Sökning: "Stone age"

Visar resultat 1 - 5 av 95 avhandlingar innehållade orden Stone age.

  1. 1. Östersjöns skeppssättningar : monument och mötesplatser under yngre bronsålder

    Författare :Joakim Wehlin; Kristian Kristiansen; Helene Martinsson-Wallin; Mads Kähler Holst; Högskolan på Gotland; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Ship setting; stone setting; burial; burnt bone; bronze age; Pre-roman iron age; bornholm; gotland; latvia; saaremaa; åland; baltic sea; maritime; landscape; seascape; maritime institution; maritory;

    Sammanfattning : During the Late Bronze Age, the number of metal objects in the Baltic Sea region increased tremendously.  Mobility and interaction in this northern inland sea intensified. This occurred in a period of prehistory when the ship was the predominant symbol in southern Scandinavia. LÄS MER

  2. 2. Gotländska stenåldersstudier : Människor och djur, platser och landskap

    Författare :Helena Andersson; Anders Carlsson; Björn Nilsson; Stockholms universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Gotland; Stone Age; Middle Neolithic; Early Neolithic; Mesolithic; Pitted Ware culture; Battle Axe culture; Funnel Beaker culture; landscape; places; material culture; animals; mortuary practices; burials; rituals; identity; practice; arkeologi; Archaeology;

    Sammanfattning : This thesis deals mainly with the Middle Neolithic period (ca. 3200-2300 BC) on the island of Gotland in the Baltic Sea. The aim is to deepen the understanding of how the islanders related to their surroundings, to the landscape, to places, to objects, to animals and to humans, both living and dead. LÄS MER

  3. 3. Östersjöns skeppssättningar. Monument och mötesplatser under yngre bronsålder / Baltic Stone Ships. Monuments and Meeting places during the Late Bronze Age

    Författare :Joakim Wehlin; Göteborgs universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Ship settings; Stone ships; Burials; Burnt bones; Bronze Age; Pre-Roman Iron Age; Bornholm; Gotland; Latvia; Saaremaa; Åland; Baltic Sea; Maritime; Landscape; Seascape; Maritime institutions; Maritory;

    Sammanfattning : During the Late Bronze Age, the number of metal objects in the Baltic Sea region increased tremendously. Mobility and interaction in this northern inland sea intensified. This occurred in a period of prehistory when the ship was the predominant symbol in southern Scandinavia. LÄS MER

  4. 4. Stone Age Companions: Humans and animals in hunter-gatherer burials in north-eastern Europe

    Författare :Aija Macane; Göteborgs universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; human–animal relationships; relational ontologies; companionship perspective; burial archaeology; mortuary practices; zooarchaeology; hunter-gatherers; Stone Age; Mesolithic; Neolithic; north-eastern Europe; southern Sweden; Latvia; central European Russia;

    Sammanfattning : This thesis examines the relationships between humans and animals in their mutual environment and how these relationships were expressed in the burial practices of northern foragers. The empirical research material consists of animal remains, particularly animal tooth pendants, deposited in graves at Zvejnieki (Latvia), Skateholm I and II (Sweden) and Sakhtysh II and IIa (Russia) cemeteries. LÄS MER

  5. 5. Med älgen i huvudrollen : Om fångstgropar, hällbilder och skärvstensvallar i mellersta Norrland

    Författare :Ylva Sjöstrand; Anders Andrén; Kerstin Cassel; Lise Nordenborg Myhre; Stockholms universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Stone Age; Northern Sweden; Nämforsen; rock art; pit falls; mounds of burnt stone; affordances; James J. Gibsson; chronology; theories of meaning; key symbols; neolithisation; arkeologi; Archaeology;

    Sammanfattning : The importance of the elk (Alces alces) in the Stone Age societies of northern Sweden constitutes the major focus of this thesis. The point of departure is a simple but crucial observation: this animal is the common denominator between the three stationary types of remains known in this region from the period 4000-1800 BC. LÄS MER