The aim of this report is to describe the ten animal skin fragments and artefacts, and to discuss these in relation to the qualities and role of skins as a cloth technology in the Bronze Age. This includes the colour and texture, dimensions and thickness, sewing, seams and edges, use and reuse of these artefacts. These fragments and artefacts have not been studied before and add to the previously published findings of animal skin artefacts from the Bronze Age salt mine. They will be discussed in comparison to recent analysis of the textile finds from the same site and in relation to the context of animal skins in the Bronze Age
The study of leather is a specialist field in archaeology, yet focuses on one of the major materials...
The unusual linen twill fragments found in the Hallstatt salt mine in Austria, previously assumed to...
In prehistoric Europe, where skins are preserved and can be analysed, the skins are cured rather tha...
The aim of this report is to describe the ten animal skin fragments and artefacts, and to discuss th...
For over a millennium, the site of Hallstatt, located in the Austrian Alps, was a meeting point betw...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the social context of cloth from the Neolithic to Bronze Age (C...
The importance of skin processing technologies, in the history and dispersal of humankind around the...
Introduction This paper has as its subject the narrow woven horsehair band from Cromaghs, Co. Antri...
The aim of this research is to compare the cloth cultures of Europe and Egypt in the Bronze Age and ...
A decorative textile and animal skin object, possible a sash or belt, was found in an Early Bronze A...
Textile production is one of the oldest crafts and has played a crucial role in societies. Yet, very...
Organic materials are rare in the archaeological settlement context of the central Balkan area. A un...
When we encounter cloth-type materials, whether textiles, twined cloth or animal skins from the Neol...
This thesis investigates the skin and fur finds which have been excavated from Iron Age (500 BC – AD...
Numerous animal bones were excavated from the Bronze Age Alpine settlement, Savognin-Padnal, located...
The study of leather is a specialist field in archaeology, yet focuses on one of the major materials...
The unusual linen twill fragments found in the Hallstatt salt mine in Austria, previously assumed to...
In prehistoric Europe, where skins are preserved and can be analysed, the skins are cured rather tha...
The aim of this report is to describe the ten animal skin fragments and artefacts, and to discuss th...
For over a millennium, the site of Hallstatt, located in the Austrian Alps, was a meeting point betw...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the social context of cloth from the Neolithic to Bronze Age (C...
The importance of skin processing technologies, in the history and dispersal of humankind around the...
Introduction This paper has as its subject the narrow woven horsehair band from Cromaghs, Co. Antri...
The aim of this research is to compare the cloth cultures of Europe and Egypt in the Bronze Age and ...
A decorative textile and animal skin object, possible a sash or belt, was found in an Early Bronze A...
Textile production is one of the oldest crafts and has played a crucial role in societies. Yet, very...
Organic materials are rare in the archaeological settlement context of the central Balkan area. A un...
When we encounter cloth-type materials, whether textiles, twined cloth or animal skins from the Neol...
This thesis investigates the skin and fur finds which have been excavated from Iron Age (500 BC – AD...
Numerous animal bones were excavated from the Bronze Age Alpine settlement, Savognin-Padnal, located...
The study of leather is a specialist field in archaeology, yet focuses on one of the major materials...
The unusual linen twill fragments found in the Hallstatt salt mine in Austria, previously assumed to...
In prehistoric Europe, where skins are preserved and can be analysed, the skins are cured rather tha...