2016
DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2016.93
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First chronometric results for ‘works of the old men’: late prehistoric ‘wheels’ near Wisad Pools, Black Desert, Jordan

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Cited by 15 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…However, for certain features, the higher quality satellite imagery actually allowed for the discerning of discrete site types that have previously been grouped together. Most notably, it became clear that the sites known as "wheels" or "jellyfish" [6,28] require a typological seriation, something that has been recognised before by Rollefson et al [16]. In the WHS area, two distinct forms could be morphologically defined by remote sensing data, which during the course of the later fieldwork were found to have impacts on their frequency and material remains.…”
Section: Site Locations and Their Relationships To Natural Featuresmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, for certain features, the higher quality satellite imagery actually allowed for the discerning of discrete site types that have previously been grouped together. Most notably, it became clear that the sites known as "wheels" or "jellyfish" [6,28] require a typological seriation, something that has been recognised before by Rollefson et al [16]. In the WHS area, two distinct forms could be morphologically defined by remote sensing data, which during the course of the later fieldwork were found to have impacts on their frequency and material remains.…”
Section: Site Locations and Their Relationships To Natural Featuresmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…9000 BC at Dhuweila [14]). Human presence in the Harra is subsequently attested to for all periods up to and including the Early Bronze Age (early 3rd millennium BC), but is particularly well-represented between the 7th and 4th millennium BC [9,10,15,16]. This data does not necessarily indicate permanent occupation, but it speaks against any prolonged period of abandonment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Subsequent limited excavations of a few structures at each site date to the Late Neolithic, although a Late Bronze II or Iron Age tomb was built atop one Neolithic structure (Rowan et al, 2015b). The preliminary results of these surveys and excavations are presented in detail elsewhere (Athanassas et al, 2015;Rollefson, 2013;Rollefson et al, 2016;Rollefson, Rowan, & Wasse, 2011, 2014Rowan et al, 2015aRowan et al, , 2015bWasse, Rowan, & Rollefson, 2012). This evidence indicates a very different occupation in the Black Desert that runs counter to earlier narratives of occasional, short-term hunter-herder use of the region.…”
Section: Research In the Black Desertmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…BC, substantial numbers of pastoralists were seemingly occupying large, virtual village sites in the steppe for considerable amounts of time on a seasonal basis (Rollefson 2016;Rollefson et al 2014;Rowan et al 2017). A shift from meat production to dairying is thought to have allowed for greater efficiency in using the steppe regions for animal raising (Rollefson et al 2014;Vigne and Helmer 2007) while hunting continued to be important (Rollefson et al 2016). Moving between a sedentary village base and seasonal pasture in the steppe would have required the development of transhumance, or tethered pastoralism, whereby movement Miller et al The origins of nomadic pastoralism in the eastern Jordanian steppe: a combined stable isotope and chipped stone assessment was beyond the agricultural zone and/or several days walk from the village.…”
Section: Identifying Pastoral Practices In the Neolithic Steppe Regionsmentioning
confidence: 99%