Metallurgical technology and metal exchange networks: a case study from the western Anatolian Late Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 39-40
Author(s):  
Michele Massa
2012 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 1119-1138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen R. Jensen ◽  
Loubna Belqadi ◽  
Paola De Santis ◽  
Mohammed Sadiki ◽  
Devra I. Jarvis ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 1087-1109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Oliver Pryce ◽  
Kalayar Myat Myat Htwe ◽  
Myrto Georgakopoulou ◽  
Tiffany Martin ◽  
Enrique Vega ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 69 ◽  
pp. 21-57
Author(s):  
Sharon R. Steadman ◽  
Gregory McMahon ◽  
Benjamin S. Arbuckle ◽  
Madelynn von Baeyer ◽  
Alexia Smith ◽  
...  

AbstractScholars have recently investigated the efficacy of applying globalisation models to ancient cultures such as the fourth-millennium BC Mesopotamian Uruk system. Embedded within globalisation models is the ‘complex connectivity‘ that brings disparate regions together into a singular world. In the fourth millennium BC, the site of Çadır Höyük on the north-central Anatolian plateau experienced dramatic changes in its material culture and architectural assemblages, which in turn reflect new socio-economic, sociopolitical and ritual patterns at this rural agro-pastoral settlement. This study examines the complex connectivities of the ancient Uruk system, encompassing settlements in more consistent contact with the Uruk system such as Arslantepe in southeastern Anatolia, and how these may have fostered exchange networks that reached far beyond the Uruk ‘global world‘ and onto the Anatolian plateau.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (12) ◽  
pp. 6453-6462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian A. Stewart ◽  
Yuchao Zhao ◽  
Peter J. Mitchell ◽  
Genevieve Dewar ◽  
James D. Gleason ◽  
...  

Hunter-gatherer exchange networks dampen subsistence and reproductive risks by building relationships of mutual support outside local groups that are underwritten by symbolic gift exchange.Hxaro, the system of delayed reciprocity between Ju/’hoãn individuals in southern Africa’s Kalahari Desert, is the best-known such example and the basis for most analogies and models of hunter-gatherer exchange in prehistory. However, its antiquity, drivers, and development remain unclear, as they do for long-distance exchanges among African foragers more broadly. Here we show through strontium isotope analyses of ostrich eggshell beads from highland Lesotho, and associated strontium isoscape development, that such practices stretch back into the late Middle Stone Age. We argue that these exchange items originated beyond the macroband from groups occupying the more water-stressed subcontinental interior. Tracking the emergence and persistence of macroscale, transbiome social networks helps illuminate the evolution of social strategies needed to thrive in stochastic environments, strategies that in our case study show persistence over more than 33,000 y.


2014 ◽  
Vol 889-890 ◽  
pp. 612-616
Author(s):  
Ren Jie Shen ◽  
Wen Wei Zhang ◽  
Lei Wang

For the work exchange network, this paper proposed an optimal matching network mathematical to achieve the maxime reuse target. Based on this method, a case is studied, the corresponding work exchange network is optimized and the optimal matching network is obtained. The case study also shows that this method is more efficient and specific than the graphical and problem table methods, which is proved by the correctness, efficiency and benefits of mathematical programming method.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document