This collection of short articles represents an original attempt to bring together scholarship that is usually divided along lines of specialism in time, place, method, or discipline. The shared focus of its contributions is on hair: more than an infrequently preserved element of human remains, but a widespread (and arguably cross-cultural) symbol of power, of fertility, of identity and the self. Moreover, its care and treatment using various forms of material culture, and its artistic representation in diverse media, offer a unique opportunity to examine the interface between the body and material culture. Where exceptional taphonomic conditions facilitate the preservation of hair and associated organic material, the result is some of the ...
Styling one's hair seems to be an innate desire of humans to emphasize their beauty and power. As re...
The purpose of the article is to determine the peculiarities of the development of ancient hairstyle...
A study of hair in the Viking Age. The article draws on medieval Icelandic and Scandinavian texts fo...
This collection of short articles represents an original attempt to bring together scholarship that ...
Anthropologists and sociologists have made hair the focus of numerous studies since the late ninetee...
In this article, we will conduct a detailed review on the topic of hairiness in the prehistoric area...
NoHair removed from archaeological burials can tell us a lot about the diet and lifestyle of our anc...
Katherine Schwab and Marice Rose are contributing authors, Self and Society. Book description: How...
Biomolecular archaeometry is an interdisciplinary discipline integrating humanities and hard science...
International audienceWhen exceptionally preserved, hairs, wools, the skin stratum corneum and avian...
Hair carried a significant symbolic value among the cultures of ancient Greece, Rome and Egypt. In t...
NoThere is developing interest in the analytical use of human hair from archaeological contexts in k...
A recent upsurge exists of archaeologists using ancient hair as a research tool, with new uses of th...
Although the taphonomic (post-mortem) degradation processes relevant to teeth and bones have been we...
Personal hygiene paraphernalia has been largely overlooked in interpretations of prehistoric Europea...
Styling one's hair seems to be an innate desire of humans to emphasize their beauty and power. As re...
The purpose of the article is to determine the peculiarities of the development of ancient hairstyle...
A study of hair in the Viking Age. The article draws on medieval Icelandic and Scandinavian texts fo...
This collection of short articles represents an original attempt to bring together scholarship that ...
Anthropologists and sociologists have made hair the focus of numerous studies since the late ninetee...
In this article, we will conduct a detailed review on the topic of hairiness in the prehistoric area...
NoHair removed from archaeological burials can tell us a lot about the diet and lifestyle of our anc...
Katherine Schwab and Marice Rose are contributing authors, Self and Society. Book description: How...
Biomolecular archaeometry is an interdisciplinary discipline integrating humanities and hard science...
International audienceWhen exceptionally preserved, hairs, wools, the skin stratum corneum and avian...
Hair carried a significant symbolic value among the cultures of ancient Greece, Rome and Egypt. In t...
NoThere is developing interest in the analytical use of human hair from archaeological contexts in k...
A recent upsurge exists of archaeologists using ancient hair as a research tool, with new uses of th...
Although the taphonomic (post-mortem) degradation processes relevant to teeth and bones have been we...
Personal hygiene paraphernalia has been largely overlooked in interpretations of prehistoric Europea...
Styling one's hair seems to be an innate desire of humans to emphasize their beauty and power. As re...
The purpose of the article is to determine the peculiarities of the development of ancient hairstyle...
A study of hair in the Viking Age. The article draws on medieval Icelandic and Scandinavian texts fo...