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  1. Ana Sayfa
  2. Yazara Göre Listele

Yazar "Yalcikli, Derya" seçeneğine göre listele

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    Öğe
    Early Bronze Age Graves from Kubad Abad (Toprak Tol Hoyuk)
    (Suny-State Univ New York Press, 2021) Yalcikli, Derya
    [Anstract Not Available]
  • [ X ]
    Öğe
    Evidence of an Arrowhead workshop in the First half of the 1st Millennium BC.
    (Walter De Gruyter & Co, 2009) Yalcikli, Derya
    [Anstract Not Available]
  • [ X ]
    Öğe
    NEW EVIDENCE FOR NEOLITHIC HABITATION IN THE HINTERLAND OF THE TROAD
    (Wiley, 2014) Yalcikli, Derya
    This essay introduces two newly discovered Neolithic sites identified through the archaeological surveys conducted in the hinterland of the Troad in north-western Turkey. Most of our knowledge about the Neolithic period of the region comes from the coastal site of Coskuntepe, as well as Ugurlu on the island of Gokceada (Imbros) and Karagactepe (Protesilas) on the Gallipoli Peninsula. The lack of evidence for Neolithic habitation in the hinterland of the region was apparently due to the state of research. The recently discovered rock shelter-type site of Evkayasi and the mound of Taracci imply that the hinterland of the Troad also bears traces of Neolithic habitation. Each of these sites yielded a single obsidian artefact of Melian origin, suggesting that these two settlements were on a land-based route that connected the Gulf of Edremit with the southern coast of the Sea of Marmara.
  • [ X ]
    Öğe
    Two Neolithic Ritual Centers in East Mysia (NW Turkey): The Baltaliin and Inkaya Caves
    (Koc Univ Suna & Inan Kirac Res Ctr Mediterranean Civilizations-Akmed, 2018) Yalcikli, Derya
    The social and belief systems in Western Anatolia during the Neolithic and Chalcolitic periods constitute an important question in Anatolian archaeology. Examination of the wall paintings in the Baltaliin and inkaya caves near the village of Delice in the district of Dursunbey in Balikesir province may provide some important answers. There appears to be a conscious effort behind the planning of these caves for use as cult centers in regards to hunting and religious rituals. These pictures reflect the beliefs and rituals of the Neolithic Age and includes themes such as life, death, and hunting.

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