17 research outputs found

    Fueling the hearths in India : the role of dung in paleoethnobotanical interpretation

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    In assigning meaning to agricultural crop remains from archaeological sites, paleoethnobotanists are often hindered by issues related to defining the original source of carbonized seeds recovered from contexts where fuel material could have been a contributor. This article presents the results of recent ethnoarchaeological research conducted in India specifically designed to investigate the source of seed assemblages in archaeological contexts through studies of dung production and utilization by traditional farming communities. Particular attention is given to distinguishing the activities involved in and around domestic hearths, variation between different types of hearths and their fueling, and the nature of dung in India. Combining these results with previous studies on dung fueled hearths will provide paleoethnobotanists with a broader range of possible human behavior to test in archaeobotanical investigations.Lors de l'analyse des restes de moissons provenant de sites archéologiques, les paléobotanistes se heurtent souvent au problÚme d'identification des graines trouvées dans des contextes qui ont pu contenir du combustible. Cet article présente les résultats de recherches ethnoarchéologiques - production et utilisation du fumier par les sociétés agricoles traditionnelles - conduites en Inde afin d'aider à l'identification de l'origine de graines recueillies dans les contextes archéologiques. L'effort a porté en particulier sur la distinction qu'il convient d'établir en Inde entre des activités effectuées dans les foyers et à leur proximité, sur les différences entre les divers types de foyers et de combustibles, et sur la nature du fumier. Ces nouveaux résultats s 'ajoutant à des études plus anciennes ayant porté sur les foyers alimentés avec du fumier vont permettre aux paléoethnobotanistes d'élargir la gamme des possibilités qu'il leur faudra tester.Reddy Seetha N. Fueling the hearths in India : the role of dung in paleoethnobotanical interpretation. In: Paléorient, 1998, vol. 24, n°2. pp. 61-69

    <span style="font-size:11.0pt;font-family: "Times New Roman";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-bidi-font-family: Mangal;mso-ansi-language:EN-GB;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language: HI" lang="EN-GB">Methane reforming with carbon dioxide over La-Ni<sub>x</sub>-Ce<sub>1-x</sub> mixed oxide catalysts</span>

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    478-483La-Nix-Ce1-x mixed oxide (0≀x≀1) catalysts have been hydrothermally prepared, characterized by physico-chemical techniques and evaluated for CO2 reforming of methane. High conversions are achieved <span style="mso-bidi-font-style: italic">for both methane and carbon dioxide over the LaNi0.6Ce0.4O3 catalyst tested under the conditions of CO2/CH4/N2 ratio of 80/80/80 (total flow rate = 240 mL/min), space velocity of 28,800 h-1 and at a temperature of 800 °C. The H2/CO ratio in the syngas is stable at 0.93±0.02. Exchanging Ni with Ce, rather than with La as reported in the literature, appears to be a better option for the improved performance of the catalysts. </span

    Review of Indian Beads: A Cultural and Technological Study, by Shantaram Bhalchandra Deo; Distinctive Beads in Ancient India, by Maurya Jyotsna; Amulets and Pendants in Ancient Maharashtra, by Maurya Jyotsna; A Peacful Realm: the Rise and Fall of the Indus Civilization, by Jane McIntosh; India, An Archaeological History: Palaeolithic Beginnings to Early Historic Foundations, by Dilip K. Chakrabarti; Development of a Field Petrographic Analysis System and its Application to the Study of Socioeconomic Interaction Networks of the Early Harappan Northwestern Indus Valley of Pakistan, by Graham Mansfield Chandler; Maritime Archaeology: Historical Descriptions of the Kalingas, by Sila Tripati; Anuradhapura: The British-Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta 2, Volume I: The Site, by Robin Coningham; Indian Archaeology in Retrospect, Volume I: Prehistory--Archaeology of South Asia, by S. Settar and Ravi Korisettar (eds.); Indian Archaeology in Retrospect, Volume II: Protohistory--Archaeology of the Harappan Civilization, by S. Settar and Ravi Korisettar (eds.); Indian Archaeology in Retrospect, Volume III: Archaeology and Interactive Disciplines, by S. Settar and Ravi Korisettar (eds.); Indian Archaeology in Retrospect, Volume IV: Archaeology and Historiography: History, Theory, and Method, by S. Settar and Ravi Korisettar (eds.); The Archaeology of an Early Historic Town in Central India, by Monica Smith.

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    Determining Temporal Boundaries and Land Use Patterns: Hunter-Gatherer Spatiotemporal Patterning in San Diego County

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    Review of Asia's Cultural Mosaic: An Anthropological Introduction, by Grant Evans (ed.); Explorations on the Makran Coast, Pakistan: A Search for Paradise, by George F. Dales and Carl P. Lipo; Biological Adaptations in Human Dentition: An Odontometric Study on Living and Archaeological Populations in India, by Subash R. Walimbe and Shaunak S. Kulkarni; South Asian Archaeology 1989, by Catherine Jarrige (ed.); Palaeoethnobotany: Plants and Ancient Man in Kashmir, by Farooq A. Lone, Masooda Khan and G. M. Buth; Inventory of Monuments at Pagan, Volume I: Monuments 1 to 255, by Pierre Pichard; Money, Markets, and Trade in Early Southeast Asia: The Development of Indigenous Monetary Systems to A.D. 1400, by Robert S. Wicks; Khok Phanom Di: Prehistoric Adaptation to the World's Richest Habitat, by Charles Higham and Rachanie Thosarat; Art and Political Expression in Early China, by Martin J. Powers; The Archaeology of Korea, by Sarah Milledge Nelson; A Community of Culture: The People and Prehistory of the Pacific, by Matthew Spriggs, Douglas E. Yen, Wal Ambrose, Rhys Jones, Alan Thorne, and Ann Andrews (eds.); Inside Austronesian Houses: Perspectives on Domestic Designs for LIving, by James J. Fox (ed.); Australian Rock Art: A New Synthesis, by Robert Layton; Sahul in Review: Pleistocene Archaeology in Australia, New Guinea, and Island Melanesia, by M. A. Smith, M. Spriggs and B. Fankhauser (eds.); Indo-Pacific Prehistory 1990, Volumes 1 and 2, by Peter Bellwood (ed.); Report of the Lapita Homeland Project, by Jim Allen and Chris Gosden (eds.); The To'aga Site: Three Millenia of Polynesian Occupation in the Manu'a Islands, American Samoa, by Patrick V. Kirch (ed.)

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