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The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is a peer-reviewed academic journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. [1] It was established in 1991 and is published triannually. [2]
Analysis in 2022, led by Bennet Bacon, an amateur archaeologist, [3] showed that lines, dots and "Y"-like symbols on Upper Palaeolithic cave paintings were used to indicate the mating cycle of animals in a lunar calendar. The markings found in over 400 caves across Europe were compared to the mating cycles of the animals with which they were ...
The Archaeological Journal: Taylor & Francis: 1844: 1 — 0066-5983: Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association [13] Wiley: 1989: 1 — Archaeological Review from Cambridge — 1981: 2 — 0261-4332: Archaeologies [13] Springer: 2005: 3 — Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia: Elsevier: 2000: 4: Delayed: 1563 ...
The Archaeological Journal; Archaeological Review from Cambridge; Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia; Archaeology in Oceania; Archaeology International;
Cambridge Archaeological Journal 21: 1-30 (2011, with L. Maher and M. Chazan). "Houses, Households and Changing Society in the Late Neolithic and Chalcolithic of the Southern Levant." Paléorient 36: 45-83 (2010). "Subsistence Practices and Pottery use in Neolithic Jordan: Molecular and Isotopic Evidence."
The Archaeological Review from Cambridge (ARC) is a biannual academic journal of archaeology. It is managed and published on a non-profit, voluntary basis by postgraduate researchers in the Department of Archaeology at the University of Cambridge.
Benjamin Wisner Bacon (January 15, 1860 – February 1, 1932) [1] was an American theologian. He was born in Litchfield, Connecticut and graduated from Yale College in 1881 and Yale Divinity School in 1884.
Peter S. Wells of the University of Missouri reviewed The Tribe of Witches for the Cambridge Archaeological Journal in 2009. Wells criticised Yeates' use of the word "tribe" to refer to both the Dobunni and the Hwicce, believing that another term might have been more appropriate. He also criticised the use of maps, believing that they were ...