This study focuses on the nature of social and economic interaction among Late Bronze Age (c.1800–1500 BC) pastoralists of the mountainous steppes of Semirech\u27ya (eastern Kazakhstan). This period is typically documented in terms of various regional archaeological culture groups of the Andronovo Cultural Community, whose alleged mobility contributed to the formation of a wide macro phenomenon that spanned the Eurasian steppe zone, reflected in the wide distribution of a common material culture. The genesis of this distribution is typically explained through models of long distance migration or cultural diffusion, which resulted from the demands of an extensive pastoral economy and was facilitated by the ability to ride horses on the part ...
The current article discusses the Bronze Age metal evidence in Central Asia based on a vast study of...
The ethnohistorical record of the Eurasian steppes points to the long-term predominance of extensive...
The Andronovo and Saka cultures develop during the Bronze and Iron Age (2nd and 1st millennia BC) on...
This study focuses on the nature of social and economic interaction among Late Bronze Age (c.1800–15...
While it has recently become clear that pastoral groups have varied economies, social systems, and m...
The long-standing subsistence model for the Bronze Age communities in the Southeastern Urals region ...
transmission among Bronze Age mobile pastoralists of Central Eurasia. Proc. R. Soc. Bchronology for ...
It is a widely accepted fact that the cultural interaction between Northwest China and its westerly ...
The first English-language monograph that describes seasonal and permanent Late Bronze Age settlemen...
In the past ten years or more, social complexity has taken center stage as the focus of archaeologis...
In the past ten years or more, social complexity has taken center stage as the focus of archaeologis...
This dissertation examines mobility practices among hunter-gatherer groups who inhabited the Cis-Bai...
Archaeological excavations at the Dali site complex located in southeastern Kazakhstan provide a ric...
International audienceWe provide a multi-scalar investigation of interactions among hunter-gatherers...
This thesis presents the results of phytolith and faecal spherulite analysis from three sites in the...
The current article discusses the Bronze Age metal evidence in Central Asia based on a vast study of...
The ethnohistorical record of the Eurasian steppes points to the long-term predominance of extensive...
The Andronovo and Saka cultures develop during the Bronze and Iron Age (2nd and 1st millennia BC) on...
This study focuses on the nature of social and economic interaction among Late Bronze Age (c.1800–15...
While it has recently become clear that pastoral groups have varied economies, social systems, and m...
The long-standing subsistence model for the Bronze Age communities in the Southeastern Urals region ...
transmission among Bronze Age mobile pastoralists of Central Eurasia. Proc. R. Soc. Bchronology for ...
It is a widely accepted fact that the cultural interaction between Northwest China and its westerly ...
The first English-language monograph that describes seasonal and permanent Late Bronze Age settlemen...
In the past ten years or more, social complexity has taken center stage as the focus of archaeologis...
In the past ten years or more, social complexity has taken center stage as the focus of archaeologis...
This dissertation examines mobility practices among hunter-gatherer groups who inhabited the Cis-Bai...
Archaeological excavations at the Dali site complex located in southeastern Kazakhstan provide a ric...
International audienceWe provide a multi-scalar investigation of interactions among hunter-gatherers...
This thesis presents the results of phytolith and faecal spherulite analysis from three sites in the...
The current article discusses the Bronze Age metal evidence in Central Asia based on a vast study of...
The ethnohistorical record of the Eurasian steppes points to the long-term predominance of extensive...
The Andronovo and Saka cultures develop during the Bronze and Iron Age (2nd and 1st millennia BC) on...