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Human Remains from Jemdet Nasr, Mesopotamia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Henry Field
Affiliation:
Assistant Curator, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago

Extract

During the past ten winter seasons the Field Museum – Oxford University Joint Expedition has been conducting archæological excavations on the site of the ancient city of Kish, which according to the texts, was “the first city founded after the Flood”.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1932

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References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Field, H.—“Field Museum–Oxford University Joint Expedition to Kish from 1923 to 1929,” F.M. Anthropology Leaflet No. 28, Chicago, 1929.Google Scholar
Field, H.—“The Field Museum-Oxford University Joint Expedition at Kish,” Art and Archœology, vol. xxxi, Nos. 5 and 6, pp. 243–52 and pp. 323–34, Washington, 05 and 06, 1931.Google Scholar
Field, H. —“Ancient Wheat and Barley from Kish, Mesopotamia,” American Anthropologist, vol. xxxiv, No. 2, pp. 303–9.Google Scholar
Langdon, S.—“Pietographic Inscriptions from Jemdet Nasr Excavated by the Oxford and Field Museum Expedition,” Oxford Editions of Cuneiform Texts, vol. vii, Oxford, 1928.Google Scholar
Mackay, D.—“Painted Potsherds,” The English Review, 07, 1927, pp. 81–9.Google Scholar
Mackay, E.—“Report on Excavations at Jemdet Nasr, Iraq, ” F.M. Anth. Mem., vol. i, No. 3, Chicago, 1931.Google Scholar
Watelin, L. C.—“Essai de Coordination des Periodes Archaiques de la Mesopotamie et de l'Elam,” L'Anthropologie, vol. xli, pp. 265–73. Paris, 1931.Google Scholar