Water as a morphogen in landscapes/L'eau comme morphogene dans les paysages: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain) Volume 4/Session A14
These proceedings include eight presentations. Two of them focus on the role played by the river axes and the geography of river basins as factors of circulation and settlement of Palaeolithic hunter gatherers on the European scale (Francois Djindjian) and in the surroundings of the Jura Mountains (Gerald Bereiziat and Harald Floss). Jose Javier Pina Abellan describes how the central valley of the River Jabalon (Ciudad Real, Spain) was peopled in the course of the second millennium B.C., and how the inhabitants still maintain a close link to the hydrography. Frederic Cruz and Christophe Petit provide new insights into the organization of the princely residences' territories of the late Hallstatt era in the North-Western region of the Alps, taking into account their relationship to the environment, and especially the distance from the valleys. Ana Lucia Herberts documents how river crossings and related drainage structures played a crucial role in setting cattle trails in Brazil to drive the cattle from their pasture lands to the major market places in remote cities. A 3-D modelling using Li DAR altimetry has been used by Sabine Schellberg, Benoit Sittler, and Werner Konold to reconstruct water meadows that were used in historical times in the upper Rhine Valley. In their paper, Sandrine Robert and Helene Noizet develop, as an example illustrating resilience, how an ancient meander of the River Seine, which was filled in Antiquity, still dictates the layout of the network of the streets of Paris. Lastly, Martin Orgaz and Norma Ratto addressed the social construction of landscapes by relating Inca sites to the Tinogasta region (Catamarca, Argentina) rivers whose visual features (the colour red) may be regarded as a factor that governed the selection of sites.
1132423395
Water as a morphogen in landscapes/L'eau comme morphogene dans les paysages: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain) Volume 4/Session A14
These proceedings include eight presentations. Two of them focus on the role played by the river axes and the geography of river basins as factors of circulation and settlement of Palaeolithic hunter gatherers on the European scale (Francois Djindjian) and in the surroundings of the Jura Mountains (Gerald Bereiziat and Harald Floss). Jose Javier Pina Abellan describes how the central valley of the River Jabalon (Ciudad Real, Spain) was peopled in the course of the second millennium B.C., and how the inhabitants still maintain a close link to the hydrography. Frederic Cruz and Christophe Petit provide new insights into the organization of the princely residences' territories of the late Hallstatt era in the North-Western region of the Alps, taking into account their relationship to the environment, and especially the distance from the valleys. Ana Lucia Herberts documents how river crossings and related drainage structures played a crucial role in setting cattle trails in Brazil to drive the cattle from their pasture lands to the major market places in remote cities. A 3-D modelling using Li DAR altimetry has been used by Sabine Schellberg, Benoit Sittler, and Werner Konold to reconstruct water meadows that were used in historical times in the upper Rhine Valley. In their paper, Sandrine Robert and Helene Noizet develop, as an example illustrating resilience, how an ancient meander of the River Seine, which was filled in Antiquity, still dictates the layout of the network of the streets of Paris. Lastly, Martin Orgaz and Norma Ratto addressed the social construction of landscapes by relating Inca sites to the Tinogasta region (Catamarca, Argentina) rivers whose visual features (the colour red) may be regarded as a factor that governed the selection of sites.
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Water as a morphogen in landscapes/L'eau comme morphogene dans les paysages: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain) Volume 4/Session A14

Water as a morphogen in landscapes/L'eau comme morphogene dans les paysages: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain) Volume 4/Session A14

Water as a morphogen in landscapes/L'eau comme morphogene dans les paysages: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain) Volume 4/Session A14

Water as a morphogen in landscapes/L'eau comme morphogene dans les paysages: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain) Volume 4/Session A14

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Overview

These proceedings include eight presentations. Two of them focus on the role played by the river axes and the geography of river basins as factors of circulation and settlement of Palaeolithic hunter gatherers on the European scale (Francois Djindjian) and in the surroundings of the Jura Mountains (Gerald Bereiziat and Harald Floss). Jose Javier Pina Abellan describes how the central valley of the River Jabalon (Ciudad Real, Spain) was peopled in the course of the second millennium B.C., and how the inhabitants still maintain a close link to the hydrography. Frederic Cruz and Christophe Petit provide new insights into the organization of the princely residences' territories of the late Hallstatt era in the North-Western region of the Alps, taking into account their relationship to the environment, and especially the distance from the valleys. Ana Lucia Herberts documents how river crossings and related drainage structures played a crucial role in setting cattle trails in Brazil to drive the cattle from their pasture lands to the major market places in remote cities. A 3-D modelling using Li DAR altimetry has been used by Sabine Schellberg, Benoit Sittler, and Werner Konold to reconstruct water meadows that were used in historical times in the upper Rhine Valley. In their paper, Sandrine Robert and Helene Noizet develop, as an example illustrating resilience, how an ancient meander of the River Seine, which was filled in Antiquity, still dictates the layout of the network of the streets of Paris. Lastly, Martin Orgaz and Norma Ratto addressed the social construction of landscapes by relating Inca sites to the Tinogasta region (Catamarca, Argentina) rivers whose visual features (the colour red) may be regarded as a factor that governed the selection of sites.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781784912871
Publisher: Archaeopress Publishing
Publication date: 04/18/2016
Series: Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress , #4
Edition description: Bilingual
Pages: 116
Product dimensions: 8.03(w) x 11.42(h) x (d)
Language: French

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Tables
Foreword to the XVII UISPP Congress Proceedings Series Edition (Luiz Oosterbeek)
Introduction (Sandrine Robert et Benoit Sittler)
Introduction (Sandrine Robert and Benoit Sittler)
L'importance des cours d'eau dans l'orientation, les deplacements et les colonisations des groupes de chasseurs cueilleurs du Paleolithique superieur europeen (Francois Djindjian)
De longs fleuves tranquilles? Le role du couloir Rhin-Saone-Rhone dans la dynamique de peuplement a la fin du Paleolithique superieur sur le pourtour jurassien (Gerald Bereiziat et Harald Floss)
Water and Settlement in the Middle Valley of Jabalon River during the second Millennium B.C. (Ciudad Real, Spain) (Jose Javier Pina Abellan)
Le territoire de la residence princiere de Vix (Cote-d'Or, France): une approche geomorphologique (Frederic Cruz et Christophe Petit)
La gestion de l'eau dans le "Chemin des Troupeaux" dans le sud du Bresil (Ana Lucia Herberts)
Li DAR surveys of irrigated meadows in South-West-Germany (Sabine Schellberg, Benoit Sittler and Werner Konold)
The Resilience of the Old Course of the River Seine on the right bank of Paris (Sandrine Robert and Helene Noizet)
Aguas turbias, campos fertiles. La geografia sagrada del estado Inca en la region de Fiambala, Tinogasta, Catamarca, Argentina (Martin Orgaz y Norma Ratto)
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