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         Iberian Peninsula Archaeology:     more detail
  1. Greek Pottery from the Iberian Peninsula: Archaic and Classical Periods by Adolfo J. Dominguez, Carmen Sanchez, 2001-02
  2. Technical Systems of Lithic Production in the Lower and Middle Pleistocene of the Iberian Peninsula (BAR International Series) by Xose Pedro Rodriguez, 2004-06-01

21. Trabajos De Prehistoria
perceptions to the original meanings of Galician Megalithism (NW iberian peninsula)(6380 We ought approach the project of building an archaeology of Perception
http://www.ih.csic.es/publicaciones/tp/botones/indi/indi551_ing.htm
Trabajos de Prehistoria, 55 (1), 1998 Index IAN HODDER: Mapping the postmodern past
Abstract
JUAN ANTONIO MARTOS ROMERO: Elephants and human intervention in the Lower and Middle Pleistocene sites of Africa and Europe
Abstract
In this paper, we review some African and European sites at which it is claimed that elephants were exploited by humans. The differences between sites with only one individual (type 1) and sites with a large number of elephants (type 2) are related to different formation processes and particular problems which limit the information potential of the sites The lithic industries of Gruta Nova de Columbeira (Bombarral, Portugal) in the context of the Late Mousterian of the Iberian Peninsula
Abstract
Gruta Nova de Columbeira, discovered in 1962, is one of the most important Middle Palaeolithic sites in Portugal. The lithic industry, here described for the first time, may be described in general terms as a Denticulate Mousterian of Levallois facies rich in sidescrapers and it bears no resemblance to the Upper Palaeolithic.
Monumentalizing Landscape: from present perceptions to the original meanings of Galician Megalithism (NW Iberian Peninsula)
Abstract
The study of Landscape as social construction implies considering its economic and territorial dimensions, as much as its symbolic ones. A major topic in such studies is to reconstruct the ways as natural and social space was perceived by past societies. We ought approach the project of building an

22. Archaeological Digs In Spain
school and it is a great place to learn the basics of archaeology stepby the scaenaof its impressive 9,000-seat theater, the largest in the iberian peninsula.
http://www.archaeospain.com/
2004 ARCHAEOLOGY FIELDWORK OPPORTUNITIES compare all Too young
Visit
Refer this page to a friend!
City and Necropolis of Pintia
(Valladolid, Spain)
(June 1st- August 31st 2004)
Accomodation
: Participants will share rooms for 2-8 people at the site's research facilities. Food will be provided at a local restaurant. Tiermes (Soria, Spain)
(July 15th-30th, August 1st-15th, 2004)
A Celtiberian and Roman site. The Romans added important public works to an already significant Celtiberian city excavated in the bedrock. Tiermes, today a rural area in central Spain, offers a comprehensive scope of Spain's history over the past 4 millenniums. Next summer's work will concentrate on the Roman Forum.
Accomodation : Participants will share cabins for 2-8 people at the site's research facilities. Food will be provided at a local restaurant. Monte Testaccio , (Rome, Italy)
(September 19-October 3, 2004) - Est. dates

23. Madrid Section
The focus of its work is the archaeology of the iberian peninsula as well as Moroccofrom prehistoric times to the early Christian an early Islamic Middle Ages
http://www.dainst.org/abteilung.php?id=267&sessionLanguage=en

24. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
3. The history of iberian archaeology one archaeology for two Spains. regionsof the iberian peninsula. As a result of settled in the peninsula.
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

25. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
Arturo Sanchez, Alberto Bellon, Juan P. search in protohistorical archaeology( iberians, Celts a member of an ancient people of the iberian peninsula 2. a
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

26. E-Keltoi: Volume 6, The Celts In The Iberian Peninsula - Table Of Contents
in their respective disciplines on the archaeology, folklore, history, language,mythology, religion, music and culture of the Celts in the iberian peninsula.
http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/celtic/ekeltoi/volumes/vol6/
Volume 6: The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula
Edited by Manuel Alberro and Bettina Arnold
This special issue of e-Keltoi will present more than twenty articles by scholars who are recognized as experts in their respective disciplines on the archaeology, folklore, history, language, mythology, religion, music and culture of the Celts in the Iberian Peninsula. Much of this research is recent or on going and most of it has not previously been published in English. Many of the articles will be accompanied by numerous illustrations of the sites, artifacts, folk festivals and landscapes of one of the most intriguing areas of the Celtic world. Articles will appear on-line in the order in which they complete the review and editing process, so check the site frequently.
e-Keltoi Home
What's New Active Volumes
UW-Milwaukee: Center for Celtic Studies

e-Keltoi Volume 6: The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula
Last Updated: March 9, 2004

27. Continental Europe Archaeology
Greek Pottery from the iberian peninsula Archaic and Classical Periods. The Archaeologyof the iberians Culture Contact and Culture Change in IronAge Europe.
http://www.cyberpursuits.com/archeo/eur-arch.asp

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28. Iberians
The iberian peninsula, ie, Spain and Portugal, is named for them. Thehistory of iberian archaeology one archaeology for two Spains.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0824816.html
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    Iberians Iberians, ancient people of Spain. They are believed to have migrated from Africa in the Neolithic period and again at the end of the Bronze Age. They were first mentioned in the 6th cent. B.C. , after they had settled in E Spain and the Ebro valley. The Iberian Peninsula, i.e., Spain and Portugal, is named for them. The high point of Iberian civilization was reached about the 4th cent. B.C. , and thereafter their culture came under the influence of Carthaginian colonization. About the 4th cent. B.C. began the Celtic migration into Spain, which led to an increased dissolution of Iberian culture. After the Roman conquest of Spain the Iberians gradually accepted Roman culture. The theory that the Iberians and the Basques were identical has been discredited by modern research. See A. A. Palau

29. Neandertal-Cro-Magnon Hybrid?
is the first Palaeolithic burial ever excavated on the iberian peninsula, and among 1999by the Archaeological Institute of America www.archaeology.org/online
http://www.archaeology.org/online/news/neanderkid.html
Your browser does not support javascript Neandertal-Cro-Magnon Hybrid? April 29, 1999 by Spencer P.M. Harrington [LARGER IMAGE] Analysis of the skeletal remains of a four-year-old child buried in a Portuguese rock-shelter 25,000 to 24,500 years ago has yielded startling evidence that early modern humans and Neandertals may have interbred. While the boy's prominent chin, tooth size, and pelvic measurements marked him as a Cro-Magnon, or fully modern human, his stocky body and short legs indicate Neandertal heritage, says Erik Trinkaus, a paleoanthropologist at Washington University in St. Louis. Interbreeding could answer the vexed question of the fate of the Neandertals, the last of whom disappeared from the Iberian Peninsula 28,000 years ago. Trinkaus, who compared the boy's limb proportions with those of Neandertal skeletons, including some children, says that the body is the first definite evidence of a mixture between Neandertal and early humans. While full Neandertals are thought to have been extinct for 4,000 years before the boy was born, he appears to be a descendant of generations of Neandertal-Cro-Magnon hybrids. Neandertals belong to our species and contributed their genes to European ancestry, he says.
www.archaeology.org/online/news/neanderkid.html

30. Neandertal News
September/October 1995) have been recovered on the iberian peninsula, thought to 1999 by the Archaeological Institute of America www.archaeology.org/online
http://www.archaeology.org/online/news/neandernews.html
Your browser does not support javascript Neandertal News November 10, 1999 by Angela M.H. Schuster Illustration by Ray Bartkus Tastes Like Chicken According to Tim D. White of the University of California at Berkeley, who has studied the bones, and French archaeologist Alban Defleur of the University of the Mediterranean, Marseilles, who has excavated the site since 1991, cut marks on the bones could have been made only by sharp flints. The skulls had been smashed open and limb bones had been broken apart, presumably to extract nutritious brain tissue and remove marrow. Only the hand and foot bones, which contain no marrow, remained intact. Cut marks indicate that tendons had been severed (necessary for limb removal), the thigh muscles removed, and in at least one case a tongue taken out. No signs of gnawing were found on the bones, ruling out the possibility that the Neanderthals were eaten by wild animals. There were no signs of charring either, suggesting the flesh was either eaten raw or cooked off the bone. Scattered among the human remains were fragments of several animals butchered in the same manner, which were identified by Defleur's associate, Patria Valensi, as coming mostly from red deer. "If we conclude that the animal remains are the leftovers from a meal, we're obliged to expand that conclusion to include humans," says Defleur. "It is not clear whether the individuals were eaten for survival when other food was scarce or as part of a social ritual," he adds, "but the abundance of natural resources available at the site when these individuals were killed makes the survival scenario seem highly unlikely."

31. Norah MOLONEY: Institute Of Archaeology UCL
1997 archaeology for the Young Reader, In Kottak, CP, White, JJ, Furlow eds) NonflintStone Tools and the Palaeolithic Occupation of the iberian peninsula.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/profiles/moloney.htm
Norah MOLONEY B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
Contact Information:
General contact details: Institute of Archaeology, UCL Direct telephone: E-mail: n.moloney@ucl.ac.uk
Positions currently held:
  • College Teacher First Year Study Group Tutor
Research Interests:
Lithic analysis; Lower/Middle Palaeolithic of Eurasia and Central Asia; Early human settlement in the Old World.
Recent Publications:
Moloney, N. and Shott, M.J. (eds) 2003. Lithic Analysis at the Millennium. London: Institute of Archaeology Moloney, N., Olsen, S. and Voloshin, V. 2001. Lower and Middle palaeolithic occupation in Central Kazakhstan: the Batpak Valley and environs. In Milliken, S. and J. Cook (eds) A Very Remote Period Indeed: Papers on the Palaeolithic Presented to Derek Roe . Oxford: Oxbow Books. The Mousterian Site of Ras el-Kelb, Lebanon . Oxford: BAR International Series 706 The Wadi Faynan Fourth and third Millennia Project, 1997: Report on the First Season of Text Excavations at Wadi Faynan Levant XXX 1997 Archaeology for the Young Reader, In: Kottak, C.P., White, J.J., Furlow, R.H., Rice, P.C. (eds)

32. SAGE Publications - Journal Issue - European Journal Of Archaeology
cyberpast/cybernation Yannis Hamilakis , Department of archaeology, University of tothe Medieval World in the iberian peninsula Archaeological Perspectives
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journalIssue.aspx?pid=105535&jiid=522050

33. Palaeoethnology Of Iberian Peninsula
references complement the difficult and inadequate panorama offered by archaeology. trendsaffected the different regions of the iberian peninsula must be
http://www.ucm.es/info/preh/complutum/co/rev_02-03b.htm
Martín Almagro-Gorbea
Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero
Palaeoethnology of Iberian Peninsula: state of knowledge and future perspectives
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
The various papers brought together in this work aim to provide a complete and up-to-date picture of the Palaeoethnology of the Iberian Peninsula as a whole. But the very diversity of the writers and particularly the complex problems raised by very different topics and Iberian regions (fig 1), also require an overview by way of conclusion, which is the purpose of this summary. Rather than a synthesis, impossible and inapplicable in these fields of study, it should be seen as a way of providing an overall idea that at least highlights both the points of agreement or greater coincidence, and the most significant problems and divergences. Both aspects, we believe, provide an interesting insight into our present state of knowledge and a useful starting point and stimulus for future progress of these studies. From this point of view, this summary about the Palaeoethnology of the Iberian Peninsula should be regarded as an editors' overview rather than an attempt to offer a synthesis of the views expressed by the various authors in their contributions. Instead it aims to enumerate the better known aspects of the Palaeoethnology of the Iberian Peninsula and at the same time to pinpoint the most problematic areas where future research is needed as a point of departure for future research. We have included graphic information - regional periodization (fig. 2, 3), maps showing different cultural elements and peoples distribution (fig. 5-8), and tables summarising the most significant cultural elements (fig. 9-14) - to support the text and to provide a starting point for a more critical archaeological view.

34. Equinox - About
published that deals with the entire multicultural world of Mediterranean archaeology. theMediterranean Sea—from Gibraltar and the iberian peninsula in the
http://www.equinoxpub.com/journals/main.asp?jref=13

35. International Travel News: Focus On Archaeology - Spain
the first hominids arrived on the iberian peninsula about 500,000 The three iberianladies are by no means the only treasures of the archaeology Museum.
http://articles.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3648/is_5_26/ai_76612645
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YOU ARE HERE Articles International Travel News July, 2001 Content provided in partnership with
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International Travel News
July, 2001 by Julie Skurdenis
The 'ladies of Madrid' and other remnants of the past Madrid is blessed with dozens of sights to delight the first-time visitor or one like me who has visited and revisited the city at least half a dozen times over the past three decades. Even those with limited time should not miss the "must sees": the impressive Royal Palace; the intimate, balconied Plaza, Mayor; the vibrant Puerta del Sol; the newish (1992) Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, one of the world's finest private art collections; the elegant, bustling Plaza de la Cibeles with, its splendid fountain of the fertility goddess, and, of course, the incomparable Prado Museum, full of works by Goya, Velazquez and El Greco. On my most recent trip, however, in January '01, I went to visit three ladies whom I had not seen for many years. They reside in the Museo Arqueologico Nacional and are arguably three of the finest examples of Iberian sculpture of the fourth to sixth centuries B.C.

36. Iberian Peninsula
Encyclopedia. Agriculture. Anthropology. archaeology. Astronomy. Biology. Chemistry. Communication. Main Page See live article, iberian peninsula.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/iberian_peninsula_1
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Iberian Peninsula
The Iberian Peninsula , or Iberia , is located in the extreme southwest of Europe . It is bordered on the south and east by the Mediterranean Sea , and on the north and west by the Atlantic Ocean . The Pyrenees form the northeast edge of the peninsula , connecting it to the rest of Europe. At Gibraltar in the south, it approaches Africa . In medieval times the peninsula housed many small states. However these amalgamated over time, until the end of the Napoleonic Wars (including the Peninsular War ) in . At that point the modern position was reached and the peninsula now consists of the countries of Spain and Portugal (excluding their islands and Ceuta and Melilla Andorra , and the territory of Gibraltar . The following official languages are spoken in the Iberian peninsula:

37. ScienceDaily -- Browse Topics: Science/Social_Sciences/Archaeology/Regional/Euro
Sacred Precincts A Tartessian Sanctuary in Ancient Spain From archaeology Odyssey,When the Phoenicians arrived on the iberian peninsula, probably at the
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Real Estate Lookup Front Page Today's Digest Week in Review Email Updates ... Europe Spain (12 links) News about Spain Bringing The Martian Landscape To The Silver Screen (June 2, 2004) full story World Mental Health Surveys Find Mental Disorders Highly Prevalent And Often Untreated (June 2, 2004) full story Concerns Remain About UVB Damage To Amphibians (June 2, 2004) full story Artificial Light-dark Cycles Expose Circadian Clocks At Odds With Each Other (May 18, 2004) full story European Space Agency's Miniature Earth Observer Put To Many Uses (May 5, 2004) full story [ More news about Spain Books about Spain List Price: Amazon.com's Price:

38. Archaeology At The Hispanic Society
Beginning in the third century BC, Rome slowly made inroads into Spain, eventuallycontrolling the entire iberian peninsula from 19 BC until the fifth century
http://www.hispanicsociety.org/temp/archaeology.htm
Archaeology Decorative Arts Paintings Sculpture Textiles ... Modern Art The Hispanic Society's holdings offer an impressive overview of the early history of Spain. The collection contains outstanding pieces from one of the most distinctive groups dating from the second millennium B.C., the Bell-Beaker people. Excavated between 1895-1910, these vessels come from large tumuli (burial mounds) in the lower Guadalquivir Valley. The people who used these objects were nomadic herdsmen, and the ceramics, judging from their inclusion in burials, were objects of prestige.
Vessels
Bell-Beaker, 1500/1400-1200 (?) B.C.
Evidence of the mingling of Phoenician and indigenous cultures appears in the Society's exemplary collection of engraved bones and ivories. Migrating celts had also settled in central Spain and been assimilated with the indigenous people, the Iberians, thereby forming a group known as the Celtiberians, represented in the Hispanic Society with a stunning collection of jewelry.
Jewelry
Celtiberian, ca. 125-100 B.C.

39. Servicio De Extensión Universitaria
Ancient History of the iberian peninsula and the Balearic Islands, 6. History ofModern Thought and Cultures, 6. History and archaeology of the Later Antiquity,6.
http://www.udl.es/arees/seu/estudis_eng/plans/history.html
document.write("");
  • Structure First and second cycle
  • Length 4 years
  • Credits
    • Core and obligatory 179
    • Optional: 91
    • Free choice 30
    • Total credits: 300
  • Access
    • Option PAU LOGSE: Arts, Humanities, Social sciences
    • Option COU: C Social sciences, D Humanistic-linguistic
    • Artistic training: Only those who have access to it
    • Access exam for the over 25s
  • Description of the studies The studies in History are focussed on the analysis of the processes of change in human societies and go deeper into the most immediate historical context. At the same time, students learn the historian's methods and the techniques.
  • Desirable prior knowledge Basic knowledge of the contents linked to the social sciences. Knowledge of modern and classical languages.
  • Favourable personal characteristics Predisposition to interpreting historical, social, geographic and political phenomena, taking different points of view into consideration, under the guidance of an adequate methodology. Pleasure in reading. Sensitivity to documentary historical archaeological heritage. Capacity to discern and adopt a critical and active attitude to the data being analysed. Interest in other humanistic studies.
  • Requirements for permanence Students enrolled in any of the studies in the UdL will have to pass a minimum of 12 credits from the list of core and obligatory credits in the first academic year.

40. Vacation In Spain Covering The Iberian Peninsula In 22 Days : Spain Portugal Mor
Covering the highlights of the iberian peninsula On Wednesdays. ll visit the museumof composer Manuel de Falla, or the Fine Arts or archaeology museum, or
http://www.travelinstyle.com/spainnew/aroundiberia.htm
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