[Bonetools] Updates WBRG website
Alice Choyke
choyke at gmail.com
Thu Sep 20 14:51:45 CEST 2018
Dear Francois,
Christian use this pair of Late Bronze Age skates from Törökbalint,
near Budapest in Hungary for decoration on the WBRG page. They are indeed
skates and a characteristic of this period in the western part of Hungary
at least. They were produced on a metatarsal from some kind of an equid -
possibly even donkey because they are very small. They were found in a pit
along with what might be a sled runner made from a worked red deer
metatarsal.
Best,
Alice
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 1:53 PM François POPLIN <francois.poplin at mnhn.fr>
wrote:
> How is the opposite side of that metapodial, flat and smoothed ? It lets
> me think of skates.
>
>
> ----- Mail original -----
> De: "info" <info at knochenarbeit.de>
> À: "Mailing list for archaeologists of the research group for the study of
> object and waste of bone, antler. ivory and horn." <
> bonetools at listserv.niif.hu>
> Envoyé: Lundi 10 Septembre 2018 06:26:23
> Objet: [Bonetools] Updates WBRG website
>
> Dear worked bone people,
>
> the ICAZ Ankara conference just finished and included two sessions related
> to worked bone, which means there are some related updates on the WBRG
> website.
>
> There is a new page for the ICAZ 2018 Ankara session, which contains the
> full programme of the sessions at
> https://www.wbrg.net/meetings/icaz-2018-ankara/
>
> This months bonetool has been updated rather late due to too much work on
> the conference and is also related to Turkey. These are two beautiful
> anthropomorphic bone pins from Bronze Age Dündartepe in Turkey presented on
> a poster by Gamze Durdu in the WBRG session at Ankara.
> https://www.wbrg.net/bonetool-of-the-month-archives/
>
> A link to the 1st version of Aline Averbouhs "Multilingual lexicon of bone
> industries" is now available on the start page and on the „News“ page (
> https://www.wbrg.net/news/).
>
> On the Working Group Meeting we agreed to add a new page to the website
> showing images of typical objects and intermediate stages of chaines
> operatoire, which can then be used as a reference e.g. for archaeologists
> or zooarchaeologists. The page will be set-up and maintained by Jennifer
> Hull (Australian National University) and Aleksa K. Alaica (University of
> Toronto).
>
> Best wishes.
>
> Christian
> --
> Knochenarbeit
>
> Hans Christian Küchelmann
>
> Speicherhof 4, D-28217 Bremen, Germany
> tel: +49 - 421 - 61 99 177
> mail: info at knochenarbeit.de
> web: http://www.knochenarbeit.de
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Bonetools mailing list
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> --
> François POPLIN
>
> Directeur honoraire de l’UMR 7209 Archéozoologie, Archébotanique :
> sociétés, pratiques et environnements
>
> Responsable du Séminaire d'Anthropozoologie
>
> Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle
> CP 56
> Ancien Laboratoire d’Anatomie comparée
> 55, rue de Buffon
> 75005 Paris
> 01 40 79 33 11
> fax ------ 33 14
>
> francoispoplin.blogspot.com
> H
>
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