Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Palaeohistoria
University of Groningen Press
  • Current
  • Archives
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  1. Home /
  2. Archives /
  3. Palaeohistoria 59/60 (2017/2018)

Palaeohistoria 59/60 (2017/2018)

  • Frontmatter
    The Editorial Staff
    i-iv
    • PDF
  • Looking Sharp. Dutch Bronze Age razors and tweezers in context
    Stijn Arnoldussen, Hannie Steegstra
    1-48
    • PDF
  • Grafheuvels bij Arnhem. Opgravingen op het landgoed Warnsborn 1947-’48
    L.P. Louwe Kooijmans
    49-98
    • PDF
  • Around 1000 BC. Absolute dates for the Final Bronze Age – Early Iron Age transition in Italy: wiggle-match 14C dating of two tree-trunk coffins from Celano
    J. van der Plicht, A.J. Nijboer
    99-108
    • PDF
  • Why 7? Rules and exceptions in the numbering of dice
    Hans Christian Küchelmann
    109-134
    • PDF
  • Hellenistic Rural Settlement and the City of Thurii. The survey evidence (Sibaritide, southern Italy)
    N. Oome, P.A.J. Attema
    135-166
    • PDF
  • The Late Antique and Medieval settlement of Astura (Lazio, Italy). A synthesis of GIA investigations (2005-2014)
    G.W. Tol, T.C.A. de Haas, P.A.J. Attema, K. Armstrong
    167-190
    • PDF
  • Where are the Shipwrecks of the Zuiderzee? A new version of the Shipwreck Database Flevoland (3.0), based on spatial and archaeohistorical research into wreck sites in the province of Flevoland
    Y.T. van Popta, A.F.L. van Holk
    191-227
    • PDF
##commmon.university_name##
Search
Browse
  • Other Journals
Make font size smaller Make font size default Make font size larger
  • Login
ISSN: 2773-1723

Creative Commons Open Access

More information about the publishing system, Platform and Workflow by OJS/PKP.

University of Groningen Press offers a publication platform for journals, books and other publications of faculties and researchers working at or with the University of Groningen. Our preferred model for publications is open access, so that any researcher or interested reader around the world can find and access the information without barriers.