Proceedings, American Philosophical Society (vol. 142, no. 1, 1998)American Philosophical Society |
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... early man . The sequence of events leading to the observed ndition can be deciphered by mapping the stratigraphy in the field . nsider the example of the central Navajo country studied by John T. ck in the 1950s and represented in ...
... early man . The sequence of events leading to the observed ndition can be deciphered by mapping the stratigraphy in the field . nsider the example of the central Navajo country studied by John T. ck in the 1950s and represented in ...
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... early e , was found in a few but widely separated places . In nearly all as buried beneath sediments , so that its presence is shown only lls of later gullies . It was first described by J. T. Hack in Jeddito Arizona ( Fig . 4 ) , where ...
... early e , was found in a few but widely separated places . In nearly all as buried beneath sediments , so that its presence is shown only lls of later gullies . It was first described by J. T. Hack in Jeddito Arizona ( Fig . 4 ) , where ...
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... early Holocene , and a later one in Roman and medieval times as depicted by the simplified chronology in Figure 13 . There are valleys that locally display the more complicated sequence of three rather than two alluvial fills . One ...
... early Holocene , and a later one in Roman and medieval times as depicted by the simplified chronology in Figure 13 . There are valleys that locally display the more complicated sequence of three rather than two alluvial fills . One ...
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... earliest episode of aggradation or sediment deposition contains e on several continents of early man and fauna , including many ucning the snore of the Mediterranean from Morocco and spain.
... earliest episode of aggradation or sediment deposition contains e on several continents of early man and fauna , including many ucning the snore of the Mediterranean from Morocco and spain.
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... early human works is why their recovery is ften called a dig . The alternation from deposition to erosion and back during the nergence of civilizations means that humanity had to cope with nportant changes in the physical landscape ...
... early human works is why their recovery is ften called a dig . The alternation from deposition to erosion and back during the nergence of civilizations means that humanity had to cope with nportant changes in the physical landscape ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alan Bullock Algonkian alluvial American Indian languages AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY art history Bill Bracton called Campbell century changes China Chinese civilization comparative Conquest Dave death Delaware deposition Du Ponceau earlier early Eliot erosion Essai false memories fill Fulbright Gellner German graduate grammatical forms Harvard Hewlett historians Hitler and Stalin house of lords human Humboldt imagination Iroquois Jews John Kulaks langues later law school Lenni Lenape Lewis Cass linguistic Loftus Macbeth Macduff Mémoire modern never North America notes nuclear nuclear astrophysics observations Packard painting person Peter Stephen Philadelphia Pickering political polysynthetic president Professor reported Review Roy Medvedev ruin Russian Salisbury Salisbury's scholar Soviet Union Stalin Stephen Du Ponceau subjects Svetlana Alliluyeva terraces terror theory Thorne Thorne's typological tyrant University valley Vita-Finzi Wadi William Fulbright Willy Fowler words wrote York yr BP