9 research outputs found

    The Agrarian Life of the North 2000 BC AD 1000

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    The 14 articles presented in this publication represent some of the latest and most relevant research on rural settlement and farming from the Late Neolithic through the Early Medieval Period in Norway. It deals with the impact of climate change, plague and the AD 536â 7 volcanic event and some of the earliest farms north of the Arctic Circle. It provides new perspectives and archaeological evidence for the Viking age farm of Norway, differences in regional settlement structures of agrarian societies, the relation between houses and graves in the Iron Age, and varying food practices as indicators of societal change

    The Agrarian Life of the North 2000 BC AD 1000

    Get PDF
    The 14 articles presented in this publication represent some of the latest and most relevant research on rural settlement and farming from the Late Neolithic through the Early Medieval Period in Norway. It deals with the impact of climate change, plague and the AD 536â 7 volcanic event and some of the earliest farms north of the Arctic Circle. It provides new perspectives and archaeological evidence for the Viking age farm of Norway, differences in regional settlement structures of agrarian societies, the relation between houses and graves in the Iron Age, and varying food practices as indicators of societal change

    Environment and Settlement: Ørland 600 BC - AD 1250

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    "During the Late Bronze Age, the Iron Age and early medieval period (c. 600 BC–AD 1250) settlement at Vik in the Ørland peninsula emerged, flourished, vanished and emerged anew. Local landscape and vegetation development, cross-regional cultural developments and global climatic events were of great significance to the farmer-fisher communities at Vik throughout these periods. In this book, results from the 2014–2016 archaeological excavations at Ørland main air base have been refined and developed. The 13 papers deal with landscape, vegetation and environmental aspects related to the excavated settlement, as well as the spatial and social organization of the built environment. Building traditions, disposal practices, the form and representation of everyday objects, subsistence and landscape use are central to the discussions.

    Milking the Aanderaa Argument

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    In the early 1970's, by an intricate and involved counting argument, Stål Aanderaa managed to show for the first time that every additional tape adds to the power of a Turing machine that operates in real time. This was a full decade after Rabin had shown that the second tape adds power. With time, especially following the introduction of an information-theoretic approach based on Kolmogorov's notion of descriptional complexity, Aanderaa's argument has become better understood, and even extended to new results. In this paper, we present a clean version of the argument and some new extensions
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