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Archéopages 35 - Living with animals

To base itself on archaeology in order to rethink our ways of living together in one environment: Such is the editorial line of Archéopages, a scientific journal with a review panel. Each issue develops a specific theme by crossing the points of view of archaeologists of all backgrounds and those of other researchers in human sciences, thus taking stock of the recent contributions of archaeology to the knowledge of societies. A large space is also devoted to modern methods of archaeology. The journal is aimed at researchers, students and enlightened amateurs.
From the bee to the elephant, including the carp, the falcon, the pig, the dog and the cat, domesticated species are as diverse as they are multiple. What distinguishes them from their wild congeners, besides their morphogenetic characteristics? The share of familiarity they agree to have with us, or the one we put up with in order to achieve our ends.

Editorial
Jean-Paul Jacob
File: Living with animals
Looking for stabling. Multidisciplinary research on settlement sites in northern France from the Neolithic to the Middle Ages
Frédéric Broes, Viviane Clavel, Wim De Clercq, Kai Fechner, Vanessa Rouppert, Jan Vanmoerkerke
Box: Interpretation of a building by soil analysis and carpological study - Perrine Gambier, Véronique Zech-Matterne, Julien Avinain
Horse breeding in Languedoc. The role of protohistoric farming establishments
Pierre Séjalon, Antoine Ratsimba, Vianney Forest
The golden age of the pig. The place of the pig in northern Gaul in the last millennium BC
Ginette Auxiette
Box: Deposition of sows in silos and pits in Gallic sites in Beauce - Grégory Bayle, David Josset
Living with livestock. The Roman farm of Bouxières-sous-Froidmont
Karine Boulanger
The fashion for keeping exotic animals in Gallo Roman high society. The burial of a monkey in the cemetery of the Rue des Caillons in Poitiers
Frédéric Gerber, Anna Baudry-Dautry
Animals in towns. Medieval and modern skeletons of animals in Amiens
Benoît Clavel, Opale Robin
A sheepfold and a henhouse in a medieval souterrain "Le Bois d’Ormes” in the Loiret
Laurent Fournier
Cattle sheds, stables, sheepfolds and pigsties. Treatises on agronomy and medieval and modern remains in Ile-de-France
Jean-Yves Dufour
Box: A mixed medieval house in Roissy-en-France - Jean-Yves Dufour
Infectious diseases in archaeology. Human-animal interaction and health in antiquity
Sacha Kacki
Debate - Domestication or mutual attraction between men and animals
Jean-Denis Vigne, Jean-Pierre Digard
Practical
Using 3D imagery to assist reconstruction
Simon Bryant, Karine Boulanger, Gaëlle Robert, Nicolas Holzem
News
Upper Palaeolithic camp along the Seine
Miguel Biard, Cyril Marcigny
Rural area from the end of the Iron Age
Jean-Philippe Baigl
Revue « Archéopages : archéologie & société », 35
October 2012
Size 22 x 27,5 cm
104 pages
ISSN : 1622-8545
To subscribe or purchase a number, contact the publisher (Éditions Faton):
Librairie archéologique
CS50090 - 1, rue des artisans
21803 Quétigny cedex
Phone: +33 3 80 48 98 60
infos [at] librairie-archeologique.com
Catherine Chauveau
Cultural Development and Communication Department, Inrap
Editor in Chief
Phone: +33 1 40 08 81 44
catherine.chauveau [at] inrap.fr