Beginnings of Village-Farming Communities in Southeastern Turkey−1972
AUTOR(ES)
Braidwood, Robert J.
RESUMO
The mound known as Çayönü Tepesi (38° 16′ N; 39° 43′ E) in southeastern Turkey is one of the increasing number of early village sites which, since World War II, have been excavated archeologically in greater southwestern Asia. The evidence recovered in the autumn 1972 campaign of the Joint Istanbul-Chicago Prehistoric Project is briefly described, with particular attention to Çayönü's architectural remains, which are most remarkable, considering the site's date of about 7000 B.C. There was evidence of domesticated food plants from the beginning but animal domesticates were not present (save the dog) until later in the major prehistoric phase of occupation.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=388049Documentos Relacionados
- Beginnings of Village-Farming Communities in Southeastern Turkey
- Technical efficiency of goat farming in Turkey: a case study of Isparta province
- Economic and social structures of water buffalo farming in Muş province of Turkey
- Estimating the efficiency level of different tea farming systems in Rize Province Turkey
- Brucellar epididymo-orchitis in southeastern part of Turkey: an 8 year experience