Drawing on the results of new multi-method research in Grotta Regina Margherita—the largest known Middle Bronze Age mortuary cave in west-central Italy (ca. 1650–1450 b.c.)—this article helps to replace the generic idea of “collective burial” with a more precise understanding of how the bodies of the deceased were transformed into potent social, symbolic, and sensuous resources housed in caves. It contextualizes this process within a nuanced understanding of settlement and subsistence practices, in which relatively short-lived and small-scale agricultural communities extended inland to the edge of the Apennine Mountains, ritually demarcating mortuary assemblages in caves in the process
This report introduces a new archaeological research project investigating the human uses of caves i...
This chapter attempts to synthesize the available data relating to the human use of over 100 natural...
Across Europe, the genetics of the Chalcolithic/Bronze Age transition is increasingly characterized ...
Drawing on the results of new multi-method research in Grotta Regina Margherita—the largest known Mi...
Drawing on the results of new multi-method research in Grotta Regina Margherita-the largest known Mi...
The study of the Bom Santo Cave (central Portugal), a Neolithic cemetery, indicates a complex social...
Evidence of Neolithic occupation at Arma dell’Aquila (Finale Ligure, Italy) had been unearthed in th...
The multidisciplinary research team of this new project aimed at the chronological, anthropological ...
Grotta Mora Cavorso is a multi-stratified site located in the inner Apennines in Central Italy. The ...
This paper concerns the role of costly signalling in the ritual expressions of Middle Bronze Age hum...
A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the ear...
The famous upper Palaeolithic (Gravettian) burial with shell ornaments known as "Il Principe" was di...
This article seeks to contribute to recent scholarship on ritual performances in caves, sensory arch...
Following a mid twelfth-century BC demographic crisis, Frattesina, in northern Italy, arose as a pro...
Following a mid twelfth-century BC demographic crisis, Frattesina, in northern Italy, arose as a pro...
This report introduces a new archaeological research project investigating the human uses of caves i...
This chapter attempts to synthesize the available data relating to the human use of over 100 natural...
Across Europe, the genetics of the Chalcolithic/Bronze Age transition is increasingly characterized ...
Drawing on the results of new multi-method research in Grotta Regina Margherita—the largest known Mi...
Drawing on the results of new multi-method research in Grotta Regina Margherita-the largest known Mi...
The study of the Bom Santo Cave (central Portugal), a Neolithic cemetery, indicates a complex social...
Evidence of Neolithic occupation at Arma dell’Aquila (Finale Ligure, Italy) had been unearthed in th...
The multidisciplinary research team of this new project aimed at the chronological, anthropological ...
Grotta Mora Cavorso is a multi-stratified site located in the inner Apennines in Central Italy. The ...
This paper concerns the role of costly signalling in the ritual expressions of Middle Bronze Age hum...
A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the ear...
The famous upper Palaeolithic (Gravettian) burial with shell ornaments known as "Il Principe" was di...
This article seeks to contribute to recent scholarship on ritual performances in caves, sensory arch...
Following a mid twelfth-century BC demographic crisis, Frattesina, in northern Italy, arose as a pro...
Following a mid twelfth-century BC demographic crisis, Frattesina, in northern Italy, arose as a pro...
This report introduces a new archaeological research project investigating the human uses of caves i...
This chapter attempts to synthesize the available data relating to the human use of over 100 natural...
Across Europe, the genetics of the Chalcolithic/Bronze Age transition is increasingly characterized ...