DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Qijia culture
Qijia culture
Ceramic's Influence on Chinese Bronze Development
Originally, the Descendants of Hua Xia Were Not the Descendants of Yan Huang
Of the Chinese Bronze
Spatiotemporal Distribution Patterns of Archaeological Sites In
Chapter 1 Chinese Archaeology: Past, Present
Front Matter
Ancient Dnas and the Neolithic Chinese Super-Grandfather Y
Zooarchaeological and Genetic Evidence for the Origins of Domestic Cattle in Ancient China
Download Article
Andrew Womack Curriculum Vitae
THE BRONZE AGE in EASTERN PARTS of CENTRAL ASIA Early
Neolithic Communities in Eastern Parts of Central
The Evolution of Fragility: Setting the Terms
The Horse in Pre-Imperial China
Tales of Stone: Collecting Archaic Chinese Jades in the U.S., 1901-1950
The Regional Characteristics and Interactions Between the Early Bronze Metallurgies of the Northwest and Central Plains
A Discussion of Sino-Western Cultural Contacts and Exchange in the Second Millennium B.C
Stable Isotope and Dental Caries Data Reveal Abrupt Changes in Subsistence Economy in Ancient China in Response to Global Climate Change
Top View
The Di Jun People Were the Ancestors of the Xia Dynasty
Turquoise-Inlaid Bronze Plaques from the Erlitou Culture: Origin and Transmission
Cultural Interaction Between China and Central Asia During the Bronze Age
Early Development of Bronze Metallurgy in Eastern Eurasia
Glossary of Chinese Terms
The Circulation of Jades in Early China (Late Neolithic – Eastern Zhou, Ca.4500-221 B.C.)
Table of Contents More Information
Prehistoric Interactions in Eurasia: a Re-Evaluation of Bronze Age Remains in the Oases on the Southern Rim of the Tarim Basin
Ritualistic Cranial Surgery in the Qijia Culture (2300‑1500 BCE), Gansu, China = 甘肃齐家文化中仪式性开颅手术初探
Chronology of Post-Glacial Settlement in the Gobi Desert and the Neolithization of Arid Mongolia and China
Early Bronze Age Animal Use at Lajia, a Qijia Culture Site in Qinghai Province, China