Papers by Marek E . Jasinski
Papers from N-TAG TEN, the Proceedings of the 10th Nordic TAG conference at Stiklestad, Norway 20... more Papers from N-TAG TEN, the Proceedings of the 10th Nordic TAG conference at Stiklestad, Norway 2009. Contents: Preamble: Nordic TAG 1985-2009: Past and Future (Kristian Kristiansen); 1) Introduction (Ragnhild Berge, Marek E. Jasinski and Kalle Sognnes); 2) Quartzite at a sieidi: a new life of an offering site? (Tiina Aikas); 3) Without a trace? Rituals and remembrance at rune stones (Cecilia Ljung and Susanne Theden); 4) Reused rock art: Traces of Iron Age activities at Bronze Age rock art sites (Per Nilsson); 5) Material memories among pre-Christian graves in Iceland (Dora Petursdottir); 6) What can a little bird tell if all good things come in threes? Triple cups and bird-shaped pottery as representations of ritualized feasting goods (Christian L. Rsrud); 7) Images of the non-conceivable. On pictorial mimesis within rock art research (Ylva Sjostrand); 8) Accompanying the stone ships. Circular stone settings in relation to the Gotlandic ship settings (Joakim Wehlin); 9) Hard rock s...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Forensic Science International, 2016
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The use of remote sensing technology in marine archaeology has escalated at an ever increasing ra... more The use of remote sensing technology in marine archaeology has escalated at an ever increasing rate and rapid developments within marine geophysical survey and related fields guarantee that an even wider array of sophisticated equipment with archaeological applications will become available as we enter the new millennium. The most formidable methodological challenge in marine archaeology is the physical barrier of the underwater environment which substantially increases the amount of planning, effort, time and money required to accomplish even the most fundamental tasks commonly performed by the terrestrial archaeologist. For this reason, marine archaeologists have come to rely on remote sensing technology to a greater extent than their colleagues on land, where low tech solutions tend to predominate.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 2017
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Human Biology, 2021
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Russian pink, the Unicorn,/i>, hit the Norwegian shoreline in 1760, and broke up Wreck... more The Russian pink, the Unicorn,/i>, hit the Norwegian shoreline in 1760, and broke up Wreck fragments were scattered over a large area, some parts as deep as 280 meters. The Institute of Archaeology and the Department of Marine Systems Design at the Norwegian ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Archeologia Polski, 1993
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
2013 MTS/IEEE OCEANS - Bergen, 2013
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
International Journal of Historical Archaeology
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
revista PH
Las reflexiones teóricas sobre el valor del patrimonio, junto con el desarrollo tecnológico de lo... more Las reflexiones teóricas sobre el valor del patrimonio, junto con el desarrollo tecnológico de los últimos años del s.XX, determinan la necesidad de aplicar el principio de reversibilidad en la acción sobre los bienes y hacen posible la utilización de herramientas que permitan acciones no intrusivas en el acceso a la información. El presente trabajo tiene como objetivo transmitir una serie de reflexiones acerca de las primeras experiencias en su tipo hechas en el territorio argentino. A través de la revisión de los medios de acceso a la información arqueológica, se intenta verificar la verdadera posibilidad de poner en práctica algunos preceptos de no intrusión en torno al patrimonio arqueológico
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Conference of American Academy of Forensic Sciences 2021, 2021
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Archaeology of the Falstad Camp. Rescue Excavations 2015, 2020
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Call for Papers: Edited volume, 2020
What are the archaeological signatures of military occupation? Is there a distinctive materiality... more What are the archaeological signatures of military occupation? Is there a distinctive materiality that emerges from such an experience? How do memories permeate objects and objects permeate memories? This edited volume seeks to explore answers to these questions by exploring military occupations of the 20 th and 21 st century around the world. These overarching questions quickly explode into many more: how, for example, should we interpret this material culture of occupation-objects which have been created as a response to and means of surviving this experience? How does the materiality of daily life of the occupiers differ from that of the occupied? More than an analysis of the materiality of soldiers versus civilians, this volume seeks more nuanced explorations of age, gender, status, nationality and geography. We invite authors to write about the archaeology of occupation with a focus on material culture and the role it plays in mediating, narrating or constructing memory, whether within the family, the museum or the nation. Rather than proposing another volume that touches upon the materiality of camps and prisons, here we invite authors to reflect instead on the materiality of the un-imprisoned population. What was life like for the 'free-but-occupied' civilians, whose material culture fills WWI and WWII museums throughout Europe today? Did this alter in any key ways from those who lived in the hinterland of camps, who were sucked into the camp economy in a variety of ways? Did the materiality of occupation vary according to the severity of the conditions of occupation? Do we see a difference, for example, between the materiality of Western versus Eastern Europe during WWII? Or between different conflicts? The editors seek papers which include, but are not limited to: The link between objects of occupation and oral testimony; Discussions of how social memory is built through materiality; Discussions of the process of moving from living witnesses to material culture in understanding the past; The occupied landscape; Occupied identities and material culture (e.g. the materiality of the occupied and occupier, and further subdivisions of age, gender, ethnicity and status); The material culture of the children's experience of occupation; The archaeology and material culture of the non-interned camp hinterland; The archaeology and material culture of ghettos; Discussions of the difference between the material culture of souvenir collections (e.g. Carr 2016), trench art (Saunders 2001, 2003) and excavated objects (e.g. Carr, Jasinski and Theune 2017); The construction of narratives in museums through material culture; Collections and collecting the materiality of occupation. Materiality of collaboration and resistance
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
e-Journal iC-ACCESS , 2018
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Conference of International Society for Forensic Genetics, Prague, 2019
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
International Journal of Historical Archaeology. Volume 22 Number 3. September 2018, 2018
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Painful Heritage. Studies in the Cultural Landscape of the Second World War. The Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters. No 4-2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
PH: Boletín del …, 2002
Información del artículo Técnicas no intrusivas de prospección y registro subacuático. Experienci... more Información del artículo Técnicas no intrusivas de prospección y registro subacuático. Experiencias y potencial en Argentina.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by Marek E . Jasinski