The surface pottery from a well-preserved Holocene archaeological site in south-western Libya is analysed. The collection suggests a long and protracted human occupation of the shelter, from Late Acacus (Mesolithic) hunter-gatherers to Late Pastoral (Neolithic) herders. Aim of the work is to decode the dynamic history of the site via the study of its surface elements, both artefacts and ecofacts, and the way they interacted over the millennia. To do this, traditional ceramic analysis is combined with recently developed methods of description imported from sedimentology, stressing the potentialities of surface archaeological material. In this framework, spatial analysis of scattered potsherds, in connection with their quantitative and qualit...
Caves have yielded some of the most globally important archaeological sequences, but often their int...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
This study seeks to define the relationship between the pottery remains from early and mid-Holocene ...
The paper aims to discuss the archaeometric characterization of 69 potsherds, from a rock shelter lo...
Routine pottery analyses (optical microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, X-ray fluorescence) and digi...
The excavation at Takarkori rock shelter is part of a long-term study of Holocene cultural dynamics ...
The archaeological landscape of the Tadrart Acacus massif (SW Libya, central Sahara) is made of site...
The identification of mobility patterns in prehistoric communities is crucial for the understanding ...
The paper presents the large set of basketry and other worked fibre artefacts constituting the peris...
Contexts with monumental features are common in the Holocene later prehistory of central Sahara. The...
The paper presents the large set of basketry and other worked fibre artefacts constituting the peris...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
The central Sahara was intensely occupied at the very onset of the Holocene, when moister conditions...
Rockshelters have hosted ancient Saharans since the Late Pleistocene. After a long hiatus, human occ...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
Caves have yielded some of the most globally important archaeological sequences, but often their int...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
This study seeks to define the relationship between the pottery remains from early and mid-Holocene ...
The paper aims to discuss the archaeometric characterization of 69 potsherds, from a rock shelter lo...
Routine pottery analyses (optical microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, X-ray fluorescence) and digi...
The excavation at Takarkori rock shelter is part of a long-term study of Holocene cultural dynamics ...
The archaeological landscape of the Tadrart Acacus massif (SW Libya, central Sahara) is made of site...
The identification of mobility patterns in prehistoric communities is crucial for the understanding ...
The paper presents the large set of basketry and other worked fibre artefacts constituting the peris...
Contexts with monumental features are common in the Holocene later prehistory of central Sahara. The...
The paper presents the large set of basketry and other worked fibre artefacts constituting the peris...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
The central Sahara was intensely occupied at the very onset of the Holocene, when moister conditions...
Rockshelters have hosted ancient Saharans since the Late Pleistocene. After a long hiatus, human occ...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
Caves have yielded some of the most globally important archaeological sequences, but often their int...
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that rep...
This study seeks to define the relationship between the pottery remains from early and mid-Holocene ...