hardcover. Condition: New.
hardcover. Condition: New.
hardcover. Condition: New.
Seller: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. This report of the 2016 activities of the Peshdar Plain Project presents new data for the occupation of the Bora Plain on the upper reaches of the Lesser Zab near the modern district centre of Qaladze in the Neo-Assyrian and Sassanian periods. The book details the results of the first test excavations at the citadel of Qalat-i Dinka and of the on-going excavations at the settlement quarter of Gird-i Bazar. Here, a continuous excavated area of 625 m2 has been uncovered, occupied by several well-appointed multi-room houses with courtyards, wells and drainage systems and an open area around a pottery kiln, which was found complete with its last load. The book also presents the results of the geophysical exploration of the Bora Plain: on the one hand, the continuation of the magnetometer survey of the entire Neo-Assyrian settlement, now recognised to be a complex of at least 60 hectares, and on the other hand, the new electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) investigations of the ancient qanat irrigation system that seems to be connected to the Neo-Assyrian settlement. The three chapters on the pottery of Gird-i Bazar present a first overview of the attested chaines operatoires, the updated fabric classification on the basis of thin section petrography analysis and the first results of the residue analysis performed on a selection of vessels. Another chapter is devoted to the small finds of the Neo-Assyrian occupation. A chapter on the bioarchaeology of Gird-i Bazar presents preliminary results of the analysis of the animal bones and of the palaeobotanical remains from the Neo-Assyrian settlement and discusses the Sassanian-period graveyard, now dated by 14C analysis, on top of the ruins of the Neo-Assyrian occupation. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. This report of the 2017 activities of the Peshdar Plain Project presents new data for the Dinka Settlement Complex and for the occupation of the Bora Plain on the upper reaches of the Lesser Zab near the modern district centre of Qaladze in the Neo-Assyrian and Sassanian periods, including a range of additional 14C dates derived from single year crops and human and animal remains. Firstly, the volume details the third and final season at Gird-i Bazar, completing the excavation of all previously identified buildings and of two more pottery kilns. The star find is a pivoted stone that constitutes the upper-bearing for a potter's wheel. As the three pottery kilns, this piece highlights the importance of pottery making at Gird-i Bazar. The surprise discovery of human remains in the filling of the private well of Building I produced the first Iron Age bodies unearthed at the Dinka Settlement Complex. Secondly, the book reports on the first season of excavations in another area in the Lower Town, dubbed "Dinka Lower Town operation 2" (DLT2), where a test trench unearthed parts of three major structures: Buildings K (280 m2), L (800 m2) and M (650 m2), which can be demonstrated to all have been used during a common occupation phase. The pottery retrieved closely marches that known from Gird-i Bazar, and the volume includes a first typological assessment as well as data from the petrographic and residue analyses of the new pottery material. The so-called "Groovy Pottery" is now attested both in Gird-i Bazar and DLT2, and its local production can be demonstrated. The DLT2 excavations also confirmed the accuracy of the results of the magnetometer survey in this area. The book presents the data of the 2017 continuation of this survey and offers a detailed interpretation of the lower town's layout, its buildings and other features on the basis of the magnetogram. In addition, the book offers geographer Eileen Eckmeier's assessment of the soils and sediments encountered in the Dinka Settlement Complex and the surrounding Bora Plain and considers their significance for landscape and site formation processes. While the majority of the book will be of interest to anyone studying the Assyrian Empire and its eastern border region, the volume also presents new data for the occupation of the Bora Plain in the Sasanian period in the form of anthropologist Kathleen Downey's discussion of the extensive Sasanian cemetery overlying the buildings of the Iron Age occupation of Gird-i Bazar. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
hardcover. Condition: New. 1st.
Condition: New. 2021. erste. hardcover. . . . . .
hardcover. Condition: New.
Condition: New. 2018. Hardcover. . . . . .
Condition: New. 2017. Hardcover. . . . . .
Seller: Kennys Bookstore, Olney, MD, U.S.A.
Condition: New. 2017. Hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Condition: New. 2021. erste. hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Condition: New. 2018. Hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Mit der Festschrift zum 65. Geburtstag wird mit Hartmut Kuhne ein Wissenschaftler geehrt, der durch seine langjahrige Lehr- und Ausgrabungstatigkeit zahlreiche Schuler im In- und Ausland hervorgebracht und sich grosse Verdienste um die Archaologie Syriens, aber auch Anatoliens erworben hat.Die von renommierten Archaologen und Philologen verfassten Beitrage zu den "Fundstellen" tragen dieser Lebensleistung Rechnung. Der chronologische Rahmen reicht vom Neolithikum Westsyriens (K. Bartl) und Sudwestanatoliens (E. Abay) bis zur Romanisierung Ostsyriens(A. Oettel) und der spatantiken Besiedlung des Tell Feheriye (N. Ritter). Einen Schwerpunkt bildet die mittel- und neuassyrische bzw. spathethitische Zeit. Dabei werden bau- und kunstgeschichtliche Fragen zur Architektur von Hama (P. Matthiae), Karkamis (M. Pucci), Tall Seh Hamad (A. Kose) und Kar Tukulti-Ninurta (A. Gilibert) ebenso thematisiert wie die Bestattungssitten in Tell Sabi Abyad (P. Akkermans/ E. Smits), Tall Knedig (S. Kulemann-Ossen/L. Martin) und Dur Katlimmu (J. Kreppner). W. Rollig, K. Radner und E. Cancik-Kirschbaum betrachten diesen Zeitraum aus historischem Blickwinkel. R. Bernbeck widmet sich in seinem Beitrag der historisch verzerrten Gestalt der Semiramis. D. Bonatz betrachtet "Bartlosigkeit in Assyrien" aus kulturanthropologischer Sicht. G. Bunnens beschaftigt sich mit der "damnatio memoriae" in den Wandmalereien von Til Barsib. V. Haas wirft am Beispiel des urartaischen Urzana-Siegels Licht auf die Forschungsgeschichte der altorientalischen Glyptik. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Condition: Neu. Neuware.
Buch. Condition: Neu. The Dinka Settlement Complex 2019 | Further Archaeological and Geophysical Work on Qalat-i Dinka and the Lower Town | Karen Radner (u. a.) | Buch | Englisch | 2021 | PeWe-Verlag POD | EAN 9783935012454 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: preigu GmbH & Co. KG, Lengericher Landstr. 19, 49078 Osnabrück, mail[at]preigu[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu.
Condition: Neu. Neuware.
Condition: New. 2008. Hardcover. . . . . .
Seller: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. This report of the 2016 activities of the Peshdar Plain Project presents new data for the occupation of the Bora Plain on the upper reaches of the Lesser Zab near the modern district centre of Qaladze in the Neo-Assyrian and Sassanian periods. The book details the results of the first test excavations at the citadel of Qalat-i Dinka and of the on-going excavations at the settlement quarter of Gird-i Bazar. Here, a continuous excavated area of 625 m2 has been uncovered, occupied by several well-appointed multi-room houses with courtyards, wells and drainage systems and an open area around a pottery kiln, which was found complete with its last load. The book also presents the results of the geophysical exploration of the Bora Plain: on the one hand, the continuation of the magnetometer survey of the entire Neo-Assyrian settlement, now recognised to be a complex of at least 60 hectares, and on the other hand, the new electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) investigations of the ancient qanat irrigation system that seems to be connected to the Neo-Assyrian settlement. The three chapters on the pottery of Gird-i Bazar present a first overview of the attested chaines operatoires, the updated fabric classification on the basis of thin section petrography analysis and the first results of the residue analysis performed on a selection of vessels. Another chapter is devoted to the small finds of the Neo-Assyrian occupation. A chapter on the bioarchaeology of Gird-i Bazar presents preliminary results of the analysis of the animal bones and of the palaeobotanical remains from the Neo-Assyrian settlement and discusses the Sassanian-period graveyard, now dated by 14C analysis, on top of the ruins of the Neo-Assyrian occupation. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. This report of the 2017 activities of the Peshdar Plain Project presents new data for the Dinka Settlement Complex and for the occupation of the Bora Plain on the upper reaches of the Lesser Zab near the modern district centre of Qaladze in the Neo-Assyrian and Sassanian periods, including a range of additional 14C dates derived from single year crops and human and animal remains. Firstly, the volume details the third and final season at Gird-i Bazar, completing the excavation of all previously identified buildings and of two more pottery kilns. The star find is a pivoted stone that constitutes the upper-bearing for a potter's wheel. As the three pottery kilns, this piece highlights the importance of pottery making at Gird-i Bazar. The surprise discovery of human remains in the filling of the private well of Building I produced the first Iron Age bodies unearthed at the Dinka Settlement Complex. Secondly, the book reports on the first season of excavations in another area in the Lower Town, dubbed "Dinka Lower Town operation 2" (DLT2), where a test trench unearthed parts of three major structures: Buildings K (280 m2), L (800 m2) and M (650 m2), which can be demonstrated to all have been used during a common occupation phase. The pottery retrieved closely marches that known from Gird-i Bazar, and the volume includes a first typological assessment as well as data from the petrographic and residue analyses of the new pottery material. The so-called "Groovy Pottery" is now attested both in Gird-i Bazar and DLT2, and its local production can be demonstrated. The DLT2 excavations also confirmed the accuracy of the results of the magnetometer survey in this area. The book presents the data of the 2017 continuation of this survey and offers a detailed interpretation of the lower town's layout, its buildings and other features on the basis of the magnetogram. In addition, the book offers geographer Eileen Eckmeier's assessment of the soils and sediments encountered in the Dinka Settlement Complex and the surrounding Bora Plain and considers their significance for landscape and site formation processes. While the majority of the book will be of interest to anyone studying the Assyrian Empire and its eastern border region, the volume also presents new data for the occupation of the Bora Plain in the Sasanian period in the form of anthropologist Kathleen Downey's discussion of the extensive Sasanian cemetery overlying the buildings of the Iron Age occupation of Gird-i Bazar. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Condition: New. 2008. Hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Mit der Festschrift zum 65. Geburtstag wird mit Hartmut Kuhne ein Wissenschaftler geehrt, der durch seine langjahrige Lehr- und Ausgrabungstatigkeit zahlreiche Schuler im In- und Ausland hervorgebracht und sich grosse Verdienste um die Archaologie Syriens, aber auch Anatoliens erworben hat.Die von renommierten Archaologen und Philologen verfassten Beitrage zu den "Fundstellen" tragen dieser Lebensleistung Rechnung. Der chronologische Rahmen reicht vom Neolithikum Westsyriens (K. Bartl) und Sudwestanatoliens (E. Abay) bis zur Romanisierung Ostsyriens(A. Oettel) und der spatantiken Besiedlung des Tell Feheriye (N. Ritter). Einen Schwerpunkt bildet die mittel- und neuassyrische bzw. spathethitische Zeit. Dabei werden bau- und kunstgeschichtliche Fragen zur Architektur von Hama (P. Matthiae), Karkamis (M. Pucci), Tall Seh Hamad (A. Kose) und Kar Tukulti-Ninurta (A. Gilibert) ebenso thematisiert wie die Bestattungssitten in Tell Sabi Abyad (P. Akkermans/ E. Smits), Tall Knedig (S. Kulemann-Ossen/L. Martin) und Dur Katlimmu (J. Kreppner). W. Rollig, K. Radner und E. Cancik-Kirschbaum betrachten diesen Zeitraum aus historischem Blickwinkel. R. Bernbeck widmet sich in seinem Beitrag der historisch verzerrten Gestalt der Semiramis. D. Bonatz betrachtet "Bartlosigkeit in Assyrien" aus kulturanthropologischer Sicht. G. Bunnens beschaftigt sich mit der "damnatio memoriae" in den Wandmalereien von Til Barsib. V. Haas wirft am Beispiel des urartaischen Urzana-Siegels Licht auf die Forschungsgeschichte der altorientalischen Glyptik. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Seller: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. The Peshdar district is part of the province of Sulaymaniyah in the Kurdish Autonomous Region of Iraq. In its centre lies the Peshdar Plain, surrounded by the glorious mountainscape of the Zagros and bounded in the south by the valley of the Lesser Zab, which connects the region to the Assyrian heartland and Western Iran. The international and interdisciplinary Peshdar Plain Project was inaugurated in 2015 with the goal of investigating the region in the Neo-Assyrian period (9th to 7th century BC). It formed part of the Border March of the Palace Herald which served to negotiate relations with the adjoining client kingdoms in the Zagros, most importantly Mannea (south of Lake Urmiye), Hubukia in the Sardasht Plain and Musasir in the Rowanduz Plain. Work in 2015 focused on two closely connected sites in the small Bora Plain, a sub-unit of the Peshdar Plain: the tiny single-phase site Gird-i Bazar and impressive Qalat-i Dinka, looming on a rocky outcrop high over the river, both part of the Dinka settlement complex. This book presents the results of this first season of field work. Karen Radner offers an analysis of the historical geography of the region on the basis of the textual sources, including the private contract of 725 BC found at Qalat-i Dinka. Mark Altaweel and Anke March provide a geoarchaeological assessment of the Bora Plain while Jessica Giraud presents an evaluation of the Dinka settlement complex based on the results of the survey of the Mission archeologique francaise du Gouvernorat de Soulaimaniah (MAFGS). Jorg Fassbinder and Andrei Aandulesei discuss the results of their geophysical survey at Gird-i Bazar and Qalat-i Dinka. The bulk of the volume is dedicated to the 2015 excavations at Gird-i Bazar, with contributions on the fieldwork by F. Janoscha Kreppner, Christoph Forster, Andrea Squitieri, John MacGinnis, Adam B. Stone and Peter V. Bartl. Tina Greenfield introduces the bioarchaeological sampling strategy. On the basis of the analysis of 666 diagnostic ceramic sherds from key find contexts and by drawing on parallels from the Assyrian heartland and western Iran, Jean-Jacques Herr presents a first assessment of the technical aspects, the fabrics and the shapes of the pottery excavated at Gird-i Bazar. Eleanor Barbanes Wilkinson, Andrea Squitieri and Zahra Hashemi present the small finds from the 2015 excavations. In an appendix to the volume, Jorg Fassbinder presents the promising results of the 2014 magnetometer survey in Mujeser in the Soran district of the province of Erbil, the possible site of the capital of the kingdom of Musasir, a client state of the Assyrian Empire, and its famous Haldi temple. The research presented in this book throws light on a hitherto little known eastern frontier region of the Assyrian Empire. Gird-i Bazar is the first unequivocally Neo-Assyrian site to be excavated in the region. The occupation layers beginning to be uncovered there offer the rare opportunity to explore an Assyrian non-elite settlement. Its well stratified ceramic repertoire is of special importance as it allows us for the first time to synchronise the Western Iranian pottery cultures (with the key sites Hasanlu, Godin Tepe, Nush-i Jan and Baba Jan) with the Assyrian material of the 8th and 7th centuries BC. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Condition: New. 2016. Hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Hardcover, no dust jacket. In German. Complete set, volume 1 and volume 2. Very good; first volume's spine slightly cocked. 437, 135 pages. Heavy item, will require additional shipping fees. pp.
Seller: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. The Peshdar district is part of the province of Sulaymaniyah in the Kurdish Autonomous Region of Iraq. In its centre lies the Peshdar Plain, surrounded by the glorious mountainscape of the Zagros and bounded in the south by the valley of the Lesser Zab, which connects the region to the Assyrian heartland and Western Iran. The international and interdisciplinary Peshdar Plain Project was inaugurated in 2015 with the goal of investigating the region in the Neo-Assyrian period (9th to 7th century BC). It formed part of the Border March of the Palace Herald which served to negotiate relations with the adjoining client kingdoms in the Zagros, most importantly Mannea (south of Lake Urmiye), Hubukia in the Sardasht Plain and Musasir in the Rowanduz Plain. Work in 2015 focused on two closely connected sites in the small Bora Plain, a sub-unit of the Peshdar Plain: the tiny single-phase site Gird-i Bazar and impressive Qalat-i Dinka, looming on a rocky outcrop high over the river, both part of the Dinka settlement complex. This book presents the results of this first season of field work. Karen Radner offers an analysis of the historical geography of the region on the basis of the textual sources, including the private contract of 725 BC found at Qalat-i Dinka. Mark Altaweel and Anke March provide a geoarchaeological assessment of the Bora Plain while Jessica Giraud presents an evaluation of the Dinka settlement complex based on the results of the survey of the Mission archeologique francaise du Gouvernorat de Soulaimaniah (MAFGS). Jorg Fassbinder and Andrei Aandulesei discuss the results of their geophysical survey at Gird-i Bazar and Qalat-i Dinka. The bulk of the volume is dedicated to the 2015 excavations at Gird-i Bazar, with contributions on the fieldwork by F. Janoscha Kreppner, Christoph Forster, Andrea Squitieri, John MacGinnis, Adam B. Stone and Peter V. Bartl. Tina Greenfield introduces the bioarchaeological sampling strategy. On the basis of the analysis of 666 diagnostic ceramic sherds from key find contexts and by drawing on parallels from the Assyrian heartland and western Iran, Jean-Jacques Herr presents a first assessment of the technical aspects, the fabrics and the shapes of the pottery excavated at Gird-i Bazar. Eleanor Barbanes Wilkinson, Andrea Squitieri and Zahra Hashemi present the small finds from the 2015 excavations. In an appendix to the volume, Jorg Fassbinder presents the promising results of the 2014 magnetometer survey in Mujeser in the Soran district of the province of Erbil, the possible site of the capital of the kingdom of Musasir, a client state of the Assyrian Empire, and its famous Haldi temple. The research presented in this book throws light on a hitherto little known eastern frontier region of the Assyrian Empire. Gird-i Bazar is the first unequivocally Neo-Assyrian site to be excavated in the region. The occupation layers beginning to be uncovered there offer the rare opportunity to explore an Assyrian non-elite settlement. Its well stratified ceramic repertoire is of special importance as it allows us for the first time to synchronise the Western Iranian pottery cultures (with the key sites Hasanlu, Godin Tepe, Nush-i Jan and Baba Jan) with the Assyrian material of the 8th and 7th centuries BC. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Condition: New. 2016. Hardcover. . . . . .
Language: German
Published by Harrassowitz Verlag : Otto Harrassowitz, 2006
ISBN 10: 3447053992 ISBN 13: 9783447053990
Seller: BUCHSERVICE / ANTIQUARIAT Lars Lutzer, Wahlstedt, Germany
Hardcover. Condition: gut. 2006. Die Keramik des "Roten Hauses" von Tall Seh Hamad, Dur-Katlimmu : Eine Betrachtung der Keramik Nordmesopotamiens aus der zweiten Hälfte des 7. und aus dem 6. Jahrhundert v. Chr. : Teil 1 : Text / Teil 2 : Tafeln In deutscher Sprache. pages.
Language: Arabic
Published by Harrassowitz Verlag : Otto Harrassowitz, 2013
ISBN 10: 3447100583 ISBN 13: 9783447100588
Seller: BUCHSERVICE / ANTIQUARIAT Lars Lutzer, Wahlstedt, Germany
Hardcover. Condition: gut. 2013. Stratigraphie und Architektur des "Roten Hauses" von Tall Seh Hamad / Dur-Katlimmu : [Textband & Beilagenmappe] In deutscher Sprache. pages.
Language: English
Published by Pewe-Verlag POD Mrz 2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 3935012454 ISBN 13: 9783935012454
Seller: BuchWeltWeit Ludwig Meier e.K., Bergisch Gladbach, Germany
Buch. Condition: Neu. This item is printed on demand - it takes 3-4 days longer - Neuware -Mit Beiträgen von Mark Altaweel, Silvia Amicone, Christoph Berthold, Ali Binandeh, Salahaddin Ebrahimipour, Eileen Eckmeier, Jörg Fassbinder, Anja Fügert, Fatemeh Ghaheri, Anne Grasse, Raouf Jemmali, Anja Hellmuth Kramberger, Jean-Jacques Herr, Louise König, F. Janoscha Kreppner, Kazem Mollazadeh, Alessio Palmisano, Mandana Parsi, Friedhelm Pedde, Sophie Pietsch, Anja Prust, Karen Radner, Thilo Rehren, Jana Richter, Jens Rohde, Melissa S. Rosenzweig, Hero Salih Ahmed, Marion Scheiblecker, Andrea Squitieri und Laura Tretow.Dieser fünfte Band der jährlichen Berichte des Peshdar Plain Project bietet einen umfassenden Bericht über die Feldforschungsaktivitäten des Jahres 2019 im Dinka Settlement Complex, die archäologische Ausgrabungen, Umweltstudien und die Fortsetzung der geophysikalischen Untersuchung durch Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) umfassten.Einerseits konzentrierten sich 2019 die Feldarbeiten darauf, unser Verständnis jener großflächigen urbanisierten Siedlung am Oberlauf des Unteren Zabs weiter zu verbessern, deren guter Erhaltungszustand und hervorragende archäologische Zugänglichkeit sie zu einem Leitfundort für die Erforschung der Eisenzeit im Zagros-Gebirge im Nordosten des Irak und im Nordwesten des Iran machen. Durch unsere Ausgrabungen in Qalat-i Dinka, der Oberstadt des Dinka Settlement Complex, gelang der Abschluss der Freilegung des monumentalen Gebäudes P. Außerdem kamen rund um dieses Gebäude weitere Grablegen in Form von Brand- und Körperbestattungen ans Licht, deren Grabinventare diagnostische Materialien wie Fibeln, Rollsiegel und eine Bronzetrinkschale enthielten. Der Band enthält eine erste Diskussion der Keramik von Jean-Jacques Herr und Silvia Amicone und einen Überblick von Andrea Squitieri über die Kleinfunde, die während der Ausgrabung 2019 gefunden wurden. Dies wird ergänzt durch detaillierte Studien von Friedhelm Pedde zu den fünf Bronzefibeln und von Anja Fügert zu den drei Rollsiegeln im 'assyrischen Provinzstil'. Ebenfalls auf Qalat-i Dinka wurden die teilweise ausgegrabenen Befestigungsanlagen, die 2015 erstmals durch Magnetometer-Prospektion identifiziert wurden, weiter untersucht. Die ERT-Messungen unter der Leitung von Jörg Fassbinder konnten unsere Interpretation dieser Strukturen als Kombination aus Glacis und Palisadenwand bestätigen. In der Unterstadt und in der umliegenden Bora-Ebene wurden mithilfe von ERT-Prospektion und Sedimentbohrungen neue Daten über das Qanat-System und die antike Umgebung des Dinka Settlement Complex gewonnen, die durch Eileen Eckmeiers Analyse der Bodenproben sowie die laufenden Studien zu Tier- und Pflanzenresten (makrobotanisch und Phytolithen) noch erheblich erweitert werden.Andererseits sind 2019 auch weitaus ältere Perioden der Besiedelung der Bora-Ebene stärker in den Fokus gerückt, insbesondere durch die Freilegung eines chalkolithischen Keramikbrennofens unter den eisenzeitlichen Strukturen des Ausgrabungsgebiets DLT3 in der Unterstadt.Darüber hinaus enthält der Band auch die Ergebnisse von Analysen von Materialien, die schon in den Vorjahren im Dinka Settlement Complex ausgegraben wurden. Anja Hellmuth Kramberger bespricht alle zwischen 2015 und 2019 gefundenen Eisenpfeilspitzen, hauptsächlich vom Qalat-i Dinka. Das 2015 bei Gird-i Bazar geborgene Exemplar (Bodkin-Typ) ist Gegenstand einer Mikro-CT-Studie von Thilo Rehren, Raouf Jemmali, Silvia Amicone und Cristoph Berthold. Anja Prust präsentiert Ergebnisse ihrer Identifizierung und Analysen der von 2015 bis 2019 geborgenen Tierreste sowie eine Diskussion aller Artefakte aus tierischen Materialien. Fatemeh Ghaheri bietet erste Resultate zu ihrer laufenden Untersuchung der Phytolithproben, die während der Ausgrabungen von 2015 bis 2019 genommen wurden, während Melissa S. Rosenzweig und Anne Grasse vorläufige Ergebnisse zu ihren Analysen der von 2015 bis 2018 gesammelten makrobotanischen Überreste vorlegen.Zudem bietet der B.