The dolmen of Carrascal (Sintra, Portugal) was discovered at the end of the 19th century. The human bones housed in the Museu dos Serviços Geológicos (Lisbon) were re-analysed in the scope of a research program that is investigating the past lifeways of Late Neolithic populations from the central and southern regions of Portugal. Recent fieldwork under the scope of the Recovery and Valorisation project of the monument undertaken by the Sintra Municipality allowed constructional aspects of the tomb to be clarified, and the recovery of further osteological and archaeological remains. The radiocarbon dates obtained from the human bones enable us to assign this monument to an initial phase of the funerary practices associated with m...
The aim of this article is to present to the scientific and academic community a new osteological ...
The bone remains whose study is presented here come from two Late Roman burial grounds, Calle Era an...
The importance of reference osteological collections is unquestionable. However, the development of ...
El dolmen de Carrascal (Sintra, Portugal) fue descubierto a finales del siglo XIX. Los restos óseos ...
The dolmen of Carrascal (Sintra, Portugal) was discovered at the end of the 19th century. The human ...
The Dolmen of Pedras Grandes (Odivelas, Lisboa, Portugal) was discovered and excavated at the end of...
A research project on the Algar do Bom Santo necropolis started in 2010. This paper presents a preli...
Evidence of Neolithic occupation at Arma dell’Aquila (Finale Ligure, Italy) had been unearthed in th...
The study of the Bom Santo Cave (central Portugal), a Neolithic cemetery, indicates a complex social...
Lugar do Canto Cave is one of the most relevant Neolithic burial caves in Portugal given not only it...
The Southwest Iberian Middle Bronze Age culture, although widespread in southern Portugal and nearby...
A Necrópole de Alapraia (Cascais), datada do Neolítico final, é constituída por quatro grutas artifi...
Cussac Cave presents a unique combination of parietal art and several hundred parts of scattered hum...
Cobrinhos (Vila Velha do Ródão, central eastern Portugal) is a Mousterian site found during factory ...
Located on the Iberian Mediterranean coast, El Collado is an open-air site where a rescue excavation...
The aim of this article is to present to the scientific and academic community a new osteological ...
The bone remains whose study is presented here come from two Late Roman burial grounds, Calle Era an...
The importance of reference osteological collections is unquestionable. However, the development of ...
El dolmen de Carrascal (Sintra, Portugal) fue descubierto a finales del siglo XIX. Los restos óseos ...
The dolmen of Carrascal (Sintra, Portugal) was discovered at the end of the 19th century. The human ...
The Dolmen of Pedras Grandes (Odivelas, Lisboa, Portugal) was discovered and excavated at the end of...
A research project on the Algar do Bom Santo necropolis started in 2010. This paper presents a preli...
Evidence of Neolithic occupation at Arma dell’Aquila (Finale Ligure, Italy) had been unearthed in th...
The study of the Bom Santo Cave (central Portugal), a Neolithic cemetery, indicates a complex social...
Lugar do Canto Cave is one of the most relevant Neolithic burial caves in Portugal given not only it...
The Southwest Iberian Middle Bronze Age culture, although widespread in southern Portugal and nearby...
A Necrópole de Alapraia (Cascais), datada do Neolítico final, é constituída por quatro grutas artifi...
Cussac Cave presents a unique combination of parietal art and several hundred parts of scattered hum...
Cobrinhos (Vila Velha do Ródão, central eastern Portugal) is a Mousterian site found during factory ...
Located on the Iberian Mediterranean coast, El Collado is an open-air site where a rescue excavation...
The aim of this article is to present to the scientific and academic community a new osteological ...
The bone remains whose study is presented here come from two Late Roman burial grounds, Calle Era an...
The importance of reference osteological collections is unquestionable. However, the development of ...