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Rafael M. Martínez Sánchez Juan Carlos Vera Rodríguez Leonor Peña-Chocarro Youssef Bokbot Guillem Pérez Jordà Salvador Pardo-Gordó 《African Archaeological Review》2018,35(3):417-442
The period comprising the end of the Early Neolithic and the Middle Neolithic, dated broadly within the fifth millennium cal BC, corresponds to an interval that remains largely unknown in the extreme north-western tip of Africa. This situation contrasts with that of the Early Neolithic, a period characterised by the earliest evidence of the diffusion of a productive economy, cultivated plants and domestic animals. The paucity of data for these later phases can be explained in part by the lack of secure contexts and sequences based on radiocarbon datings of short-lived samples. The current study presents the results of the excavations of El-Khil Caves B and C that yield materials allowing re-evaluation of the chronology of a type of ceramic known as Ashakar ware. The study also identifies two traditions in the northern Moroccan Middle Neolithic. The first is heir to the so-called Impressa Mediterranean ware and rooted in the Cardial Neolithic, while the second is characterised by roulette cord impressions, red slip and tunnel lugs and probably rooted in the region of the Sahara, and has no technological precedents in the study area. 相似文献
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Martínez Sánchez Rafael M. Vera-Rodríguez Juan Carlos Pérez-Jordà Guillem Moreno-García Marta Bokbot Youssef Peña-Chocarro Leonor 《African Archaeological Review》2021,38(2):251-274
African Archaeological Review - This study focuses on the chronostratigraphic sequence of the Cave of Kaf Taht el-Ghar (Dar Ben Karrich, Tétouan, Morocco) excavated in 2012 in the framework of... 相似文献
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Rafael M. Martínez Sánchez Juan Carlos Vera Rodríguez Marta Moreno García Guillem Pérez Jordà Leonor Peña-Chocarro Youssef Bokbot 《The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology》2018,13(3):420-437
The use of seashells for the decoration of pottery from the sixth millennium cal BC is well known in the western Mediterranean, with the emergence of so-called Cardial Pottery. Actually, the most discussed issue up until now has been the use of bivalves for impressed decoration. However, the experimental approach followed in the present study provides for the first time clear evidence for the utilization of a very specific group of shells as tools for the decoration of some of the early pottery productions in northwest Africa. In particular, we propose the use of cowry, a gastropod family with a well-known ideological and symbolic role in many human cultures around the world. Also, it is suggested that cowry was used for making impressed wares on the opposite European shore. The implications for reconstruction of Neolithic diffusion along both the European and African coasts of the Mediterranean are of great significance. 相似文献
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