Re: Food Culture: Mesolithic Western Europe.



In sci.archaeology message news:ed4ped$v7c$1@xxxxxxxxx by "Uwe
Müller" <uwemueller@xxxxxxxxxx> . . . :

Try hitting on 'New search', then type 'mesolithic France' and
specify the search for 'keywords'.

OK, that explains it I was using the Subject Browse feild
specifiyer

More results than 10000, showing only these.

I'll try it again, OK, now I am getting some of the
hits I displayed in the previous post.

Possibly, I have 0 access to hard back titles.

There is not much you can to in the way of scientific work then.
So your comments of French archaeologists were from pure and
undiluted ignorance.

No, I can show you some quotes if you like where their colleages
have said likewise. Aside from that understandable reasons I like
journal publications particularly those in english that I have free
access to. :^) .

http://www.jp.culture.fr/culture/actualites/rapports/archeo-
preventive2006/tome2-normandiehaute.pdf#search=%22Le%20M%C3%
A9solithique%20en%20Haute-Normandie%20(France)%20%3A%22

erreur 404

You misspelled error. ROFL.

Its good but try.
http://tinyurl.com/qacbg


http://translate.google.com/translate?
sourceid=navclient&hl=en&u=http%3a%2f%2f72%2e14%2e207%2e104%2fse
arch%
3fq%3dcache%3adx8%5fOhFf9cgJ%3awww%2ejp%2eculture%2efr%2fculture
% 2factualites%2frapports%2farcheo%2dpreventive2006%2ftome2%
2dnormandiehaute%2epdf%2bLe%2bM%25C3%25A9solithique%2ben%2bHaute
%
2dNormandie%2b%28France%29%2b%3a%26hl%3den%26gl%3dus%26ct%3dclnk
% 26cd%3d8
[Tranlated HTML]

The requested URL was not found on this server.

http://tinyurl.com/ltuwr


So they were eating horse meat and goat-ish like animal.

There are two reviews in that article. If you'd read it, you
would have known that Rocher de la Caille was the Magdalenien
site, palaeolithic that is. The date mentioned would have been a
clue.

Yes that was the older of the two, the younger one did not

Scroll down a bit and you find the following about the
Baraquettes mesolithic site:
"... Baraquettes 4 shelter, with over 3200 lithic pieces clearly
attributable to the Middle Sauveterrian. 14C dates average
around 8800 BP, although the range of these suggests at least
two main periods of occupation. As with the shelters 2 and 3,
fauna is not preserved apart from small fragments of wild boar
teeth. Wood charcoal suggests the presence of mixed oak forests,
and carbonised hazelnut and acorn shells are abundant. This
attests to the importance of gathered resources, as are hinted
at by two fragments of leguminous grains and a macrofossil of
Prunus."

Thanks, I didn't catch that. Hazelnut and acorns.

http://translate.google.com/translate?
hl=en&sl=fr&u=http://www.mmsh.univ-
aix.fr/esep/Publications/sommaires/BINTZ.html&sa=X&oi=translate&
resnu
m=8&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3DLe%2BM%25C3%25A9solithique%2Bdu
% 2Bbassin%2Bde%2Bla%2BSomme%2B:%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26rls%
3DGGLG,GGLG:2006-28,GGLG:en
An new list of search terms. [To bad they don't give abstracts]

It's a list of publications by P. Bintz.

Too bad he didn't give abstracts.

.