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دانلود کتاب Carved in Stone: The archaeology of rock-cut sites and stone quarries

دانلود کتاب حک شده در سنگ: باستان شناسی محوطه های تراش خورده سنگ و معادن سنگ

Carved in Stone: The archaeology of rock-cut sites and stone quarries

مشخصات کتاب

Carved in Stone: The archaeology of rock-cut sites and stone quarries

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان: , , ,   
سری: BAR British Archaeological Reports International Series 3054 
ISBN (شابک) : 9781407358093, 9781407358086 
ناشر: BAR Publishing 
سال نشر: 2021 
تعداد صفحات: 194 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 16 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 62,000

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فهرست مطالب

Title page
Copyright page
Of Related Interest
Contents
List of Contributors
Foreword
1. The Archaeology of Quarries and Rock-Cut Sites
	1. General context
	2. Quarries: a research closely connectedto the nature of the rock
	3. Rock-cut monuments: still a study niche?
	4. Towards new research perspectives
	Bibliography
2. From Surfaces to Tools: Traceology and Experimental Analysisof Digging Techniques of Mediterranean Rock-Cut Tombs
	Introduction
	1. Presentation of the sites and their problematics
		1.1. Fontvieille necropolis, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
		1.2. S’Elighe Entosu, Usini, Sardinia, Italy
		1.3. Sas Concas and Museddu (Sardinia, Italy).Presence of similar anthropomorphic engraved elements
		1.4. Sant’Andrea Priu and S’Incantu (Sardinia,Italy). Presence of an important painted iconographicprogramme
	2. Methodology
		2.1. Non-invasive techniques for the study of the toolmarks
		2.2. Experimentation
	3. Difference of treatment on the walls of the hypogea
		3.1. Diversified treatments of walls and grounds
		3.2. Presence of coating on the walls
	4. Conclusions
	Bibliography
3. The Design and Excavation of Souterrains in FranceBetween the Tenth and Sixteenth Centuries
	Introduction
	1. The concept of souterrains in France
		1.1. Definition
		1.2. Typology
		1.3. Dating elements
		1.4. Distribution of souterrains in France
	2. The digging of souterrains
		2.1. Extraction methods
		2.2. Lighting
		2.3. Tools1
			2.3.1. Swung percussion tools
			2.3.2. Struck Percussion Tools
			2.3.3. Drills
			2.3.4. Other tools
		2.4. Extraction routes
		2.5. Orientation when digging a souterrain
		2.6. Finishing works
		2.7. The workers
		2.8. Excavation time
	3. Conclusions
	Bibliography
4. Cutting in the Chinese Loess
	1. Cave dwellings (yáodòng) on the Loess Plateauacross the Yellow River in North-Central China
	2. Conventional typologies of contemporaryyáodòng dwellings
	3. Evolutionary approaches
	4. Critique
	5. Alternative approaches
	6. Contemporary perceptions and the heritage issue
	7. Conclusions
	Bibliography
5. Creating a Rock-Cut Tomb in Traditional Tana Toraja(Sulawesi, Indonesia): An Ethno-Archaeologyof Stone Economy and Ritual
	Introduction
	1. Death, monuments and society in traditionalTana Toraja
	2. Research questions and methodology
	3. Anatomy of Toraja rock-cut tombs
	4. Finding and reserving a location on the rock face
	5. The stone workers: costs, workspaces,tools and roles
	6. Cutting out the tomb: a technical andritual chaîne-opératoire
	7. Consecration of the tomb
	8. Construction failures and abandonments
	9. Tomb worksites as stone quarries
	10. Conclusion
	Bibliography
6. A Rock-Cut Landscape By the Sea: Myrina Kastro in Prehistoryand Antiquity (Lemnos Island, North Aegean Sea, Greece)
	Introduction
	1. A rock-cut landscape
	2. The sea: a maritime cultural landscape
	3. A female factor in a rocky seascape
	4. Further research directions
	Bibliography
7. Koramaz Valley of Kayseri, Turkey Rock-Cut Architectureand Underground Cities
	Introduction
	1. General Description of Koramaz Valley
		1.1. Büyük Bürüngüz Village
		1.2. Subaşı (Üskübü) Village
		1.3. Küçük Bürüngüz Village
		1.4. Ağırnas Village
		1.5. Dimitre Village
		1.6. Vekse Village
		1.7. Ispıdın Village
	2. Conclusions
	Bibliography
8. Renaissance-Era Rock Cut Cellars in the Economy of a FortifiedCity in the War Frontier between Two Civilizations
	Introduction
	1. Historical background
	2. Survey of extinct vineyards
	3. Geology, geographical and cultural background
	4. Characteristics of Krupina’s rock-cut cellars
	5. Purpose of cellars
	6. Dating
		6.1. Archaeological data
		6.2. Political, cultural and economic context
			6.2.1. Vacancy on the wine market
			6.2.2. Rise of the domestic winery
			6.2.3. Cultural and religious changes
			6.2.4. Decline of the wine-industry in Krupina
		6.3. Evidence in artwork
		6.4. Dating through technology
		6.5. Dating through analogy
	7. Conclusions
	Bibliography
9. Addi Behaylay – A Possible Stone Quarry Site for YehaGreat Temple: A Result of Recent Archaeological Survey
	Introduction
	1. Previous Investigations
	2. Survey Objective
	3. Methodology
	4. Result of the Survey
		4.1. Addi Behaylay stone quarry
			4.1.1. Addi Behaylay 1 (AB-1)
			4.1.2. Addi Behaylay 2 (AB-2)
		4.2. Addi Behaylay Kidanemihret (AB-K)
	5. Discussion
		5.1. Who used the Addi Behaylay stone quarry sites?
		5.2. Technique of quarrying
	6. Future research
	Bibliography
10. Archaeology of Early Middle Ages SarcophagiQuarries in the Southern Paris Basin (France)
	Introduction
	1. Sarcophagi quarries in the Southern Paris Basin
		1.1. Quarrying district of Panzoult (Indre-et-Loire)
		1.2. Quarrying district of Manse and Courtineauvalleys (Indre-et-Loire)
		1.3. Quarrying district of Anglin and Gartempe valleys(Indre and Vienne)
		1.4. The late antiquity and early Middle Ages quarryof Vinon (Sancerre, Cher)
	2. Sources of the study
		2.1. Written sources
		2.2. Prior archaeological data
		2.3. Sarcophagi
		2.4. Quarries and production centres
	3. Multiscalar approach and main characteristicsof sarcophagi exploitation
		3.1. Quarries, special archaeological sites
			3.1.1. Three-dimensional issues
			3.1.2. Nature and hierarchy of main elementsof the exploitation
		3.2. At the block scale: reconstruction of the ‘chaîneopératoire’ and technical gestures
		3.3. At the quarry face scale: organisationof the extraction
		3.4. At the quarry scale: operation and planning
			3.4.1. Operating strategies
			3.4.2. Space and waste management
		3.5. At the quarrying centre scale: local/regionaleconomy of the sarcophagus
			3.5.1. Topography of the sites
			3.5.2. Sarcophagus market
			3.5.3. Chronology, tempo and quantification of theproduction
	4. Sarcophagi quarry study protocol
		4.1. Identification of production sites
			4.1.1. Constitution of a rock reference collectionand determination of the rock types
			4.1.2. Quarry surveying and recognition
		4.2. Observation, analysis and recording of data
			4.2.1. Observation and recording of the remains
			4.2.2. Study of blocks founds in the quarry
			4.2.3. Geology of the quarries
		4.3. Documenting quarries
			4.3.1. Photographic coverage
			4.3.2. Archaeological drawings
		4.4. Graphical representation of the exploitation
			4.4.1. The exploitation diagram
			4.4.2. Operating plans and topo-chronologies
	5. Quarry excavation: problematic, meansand methods
		5.1. Interests of the excavation
			5.1.2. Nature of quarry waste
			5.1.3. Depositional process
		5.2. Quarry excavation methodology
			5.2.1. Spot survey and extensive excavations
			5.2.2. Excavation strategies
			5.2.3. Excavation and recording techniques
			5.2.4. Dating and findings issues
	6. Case studies
		6.1. Contributions of digital 3D to the study of quarries
			6.1.1. Reconstitution of Vinon quarry (Cher) fromold photographs
			6.1.2. Quarry ceilings finally accessible: exampleof Barbauderie 2 (Panzoult, Indre-et-Loire)
		6.2. Operational planning
			6.2.1. Example of the wall 5 of Barbauderie 1(Panzoult, Indre-et-Loire)
			6.2.2. Topographic evolution of Pied Griffé(Saint-Pierre-de-Maillé, Vienne)
		6.3. Space and waste management
			6.3.1. Movement of men and materials from the lastexploited quarry faces of the underground quarryBarbauderie 5–6 (Panzoult, Indre-et-Loire)
			6.3.2. Waste management in the pit quarry of Pied Griffé(Saint-Pierre-de-Maillé, Vienne)
	7. Conclusions
	Bibliography
11. Uses and Exploitation of Gypsum PlasterOver Time in Construction in Ile-de-France
	Introduction
	1. Geological and chemical overview
	2. Historical overviews
	3. Extraction
	4. Kilns
		4.1. Medieval kilns
		4.2. Dampmart early Middle Ages kiln
		4.3. The kiln of the castle of Saint-Martin-du-Tertre
		4.4. The kiln of Sarcelles
	5. Experimental archaeology approach
	6. Conclusions
	Bibliography
12. Building Stone Through the Centuries: The ‘Paris Stone’ Versusthe ‘Oise Stone’ (France)
	Introduction
	1. Paris and its geological resources
	2. The extraction centres of Saint-Leu-d’Esserentand Saint-Maximin
	3. The Ancient period (first to fourth centuries AD)
		3.1. Ancient Paris (Lutetia) and its quarries
		3.2. Genesis of the quarry district of Saint-Leud’Esserent and Saint-Maximin
	4. The Merovingian (fifth to eighth centuries) andCarolingian periods (ninth to tenth centuries)
		4.1. Lutetia becomes Paris
		4.2. The Oise quarry district betweencontinuity and rupture
	5. The Classical Middle Ages (eleventhto thirteenth centuries)
		5.1. Paris, capital of the kingdom, the omnipresentParis stone
		5.2. The quarry districts of the Oise limitedto the local market
	6. The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries:a period of transition for the stone market
		6.1. Evolution of the stone supply in Paris
		6.2. Beginning of the export of the Oise stone
	7. The market of stone, from the sixteenthto the eighteenth century
		7.1. Paris and the specialisation of its quarry districts
		7.2. The differentiated development of quarrydistricts in the Oise region
	8. Towards a great diversification of the stone market(nineteenth-twentieth century)
		8.1. Paris metropolis and the end of its quarry districts
		8.2. Only the quarry district of Saint-Maximin remains
	9. Conclusion
	Bibliography




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