The focus of this paper is the ornament hoard from the Sopot culture site of Čepin-Ovčara in eastern Slavonia (the Republic of Croatia). The hoard contained pendants and beads made of shells of marine clam Spondylus gaederopus and scaphopod Antalis vulgaris. The paper analyses the context and use wear of the objects in the hoard. The results form a basis for: the reconstruction of the role of some of the items and the ways in which they were worn; the premise that the dynamics and mechanisms of acquisition of ornaments made of the two Mediterranean mollusc species could have differed; and the identification of a cross-cultural pattern of deposition of ornament hoards
S’Omu e S’Orku (SOMK) on the western coast of Sardinia (Italy) is a collapsed rockshelter currently...
International audienceOrnaments are a non-verbal mode of communication, employed by societies to tra...
The first appearance of explicitly symbolic objects in the archaeological record marks a fundamental...
The focus of this paper is the ornament hoard from the Sopot culture site of čepin-Ov-čara in easter...
The study of ornaments made of marine shells has remarkable importance for understanding prehistoric...
In the provision, production and exchange of prestigious items and materials in prehistoric Europe, ...
A string of marine shell beads from the Neolithic site of Vegnik (Ovce polje, Republic of Macedonia)...
Dimitrijević, Vesna, Naumov, Goce, Fidanoski, Ljubo, Stefanović, Sofija (2021): A string of marine s...
This paper advances the current knowledge on past foragers’ ornamental traditions by comparing the L...
The study refers to the issue of shell artefacts in the Early Neolithic and highlights the importanc...
FIG. 7. — The typology of beads from the Vršnik string.Published as part of Dimitrijević, Vesna, Nau...
This paper advances the current knowledge on past foragers’ ornamental traditions by comparing the ...
Personal ornaments are commonly linked to the emergence of symbolic behavior. Although their presenc...
Mollusc shells have been used for the production of ornaments since the Palaeolithic times. Some of ...
The making and the use of personal ornaments is one of the main debates about the systematic human b...
S’Omu e S’Orku (SOMK) on the western coast of Sardinia (Italy) is a collapsed rockshelter currently...
International audienceOrnaments are a non-verbal mode of communication, employed by societies to tra...
The first appearance of explicitly symbolic objects in the archaeological record marks a fundamental...
The focus of this paper is the ornament hoard from the Sopot culture site of čepin-Ov-čara in easter...
The study of ornaments made of marine shells has remarkable importance for understanding prehistoric...
In the provision, production and exchange of prestigious items and materials in prehistoric Europe, ...
A string of marine shell beads from the Neolithic site of Vegnik (Ovce polje, Republic of Macedonia)...
Dimitrijević, Vesna, Naumov, Goce, Fidanoski, Ljubo, Stefanović, Sofija (2021): A string of marine s...
This paper advances the current knowledge on past foragers’ ornamental traditions by comparing the L...
The study refers to the issue of shell artefacts in the Early Neolithic and highlights the importanc...
FIG. 7. — The typology of beads from the Vršnik string.Published as part of Dimitrijević, Vesna, Nau...
This paper advances the current knowledge on past foragers’ ornamental traditions by comparing the ...
Personal ornaments are commonly linked to the emergence of symbolic behavior. Although their presenc...
Mollusc shells have been used for the production of ornaments since the Palaeolithic times. Some of ...
The making and the use of personal ornaments is one of the main debates about the systematic human b...
S’Omu e S’Orku (SOMK) on the western coast of Sardinia (Italy) is a collapsed rockshelter currently...
International audienceOrnaments are a non-verbal mode of communication, employed by societies to tra...
The first appearance of explicitly symbolic objects in the archaeological record marks a fundamental...