Historical Explorations of the Poems -- Documenting the Poems -- Recruitment and Propaganda -- Document: Rupert Brooke, "Peace" (1915) -- Document: UK Government, Bryce Committee Report on "Alleged German Outrages" (1915) -- Document: UK Government, "Women of Britain" Recruitment Poster (1915) -- Document: German Government, "The Better Part of Valor" Leaflet (1918) -- Objection to War and Disillusionment -- Document: German Government, "Secret Decree of the Prussian Ministry of War of November 7, 1915, on Intensified Measures to Suppress the Bourgeois-Pacifist Anti-War Movement" (November 7, 1915) -- Document: Bertrand Russell, Justice in War-Time (1916) -- Document: Selections from the Diary of Arthur Graeme West (1916) -- Document: Lord Lansdowne, "Letter to the Editor of the Daily Telegraph" (November 23, 1917) -- Moral Obligation of the Writer. , Document: Rudyard Kipling, "As They Tested Our Fathers" (September 8, 1914) -- Document: George Bernard Shaw, "Common Sense about the War" (November 14, 1914) -- Document: Siegfried Sassoon, "Finished with the War: A Soldier's Declaration" (1917) -- Documents: Siegfried Sassoon, "Introduction" and Wilfred Owen, "Preface" in Poems of Wilfred Owen (1920) -- Wilfred Owen, "Preface" (1920) -- Documents: Rudyard Kipling, Three Two-Line Poems from "Epitaphs of War," in The Years Between (1919) and Siegfried Sassoon, "On Passing the New Menin Gate" (1928) -- Siegfried Sassoon, "On Passing the Menin Gate" (1928) -- Suggested Readings -- 4 A Farewell to Arms (Ernest Hemingway, 1929) -- Synopsis of A Farewell to Arms -- Historical Background of A Farewell to Arms: The Italo-Austrian Front in the First World War -- About Ernest Hemingway -- Why We Read A Farewell to Arms -- Historical Explorations of A Farewell to Arms -- Documenting A Farewell to Arms -- Volunteers -- Ambulance Drivers -- Document: Henry Sheahan (aka Henry Beston), A Volunteer Poilu (1916) -- Document: G.M. Trevelyan, Scenes from Italy's War (1919) -- Nurses -- Document: Enid Bagnold, Diary without Dates (1918) -- Document: Vera Brittain, Testament of Youth (1933) -- Women at War -- Document: Selections from the Diary of Isabelle Rimbaud (1914) -- Document: Laura de Gozdawa Turczynowicz, When the Prussians Came to Poland (1916) -- Document: Rebecca West, "Women of England" (1916) -- Document: Vera Brittain, Testament of Youth (1933) -- Shell Shock -- Document: Thomas Salmon, M.D., Care and Treatment of Mental Disorders and War Neuroses ("Shell Shock") in the British Army (1917) -- Document: Siegfried Sassoon, "Repression of War Experience" (1918) -- Document: W.H.R. Rivers, M.D., "Repression of War Experience" (1918) -- Document: Lewis Yealland, M.D., Hysterical Disorders of Warfare (1918). , Suggested Readings -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4408-5434-3
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    almafu_9961058788302883
    Format: ill
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-80327-073-X
    Series Statement: Proceedings of the UISPP World Congress Series
    Content: New Advances in the History of Archaeology presents the papers from three sessions organised by the History of Archaeology Scientific Commission at the 18th UISPP World Congress (Paris, June 2018). The first session, From stratigraphy to stratigraphic excavation in pre- and protohistoric archaeology organised by Massimo Tarantini and Alessandro Guidi, reviews the development of stratigraphical methods in archaeology in many European countries. The second session, Epistemology, History and Philosophy of Science: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the History of Archaeology, organised by Sophie A. de Beaune and Oscar Moro Abadia, is characterised by different examples of intersections between archaeology and other disciplines like history and the philosophy of science. Finally, four papers discuss the development of different types of interdisciplinarity in Europe and South America. These were presented in the third session, Archaeology and interdisciplinarity, from the 19th century to present-day research, organized by Laura Coltofean, Géraldine. Delley, Margarita Díaz-Andreu and Marc-Antoine Kaeser.
    Note: Cover -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Démarche d'historien et de préhistorien ou comment pallier les manques dans l'étude -- Figure 1. Carte de localisation des sites paléolithiques incluant les sites mentionnés dans cette étude : n°7 et n° 8 © Notter in Rossoni-Notter et al. 2016. -- Figure 2. Carte des sites des Balzi Rossi (Vintimille, Ligurie, Italie). © Notter d'après Lumley et Barral 1976. -- Figure 3. Première page d'un carnet de note de la grotte du Prince (Barmal del Ponte) tenu par Léonce de Villeneuve 1899-1900. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P. de Monaco). -- Figure 4. Troisième Journal de la grotte du Prince (Barma del Ponte), Coupes, décembre 1897, page 9. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 5. Extrait du Journal de la grotte des Enfants. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 6. Exemple d'étiquetage d'une pièce lithique, pastille bleue à la grotte du Prince, Foyer C. -- Figure 7. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de l'abri Lorenzi (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée de 1920. Archives du Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. -- Figure 8. Dessin du dernier biface découvert à la grotte de l'Observatoire (Monaco) en 1919. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Figure 9. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de la grotte du Cavillon (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie) et présenté par foyers au sein d'une vitrine du premier Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. Photographies datée de 1920 et d'aujourd'hui. -- Figure 10. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant du Foyer A de la grotte du Prince (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée du 5 décembre 1896. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Santa Verna in 1911 and 2015: re-examining pioneering stratigraphic excavation methods. , Figure 1. Map of the Central Mediterranean region showing the location of the Maltese Islands and the site of Santa Verna. -- Figure 2. Portrait of Thomas Ashby 1874-1931 (BSR copyright). -- Figure 4. Santa Verna in 2015. -- Figure 5. Sub-adult skeleton exposed at Santa Verna in 1911 (Bradley 1912). -- Figure 6. Measured plan, profile and section drawing of Santa Verna, Gozo (Ashby et al. 1913). -- Figure 7. Detail illustrating the vertical section through deposits at Santa Verna. -- Figure 8. Ashby and Bradley's 1911 sondage re-excavated in 2015. -- Figure 9. Structural features at Santa Verna in 1911 (left) and 2015 (right). -- Figure 10. Section drawings from the 2015 excavations at Santa Verna. Compare with Figure 7. -- Figure 11. Bayesian model for the sequence of radiocarbon dates associated with the Santa Verna 'temple' megalithic building. -- The multiple roots of an innovative excavation: G.A. Blanc at the Romanelli Cave -- Figure 1. Gian Alberto Blanc (1879-1966), on the right side, illustrates the cave to a group of visitors in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 2. Grotta Romanelli view from the sea in 1914 (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 3. Numerous and beautiful illustrative plates published in Blanc 1928 demonstrate that the finds were rigorously distinguished by their layer of provenience. -- Figure 4. G.A. Blanc carried out microscopic observation to verify the hypothesis of an aeolian origin for the sands found in Romanelli Cave -- several microphotographs were published (from Blanc 1928). -- Figure 5. Paolo Graziosi (1906-1988), on the right side, at Romanelli cave in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 6. ???. , Paul Vouga à La Tène et à Auvernier : la stratigraphie à l'épreuve de la typologie -- Figure 1. Position du site de La Tène, dans la baie d'Épagnier, à l'extrémité nord-est du lac de Neuchâtel, près de la rivière Thielle. Aujourd'hui canalisée, celle-ci déverse les eaux du lac de Neuchâtel dans celui de Bienne. Photographie B. Arnold. Inf -- Figure 2. Paul Vouga (1880-1940) à l'âge de 25 ans environ. Professeur d'histoire et de français à l'école de Commerce de Neuchâtel, il s'occupe en outre, en dehors de son poste et sans rémunération, de la collection archéologique du Musée historique et d -- Figure 3. En 11 ans, les fouilles officielles de La Tène ont touché une surface de 170 mètres de long, par 25 à 40 de largeur et jusqu'à plus de 4 mètres de profondeur. Commencées en aval du pont Desor, elles vident progressivement l'intégralité du comble -- Figure 4. Les fouilles progressent par tranchées perpendiculaires au chenal comblé de l'ancienne Thielle, mettant en évidence de spectaculaires coupes. La Tène, 28.09.1911. Archives du Laténium. -- Figure 5. Du relevé de détail au simple profil, les coupes stratigraphiques du site de La Tène ont été inégalement documentées durant les fouilles officielles. Archives du Laténium. Infographie OPAN/J. Spielmann. -- Figure 6. Le plan du site que donne Vouga dans sa monographie reflète sa conception du site, où tout est contemporain. (Vouga 1923). -- Figure 7. Paul Vouga et la stratigraphie néolithique d'Auvernier/La Saunerie, le 20 sept. 1919. Photographie Samuel Perret, Archives du Laténium. -- Pioneers of archaeological stratigraphical techniques -- Figure 1. Giorgio Buchner (1914-2005). -- Figure 2. Vivara island, in red point the Buchner's trenches. -- Figure 3. Luigi Bernabò Brea (1910-1999). -- Figure 4. Salvatore Maria Puglisi (1912-1985). , Figure 5. Grotta delle Felci, Buchner's documentation of section South of principal trench IIPU excavation (1941). -- Figure 6. Grotta delle Felci_IIPU Multidisciplinary Research Team: Luigi Cardini (1898-1971), first at right and then Buchner, Blanc and Settepassi. -- Figure 7. Papesca -- obsidian tools found by Buchner (1949). -- Figure 8. Alfred Rittmann (1893-1980). -- Figure 9. Buchner at Punta Milazzese settlement (Panarea) and A& -- B huts (from Mastelloni 2020, p. 184, fig. 2). -- Figure 10. Poliochni, Lemnos. A stratigraphical section in the Room 819, Bernabò Brea excavation 1936 (Archive of the Italian Archaeological School at Athens). -- Figure 11. Poliochni, Lemnos. Stratigraphical section of Room 864 by Bernabò Brea 1952 (after Bernabò Brea 1964). -- Figure 12. Arene Candide, excavations 1940-42, main NE stratigraphic section (courtesy Istituto Italiano di Paleontologia Umana [ISIPU]). -- Figure 13. Arene Candide, field sketch of the upper part of the same section by Bernabò Brea (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 14. A. Arene Candide, 1970 campaign -- stratigraphic sketch by Cardini B. Stratigraphic sketch of 1968 Grotta Giovanna C excavations (from Pianese 1968-69). -- Figure 16. Arene Candide, sketch plan of part of the Epigravettian graveyard by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 17. Arene Candide, photograph of grave VIII by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 18. Grotta Corrugi, Pachino (Sr), plan and stratigraphical section by Bernabò Brea 1945 (after Bernabò Brea 1949). -- Figure 19. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the Insula IV (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 20. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the area oh Ausonian hut Alpha II (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 21. Scheme with the two 'parallel' lives of the two scholars. , Figure 22. Paolo Orsi (1859-1935). -- Abstraction in Archaeological Stratigraphy: a Pyrenean Lineage of Innovation -- Figure 1. Map of the archaeological sites and municipalities mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. The method used to record the position of objects by (Caso Andrade and Marquina, 1938: p. 269). -- Figure 4. Graphic representation of the Cartesian grid used during the excavation of the Tute de Carrelore site by Laplace. The dots show the location of the objects uncovered (Laplace-Jauretche 1949: 228). -- Figure 5. Illustration of two methods to record the location of an object during an excavation: above the surface level with reference to the plan Om -- below the surface, with reference to the plan of the nm triangle (Laplace 1971, p. 228). -- Figure 7. Annual cumulative sum of Laplace-Jauretche and Méroc 1954a, and Laplace 1971, citations (data: Google Scholar). -- Figure 8. An 'analytical formula' representing the stratigraphy of the Cueva de Arrillor. The sign [] represents the stratigraphic structure, = the superposition of structures, {} the inclusion of structures, _ the structure in the case of composed expres -- Primitif, précurseur, contemporain -- Figure 1. Typologie des approches modernes de l'art paléolithique. -- Compelling image-worlds -- Figure 1. Selection of lithic imagery from the French subsample. (1) Diagram of idealized technological relationships including débitage modes, blank shapes, tool types and object frequencies (Bazile and Boccaccio 2008: fig. 26) -- (2) artefact drawing with -- Figure 2. Selection of lithic imagery from the Anglophone subsample. (1) Artefact photographs of specific point types with added contour lines and scar outlines (Blinkhorn et al. 2015: fig. 6) -- (2) graph conveying the results of a discriminant function an. , Figure 3. Comparison of absolute frequency values of image sub-types recorded in the French and Anglophone sample. For an explanation of sub-type IDs, refer to Appendix 2.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-80327-072-1
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Book
    Book
    Aldershot [u.a.] : Ashgate
    UID:
    gbv_563189460
    Format: XXVI, 226 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 9780754672883
    Series Statement: Digital research in the arts and humanities
    Content: The imaging of historical documents / Andrew Prescott -- Restoration and manuscript archaeology / Meg Twycross -- Representations of sources and data : working with exceptions to hierarchy in historical documents / Donald Spaeth -- Finding needles in haystacks : data-mining in distributed historical datasets / Fabio Ciravegna ... [et al.] -- Digital searching and the re-formulation of historical knowledge / Tim Hitchcock -- Using computer-assisted qualitative data-analysis software in historical research / Caroline Bowden -- Stepping back from the trench edge : an archaeological perspective on the development of standards for recording and publication / Julian Richards and Catherine Hardman -- Which? What? When? : on the virtual representation of time / Manfred Thaller -- In the kingdom of the blind : visualization and e-science in archaeology, the arts and humanities / Vince Gaffney -- Using geographical information systems to explore space and time in the humanities / Ian Gregory -- Spatial technologies in archaeology in the twenty-first century / Paul Cripps -- Digital artefacts : possibilities and purpose / David Arnold -- "Oh, to make the boards to speak! There's a task!" : towards a poetics of paradata / Richard Beacham -- Electronic corpora of artefacts : the example of the corpus of romanesque sculpture in Britain and Ireland / Anna Bentkowska-Kafel -- Conclusion : virtual representations of the past : new research methods, tools and communities of practice / Lorna Hughes
    Note: These papers were presented at The Expert Seminar, held in Sheffield, England, on 19-21 April 2006. - Includes bibliographical references and index , The imaging of historical documents / Andrew Prescott -- Restoration and manuscript archaeology / Meg Twycross -- Representations of sources and data : working with exceptions to hierarchy in historical documents / Donald Spaeth -- Finding needles in haystacks : data-mining in distributed historical datasets / Fabio Ciravegna ... [et al.] -- Digital searching and the re-formulation of historical knowledge / Tim Hitchcock -- Using computer-assisted qualitative data-analysis software in historical research / Caroline Bowden -- Stepping back from the trench edge : an archaeological perspective on the development of standards for recording and publication / Julian Richards and Catherine Hardman -- Which? What? When? : on the virtual representation of time / Manfred Thaller -- In the kingdom of the blind : visualization and e-science in archaeology, the arts and humanities / Vince Gaffney -- Using geographical information systems to explore space and time in the humanities / Ian Gregory -- Spatial technologies in archaeology in the twenty-first century / Paul Cripps -- Digital artefacts : possibilities and purpose / David Arnold -- "Oh, to make the boards to speak! There's a task!" : towards a poetics of paradata / Richard Beacham -- Electronic corpora of artefacts : the example of the corpus of romanesque sculpture in Britain and Ireland / Anna Bentkowska-Kafel -- Conclusion : virtual representations of the past : new research methods, tools and communities of practice / Lorna Hughes
    Language: English
    Subjects: History
    RVK:
    Keywords: Geschichtswissenschaft ; Methode ; Datenverarbeitung ; Virtuelle Rekonstruktion ; Archäologie ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift
    Author information: Greengrass, Mark 1949-
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington, D.C. :American Geophysical Union,
    UID:
    almafu_9959327916202883
    Format: 1 online resource
    ISBN: 9781118664094 , 1118664094
    Series Statement: Geophysical monograph series ; 27
    Note: Seismotectonics of the Northern Philippine Island Arc / Michael W Hamburger, Richard K Cardwell, Bryan L Isacks -- Origin and History of the South China Sea Basin / Brian Taylor, Dennis E Hayes -- The Tectonics of Northward Propagating Subduction Along Eastern Luzon, Philippine Islands / Stephen D Lewis, Dennis E Hayes -- Paleomagnetism of Luzon / M Fuller, R McCabe, I S Williams, J Almasco, R Y Encina, A S Zanoria, J A Wolfe -- Geology of the Zambales Range, Luzon, Philippine Islands: Ophiolite Derived from an Island Arc-Back Arc Basin Pair / James W Hawkins, Cynthia A Evans -- Original Setting and Emplacement History of the Zambales Ophiolite, Luzon, Phillipines, from Stratigraphic Evidence / W J Schweller, D E Karig, S B Bachman -- Petrological and Geochemical Documentation of Ocean Floor Metamorphism in the Zambales Ophiolite, Philippines / E E Geary, R W Kay -- Structural Lineaments and Neogene Volcanism in Southwestern Luzon / John A Wolfe, Stephen Self -- The Geology and Geochemistry of Philippine Porphyry Copper Deposits / Allan F Divis -- Seismicity Associated with Back Arc Crustal Spreading in the Central Mariana Trough / Donald M Hussong, John B Sinton -- Crustal Structure of a Short Length Transform Fault in the Central Mariana Trough / John B Sinton, Donald M Hussong -- Seafloor Magnetotelluric Soundings in the Mariana Island Arc Area / J H Filloux -- Marine Geology of the Forearc Region, Southern Mariana Island Arc / D E Karig, Beverly Ranken -- Hypothetical Model for the Bending of the Mariana Arc / Robert McCabe, Seiya Uyeda -- Gabbroic and Ultramafic Rocks from the Mariana Trench: An Island Arc Ophiolite / S H Bloomer, J W Hawkins -- Temporal Relationships Between Back Arc Basin Formation and Arc Volcanism with Special Reference to the Philippine Sea / D E Karig -- Convergence at the Caroline-Pacific Plate Boundary: Collision and Subduction / K A Hegarty, J K Weissel, D E Hayes -- Chronology of Volcanic Events in the Eastern Philippine Sea / Arend Meijer, Mark Reagan, Howard Ellis, Muhammad Shafiqullah, John Sutter, Paul Damon, Stanley Kling -- Collision Processes in the Northern Molucca Sea / Gregory F Moore, Eli A Silver -- The Halmahera Island Arc, Molucca Sea Collision Zone, Indonesia: A Geochemical Survey / J D Morris, P A Jezek, S R Hart, J B Hill -- Paleomagnetism and Age Determination of Cretaceous Rocks from Gyeongsang Basin, Korean Peninsula / Yo-Ichiro Otofuji, Jin Yong Oh, Takao Hirajima, Kyung Duck Min, Sadao Sasajima.
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books.
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  • 6
    UID:
    almahu_BV042135168
    Format: 470 S.
    Edition: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 978-1-4725-2384-6 , 978-1-4725-2989-3
    Series Statement: Drama and performance studies
    Note: Enth. u.a.: Night watches / by Allan Monkhouse. - Mine eyes have seen / by Alice Dunbar-Nelson
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB ISBN 978-1-4725-2750-9
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF ISBN 978-1-4725-3262-6
    Language: English
    Subjects: History , English Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Knoxville : University of Tennessee Press
    UID:
    gbv_723547173
    Format: Online-Ressource (551 p.)
    ISBN: 9781572338227
    Series Statement: Voices of the Civil War
    Content: Among the finer soldier-diarists of the Civil War, John Edward Dooley first came to the attention of readers when an edition of his wartime journal, edited by Joseph Durkin, was published in 1945. That book, John Dooley, Confederate Soldier, became a widely used resource for historians, who frequently tapped Dooley’s vivid accounts of Second Bull Run, Antietam, and Gettysburg, where he was wounded during Pickett’s Charge and subsequently captured. As it happens, the 1945 edition is actually a much-truncated version of Dooley’s original journal that fails to capture the ful
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Part One: Secession; A Few Words upon the Right of a State to Withdraw from the United States; Part Two: War; Introduction to John Dooley's "War Notes"; 1. "Oh How Scared I Felt!": The Second Manassas Campaign, August 1862; 2. "Oh, How I Ran!": The Maryland Campaign, September 1862; 3. "Resting from Our Labors": Camp in the Shenandoah Valley, September-November 1862; 4. "These Brave but Doomed Foreigners": Fredericksburg, December 1862; 5. "Everything Is Excessively Dull": Winter Quarters, December1862-March 1863 , 6. "We Slept in the Trenches": Coastal Carolina and Southeastern Virginia, March-June 18637. "Into the Very Jaws of Destruction": The Gettysburg Campaign, June-July 1863; 8. "Vae Victis": Prisoner, July 1863; 9. "Still Hoping for Better Things": Fort McHenry, July-August 1863; 10. "This Selfish, Cold Hearted, Cold Blooded Enemy": Johnson's Island, August-November 1863; 11. "Learning How Little Food . . . a Man May Live Upon": Johnson's Island, November 1863-March 1864; 12. "Anxiety about Virginia Affairs": Johnson's Island, March-July 1864 , 13. "The Bad News Is Raging": Johnson's Island, August-November 186414. "I Am among the Number-Glory, Alleluia": From Johnson's Island to Richmond, December 1864-March 1865; 15. "All Is Confusion and Panic": In Search of the CSA, March-April 1865; 16. "A Bitter, Bitter Draught": Journey's End, April-May 1865; Part Three: Reconstruction; Lines Addressed to the Bronze Statue of the Goddess of Liberty Which Covers the Capitol's Dome, Washington, D.C.; Notes; Index;
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781572338302
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781572338227
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe John Dooley's Civil War : An Irish American's Journey in the First Virginia Infantry Regiment
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
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  • 8
    UID:
    almahu_9949698482002882
    Format: ill
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-80327-073-X
    Series Statement: Proceedings of the UISPP World Congress Series
    Content: New Advances in the History of Archaeology presents the papers from three sessions organised by the History of Archaeology Scientific Commission at the 18th UISPP World Congress (Paris, June 2018). The first session, From stratigraphy to stratigraphic excavation in pre- and protohistoric archaeology organised by Massimo Tarantini and Alessandro Guidi, reviews the development of stratigraphical methods in archaeology in many European countries. The second session, Epistemology, History and Philosophy of Science: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the History of Archaeology, organised by Sophie A. de Beaune and Oscar Moro Abadia, is characterised by different examples of intersections between archaeology and other disciplines like history and the philosophy of science. Finally, four papers discuss the development of different types of interdisciplinarity in Europe and South America. These were presented in the third session, Archaeology and interdisciplinarity, from the 19th century to present-day research, organized by Laura Coltofean, Géraldine. Delley, Margarita Díaz-Andreu and Marc-Antoine Kaeser.
    Note: Cover -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Démarche d'historien et de préhistorien ou comment pallier les manques dans l'étude -- Figure 1. Carte de localisation des sites paléolithiques incluant les sites mentionnés dans cette étude : n°7 et n° 8 © Notter in Rossoni-Notter et al. 2016. -- Figure 2. Carte des sites des Balzi Rossi (Vintimille, Ligurie, Italie). © Notter d'après Lumley et Barral 1976. -- Figure 3. Première page d'un carnet de note de la grotte du Prince (Barmal del Ponte) tenu par Léonce de Villeneuve 1899-1900. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P. de Monaco). -- Figure 4. Troisième Journal de la grotte du Prince (Barma del Ponte), Coupes, décembre 1897, page 9. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 5. Extrait du Journal de la grotte des Enfants. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 6. Exemple d'étiquetage d'une pièce lithique, pastille bleue à la grotte du Prince, Foyer C. -- Figure 7. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de l'abri Lorenzi (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée de 1920. Archives du Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. -- Figure 8. Dessin du dernier biface découvert à la grotte de l'Observatoire (Monaco) en 1919. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Figure 9. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de la grotte du Cavillon (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie) et présenté par foyers au sein d'une vitrine du premier Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. Photographies datée de 1920 et d'aujourd'hui. -- Figure 10. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant du Foyer A de la grotte du Prince (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée du 5 décembre 1896. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Santa Verna in 1911 and 2015: re-examining pioneering stratigraphic excavation methods. , Figure 1. Map of the Central Mediterranean region showing the location of the Maltese Islands and the site of Santa Verna. -- Figure 2. Portrait of Thomas Ashby 1874-1931 (BSR copyright). -- Figure 4. Santa Verna in 2015. -- Figure 5. Sub-adult skeleton exposed at Santa Verna in 1911 (Bradley 1912). -- Figure 6. Measured plan, profile and section drawing of Santa Verna, Gozo (Ashby et al. 1913). -- Figure 7. Detail illustrating the vertical section through deposits at Santa Verna. -- Figure 8. Ashby and Bradley's 1911 sondage re-excavated in 2015. -- Figure 9. Structural features at Santa Verna in 1911 (left) and 2015 (right). -- Figure 10. Section drawings from the 2015 excavations at Santa Verna. Compare with Figure 7. -- Figure 11. Bayesian model for the sequence of radiocarbon dates associated with the Santa Verna 'temple' megalithic building. -- The multiple roots of an innovative excavation: G.A. Blanc at the Romanelli Cave -- Figure 1. Gian Alberto Blanc (1879-1966), on the right side, illustrates the cave to a group of visitors in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 2. Grotta Romanelli view from the sea in 1914 (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 3. Numerous and beautiful illustrative plates published in Blanc 1928 demonstrate that the finds were rigorously distinguished by their layer of provenience. -- Figure 4. G.A. Blanc carried out microscopic observation to verify the hypothesis of an aeolian origin for the sands found in Romanelli Cave -- several microphotographs were published (from Blanc 1928). -- Figure 5. Paolo Graziosi (1906-1988), on the right side, at Romanelli cave in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 6. ???. , Paul Vouga à La Tène et à Auvernier : la stratigraphie à l'épreuve de la typologie -- Figure 1. Position du site de La Tène, dans la baie d'Épagnier, à l'extrémité nord-est du lac de Neuchâtel, près de la rivière Thielle. Aujourd'hui canalisée, celle-ci déverse les eaux du lac de Neuchâtel dans celui de Bienne. Photographie B. Arnold. Inf -- Figure 2. Paul Vouga (1880-1940) à l'âge de 25 ans environ. Professeur d'histoire et de français à l'école de Commerce de Neuchâtel, il s'occupe en outre, en dehors de son poste et sans rémunération, de la collection archéologique du Musée historique et d -- Figure 3. En 11 ans, les fouilles officielles de La Tène ont touché une surface de 170 mètres de long, par 25 à 40 de largeur et jusqu'à plus de 4 mètres de profondeur. Commencées en aval du pont Desor, elles vident progressivement l'intégralité du comble -- Figure 4. Les fouilles progressent par tranchées perpendiculaires au chenal comblé de l'ancienne Thielle, mettant en évidence de spectaculaires coupes. La Tène, 28.09.1911. Archives du Laténium. -- Figure 5. Du relevé de détail au simple profil, les coupes stratigraphiques du site de La Tène ont été inégalement documentées durant les fouilles officielles. Archives du Laténium. Infographie OPAN/J. Spielmann. -- Figure 6. Le plan du site que donne Vouga dans sa monographie reflète sa conception du site, où tout est contemporain. (Vouga 1923). -- Figure 7. Paul Vouga et la stratigraphie néolithique d'Auvernier/La Saunerie, le 20 sept. 1919. Photographie Samuel Perret, Archives du Laténium. -- Pioneers of archaeological stratigraphical techniques -- Figure 1. Giorgio Buchner (1914-2005). -- Figure 2. Vivara island, in red point the Buchner's trenches. -- Figure 3. Luigi Bernabò Brea (1910-1999). -- Figure 4. Salvatore Maria Puglisi (1912-1985). , Figure 5. Grotta delle Felci, Buchner's documentation of section South of principal trench IIPU excavation (1941). -- Figure 6. Grotta delle Felci_IIPU Multidisciplinary Research Team: Luigi Cardini (1898-1971), first at right and then Buchner, Blanc and Settepassi. -- Figure 7. Papesca -- obsidian tools found by Buchner (1949). -- Figure 8. Alfred Rittmann (1893-1980). -- Figure 9. Buchner at Punta Milazzese settlement (Panarea) and A& -- B huts (from Mastelloni 2020, p. 184, fig. 2). -- Figure 10. Poliochni, Lemnos. A stratigraphical section in the Room 819, Bernabò Brea excavation 1936 (Archive of the Italian Archaeological School at Athens). -- Figure 11. Poliochni, Lemnos. Stratigraphical section of Room 864 by Bernabò Brea 1952 (after Bernabò Brea 1964). -- Figure 12. Arene Candide, excavations 1940-42, main NE stratigraphic section (courtesy Istituto Italiano di Paleontologia Umana [ISIPU]). -- Figure 13. Arene Candide, field sketch of the upper part of the same section by Bernabò Brea (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 14. A. Arene Candide, 1970 campaign -- stratigraphic sketch by Cardini B. Stratigraphic sketch of 1968 Grotta Giovanna C excavations (from Pianese 1968-69). -- Figure 16. Arene Candide, sketch plan of part of the Epigravettian graveyard by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 17. Arene Candide, photograph of grave VIII by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 18. Grotta Corrugi, Pachino (Sr), plan and stratigraphical section by Bernabò Brea 1945 (after Bernabò Brea 1949). -- Figure 19. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the Insula IV (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 20. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the area oh Ausonian hut Alpha II (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 21. Scheme with the two 'parallel' lives of the two scholars. , Figure 22. Paolo Orsi (1859-1935). -- Abstraction in Archaeological Stratigraphy: a Pyrenean Lineage of Innovation -- Figure 1. Map of the archaeological sites and municipalities mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. The method used to record the position of objects by (Caso Andrade and Marquina, 1938: p. 269). -- Figure 4. Graphic representation of the Cartesian grid used during the excavation of the Tute de Carrelore site by Laplace. The dots show the location of the objects uncovered (Laplace-Jauretche 1949: 228). -- Figure 5. Illustration of two methods to record the location of an object during an excavation: above the surface level with reference to the plan Om -- below the surface, with reference to the plan of the nm triangle (Laplace 1971, p. 228). -- Figure 7. Annual cumulative sum of Laplace-Jauretche and Méroc 1954a, and Laplace 1971, citations (data: Google Scholar). -- Figure 8. An 'analytical formula' representing the stratigraphy of the Cueva de Arrillor. The sign [] represents the stratigraphic structure, = the superposition of structures, {} the inclusion of structures, _ the structure in the case of composed expres -- Primitif, précurseur, contemporain -- Figure 1. Typologie des approches modernes de l'art paléolithique. -- Compelling image-worlds -- Figure 1. Selection of lithic imagery from the French subsample. (1) Diagram of idealized technological relationships including débitage modes, blank shapes, tool types and object frequencies (Bazile and Boccaccio 2008: fig. 26) -- (2) artefact drawing with -- Figure 2. Selection of lithic imagery from the Anglophone subsample. (1) Artefact photographs of specific point types with added contour lines and scar outlines (Blinkhorn et al. 2015: fig. 6) -- (2) graph conveying the results of a discriminant function an. , Figure 3. Comparison of absolute frequency values of image sub-types recorded in the French and Anglophone sample. For an explanation of sub-type IDs, refer to Appendix 2.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-80327-072-1
    Language: English
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  • 9
    UID:
    edocfu_9961058788302883
    Format: ill
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-80327-073-X
    Series Statement: Proceedings of the UISPP World Congress Series
    Content: New Advances in the History of Archaeology presents the papers from three sessions organised by the History of Archaeology Scientific Commission at the 18th UISPP World Congress (Paris, June 2018). The first session, From stratigraphy to stratigraphic excavation in pre- and protohistoric archaeology organised by Massimo Tarantini and Alessandro Guidi, reviews the development of stratigraphical methods in archaeology in many European countries. The second session, Epistemology, History and Philosophy of Science: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the History of Archaeology, organised by Sophie A. de Beaune and Oscar Moro Abadia, is characterised by different examples of intersections between archaeology and other disciplines like history and the philosophy of science. Finally, four papers discuss the development of different types of interdisciplinarity in Europe and South America. These were presented in the third session, Archaeology and interdisciplinarity, from the 19th century to present-day research, organized by Laura Coltofean, Géraldine. Delley, Margarita Díaz-Andreu and Marc-Antoine Kaeser.
    Note: Cover -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Démarche d'historien et de préhistorien ou comment pallier les manques dans l'étude -- Figure 1. Carte de localisation des sites paléolithiques incluant les sites mentionnés dans cette étude : n°7 et n° 8 © Notter in Rossoni-Notter et al. 2016. -- Figure 2. Carte des sites des Balzi Rossi (Vintimille, Ligurie, Italie). © Notter d'après Lumley et Barral 1976. -- Figure 3. Première page d'un carnet de note de la grotte du Prince (Barmal del Ponte) tenu par Léonce de Villeneuve 1899-1900. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P. de Monaco). -- Figure 4. Troisième Journal de la grotte du Prince (Barma del Ponte), Coupes, décembre 1897, page 9. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 5. Extrait du Journal de la grotte des Enfants. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 6. Exemple d'étiquetage d'une pièce lithique, pastille bleue à la grotte du Prince, Foyer C. -- Figure 7. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de l'abri Lorenzi (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée de 1920. Archives du Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. -- Figure 8. Dessin du dernier biface découvert à la grotte de l'Observatoire (Monaco) en 1919. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Figure 9. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de la grotte du Cavillon (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie) et présenté par foyers au sein d'une vitrine du premier Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. Photographies datée de 1920 et d'aujourd'hui. -- Figure 10. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant du Foyer A de la grotte du Prince (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée du 5 décembre 1896. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Santa Verna in 1911 and 2015: re-examining pioneering stratigraphic excavation methods. , Figure 1. Map of the Central Mediterranean region showing the location of the Maltese Islands and the site of Santa Verna. -- Figure 2. Portrait of Thomas Ashby 1874-1931 (BSR copyright). -- Figure 4. Santa Verna in 2015. -- Figure 5. Sub-adult skeleton exposed at Santa Verna in 1911 (Bradley 1912). -- Figure 6. Measured plan, profile and section drawing of Santa Verna, Gozo (Ashby et al. 1913). -- Figure 7. Detail illustrating the vertical section through deposits at Santa Verna. -- Figure 8. Ashby and Bradley's 1911 sondage re-excavated in 2015. -- Figure 9. Structural features at Santa Verna in 1911 (left) and 2015 (right). -- Figure 10. Section drawings from the 2015 excavations at Santa Verna. Compare with Figure 7. -- Figure 11. Bayesian model for the sequence of radiocarbon dates associated with the Santa Verna 'temple' megalithic building. -- The multiple roots of an innovative excavation: G.A. Blanc at the Romanelli Cave -- Figure 1. Gian Alberto Blanc (1879-1966), on the right side, illustrates the cave to a group of visitors in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 2. Grotta Romanelli view from the sea in 1914 (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 3. Numerous and beautiful illustrative plates published in Blanc 1928 demonstrate that the finds were rigorously distinguished by their layer of provenience. -- Figure 4. G.A. Blanc carried out microscopic observation to verify the hypothesis of an aeolian origin for the sands found in Romanelli Cave -- several microphotographs were published (from Blanc 1928). -- Figure 5. Paolo Graziosi (1906-1988), on the right side, at Romanelli cave in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 6. ???. , Paul Vouga à La Tène et à Auvernier : la stratigraphie à l'épreuve de la typologie -- Figure 1. Position du site de La Tène, dans la baie d'Épagnier, à l'extrémité nord-est du lac de Neuchâtel, près de la rivière Thielle. Aujourd'hui canalisée, celle-ci déverse les eaux du lac de Neuchâtel dans celui de Bienne. Photographie B. Arnold. Inf -- Figure 2. Paul Vouga (1880-1940) à l'âge de 25 ans environ. Professeur d'histoire et de français à l'école de Commerce de Neuchâtel, il s'occupe en outre, en dehors de son poste et sans rémunération, de la collection archéologique du Musée historique et d -- Figure 3. En 11 ans, les fouilles officielles de La Tène ont touché une surface de 170 mètres de long, par 25 à 40 de largeur et jusqu'à plus de 4 mètres de profondeur. Commencées en aval du pont Desor, elles vident progressivement l'intégralité du comble -- Figure 4. Les fouilles progressent par tranchées perpendiculaires au chenal comblé de l'ancienne Thielle, mettant en évidence de spectaculaires coupes. La Tène, 28.09.1911. Archives du Laténium. -- Figure 5. Du relevé de détail au simple profil, les coupes stratigraphiques du site de La Tène ont été inégalement documentées durant les fouilles officielles. Archives du Laténium. Infographie OPAN/J. Spielmann. -- Figure 6. Le plan du site que donne Vouga dans sa monographie reflète sa conception du site, où tout est contemporain. (Vouga 1923). -- Figure 7. Paul Vouga et la stratigraphie néolithique d'Auvernier/La Saunerie, le 20 sept. 1919. Photographie Samuel Perret, Archives du Laténium. -- Pioneers of archaeological stratigraphical techniques -- Figure 1. Giorgio Buchner (1914-2005). -- Figure 2. Vivara island, in red point the Buchner's trenches. -- Figure 3. Luigi Bernabò Brea (1910-1999). -- Figure 4. Salvatore Maria Puglisi (1912-1985). , Figure 5. Grotta delle Felci, Buchner's documentation of section South of principal trench IIPU excavation (1941). -- Figure 6. Grotta delle Felci_IIPU Multidisciplinary Research Team: Luigi Cardini (1898-1971), first at right and then Buchner, Blanc and Settepassi. -- Figure 7. Papesca -- obsidian tools found by Buchner (1949). -- Figure 8. Alfred Rittmann (1893-1980). -- Figure 9. Buchner at Punta Milazzese settlement (Panarea) and A& -- B huts (from Mastelloni 2020, p. 184, fig. 2). -- Figure 10. Poliochni, Lemnos. A stratigraphical section in the Room 819, Bernabò Brea excavation 1936 (Archive of the Italian Archaeological School at Athens). -- Figure 11. Poliochni, Lemnos. Stratigraphical section of Room 864 by Bernabò Brea 1952 (after Bernabò Brea 1964). -- Figure 12. Arene Candide, excavations 1940-42, main NE stratigraphic section (courtesy Istituto Italiano di Paleontologia Umana [ISIPU]). -- Figure 13. Arene Candide, field sketch of the upper part of the same section by Bernabò Brea (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 14. A. Arene Candide, 1970 campaign -- stratigraphic sketch by Cardini B. Stratigraphic sketch of 1968 Grotta Giovanna C excavations (from Pianese 1968-69). -- Figure 16. Arene Candide, sketch plan of part of the Epigravettian graveyard by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 17. Arene Candide, photograph of grave VIII by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 18. Grotta Corrugi, Pachino (Sr), plan and stratigraphical section by Bernabò Brea 1945 (after Bernabò Brea 1949). -- Figure 19. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the Insula IV (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 20. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the area oh Ausonian hut Alpha II (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 21. Scheme with the two 'parallel' lives of the two scholars. , Figure 22. Paolo Orsi (1859-1935). -- Abstraction in Archaeological Stratigraphy: a Pyrenean Lineage of Innovation -- Figure 1. Map of the archaeological sites and municipalities mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. The method used to record the position of objects by (Caso Andrade and Marquina, 1938: p. 269). -- Figure 4. Graphic representation of the Cartesian grid used during the excavation of the Tute de Carrelore site by Laplace. The dots show the location of the objects uncovered (Laplace-Jauretche 1949: 228). -- Figure 5. Illustration of two methods to record the location of an object during an excavation: above the surface level with reference to the plan Om -- below the surface, with reference to the plan of the nm triangle (Laplace 1971, p. 228). -- Figure 7. Annual cumulative sum of Laplace-Jauretche and Méroc 1954a, and Laplace 1971, citations (data: Google Scholar). -- Figure 8. An 'analytical formula' representing the stratigraphy of the Cueva de Arrillor. The sign [] represents the stratigraphic structure, = the superposition of structures, {} the inclusion of structures, _ the structure in the case of composed expres -- Primitif, précurseur, contemporain -- Figure 1. Typologie des approches modernes de l'art paléolithique. -- Compelling image-worlds -- Figure 1. Selection of lithic imagery from the French subsample. (1) Diagram of idealized technological relationships including débitage modes, blank shapes, tool types and object frequencies (Bazile and Boccaccio 2008: fig. 26) -- (2) artefact drawing with -- Figure 2. Selection of lithic imagery from the Anglophone subsample. (1) Artefact photographs of specific point types with added contour lines and scar outlines (Blinkhorn et al. 2015: fig. 6) -- (2) graph conveying the results of a discriminant function an. , Figure 3. Comparison of absolute frequency values of image sub-types recorded in the French and Anglophone sample. For an explanation of sub-type IDs, refer to Appendix 2.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-80327-072-1
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 10
    UID:
    edoccha_9961058788302883
    Format: ill
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-80327-073-X
    Series Statement: Proceedings of the UISPP World Congress Series
    Content: New Advances in the History of Archaeology presents the papers from three sessions organised by the History of Archaeology Scientific Commission at the 18th UISPP World Congress (Paris, June 2018). The first session, From stratigraphy to stratigraphic excavation in pre- and protohistoric archaeology organised by Massimo Tarantini and Alessandro Guidi, reviews the development of stratigraphical methods in archaeology in many European countries. The second session, Epistemology, History and Philosophy of Science: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the History of Archaeology, organised by Sophie A. de Beaune and Oscar Moro Abadia, is characterised by different examples of intersections between archaeology and other disciplines like history and the philosophy of science. Finally, four papers discuss the development of different types of interdisciplinarity in Europe and South America. These were presented in the third session, Archaeology and interdisciplinarity, from the 19th century to present-day research, organized by Laura Coltofean, Géraldine. Delley, Margarita Díaz-Andreu and Marc-Antoine Kaeser.
    Note: Cover -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Démarche d'historien et de préhistorien ou comment pallier les manques dans l'étude -- Figure 1. Carte de localisation des sites paléolithiques incluant les sites mentionnés dans cette étude : n°7 et n° 8 © Notter in Rossoni-Notter et al. 2016. -- Figure 2. Carte des sites des Balzi Rossi (Vintimille, Ligurie, Italie). © Notter d'après Lumley et Barral 1976. -- Figure 3. Première page d'un carnet de note de la grotte du Prince (Barmal del Ponte) tenu par Léonce de Villeneuve 1899-1900. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P. de Monaco). -- Figure 4. Troisième Journal de la grotte du Prince (Barma del Ponte), Coupes, décembre 1897, page 9. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 5. Extrait du Journal de la grotte des Enfants. Inédit (©Archives du M.A.P.). -- Figure 6. Exemple d'étiquetage d'une pièce lithique, pastille bleue à la grotte du Prince, Foyer C. -- Figure 7. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de l'abri Lorenzi (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée de 1920. Archives du Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. -- Figure 8. Dessin du dernier biface découvert à la grotte de l'Observatoire (Monaco) en 1919. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Figure 9. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant de la grotte du Cavillon (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie) et présenté par foyers au sein d'une vitrine du premier Musée d'Anthropologie préhistorique de Monaco. Photographies datée de 1920 et d'aujourd'hui. -- Figure 10. Lot d'industries lithiques provenant du Foyer A de la grotte du Prince (Balzi Rossi, Vintimille, Italie). Photographie datée du 5 décembre 1896. Archives du Palais Princier de Monaco. -- Santa Verna in 1911 and 2015: re-examining pioneering stratigraphic excavation methods. , Figure 1. Map of the Central Mediterranean region showing the location of the Maltese Islands and the site of Santa Verna. -- Figure 2. Portrait of Thomas Ashby 1874-1931 (BSR copyright). -- Figure 4. Santa Verna in 2015. -- Figure 5. Sub-adult skeleton exposed at Santa Verna in 1911 (Bradley 1912). -- Figure 6. Measured plan, profile and section drawing of Santa Verna, Gozo (Ashby et al. 1913). -- Figure 7. Detail illustrating the vertical section through deposits at Santa Verna. -- Figure 8. Ashby and Bradley's 1911 sondage re-excavated in 2015. -- Figure 9. Structural features at Santa Verna in 1911 (left) and 2015 (right). -- Figure 10. Section drawings from the 2015 excavations at Santa Verna. Compare with Figure 7. -- Figure 11. Bayesian model for the sequence of radiocarbon dates associated with the Santa Verna 'temple' megalithic building. -- The multiple roots of an innovative excavation: G.A. Blanc at the Romanelli Cave -- Figure 1. Gian Alberto Blanc (1879-1966), on the right side, illustrates the cave to a group of visitors in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 2. Grotta Romanelli view from the sea in 1914 (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 3. Numerous and beautiful illustrative plates published in Blanc 1928 demonstrate that the finds were rigorously distinguished by their layer of provenience. -- Figure 4. G.A. Blanc carried out microscopic observation to verify the hypothesis of an aeolian origin for the sands found in Romanelli Cave -- several microphotographs were published (from Blanc 1928). -- Figure 5. Paolo Graziosi (1906-1988), on the right side, at Romanelli cave in the 1930s (Archivio dell'Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria). -- Figure 6. ???. , Paul Vouga à La Tène et à Auvernier : la stratigraphie à l'épreuve de la typologie -- Figure 1. Position du site de La Tène, dans la baie d'Épagnier, à l'extrémité nord-est du lac de Neuchâtel, près de la rivière Thielle. Aujourd'hui canalisée, celle-ci déverse les eaux du lac de Neuchâtel dans celui de Bienne. Photographie B. Arnold. Inf -- Figure 2. Paul Vouga (1880-1940) à l'âge de 25 ans environ. Professeur d'histoire et de français à l'école de Commerce de Neuchâtel, il s'occupe en outre, en dehors de son poste et sans rémunération, de la collection archéologique du Musée historique et d -- Figure 3. En 11 ans, les fouilles officielles de La Tène ont touché une surface de 170 mètres de long, par 25 à 40 de largeur et jusqu'à plus de 4 mètres de profondeur. Commencées en aval du pont Desor, elles vident progressivement l'intégralité du comble -- Figure 4. Les fouilles progressent par tranchées perpendiculaires au chenal comblé de l'ancienne Thielle, mettant en évidence de spectaculaires coupes. La Tène, 28.09.1911. Archives du Laténium. -- Figure 5. Du relevé de détail au simple profil, les coupes stratigraphiques du site de La Tène ont été inégalement documentées durant les fouilles officielles. Archives du Laténium. Infographie OPAN/J. Spielmann. -- Figure 6. Le plan du site que donne Vouga dans sa monographie reflète sa conception du site, où tout est contemporain. (Vouga 1923). -- Figure 7. Paul Vouga et la stratigraphie néolithique d'Auvernier/La Saunerie, le 20 sept. 1919. Photographie Samuel Perret, Archives du Laténium. -- Pioneers of archaeological stratigraphical techniques -- Figure 1. Giorgio Buchner (1914-2005). -- Figure 2. Vivara island, in red point the Buchner's trenches. -- Figure 3. Luigi Bernabò Brea (1910-1999). -- Figure 4. Salvatore Maria Puglisi (1912-1985). , Figure 5. Grotta delle Felci, Buchner's documentation of section South of principal trench IIPU excavation (1941). -- Figure 6. Grotta delle Felci_IIPU Multidisciplinary Research Team: Luigi Cardini (1898-1971), first at right and then Buchner, Blanc and Settepassi. -- Figure 7. Papesca -- obsidian tools found by Buchner (1949). -- Figure 8. Alfred Rittmann (1893-1980). -- Figure 9. Buchner at Punta Milazzese settlement (Panarea) and A& -- B huts (from Mastelloni 2020, p. 184, fig. 2). -- Figure 10. Poliochni, Lemnos. A stratigraphical section in the Room 819, Bernabò Brea excavation 1936 (Archive of the Italian Archaeological School at Athens). -- Figure 11. Poliochni, Lemnos. Stratigraphical section of Room 864 by Bernabò Brea 1952 (after Bernabò Brea 1964). -- Figure 12. Arene Candide, excavations 1940-42, main NE stratigraphic section (courtesy Istituto Italiano di Paleontologia Umana [ISIPU]). -- Figure 13. Arene Candide, field sketch of the upper part of the same section by Bernabò Brea (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 14. A. Arene Candide, 1970 campaign -- stratigraphic sketch by Cardini B. Stratigraphic sketch of 1968 Grotta Giovanna C excavations (from Pianese 1968-69). -- Figure 16. Arene Candide, sketch plan of part of the Epigravettian graveyard by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 17. Arene Candide, photograph of grave VIII by L. Cardini (courtesy ISIPU). -- Figure 18. Grotta Corrugi, Pachino (Sr), plan and stratigraphical section by Bernabò Brea 1945 (after Bernabò Brea 1949). -- Figure 19. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the Insula IV (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 20. Lipari, Acropolis, stratigraphical section in the area oh Ausonian hut Alpha II (after Bernabò Brea and Cavalier 1980). -- Figure 21. Scheme with the two 'parallel' lives of the two scholars. , Figure 22. Paolo Orsi (1859-1935). -- Abstraction in Archaeological Stratigraphy: a Pyrenean Lineage of Innovation -- Figure 1. Map of the archaeological sites and municipalities mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. The method used to record the position of objects by (Caso Andrade and Marquina, 1938: p. 269). -- Figure 4. Graphic representation of the Cartesian grid used during the excavation of the Tute de Carrelore site by Laplace. The dots show the location of the objects uncovered (Laplace-Jauretche 1949: 228). -- Figure 5. Illustration of two methods to record the location of an object during an excavation: above the surface level with reference to the plan Om -- below the surface, with reference to the plan of the nm triangle (Laplace 1971, p. 228). -- Figure 7. Annual cumulative sum of Laplace-Jauretche and Méroc 1954a, and Laplace 1971, citations (data: Google Scholar). -- Figure 8. An 'analytical formula' representing the stratigraphy of the Cueva de Arrillor. The sign [] represents the stratigraphic structure, = the superposition of structures, {} the inclusion of structures, _ the structure in the case of composed expres -- Primitif, précurseur, contemporain -- Figure 1. Typologie des approches modernes de l'art paléolithique. -- Compelling image-worlds -- Figure 1. Selection of lithic imagery from the French subsample. (1) Diagram of idealized technological relationships including débitage modes, blank shapes, tool types and object frequencies (Bazile and Boccaccio 2008: fig. 26) -- (2) artefact drawing with -- Figure 2. Selection of lithic imagery from the Anglophone subsample. (1) Artefact photographs of specific point types with added contour lines and scar outlines (Blinkhorn et al. 2015: fig. 6) -- (2) graph conveying the results of a discriminant function an. , Figure 3. Comparison of absolute frequency values of image sub-types recorded in the French and Anglophone sample. For an explanation of sub-type IDs, refer to Appendix 2.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-80327-072-1
    Language: English
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