Lithic Use-wear Analysis. Edited byB. Hayden. 432pages. Academic Press, New York, 1979. Price £22.80. - Experimental Determination of Stone Tool Uses: a Microwear Analysis. ByL. H. Keeley. 212pages, 142 figures, 115 plates. Chicago University Press, 1980. Price £9.00 (cloth), £4.20 (paperbound).

1981 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 318-319
Author(s):  
Graeme Morris
Man ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 480
Author(s):  
Michael Pitts ◽  
Lawrence H. Keeley

1984 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Pentecost ◽  
Gordon H. Dixon

Several cloned ds cDNAs containing bovine HMG-1 sequences have been isolated from a ds cDNA library prepared from the poly(A)+ mRNA fraction of bovine testis using a pool of synthetic 17-rneric oligo-deoxyribonucleotides with the sequence α2 selected to be complementary to a region of the coding sequence corresponding to the relatively unambiguous amino acid sequence, Glu-Met-Trp-Asn-Asn-Thr. Determination of the DNA sequences in these clones indicates that they represent the 3′ half of the HMG-1 message and contain an unusually long putative 3′ untranslated region of 480 nucleotides. The sequence of the coding region corresponding to the 99 amino acids at the C-terminus of HMG-I has been determined and largely confirms the published primary sequence in this region (Walker 3M, (1982) in: The HMG Chromosomal Proteins, Academic Press, London & New York, pp. 69–88). In addition the cDNA sequence provides a complete sequence of the 30 residue polyacidic region and shows that the nucleotide sequence in this region is a repeating one and that the polyacidic domain comprises the C-terminus of the protein.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. e0249130
Author(s):  
Alba Masclans ◽  
Caroline Hamon ◽  
Christian Jeunesse ◽  
Penny Bickle

This work demonstrates the importance of integrating sexual division of labour into the research of the transition to the Neolithic and its social implications. During the spread of the Neolithic in Europe, when migration led to the dispersal of domesticated plants and animals, novel tasks and tools, appear in the archaeological record. By examining the use-wear traces from over 400 stone tools from funerary contexts of the earliest Neolithic in central Europe we provide insights into what tasks could have been carried out by women and men. The results of this analysis are then examined for statistically significant correlations with the osteological, isotopic and other grave good data, informing on sexed-based differences in diet, mobility and symbolism. Our data demonstrate males were buried with stone tools used for woodwork, and butchery, hunting or interpersonal violence, while women with those for the working of animal skins, expanding the range of tasks known to have been carried out. The results also show variation along an east-west cline from Slovakia to eastern France, suggesting that the sexual division of labour (or at least its representation in death) changed as farming spread westwards.


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