Following a survey ot the plain of Taluqan in the north-east of Afghanistan (1977), potsherds assigned to the chalcolithic period (end of 4th -beginning of the 3rd mill.) have been collected on six sites. Their technical and morphological features present analogies with potteries of the same period found on several sites between the Helmend and the Indus valleys. The apparition of settlements at the foot of the Badakhshan mountains in such ancient times may be related to the extraction of lapis-lazuli from this province, and to the lapis trade which developed throughout the East during that period.Une prospection conduite en 1977 dans la plaine de Taluqan (N.E. de l'Afghanistan) a fourni en six points différents une céramique de surface don...
The flint industry of Amri, in the Indus valley, occupied from the second half of the IVth Millenniu...
Ladakh, a Himalayan region in northern India, has remained relatively neglected in terms of ceramic ...
Black slipped jars from the Indus, containers used to transport commodities of an as yet unknown nat...
Following a survey ot the plain of Taluqan in the north-east of Afghanistan (1977), potsherds assign...
The comparison of the petrographical study of common wares from the protohistoric settlement of Shor...
Through a systematic study of large collections of poteries found in different parts of Afghanistan,...
The excavations at Nausharo (Pakistan), like all sites of the Indus Civilizations, produced a large ...
Twenty-five years ago, Roland Besenval (CNRS-UMR 9993) began a new archaeological field research pro...
The site of Dur Khan, recently surveyed by the French Archaeological Mission in Pakistan, has reveal...
International audienceCeramics play an essential role in the knowledge of the protohistoric cultures...
The paper describes the lapis lazuli industry recovered by the French archaeological mission at Mehr...
The Indus Civilisation flourished in part of the Indian Subcontinent during the Bronze Age. It was a...
The Indus Civilisation flourished in part of the Indian Subcontinent during the Bronze Age. It was a...
This paper presents a systematic review of the archaeological evidence for cultural interaction betw...
Sindh (Pakistan) is very rich in lithic resources that were exploited in prehistory at least since t...
The flint industry of Amri, in the Indus valley, occupied from the second half of the IVth Millenniu...
Ladakh, a Himalayan region in northern India, has remained relatively neglected in terms of ceramic ...
Black slipped jars from the Indus, containers used to transport commodities of an as yet unknown nat...
Following a survey ot the plain of Taluqan in the north-east of Afghanistan (1977), potsherds assign...
The comparison of the petrographical study of common wares from the protohistoric settlement of Shor...
Through a systematic study of large collections of poteries found in different parts of Afghanistan,...
The excavations at Nausharo (Pakistan), like all sites of the Indus Civilizations, produced a large ...
Twenty-five years ago, Roland Besenval (CNRS-UMR 9993) began a new archaeological field research pro...
The site of Dur Khan, recently surveyed by the French Archaeological Mission in Pakistan, has reveal...
International audienceCeramics play an essential role in the knowledge of the protohistoric cultures...
The paper describes the lapis lazuli industry recovered by the French archaeological mission at Mehr...
The Indus Civilisation flourished in part of the Indian Subcontinent during the Bronze Age. It was a...
The Indus Civilisation flourished in part of the Indian Subcontinent during the Bronze Age. It was a...
This paper presents a systematic review of the archaeological evidence for cultural interaction betw...
Sindh (Pakistan) is very rich in lithic resources that were exploited in prehistory at least since t...
The flint industry of Amri, in the Indus valley, occupied from the second half of the IVth Millenniu...
Ladakh, a Himalayan region in northern India, has remained relatively neglected in terms of ceramic ...
Black slipped jars from the Indus, containers used to transport commodities of an as yet unknown nat...