Accès gratuit
Numéro
BMSAP
Volume 28, Numéro 1-2, Avril 2016
Les différentes étapes du traitement du cadavre
Page(s) 4 - 16
Section Note / Note
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s13219-016-0144-y
Publié en ligne 1 mars 2016
  • Zimmermann A, Hilpert J, Wendt KP (2009) Estimations of population density for selected periods between the Neolithic and AD 1800. In: Steele J, Shennan SJ (eds) Demography and Cultural Macroevolution. Special Issue Hum Biol 81:357–80 [Google Scholar]
  • Clarke DL (1973) Archaeology: the loss of innocence. Antiquity 47:6–18 [Google Scholar]
  • Pettit PB (2011) The Palaeolithic Origins of Human Burial, Routledge, London, 307 p [Google Scholar]
  • Conneller C (2009) Transforming bodies: mortuary practices in Mesolithic Britain. In: McCartan S, Schulting R, Warren G, et al (eds) Mesolithic Horizons. Papers presented at the Seventh International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Belfast 2005 Oxbow, Oxford, pp 690–97 [Google Scholar]
  • Hellewell E, Milner N (2011) Burial practices at the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Britain: change or continuity? Doc Praehist 38:61–8 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Whittle AWR, Barclay A, Bayliss A, et al (2007) Building for the dead: events, processes and changing worldviews from the thirty-eighth to the thirty-fourth centuries cal. BC in southern Britain. Cam Arch J 17 (Suppl):123–47 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Coles S, Ford S, Taylor A (2008) An Early Neolithic grave and occupation, and an Early Bronze Age hearth on the Thames foreshore at Yabsley Street, Blackwall, London. Proc Prehist Soc 74:215–34 [Google Scholar]
  • Niblett R (2001) A Neolithic dugout from a multi-period site near St. Albans, Herts, England. Int J Naut Arch 30:155–95 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Chamberlain AT (2012) Caves and the funerary landscape of prehistoric Britain. In: Moyes H (ed) Sacred Darkness: a global perspective on the ritual use of caves. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, pp 81–6 [Google Scholar]
  • Lamdin-Whymark H (2008) The Residue of Ritualized Action: Neolithic deposition practices in the Middle Thames Valley, BAR British Series, Oxford, No 466, 239 p [Google Scholar]
  • Kinnes I (1979) Round Barrows and Ring-ditches in the British Neolithic, British Museum, London, 140 p [Google Scholar]
  • Loveday R, Barclay A (2010) One of the most interesting barrows ever examined - Liffs Low revisited. In: Leary J, Darvill T, Field D (eds) Round Mounds and Monumentality in the British Neolithic and Beyond. Oxbow, Oxford, pp 108–29 [Google Scholar]
  • Green M (2000) A Landscape Revealed: 10,000 years on a chalkland farm. Tempus, Stroud, 160 p [Google Scholar]
  • Thomas JS, Parker Pearson M, Pollard J, et al (2009) The date of the Stonehenge cursus. Antiquity 83:40–53 [Google Scholar]
  • Gibson AM (1998) Stonehenge and Timber Circles. Tempus, Stroud, 160 p [Google Scholar]
  • Roberts I (ed) (2005) FerrybridgeHenge: the ritual landscape. Archaeological investigations at the site of the Holmfield Interchange of the A1 Motorway. Archaeological Services WYAS, Morley, 278 p [Google Scholar]
  • Woodbridge J, Fyfe RM, Roberts N, et al (2012) The impact of the Neolithic agricultural transition in Britain: a comparison of pollen-based land-cover and archaeological 14C date-inferred population change. J Arch Sci http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440312004761 [Google Scholar]
  • Shennan SJ, Downey S, Timpson A, et al (2013) Regional population collapse followed initial agriculture booms in mid-Holocene Europe. Nature Comms 4:2486. DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3486 [Google Scholar]
  • Healy F (2012) Chronology, corpses, ceramics, copper and lithics. In: Allen MJ, Gardiner J, Sheridan A (eds) Is There a British Chalcolithic? People, place and polity in the later 3rd millennium. Oxbow, Oxford, pp 144–63 [Google Scholar]
  • Atkinson RJC, Piggott CM, Sandars N (1951) Excavations at Dorchester, Oxon, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 151 p [Google Scholar]
  • Piggott S (1948) The excavations at Cairnpapple Hill, West Lothian, 1947–8. Proc SocAntiq Scot 82:68–123 [Google Scholar]
  • Sheridan JA, Bradley RJ, Schulting R (2009) Radiocarbon dates arranged through National Museums Scotland Archaeology Department during 2008/9. Discovery and Excavation in Scotland 10:212–14 [Google Scholar]
  • Lynch F, Musson C (2004) A prehistoric and early medieval complex at Llandegai, near Bangor, north Wales. Arch Camb 150:17–142 [Google Scholar]
  • Parker Pearson M, Chamberlain A, Jay M, et al (2009) Who was buried at Stonehenge? Antiquity 83:23–39 [Google Scholar]
  • Willis C, Marshall P, McKinley JI, et al (forthcoming) The dead of Stonehenge. Antiquity 90 [Google Scholar]
  • Fitzpatrick AP (2011) The Amesbury Archer and the Boscombe Bowmen: Bell Beaker burials at Boscombe Down, Amesbury, Wiltshire, Wessex Archaeology, Salisbury, 278 p [Google Scholar]
  • Brown F, Howard-Davis C, Brennand M, et al (2007) The Archaeology of the A1(M) Darrington to Dishforth DBFO Road Scheme. Oxford Archaeology North, Lancaster, 452 p [Google Scholar]
  • Lanting JN, Brindley AL (1998) Dating Cremated Bone: the Dawn of a New Era. J Irish Arch 9:1–7 [Google Scholar]
  • Gibson AM (2004) Burials and Beakers: seeing beneath the veneer in Late Neolithic Britain. In: Czebreszuk J (ed) Similar but Different: Bell Beakers in Europe. Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, pp 173–92 [Google Scholar]
  • Carlin N (2011) Into the West: placing Beakers within their Irish contexts. In: Jones AM, Kirkham G (eds) Beyond the Core: reflections on regionality in prehistory. Oxford: Oxbow, Oxford, pp 87–100 [Google Scholar]
  • Burgess CB (1980) The Age of Stonehenge, Dent and Sons, London, 402 p [Google Scholar]
  • Piggott S (1938) The Early Bronze Age in Wessex. Proc Prehist Soc 4:52–106 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Needham S, Parker Pearson M, Tyler A, et al (2010) A first ‘Wessex I’ date from Wessex. Antiquity 84:363–73 [Google Scholar]
  • Burgess CB (1976) Burials with metalwork of the later Bronze Age in Wales and beyond. In: Boon GC, Lewis JM (eds) Welsh Antiquity. National Museum of Wales, Cardiff, pp 81–104 [Google Scholar]
  • Brück J (1995) A place for the dead: the role of human remains in the Late Bronze Age. Proc Prehist Soc 61:245–77 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Bradley RJ, Gordon K (1988) Human skulls from the River Thames: their dating and significance. Antiquity 62:503–9 [Google Scholar]
  • Schulting R, Bradley RJ (2013) ‘Of human remains and weapons in the neighbourhood of London’: new AMS 14C dates on Thames ‘river skulls’ and their European context. Arch J 170:30–77 [Google Scholar]
  • Evans CJ (2013) Delivering bodies unto waters: a Late Bronze Age mid-stream midden settlement and Iron Age ritual complex in the Fens. Antiquity 93:55–79 [Google Scholar]
  • Brück J (1999) Houses, lifecycles and deposition on Middle Bronze Age settlements in southern England. Proc Prehist Soc 65:145–66 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Whimster R (1981) Burial Practices in Iron Age Britain: a discussion and gazetteer of the evidence c.700 BC-AD 43, BAR British Series, Oxford, No 90, 457 p [Google Scholar]
  • McKinley JI (1997) Bronze Age ‘barrows’ and funerary rites and rituals of cremation. Proc Prehist Soc 63:129–45 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Carr G, Knüsel C (1997) The ritual framework of excarnation as the mortuary practice of the Early and Middle Iron Ages of central southern Britain. In: Gwilt A, Haselgrove C (eds) Reconstructing Iron Age Societies: new approaches to the British Iron Age. Oxbow, Oxford, pp 167–73 [Google Scholar]
  • Boulestin B, Zeeb-Lanz A, Jeunesse C, et al (2009) Mass cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture at Herxheim (Palatinate, Germany). Antiquity 83:968–82 [Google Scholar]
  • Chagnon NA (1992) Yanomamo: the last days of Eden. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, San Diego, 309 p [Google Scholar]
  • Cockburn TA, Cockburn E, Reyman TA (eds) (1980) Mummies, Disease and Ancient Cultures. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 402 p [Google Scholar]
  • Aufderheide AC (2003) The Scientific Study of Mummies. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 634 p [Google Scholar]
  • Molina F, Rodríguez-Ariza MO, Jiménez S, et al (2003) La sepultura 121 delyacimientoargárico de El Castellón Alto (Galera, Granada). Trab Prehist 60:153–8 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • van der Sanden WAB (1996) Through Nature to Eternity: the bog bodies of northwest Europe. Batavian Lion, Amsterdam, 200 p [Google Scholar]
  • Boyd JM, Boyd IL (1990) The Hebrides: a natural history. Collins, London, 416 p [Google Scholar]
  • Parker Pearson M (ed) (2012) From Machair to Mountains: archaeological survey and excavation in South Uist. Oxbow, Oxford, 428 p [Google Scholar]
  • Parker Pearson M, Sharples N, Symonds J (2004) South Uist: archaeology and history of a Hebridean island. Tempus, Stroud, 224 p [Google Scholar]
  • Hanna J, Bouwman AS, Brown KA, et al (2012) Ancient DNA typing shows that a Bronze Age mummy is a composite of different skeletons. J Arch Sci 39:2774–9 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Parker Pearson M, Chamberlain A, Collins MJ, et al (2005) Evidence for mummification in Bronze Age Britain. Antiquity 79:529–46 [Google Scholar]
  • Parker Pearson M, Chamberlain A, Collins MJ, et al (2007) Further evidence for mummification in Bronze Age Britain. Antiquity http://antiquity.ac.uk/ProjGall/313/html [Google Scholar]
  • Branigan K, Edwards KJ, Merrony C (2002) Bronze Age fuel: the oldest direct evidence for peat cutting and stack construction. Antiquity 76:849–55 [Google Scholar]
  • Booth T, Chamberlain A, Parker Pearson M (2015) Mummification in Bronze Age Britain. Antiquity 89:1155–73 [Google Scholar]
  • Hedges REM, Millard AR, Pike AWG (1995) Measurements and relationships of diagenetic alteration of bone from three archaeological sites. J Arch Sci 22:201–9 [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Millard AR (2001) The deterioration of bone. In: Brothwell D, Pollard AM (eds) Handbook of Archaeological Sciences. John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, pp 637–47 [Google Scholar]
  • Green M (2012) Cursus continuum: further discoveries in the Dorset Cursus environs, Cranborne Chase, Dorset. In: Jones AM,Pollard CJ, Allen MJ, et al (eds) Image, Memory and Monumentality: archaeological engagements with the material world. Oxbow, Oxford, pp 73–9 [Google Scholar]
  • Bailey L, Green M, Smith MJ (2013) Keeping the family together: Canada Farm's Bronze Age burials. Curr Arch 279:20–6 [Google Scholar]

Les statistiques affichées correspondent au cumul d'une part des vues des résumés de l'article et d'autre part des vues et téléchargements de l'article plein-texte (PDF, Full-HTML, ePub... selon les formats disponibles) sur la platefome Vision4Press.

Les statistiques sont disponibles avec un délai de 48 à 96 heures et sont mises à jour quotidiennement en semaine.

Le chargement des statistiques peut être long.