Sixth meeting: Schleswig (3-7 September 1991)
Published Friday 20 June 2008,
Schleswig, Germany, September 1991. Organized by Dirk Heinrich.
Publication: OFFA, whose 1994 issue (number 51) featured 26 papers from the Schleswig Meeting.
- V. VOGEL: Excavations in the ancient centre of Schleswig, the archaeological background to the conference-town.
- A. BULLOCK: Evidence for the exploitation of fishes from Tudor deposits and the Little Prickle excavations in 1989, Surrey, England.
- I. BODKER-ENGHOFF: Fishing from medieval Holbaek.
- A. ERVYNCK & W. VAN NEER: Fish remains in medieval castles and towns (Flanders, Belgium): a preliminary survey.
- E. ROSELLO & A. MORALES: Cartuja: Fish remains from a late medieval monastery in Seville (Spain).
- P. MOREL: Medieval fish remains from a site near Basel.
- N. IVANOVA: Fish remains from archaeological sites of the northern part of the Black Sea Region.
- D. C. BRINKHUIZEN & E. ROSELLO: Laminak II: Marine fishes within a paleolithic limnetic ichthyocenosis from the Spanish Basque country.
- A. LENTACKER: Fish remains from Saltes (Huelva, Spain).
- L. JONSSON: Fish bone measurements. Gadiformes. Review and proposals.
- W. VAN NEER: Fish size reconstructions: How accurate should they be?
- D. HEINRICH: Fish remains from Durankulak and from some other sites -are they biased by the excavator?
- J. STUDER: Fish and water: influence of a lake on the distribution of ichthyological remains.
- M. MEZES & L. BARTOSIEWICZ: Fish bone preservation and fat content.
- R. G. COOKE & J. BORT: A comparison between prehistoric and modern artisanal fishing in a small estuarine embayment on the Pacific coast of Panama.
- A. SANCHEZ MOSQUERA: Fishing patterns in the continental coast of Ecuador.
- N. JUAN-MUNS: Fishing strategy in the Beagle channel: an ethnoarchaeological approach.
- R. C. HOFFMANN: The craft of fishing Alpine lakes, ca A.D. 1500.
- C. G. RODRIGUEZ SANTANA: The role of fishing in a prehistoric settlement on the island of La Palma (Canary Islands, Spain).
- B. BEERENHOUT: What conclusions can be drawn from mature haddock bones in a neolithic coastal site in the Netherlands?.
- W. R. BELCHER: Fish utilization in the Harappan civilization: a view from the type site of Harappa.
- D. SERJEANTSON; J. EVANS & S. WALES: Fish in latter prehistoric Britain.
- L. JONSSON: Fish processing before salting and drying - historical evidence from Scandinavia.
- Ma J. RODRIGO GARCIA: The paleoecological implications of the presence of Melanogrammus aeglefinus (L., 1758) in the transition Upper Pleistocene-Holocene levels in Nerja Cave (Malaga, Spain).
- I. SZEKELYHIDY; I. TAKACS & L. BARTOSIEWICZ: Size variability by geographic regions of some fish species in Hungary.
- A. BULLOCK: Cost tradeoffs of mesh size and sieving rate in enrionmental processing.
- R. LARJE: Are dermestid beetles safe for fish bones?.
- D. C. BRINKHUIZEN: Pathologies and anomalies in recent and subfossil fish bones.
- A. MORALES & W. VAN NEER: Abundance indexes as potential discriminators of natural and anthropogenic paleoichthyocenosis.
- D. C. BRINKHUIZEN: The diet of recent otter (Lutra lutra) from two regions in the northern Netherlands.
- W. PRUMMEL: Bird and sea mammal catching during fishing.
- B. IRVING: Possible evidence for Roman fish farming at Nicopolis ad Istrum, Bulgaria.
- S. HAMILTON-DYER: Fish remains from Mons Claudianus -a Graeco- roman site in the Eastern desert of Egypt.
- R. C. HOFFMANN: European subfossil carp (interim report).
- D. PATON & E. ROSELLO: A computerized procedure for the classification of Mugilid remains from archaeological sites.
- Ch. RADTKE: Medieval fishing with <> in the Schlei.
- A. SANCHEZ MOSQUERA: The evolution of Ecuatorian Archaeozoology.
|