INVESTIGATING ORAL PATHOLOGIES AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS
AT THE ROMAN PROVINCE OF MACEDONIA
Chryssa
1,2
Vergidou ,
Georgia
3
Karamitrou-Mentesidi ,
Sofia
1
Voutsaki ,
Efthymia
2
Nikita
1 Groningen
Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen
2 Science and Technology in Archaeology and Culture Research Center, The Cyprus Institute
3 Director Emerita, Ephorate of Antiquities Kozani, Greece
INTRODUCTION
RESULTS
Rescue excavations (1999-2001) at the Kozani Prefecture in Western Macedonia,
Greece, have brought to light 101 burials (mostly pits) of a Late Roman cemetery
dated to the 3rd and 4th c. AD (Karamitrou-Mentesidi, 2002). The cemetery is
located at the site of Vrisi in Pontokomi, once belonging to the lands of the Upper
Macedonian ethnos of Eordaei that was part of the fourth administrative republic
of Macedonia Provincia in Roman times and remained as such until the end of
late antiquity (Gruen, 1982, pp.258–259; Hammond, 1989, p.11, Nigdelis, 2007,
pp.57–58) The area where the cemetery resides is semi-mountainous and,
according to the epigraphic record, populated by a more or less homogenous
population (Samsaris, 1982; Sverkos, 1997).
Figure 1. Map of Greece with the site under investigation (edited by R. Bronkhorst).
RESEARCH QUESTION
The current study explores the relationship between demographic parameters,
oral pathologies, and dental wear patterns among the adult individuals of the
Pontokomi cemetery with the aim to understand the consumption profile of this
population. The main research question is: To what extend do demographic
factors and dental hygiene status relate with each other and what conclusions
can be drawn for the oral health-related quality of life and the consumption
profile of certain social groups within this population?
MATERIALS AND METHODS
30
180
160
140
20
120
15
30%
20%
18%
16%
14%
12%
10%
8%
6%
4%
2%
0%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
M_Max
YA
0%
F_Max M_Mand F_ Mand
MA
OA
F_Max
Total
F_Mand M_Max M_Mand
YA
Figure 5. Number of individuals affected by caries
per sex, age and jaw.
MA
OA
Total
Total
Figure 4. Number of individuals affected by AMTL
per sex, age and jaw.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
• The sample included 23 male and 27 female adult individuals categorized into
three broadly defined age-at-death groups (Young, Middle-aged and Old Adults)
with a total of 925 preserved teeth. Adult skeletons whose sex and/or age could
not be estimated were excluded from the investigation.
• Dental caries, enamel hypoplasia, ante-mortem tooth loss, dental calculus, and
periapical cavities were macroscopically examined for each individual skeleton
and scored as present and/or absent per jaw. Tooth wear was recorded using the
Smith (1984) and Scott (1979) scoring systems.
• The statistical treatment of the data employed Generalized Linear Models (GLM)
with age and sex as predictors and dental diseases/wear as output.
25
• It is apparent from Figures 2 and 3 that, despite the slightly higher female
representation in the sample, no preservation bias arises in the number of
preserved anterior and posterior teeth for the jaws of both sexes, with only
exception the maxillary anterior teeth, where females show a much higher
representation.
• The GLM results showed that sex and age played no statistically significant
role in the expression of calculus, enamel hypoplasia, maxillary caries and
mandibular periapical cavities. In contrast, age exhibited a statistically
significant impact in the expression of AMTL in both jaws (maxilla p = .010;
mandible p = .021) and in maxillary periapical cavities (p = .05). Note that the p
value for the effect of age on the expression of mandibular caries is only
slightly above the fixed a level of ≥0.05 (p = .078). In addition, sex was
significant in the expression of mandibular caries (p = .004). Combined with the
descriptive statistics in Figures 4 and 5, the above results show that females
are more affected by caries than males and, as expected, middle aged
individuals are more affected by AMTL than young adults.
• Regarding dental wear, males and females of all ages exhibit the same
patterns, with a few exceptions (significant sexual dimorphism in the
buccodistal quadrant of LM2 (p = .040) and both lingual quadrants of LM2 (p =
.028 and .038); significant impact of age at the LP3 (p = .019) and all the
quadrants of the RM3 (p = .023; .023; .017; .017).
• We must stress that due to the rather small sample size, GLM often faced
computational problems. The results from the analyses that produced warnings
are not reported here as they were deemed not valid. However, it needs to be
kept in mind that there may be more significant differences with regard to age
and sex in our data, which could not be statistically identified due to the small
sample size. This is linked to an inherent issue with statistical analysis: it is
harder to obtain significant results with small sample sizes than with large
ones.
Our analysis shows an overall homogenous distribution of dental diseases and
dental wear among the sample, irrespective of sex and/or age. The detected
significant impact of age on AMTL and maxillary periapical cavities is to be
expected given the age progressive nature of these conditions, which are
aetiologically associated with chronic pathology (caries, periodontitis etc.)
pronounced dental wear or trauma (Ortner, 2019, p.770).
The prevalence of caries in the female group of the Pontokomi assemblage is
concordant with studies reporting a higher predisposition of females to the
disease (Larsen, 2016, p.73). Carious lesions are also associated with the
frequency of carbohydrates in the diet, thus pointing to possible different
consumption practices among sexes (Hara and Zero, 2010, pp.459-460).
Overall, these preliminary results highlight the need for a more systematic
examination of the oral health-related quality of life of the Pontokomi assemblage
and the consumption profile of certain social groups within it, and they lay the
groundwork for future microscopic and bio-chemical research, which has already
been planned for 2020-2021.
100
80
References
60
Gruen, E. S. (1982) ‘Macedonia and the Settlement of 167 B.C.’, in Philip II, Alexander the Great and the Macedonian Heritage. Washington, DC: University Press of America, pp. 257–267.
Hammond, N. G. L. (1989) The Macedonian State: origins, institutions, and history. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Hara, A. T. and Zero, D. T. (2010) ‘The Caries Environment: Saliva, Pellicle, Diet, and Hard Tissue Ultrastructure’, Dental Clinics of North America, 54(3), pp. 455–467. doi:
10.1016/j.cden.2010.03.008.
Karamitrou-Mentesidi, G. (2002) ‘Νομόσ Κοηάνθσ. Αναςκαφζσ εν οδοίσ και παροδίωσ’, in ΑΕΜΘ 14, 2000. Θεςςαλονίκθ: Υπουργείο Πολιτιςμοφ-ΤΑΠ, Αριςτοτζλειο Πανεπιςτιμιο
Θεςςαλονίκθσ, pp. 607–640.
Larsen, S. C. (2015) Bioarchaeology. Interpreting Behavior from the Human Skeleton. 2nd edn. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press (Cambridge studies in biological and evolutionary
anthropology).
Nigdelis, P. M. (2007) ‘Roman Macedonia (168 BC-AD 284)’, in Koliopoulos, I. (ed.) The History of Macedonia. Thessaloniki: Museum of the Macedonian Struggle Foundation, pp. 51–87.
Available at: http://www.macedonian-heritage.gr/HistoryOfMacedonia/.
Ortner, D. J. (2019) Ortner’s Identification of Pathological Conditions in Human Skeletal Remains. 3rd edn. Edited by J. E. Buikstra. Cambridge, MA: Academic Press.
Samsaris, D. K. (1982) ‘Οι επιγραφικζσ μαρτυρίεσ για τουσ κεςμοφσ τθσ Δυτικισ Μακεδονίασ κατά τθ Ρωμαιοκρατία’, Μακεδονικά, 22(1), pp. 295–308. doi: 10.12681/makedonika.525.
Scott, E. C. (1979) ‘Dental Wear Scoring Technique’, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, (51), pp. 213–218.
Smith, H. B. (1984) ‘Patterns of Molar Wear in Hunter-Gatherers and Agriculturalists’, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 63, pp. 39–56.
Sverkos, E. K. (1997) υμβολή ςτην Ιςτορία τησ Άνω Μακεδονίασ των Ρωμαϊκών Χρόνων (Πολιτική Οργάνωςη-Κοινωνία Ανθρωπωνφμια). PhD thesis. Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
(AUTH). doi: 10.12681/eadd/10575.
10
40
5
20
0
0
YA
MA
Male
OA
Female
Total
Figure 2. Number of adult individuals included
in this investigation per sex and age.
RESEARCH POSTER PRESENTATION DESIGN © 209
www.PosterPresentations.com
Max_Ant_Teeth Max_Post_Teeth Mand_Ant_Teeth Mand_Post_Teeth
Male
Female
Figure 3. Number of preserved anterior and
posterior teeth per sex and jaw.
BOOK OF ABSTRACTS
ICAS-EMME 2
^ĞĐŽŶĚ/ŶƚĞƌŶĂƟŽŶĂůŽŶŐƌĞƐƐŽŶƌĐŚĂĞŽůŽŐŝĐĂů^ĐŝĞŶĐĞƐ
ŝŶƚŚĞĂƐƚĞƌŶDĞĚŝƚĞƌƌĂŶĞĂŶĂŶĚƚŚĞDŝĚĚůĞĂƐƚ
12-14 November
dŚĞLJƉƌƵƐ/ŶƐƟƚƵƚĞ͕EŝĐŽƐŝĂ͕LJƉƌƵƐ
CAARI
Cyprus American Archaeological
Research Institute
ɈɀȸɀȰȰɆɍȰȻɃɈȸdɏɁȾɉɅɆɃɉ
WZdDEdK&Ed/Yh/d/^zWZh^
This project has received funding
from the European Union’s Horizon
2020 research and innovation
programme under grant agreement
No 811068
Book of Abstracts
ICAS-EMME 2
Second International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the
Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
12-14 November 2019
The Cyprus Institute, Nicosia, Cyprus
Edited by
Artemios Oikonomou and Thilo Rehren
The Cyprus Institute, Nicosia, Cyprus
2019
From a very early stage of his professional life, Professor Vassos Karageorghis has been a staunch
supporter of what Archaeological Sciences can do for archaeology, realizing (in his own words) ‘that
without them we cannot make any real progress in our research’. However, without the acceptance
of what the sciences have to offer, demanding that they address archaeological questions, and
providing the intellectual and structural climate to enable their full integration into archaeology,
Archaeological Science would be void of purpose. Professor Karageorghis provided all this, and so
much more, as part of his life-long work to establish archaeology in all its facets in Cyprus, as a Cypriot
endeavor.
We are deeply honoured that he accepted our dedication of ICAS-EMME 2 to mark his recent 90th
birthday anniversary.
Organising Committee
Prof. Thilo Rehren, A.G. Leventis Professor of Archaeological Sciences (Chair)
Dr Artemios Oikonomou (Co-Chair)
Dr Kirsi O. Lorentz (Co-Chair)
Dr George Artopoulos
Dr Nikolas Bakirtzis
Dr Sorin Hermon
Dr Evi Margaritis
Dr Efthymia Nikita
International Scientific Committee
Dr Lindy Crewe, Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute, Cyprus
Prof. Vasiliki Kassianidou, Archaeological Research Unit, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Prof. Thilo Rehren, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Prof. Khaled Al-Bashaireh, Department of Archaeology, Yarmouk University, Jordan
Prof. Martin Jones, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge
Prof. Sturt Manning, Department of Classics, Cornell University, USA
Dr Michel Menu, C2RMF, Paris, France
Prof. Franco Niccolucci, Department of Urban Studies, University of Florence, Italy
Prof. Eleftheria Paliou, Archaeological Institute, University of Cologne, Germany
Dr Giorgio Paolucci, SESAME, Jordan
Prof. Arkadiusz Soltysiak, Institute of Archaeology, University of Warsaw, Poland
Dr George Artopoulos, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Dr Nikolas Bakirtzis, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Dr Sorin Hermon, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Dr Kirsi O. Lorentz, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Dr Evi Margaritis, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Dr Efthymia Nikita, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Dr Artemios Oikonomou, STARC, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus
Contents
Foreword
i
Programme
iii
Public Keynote Lectures
1
Frontiers in Digital Archaeology
4
Art Characterization
21
Synchrotrons in Archaeology and CH-SESAME
28
Human Osteoarchaeology
43
Crops, Food Choices, and Landscapes
67
Computational Archaeology
87
Archaeological Materials
95
Index
133
Foreword
We are delighted to welcome you to the 2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern
Mediterranean and Middle East, or ICAS-EMME 2 for short. We are proud to host nearly 100 presentations on
a wide range of topics, ranging from Art Characterization to the use of Synchrotrons, from Crops, Foods and
Landscapes to Human Osteoarchaeology, and from Archaeological Materials to Digital Archaeology and
Computation in Archaeology. Within this, we treat the term ‘Archaeology’ very broadly - a lot of studies
address historical and cultural aspects more than strictly archaeological work. But this is one of the strengths
and characteristics of ICAS-EMME: the ability to cross borders, to combine innovation in methods with original
research questions, to break out from the strict disciplinary focus and to offer more comprehensive views on
the lives and times of people past, regardless of whether the evidence we study and discover emerges from
the soil through excavation, or has been kept above ground.
We are thrilled that for each session we were able to attract a senior scholar from outside Cyprus to be the
chair, together with one of our own faculty affiliated to the Science and Technology in Archaeology and Culture
Research Center (STARC) at the Cyprus Institute. The Chairs have been invited to start their sessions with a
Keynote Lecture, and we look forward to a rich range of high-level presentations setting the scene for the
subsequent oral presentations in each session. We had hoped to avoid parallel sessions altogether, to facilitate
the interaction of speakers and audiences across the thematic sessions; however, the number of presentations
received was such that we had to allow some parallel sessions to run on the first day - and to ask numerous
colleagues to present their research as posters instead of oral presentations.
For many years, Professor Sturt Manning of Cornell University has been closely associated with STARC, both
as a critical friend and Chair of the Scientific Expert Panel regularly evaluating our work, and as a scientific
collaborator and leading archaeologist. We are very grateful and deeply honoured that he accepted our
invitation to present Tuesday’s Public Keynote Lecture on ‘Time, History and Climate in Cyprus: the Cyprus
Dendrochronology Laboratory and recent progress’.
The Hellenic Society for Archaeometry (HSA) is the largest and longest-established relevant professional
organisation in the Eastern Mediterranean, providing a forum for colleagues not only in Greece to exchange
ideas and information, and promoting the application of Science and Technology in Archaeology, History of
Art and Cultural Heritage. We are pleased and honoured that the members of their Board accepted our
invitation to present a Public Keynote Lecture on the final day of ICAS-EMME, delivered by Dr Vassilis
Kilikoglou.
A conference such as this doesn’t pop into existence just like that. It took numerous people and organisations
to make this happen, and each and every one whom we asked has offered generously of their time,
experience, and contacts. We are also proud that this event has come together as a joint effort from across
the archaeological community in Cyprus. While the CyI acted as the nucleus and physical host of the event,
our friends and colleagues of the Archaeological Research Unit of the University of Cyprus and the Cyprus
American Archaeological Research Institute have enthusiastically accepted our invitation to co-organise ICASEMME 2, and the Department of Antiquities not only encouraged us with our combined effort, but also very
generously offered the guided tour for our international visitors on Friday morning, and free entrance to the
Cyprus Museum for all participants upon presentation of the registration badge.
Special mention should be made of the A.G. Leventis Foundation. Since their inception they have been the
leading philanthropic organisation supporting archaeological and cultural heritage work in Cyprus, and Cypriot
Archaeology and Heritage worldwide. Their endowment of the A.G. Leventis Chair in Archaeological Sciences
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
i
at the Cyprus Institute last year was a key enabler of this conference, and we are most grateful for their
enduring support of our common cause. The extraordinary generosity of the Foundation towards all of us
cannot be over-emphasized, and is deeply appreciated.
Funding for the conference was provided by the Cyprus Institute as well as by the European Union through
the H2020 project Promised – Promoting Archaeological Science in the Eastern Mediterranean. This Twinning
project links the Cyprus Institute with advanced experienced partners at the University of Cambridge and the
KU Leuven. Among the activities organised under Promised are Short Courses, Summer Schools, mentoring
and training visits, and public outreach events in Cyprus, the UK and Belgium - and the organization of ICASEMME 2.
Finally, on behalf of the Organising Committee we want to thank all those who made the conference happen
on a practical level, particularly Andriani Loui, Giusi Sorrentino, Kyriaki Tsirtsi, Meghna Desai, and Yiannis
Trimithiotis, with further support from Cagla Elektrikci, Charis Hephaestou, Evi Margaritis, Nic Jarraud, Pavlos
Tsiartas, and many more.
Thilo Rehren, Artemios Oikonomou and Kirsi Lorentz
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
ii
PROGRAM
Monday 11th of November 2019
18:30-21:30
Welcoming reception at Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute (CAARI)
[11 Andreas Demitriou Street, Nicosia 1066]
Pre-registration
Tuesday 12th of November 2019
08:30-09:00
09:00-09:30
Registration (NTL Building)
Opening ceremony (NTL Building)
Prof. Thilo Rehren, A.G. Leventis Professor of Archaeological Sciences
Dr Lindy Crewe, Director, CAARI
Prof. Vasiliki Kassianidou, ARU
Dr Marina Solomidou-Ieronymidou, Director, DoA
Mr Theodosis Tsiolas, Permanent Secretary, GDEPCD
Session I Frontiers in Digital Archaeology (NTL Building)
Chairs: Prof. F. Niccolucci, Dr S. Hermon
09:30-10:00
Keynote lecture: Challenges in Digital Archaeology
Prof. Franco Niccolucci
10:00-10:20
FDA1: A LIVING SHIPWRECK: A composite study of
scrambling devices: three-dimensional modelling and
biological analysis for the understanding of site formation
processes in archaeological shipwreck sites
FDA2: From excavation to the drawing and from drawing to
the model. The digital reconstruction of twenty years
excavations in the archeological site of Bedriacum
FDA3: The identification of cities in archaeology: A case
study from central Israel, the seventh-eleventh centuries
AD
FDA4: Knowledge-based generative adversarial networks
for scene understanding in cultural heritage
Coffee break
M. Secci, S. Demesticha, C.
Jimenez, I. Katsouri, B. Stivarou
FDA5: Digital reconstruction and visualization of a New
Kingdom palace area from the eastern Nile Delta/Egypt
FDA6: HBIM Approach for the knowledge and
documentation of the St. John the Theologian Cathedral in
Nicosia (Cyprus)
FDA7: 3D Geometric descriptors for the study of Cypriot
coroplastic production
Lunch break
I. Hein, S. Müller
FDA8: SimpleX: Towards an Ontology for Archaeological
Pottery
FDA9: Towards a Phygital Heritage approach for Museum
Collection
Ch. Paraskeva
10:20-10:40
10:40-11:00
11:00-11:20
11:20-11:40
11:40-12:00
12:00-12:20
12:20-12:40
12:40-14:00
14:00-14:20
14:20-14:40
14:40-15:00
15:00-15:20
FDA10: Machine Learning approach for monitoring and
managing museum collections
Coffee break
S. Parrinello, F. Galasso
H. Nol
R. Garozzo, C. Pino, C. Santagati,
C. Spampinato, G. Vecchio
N. Bakirtzis, S. Hermon, C. Laurini,
D.
Papacharalambous,
G.
Sanfilippo, C. Santagati
V. Vassallo, A. Scalas, M. Mortara
M., S. Hermon
POSTER SESSION I
M. Lo Turco, P. Piumatti, M.
Calvano, E.C. Giovannini, N.
Mafrici
F.M. La Russa, C. Santagati
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
iii
Session II Art Characterization (NTL Building)
Chairs: Dr M. Menu, Dr N. Bakirtzis
15:20-15:50
15:50-16:10
16:10-16:30
16:30-16:50
16:50-17:10
17:10-17:30
Keynote lecture: Heritage Science a discipline for the
conservation and analysis of works of art.
Art1: Laser applications for the characterization of cultural
heritage
Art2: Giovanni Baronzio's 'Crucifixion': Analytical
Approaches and Art Historical Considerations
Art3: The Application of Portable XRF on Negev Rock Art:
Chronological Trends at the Ramat Matred Petroglyphs as
a Test Case
Art4: Mapping the mineralogical composition of pigments
using multispectral imaging in the frigidarium of the Sarno
Baths, Pompeii
Art5: Documentation of paintings restoration through
photogrammetry and change detection algorithms
Dr Michel Menu
V. Detalle, X. Bai, M. Lopez, C.
Koch Dandolo, M. Menu
S. Gasanova, N. Bakirtzis, D. LevifMartos
I. Shapira, D. Eisenberg-Degen, L.
Schwimer, Y. Goren
Y. Asscher, I. Angelini, M. Secco,
M. Parisatto, A. Chaban, R.
Deiana, G. Artioli
D. Abate
Session III Synchrotrons in Archaeology and CH-SESAME (GOB Building) (parallel session)
Chairs: Dr G. Paolucci, Dr K.O. Lorentz
14:00-14:30
Keynote lecture: Cultural Heritage and Archaeological
Research at SESAME Synchrotron
SSE1:
Synchrotron
radiation
enabled
human
bioarchaeology in the EMME region: SR-XRF, XANES and
EXAFS data in exploring key archaeological questions
SSE2: SR-FTIR in Archaeological and Cultural Heritage
Research at SESAME
SSE3: Advantages and potential of SR phase contrast
microCT enabled virtual dental histology in comparison
with conventional dental histology
SSE4: Highlights of potential Synchrotron research
applications at the University of Jordan: case studies from
Cultural Heritage
Coffee break
Dr Giorgio Paolucci
16:10-16:30
SSE5: SR-FTIR analyses of ancient hair remains from
Anatolia
A. Buyukkarakaya, G. Kamel, S.
Lemmers, K. Lorentz
16:30-16:50
SSE6: Comparison of synchrotron CT and laboratory based
micro-CT with applications in heritage materials
K. Jakata
16:50-17:10
SSE7: SR microCT in identification of NNL: Distinguishing
between stillborn and newborn infants
Y. Miyauchi, S. Lemmers, K.
Lorentz
17:10-17:30
SSE8: Synchrotron X-Ray Spectroscopy in archaeology and
cultural heritage: Lessons learned
E. Alp
17:30-18:00
Refreshments (NTL Building)
18:00-19:00
Public Keynote Lecture: Time, History and Climate in
Cyprus: the Cyprus Dendrochronology Laboratory and
recent progress (NTL Building)
19:00-20:00
Reception in Honour of Prof. Vassos Karageorghis (NTL Building)
14:30-14:50
14:50-15:10
15:10-15:30
15:30-15:50
15:50-16:10
K. Lorentz
G. Kamel
S. Lemmers, K. Lorentz
B.M.Y. Gharaibeh, M. Arimat
Prof. Sturt Manning
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
iv
Wednesday 13th of November 2019
08:30-09:00
Registration (NTL Building)
Session IV Human Osteoarchaeology (NTL Building)
Chairs: Prof. A. Soltysiak, Dr E. Nikita
09:00-09:30
09:30-09:50
09:50-10:10
10:10-10:30
10:30-10:50
Keynote lecture: Textual sources: A headache and a
godsend
for
Mediterranean
and
Oriental
bioarchaeologists
Hum1: Eastern Mediterranean isotopic research within
the IsoMemo initiative
Hum2: Changes to the human diet at Knossos under the
Roman Empire and Christianity using stable isotope
analysis
Hum3: Isotopic reconstruction of the lifeways of ancient
Athenians
Hum4: Malaria in the Eastern Mediterranean:
Preservation, Curation, and Biomolecular Promises
10:50-11:10
Coffee break
11:10-11:30
Hum5: Human remains under the microscope of funerary
taphonomy. Investigating the histological biography of the
decaying body in the prehistoric Aegean
Hum6: East of Rome: reexamining impacts of Roman
imperialism on Eastern Mediterranean populations
through an osteoarchaeological perspective
Hum7: Bioarchaeological approaches to human mobility in
the EMME and beyond: the People in Motion project in
context
Hum8: Inter-personal violence in the Iron Age cemetery at
Qareh Tepe, Iran
Lunch break
11:30-11:50
11:50-12:10
12:10-12:30
12:30-14:00
Prof. Arkadiusz Soltysiak
R. Fernandes
A. Moles, H. Reade, A.-L. Jourdan,
R. Stevens
R. Fernandes, A. Lagia
M. Gamble, F. Maixner, A.
Loufouma-Mbouaka, A. Zink, M.
Binder
N. Papakonstantinou, Th. Booth,
S. Triantaphyllou
K.E. Marklein
E. Nikita
J. Trębicka
POSTER SESSION II
Session V Crops, Food Choices, and Landscapes (NTL Building)
Chairs: Prof. M. Jones, Dr E. Margaritis
14:00-14:30
14:30-14:50
14:50-15:10
15:10-15:30
15:30-15:50
15:50-16:10
16:10-16:30
16:30-16:50
16:50-17:10
17:10-17:30
Keynote lecture: Mobility and selection: some reflections
upon domestication
CFL1: Human diet and landscape as attested by the plant
remains of PPNC Atlit-Yam, Carmel Coast, Israel
CFL2: Food or fuel? A micro-botanical perspective of
plant remains from Neolithic Abu Hureyra, N. Syria
CFL3: Between the Desert and the Sown Revisited: crops,
food choices and landscapes of the Levant
CFL4: Crop Choice and Socio-Economic Organisation in
Bronze Age Western Anatolia
CFL5: Early Bronze Age communities of Western Anatolia:
with a special contribution on archaeobotanical research
Coffee break
Prof. Martin Jones
CFL6: The trade distances across the southern Levant
during the Early Bronze Age - the botanical evidence
CFL7: Landscapes of production and the nature of urban
farming at Tell Brak
CFL8: Arboriculture and urbanism in the Bronze Age
Aegean
S. Frumin, Y. Melamed, E. Weiss
A. Hartmann-Shenkman,
Kislev, E. Galili, E. Weiss
K. Dudgeon
C. Palmer
T. Maltas
Ö. Çizer
Ch. Diffey, M. Charles, A. Bogaard
E. Margaritis
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
v
M.E.
17:30-17:50
17:50-18:10
18:10-18:30
18:30-18:50
20:30-
CFL9: Exploring the human-cattle relationship in Bronze
Age
Cyprus:
Archaeozoological,
isotopic
and
ethnographic approaches
CFL10: The road to the Bronze Age: a diachronic
approach to sheep and goat husbandry in prehistoric
Cyprus
CFL11: Isotopic Data (δ18O, δ13C) as a Means of
Investigating Early Complex Societies: The Case of Animal
Management in the Jordan Valley
CFL12: A multi-isotope base map for Jordan: a tool for reexamining movement and community in the past
A. Spyrou
A. Hadjikoumis
L. Welton
L. Johnson, Kh. Al-Bashaireh, A. AlShorman, J. Montgomery, G.
Philip
Official dinner of ICAS-EMME 2 [Mezostrati tavern, Evagorou 18E, 1065 Nicosia]
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
vi
Thursday 14th of November 2019
08:30-09:00
Registration (NTL Building)
Session VI Computation in Archaeology (NTL Building)
Chairs: Prof. E. Paliou, Dr G. Artopoulos
09:00-09:30
09:30-09:50
09:50-10:10
10:10-10:30
Keynote lecture: Modelling long-term settlement
evolution: further insights into the application of spatial
interaction entropy maximisation models (SIEMs) in
archaeology
CA1: ANNFASS: A Neural Network Framework for
understanding historical monuments Architectural
Structure and Style
CA2: From Analogue to Digital: 40 years of archaeological
documentation and management at the Neolithic
UNESCO World Heritage site of Khirokitia
CA3: Khirokitia: simulating a proto-urban site
10:30-10:50
CA4: When culture meets economy: modelling cultural
complexity in an economic setting
10:50-11:10
Coffee break
11:10-11:40
Public Keynote lecture: Archaeological materials studies
and modern innovation: examples from the study of
ceramics and mortars
Prof. Eleftheria Paliou
M. Igarievna Maslioukova, M.
Averkiou, M. Deligiorgi, G.
Artopoulos, E. Kalogerakis, G.
Patow, Y. Chrysanthou
D. Abate, M. Faka, C. Ioannou, N.
Bakirtzis, S. Hermon, O.D. Le Brun
G. Artopoulos, I. Romanowska,
O.D. Le Brun
I. Romanowska, T. Brughmans, S.
Carrignon, A. Lichtenberger, R.
Raja
Dr Vassilis Kilikoglou
Session VII Archaeological Materials (NTL Building)
Chairs: Prof. Kh. Al-Bashaireh, Prof. Th. Rehren
11:40-12:10
12:10-12:30
12:30-14:00
14:00-14:20
14:20-14:40
14:40-15:00
15:00-15:20
15:20-15:40
15:40-16:00
Keynote lecture: Ancient marble trade and its
provenance determination
AM1: A Technological Approach to Iron Age Pottery from
the Zagros Region: A Case Study from the Dinka Complex
(Iraqi Kurdistan)
Lunch break
Prof. Khaled Al-Bashaireh
AM2: Raw material procurement at Boila Rockshelter,
northwestern Greece, as an indicator of hunter-gatherer
mobility in Greece during the Late Upper Palaeolithic and
Mesolithic
AM3: The contribution of soil micromorphology for
understanding the occupation styles in prehistory: Two
case-studies from Cyprus and Crete
AM4: Abandonment processes through the microscope
lens. Microarchaeological data from Middle Bronze Age
Erimi, Cyprus
AM5: Metallic and glazed artefacts from the Cypriot
Chalcolithic
P. Elefanti, G. Marshall, Ch.
Stergiou, E. Kotjabopoulou
AM6: Preliminary evidences for a Chalcolithic copper
workshop in Fasael, Northern Jordan Valley
AM7: From desert ores to Middle Kingdom copper: first
chemical and lead isotope data from the AHM collection,
Belgium
Th. Rose, D. Rosenberg, S. Bar, Y.
Goren
F.W. Rademakers, G. Verly, L.
Delvaux, P. Degryse
S. Amicone, J.-J. Herr
POSTER SESSION III
P. Mylona, M. Pomadère, J.-D.
Vigne
M. Amadio, L. Bombardieri
V. Kassianidou, A. Charalambous
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
vii
16:00-16:20
Coffee break
16:20-16:40
AM8: Using pXRF spectroscopy to identify ancient copper
alloys: the case of LBA Enkomi (Cyprus)
AM9: “Cooking up” pottery recipes: a diachronic
technological and provenance analysis of cooking ware
ceramics from prehistoric Heraion on Samos, Greece (5th
to early 2nd millennia BC)
AM10: Indigeneity and innovation of early Islamic glaze
technology
AM11: Glass from the Sea: Composition of Raw Glass off
the Coast of Israel
AM12: Technology of early Byzantine glass from the glass
workshop of Argyroupoli, Rethymno, Crete: Preliminary
results using SEM-EDS
AM13: Persian Crucible Steel: Archaeology, Manuscripts
and Experiments
16:40-17:00
17:00-17:20
17:20-17:40
17:40-18:00
18:00-18:20
A. Charalambous, V. Kassianidou,
G. Papasavvas
S. Menelaou, O. Kouka
C. Ting, I. Taxel
Y. Gorin-Rosen, I.C. Freestone, E.
Galili
A. Oikonomou, A. Fiolitaki
R. Alipour, Th. Rehren
Friday 15th of November 2019
10:00-13:00
Visit at the Cyprus Museum (Nicosia)
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
viii
LIST OF POSTERS
Poster Session I (Tuesday 12th of November, NTL Building)
Synchrotrons in Archaeology and CH-SESAME
SSE-P1
STARCH: at the origins of starch food diet. SR-FTIR and SEM
applied to Palaeolithic Grinding Stones from the Pontic area
SSE-P2
Exploring paleopathology of Hellenistic/Roman Paphos
(Cyprus): Potential of high-resolution SR microCT at SESAME
Charlie ‘unwrapped’: a scientific investigation of a Mummified
Votive offering in the Australian Institute of Archaeology
collection
Hidden Text: Imaging and Reading an Ancient Tablet encased
in an Envelope
SSE-P3
SSE-P4
G. Biranda, L. Vaccari, N. Cefarin,
C. Cagnato, I. Pantushina, N.
Skakun, C. Lubritto, G. Sorrentino,
L. Longo
G. Ioannou, S. Lemmers, K.
Lorentz
C.A. Raymond, J.J. Bevitt, C.J.
Davey
L.R. Siddall, C.A. Raymond, J.J.
Bevitt, C.J. Davey
Poster Session II (Wednesday 13th of November, NTL Building)
Human Osteoarchaeology
Hum-P1
Skeletal evidence of trepanation from ancient Akanthos,
Greece
Human remains from Bronze and Iron Age sites in Armenia:
palaeobiological and paleopathological studies and a new
approach to age estimation through the use of Cameriere’s
dental radiographic method
The results of the complex study of bone materials obtained
in the yard of the Monastery of the Theotokos and the crypt
of the Church of Saint Nicholas in Gialia
A. Aidonis, Ch. Papageorgopoulou
Hum-P4
Breastfeeding and weaning patterns in ancient Thessaloniki
Hum-P5
The inhabitants of ancient Kition: Preliminary insights
Hum-P6
Stature estimation in ancient Greek population of Roman times
Hum-P7
Burials and human osteological remains from the Bronze Age
acropolis of Aghios Ioannis in Boeotia, Greece: preliminary
results of the bioarchaeological analysis
E. Ganiatsou, E. Vika, Ch.
Papageorgopoulou
A. Karligkioti, P. Christofi, K.
Helgeson, S. Mavroudas, F.
Constantinou, K. Cruz, E. Nikita, N.
Herrmann
M. Koukli, F. Siegmund, Ch.
Papageorgopoulou
E. Kountouri, P. Tritsaroli, Th.
Konstantakou
Hum-P8
Social Mobility and Life Quality in Roman Byblos: Comparative
Analysis of Cross-Sectional Geometry, Degenerative Joint
Disease, Entheseal Changes, Cemetery Clustering, and Tomb
Typology
Evidence of kinship and membership in the Bronze Age
collective burials from the Caucasian cemetery of Doghlauri
(Shida Kartli region, Georgia)
Investigating oral pathologies and their implications at the
Imperial Roman Province of Upper Macedonia
The assessment of bone deterioration with nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy in a multidisciplinary context: The
case of the UNESCO world heritage site of Sedlec, Czechia
Hum-P2
Hum-P3
Hum-P9
Hum-P10
Hum-P11
F. Bertoldi, R. Mkrtchyan, A.
Piliposyan, H. Simonyan, R.
Cameriere
L. Bitadze, S. Laliashvili,
Mindorashvili, I. Gagoshidze
M. Mardini, E. Nikita, G. Doumit,
T. Zaven, M. Ghadban
P.A. Rasia, L. Bitadze, E. Rova, F.
Bertoldi
Ch. Vergidou, G. KaramitrouMentesidi, S. Voutsaki, E. Nikita
A. Viani, P. Mácová, D. Machová,
T. Čendak
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
ix
D.
Crops, Food Choices, and Landscapes
CFL-P1
CFL-P2
CFL-P3
CFL-P4
CFL-P5
A 3D Tool for Identification of Grapevine Varieties – Sample
Preparation, Scanning and Analysis
Scientific geo-ethnoarchaeology and its archaeological
application to investigate farming, settlements and agriculture
in the past
Crops and food choices at the Late Bronze Age site of Hala
Sultan Tekke
The archaeobotany of Pre-Pottery Neolithic Cyprus: a
synthesis of current and recent data
Marine vertebrate exploitation in the eastern Mediterranean
c. 2500 BC - 1300 AD
M. David, E. Drori, A. Karasik, E.
Weiss
S. Elliott
D. Kofel, T. Bürge, P.M. Fischer
M. Rousou, M. Tengberg, O.
Kouka
R. Winter, W. de Kock, C. Çakirlar
Poster Session III (Thursday 14th of November, NTL Building)
Archaeological Materials
AM-P1
AM-P2
AM-P3
AM-P4
AM-P5
AM-P6
AM-P7
AM-P8
AM-P9
AM-P10
AM-P11
AM-P12
AM-P13
AM-P14
AM-P15
Investigating the architectural history of the 14th century AD
Al-Attar mosque, Tripoli- Lebanon
Ancient artisans and ethno-archaeology. From Early Iron Age
Naxos and Andros to modern Cyprus: first assessment and
perspectives
Scientific Investigation of Roman-Byzantine Glass Working
Remains from ‘Aqir, Israel
Egyptian Middle Kingdom Copper: Analysis of a Crucible from
Buhen
Technology and Provenance of Stamped Documents on Clay:
study of Iron Age bullae from Jerusalem
“Moving” cooking pots in LBA Chania, Crete: local production
and imports
Revisiting the question of ceramic provenance in the Northern
and North-eastern Peloponnese
Bringing life to old MUSEum COllections: The interdisciplinary
study of pottery from the Cypriot Iron Age polities of Salamis,
Soloi, Lapithos and Chytroi (MuseCo)
Archaeometallurgical analyses of metal finds from the Akko
Tower shipwreck
Mapping Archaeoseismic Damages across Jordan (MADAJ)
Characterization of Historical Materials from Rammed Earth
Heritage of Iran
Maritime trade in Early Islamic-period glass: New evidence
from the Maʻagan Mikhael B shipwreck
Iron Production Technology in the Neo-Assyrian Sphere: The
Iron Workshop at Tel Sera', Western Negev, Israel
State-of-the-Art TEM coupled with Electron Diffraction for the
Study of Silicate Archaeological Materials
Technology of slips and glazes in the post-medieval Balkans:
the case of Belgrade in the 16th and 17th centuries
R. Baydoun, Z. El Morr, C. Hachem,
G. Homsy-Gottwalles
X. Charalambidou, B. McLoughlin,
G. London
C. Chen, I. Freestone, Y. GorinRosen
C.J. Davey, B. Santarelli, Th.
Rehren
C. Fossé, E. Arie, Y. Goren
S. Fouriki, E. Kiriatzi, M. Vlazaki, B.
Hallager
C. Gardner, E. Kiriatzi, N.S. Müller,
G. Giannakopoulos, K. Tsirtsi, K.
Kissas, S. Müth-Frederiksen, Ch.
Hayward, N.M. Kristensen
A. Georgiadou, M. DikomitouEliadou, G. Papasavvas, P.
Waiman-Barak, D. Pilides
N. Iddan, M. Cohen, D. Ashkenazi,
D. Cvikel
R. Jaradat, Kh. al-Bashaireh, Ad.
al-Rawabdeh, A. Gharaibeh, B.
Khrisat
M.Z. Moghaddam
E. Natan, Y. Gorin-Rosen, D. Cvikel
Y. Pagelson, E.D. Oren, Y. Golan, Y.
Goren
Ν. Ζacharias, S. Νikolopoulos, Ε.
Palamara, P.P. Das
J. Živković
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
x
Wednesday, 13 November 2019 - Human Osteoarchaeology
HUMAN OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY
Chairs: Prof. Arkadiusz Sołtysiak, Dr Efthymia Nikita
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
43
Wednesday, 13 November 2019 - Human Osteoarchaeology
Hum-P10 - Poster presentation
Investigating oral pathologies and their implications at the Imperial Roman Province
of Upper Macedonia
Chryssa Vergidou (1, 2), Georgia Karamitrou-Mentesidi (3), Sofia Voutsaki (1), Efthymia Nikita (2)
(1) Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen
(2) Science and Technology in Archaeology and Culture Research Center, The Cyprus Institute
(3) Director Emerita, Ephorate of Antiquities Kozani, Greece
Studies aiming to investigate the social aspects of past dietary habits have largely focused on dental
diseases. This study explores the relationship between oral pathologies, dental wear patterns and
demographic factors among adult and non-adult individuals interred at the Pontokomi cemetery of the
Imperial Roman Province of Upper Macedonia (modern Western Macedonia, Greece) with the aim to
understand the consumption profile of this group. Dental caries, enamel hypoplasia, ante-mortem tooth
loss, dental calculus, periapical abscesses and dental wear data were compared among the different age
and sex groups of the assemblage. The results of this investigation show differentiation in the prevalence
of dental pathologies between different demographic groups, thus pointing to possible different
consumption preferences. These findings have significant implications for the understanding of how food
acquisition strategies and preferences help redefine social and cultural affiliations within past
communities. They also lay the groundwork for future microscopic and bio-chemical research, which are
already being planned and will be carried out within 2020-2021. These analyses will not only fill a gap in
palaeo-dietary research in the Greek world but also enhance our understanding of the re-negotiation of
social and cultural identities in Macedonia after its incorporation into the Roman Empire.
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
65
Index
INDEX
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
133
Index
A
Abate Dante
Art5, CA2, CA3
27, 90, 91
Aidonis Asterios
Hum-P1
54
Al-Bashaireh Khaled
CFL12, Keynote Lecture, AM-P10
80, 96, 125
Alipour Rahil
AM13
113
Al-Rawabdeh Adullah
AM-P10
125
Al-Shorman Abdulla
CFL12
80
Amadio Marialucia
AM4
100
Amicone Silvia
AM1
97
Angelini Ivana
Art4
26
Arie Eran
AM-P5
119
Arinat Mahmoud
SSE4
33
Artioli Gilberto
Art4
26
Artopoulos George
CA1, CA2, CA3
89, 90, 91
Ashkenazi Dana
AM-P9
123
Asscher Yotam
Art4
26
Averkiou Melinos
CA1
89
Bai Xueshi
Art1
23
Bakirtzis Nikolas
FDA6, Art2, CA2
14, 24, 90
Bar Shai
AM6
103
Baydoun Rana
AM-P1
114
Bertoldi Francesca
Hum-P2, Hum-P9
55, 63
Bevitt Joseph J.
SSE-P3, SSE-P4
41, 42
Binder Michaela
Hum4
48
Biranda Giovanni
SSE-P1
38
Bitadze Liana
Hum-P3, Hum-P9
56, 63
Bogaard Amy
CFL7
75
Bombardieri Luca
AM4
100
Booth Thomas
Hum5
49
Brughmans Tom
CA4
93
Bürge Teresa
CFL-P3
83
Buyukkarakaya Alimetin
SSE5
35
Cagnato Clarissa
SSE-P1
38
Çakirlar Canan
CFL-P5
85
Calvano Michele
FDA9
18
Cameriere Roberto
Hum-P2
55
Carrignon Simon
CA4
93
Cefarin Nicola
SSE-P1
38
B
C
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
134
Index
Čendak Tomáž
Hum-P11
66
Chaban Antonina
Art4
26
Charalambidou Xenia
AM-P2
115
Charalambous Andreas
AM5, AM8
102, 106
Charles Mike
CFL7
75
Chen Chen
AM-P3
116
Christofi Polina
Hum-P5
58
Chrysanthou Yiorgos
CA1
89
Çizer Özgür
CFL5
73
Cohen Maayan
AM-P9
123
Constantinou Fotini
Hum-P5
58
Cruz Krysten
Hum-P5
58
Cvikel Deborah
AM-P9, AM-P12
123, 128
Dandolo Corinna Koch
Art1
23
Das Partha P.
AM-P14
130
Daune-Le Brun Odile
CA2, CA3
90, 91
Davey Christopher J.
SSE-P3, SSE-P4, AM-P4
41, 42, 118
David Michal
CFL-P1
81
De Kock Willemien
CFL-P5
85
Degryse Patrick
AM7
104
Deiana Rita
Art4
26
Deligiorgi Marissia
CA1
89
Delvaux Luc
AM7
104
Demesticha Stella
FDA1
7
Detalle Vincent
Art1
23
Diffey Charlotte
CFL7
75
Dikomitou-Eliadou Maria
AM-P8
122
Doumit George
Hum-P8
62
Drori Elyashiv
CFL-P1
81
Dudgeon Kate
CFL2
70
Eisenberg-Degen Davida
Art3
25
El-Morr Ziad
AM-P1
114
Elefanti Paraskevi
AM2
98
Elliott Sarah
CFL-P2
82
Faka Marina
CA2, CA3
90, 91
Fernandes Ricardo
Hum1, Hum3
45, 47
Fiolitaki Anastasia
AM10
108
Fischer Peter M.
CFL-P3
83
D
E
F
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
135
Index
Fossé Cécile
AM-P5
119
Fouriki Stavroula
AM-P6
120
Freestone Ian
AM11, AM-P3
110, 116
Frumin Suembikya (Sue)
CFL6
74
Gagoshidze Iulon
Hum-P3
56
Galasso Francesca
FDA2
8
Galili Ehud
CFL1, AM11
69, 110
Gamble Michelle
Hum4
48
Ganiatsou Elissavet
Hum-P4
57
Gardner Carlotta
AM-P7
121
Garozzo Raissa
FDA4
11
Gasanova Svetlana
Art2
24
Georgiadou Anna
AM-P8
122
Ghadban Mirna
Hum-P8
62
Gharaibeh Anne
AM-P10
125
Gharaibeh Belal M.Y.
SSE4
33
Giacometti Valentina
Hum-P2
55
Giannakopoulos Giorgos
AM-P7
121
Giovannini Elisabetta Caterina
FDA9
18
Golan Yuval
AM-P13
129
Goren Yuval
Art3, AM6, AM-P5, AM-P13
25, 103, 119, 129
Gorin-Rosen Yael
AM11, AM-P3, AM-P12
110, 116, 128
Graham Philip
CFL12
80
Hachem Carole
AM-P1
114
Hadjikoumis Angelos
CFL10
78
Hallager Birgitta
AM-P6
120
Hartmann-Shenkman Anat
CFL1
69
Hayward Chris
AM-P7
121
Hein Irmgard
FDA5
13
Helgeson Kari
Hum-P5
58
Hermon Sorin
FDA6, FDA7, CA2
14, 15, 90
Herr Jean-Jaques
AM1
97
Herrmann Nicholas
Hum-P5
58
Homsy-Gottwalles Grace
AM-P1
114
Iddan Noam
AM-P9
123
Ioannou Grigoria
SSE-P2
40
Ioannou Charalambos
CA2
90
G
H
I
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
136
Index
J
Jakata Kudakwashe
SSE6
36
Jaradat Rasheed
AM-P10
125
Jimenez Carlos
FDA1
7
Johnson Lucie
CFL12
80
Jones Martin
Keynote Lecture
68
Jourdan Anne-Lise
Hum2
46
Kalogerakis Evangelos
CA1
89
Kamel Gihan
SSE2, SSE5
31, 35
Karamitrou-Mentesidi Georgia
Hum-P10
65
Karasik Avshalom
CFL-P1
81
Karligkioti Anna
Hum-P5
58
Kassianidou Vasiliki
AM5, AM8
102, 106
Katsouri Irene
FDA1
7
Khrisat Bilal
AM-P10
125
Kilikoglou Vassilis
Public Keynote Lecture
3
Kiriatzi Evangelia
AM-P6, AM-P7
120, 121
Kislev Mordechai E.
CFL1
69
Kissas Konstantinos
AM-P7
121
Kofel Dominika
CFL-P3
83
Konstantakou Thaleia
Hum-P7
61
Kotjabopoulou Eleni
AM2
98
Kouka Ourania
CFL-P4, AM9
84, 107
Koukli Marianna
Hum-P6
59
Kountouri Elena
Hum-P7
61
Kristensen Nadia Maria
AM-P7
121
La Russa Federico Mario
FDA10
20
Lagia Anna
Hum3
47
Laliashvili Shorena
Hum-P3
56
Laurini Carla
FDA6
14
Lemmers Simone
SSE3, SSE5, SSE7, SSE-P2
32, 35, 37, 40
Levif-Martos Dominique
Art2
24
Lichtenberger Achim
CA4
93
Lo Turco Massimiliano
FDA9
18
London Gloria
AM-P2
115
Longo Laura
SSE-P1
38
Lopez Maxime
Art1
23
Lorentz Kirsi
SSE1, SSE3, SSE5, SSE7, SSE-P2
30, 32, 35, 37, 40
Loufouma-Mbouaka Alvie
Hum4
48
K
L
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
137
Index
Lubritto Carmine
SSE-P1
38
Machová Dita
Hum-P11
66
Mácová Petra
Hum-P11
66
Manning Sturt
Public Keynote Lecture
2
Mafrici Noemi
FDA9
18
Maixner Frank
Hum4
48
Maltas Tom
CFL4
72
Mardini Mahmoud
Hum-P8
62
Margaritis Evi
CFL8
76
Marklein Kathryn E.
Hum6
51
Marshall Gilbert
AM2
98
Maslioukova Maria Igarievna
CA1
89
Mavroudas Sophia
Hum-P5
58
McLoughlin Beatrice
AM-P2
115
Melamed Yoel
CFL6
74
Menelaou Sergios
AM9
107
Menu Michel
Keynote Lecture, Art1
22, 23
Mindorashvili David
Hum-P3
56
Miyauchi Yuko
SSE7
37
Mkrtchyan Ruzan
Hum-P2
55
Moghaddam Mahshid Zeighami
AM-P11
127
Moles Anna
Hum2
46
Montgomery Janet
CFL12
80
Mortara Michela
FDA7
15
Müller Sandra
FDA5
13
Müller Noémi S.
AM-P7
121
Müth-Frederiksen Silke
AM-P7
121
Mylona Pantelitsa
AM3
99
Natan Eyal
AM-P12
128
Niccolucci Franco
Nikita Efthymia
Νikolopoulos Stavros
Keynote Lecture
Hum7, Hum-P5, Hum-P8, Hum-P10
AM-P14
6
52, 58, 62, 65
130
Nol Hagit
FDA3
10
Oikonomou Artemios
AM10
108
Oren Eliezer D.
AM-P13
129
M
N
O
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
138
Index
P
Pagelson Yarden
AM-P13
129
Palamara Εleni
AM-P14
130
Paliou Eleftheria
Keynote Lecture
88
Palmer Carol
CFL3
71
Pantushina Irina
SSE-P1
38
Papacharalambous Despina
FDA6
14
Papageorgopoulou Christina
Hum-P1, Hum-P4, Hum-P6
54, 57, 59
Papakonstantinou Niki
Hum5
49
Papasavvas George
AM8, AM-P8
106, 122
Paraskeva Charalambos
FDA8
17
Parisatto Matteo
Art4
26
Parrinello Sandro
FDA2
8
Patow Gustavo
CA1
89
Pilides Despina
AM-P8
122
Piliposyan Ashot
Hum-P2
55
Pino Carmelo
FDA4
11
Piumatti Paolo
FDA9
18
Pomadère Maia
AM3
99
Rademakers Frederik W.
AM7
104
Raja Rubina
CA4
93
Rasia Piera Allegra
Hum-P9
63
Raymond Carla A.
SSE-P3, SSE-P4
41, 42
Reade Hazel
Hum2
46
Rehren Thilo
AM13, AM-P4
113, 118
Romanowska Iza
CA3, CA4
91, 93
Rose Thomas
AM6
103
Rosenberg Danny
AM6
103
Rousou Maria
CFL-P4
84
Rova Elena
Hum-P9
63
Sanfilippo Giulia
FDA6
14
Santagati Cettina
FDA4, FDA6, FDA10
11, 14, 20
Santarelli Brunella
AM-P4
118
Scalas Andreas
FDA7
15
Schwimer Lior
Art3
25
Secci Massimiliano
FDA1
7
Secco Michele
Art4
26
Shapira Ifat
Art3
25
Siddall Luis R.
SSE-P4
42
Siegmund Frank
Hum-P6
59
R
S
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
139
Index
Simonyan Hakob
Hum-P2
55
Skakun Natalia
SSE-P1
38
Soltysiak Arkadiusz
Keynote Lecture
44
Sorrentino Giusi
SSE-P1
38
Spampinato Concetto
FDA4
11
Spyrou Anna
CFL9
77
Stergiou Christos
AM2
98
Stevens Rhiannon
Hum2
46
Stivarou Barbara
FDA1
7
Taxel Itamar
AM12
111
Tengberg Margareta
CFL-P4
84
Ting Carmen
AM12
111
Trębicka Joanna
Hum8
53
Triantaphyllou Sevasti
Hum5
49
Tritsaroli Paraskevi
Hum-P7
61
Tsirtsi Kiriaki
AM-P7
121
Vaccari Lisa
SSE-P1
38
Vassallo Valentina
FDA7
15
Vecchio Giuseppe
FDA4
11
Vergidou Chryssa
Hum-P10
65
Verly Georges
AM7
104
Viani Alberto
Hum-P11
66
Vigne Jean-Denis
AM3
99
Vika Efrossini
Hum-P4
57
Vlazaki Maria
AM-P6
120
Voutsaki Sofia
Hum-P10
65
AM-P8
CFL1, CFL6, CFL-P1
CFL11
CFL-P5
122
69, 74, 81
79
85
Hum-P8
Hum4
AM-P14
AM-P15
62
48
130
131
T
V
W
Waiman-Barak Paula
Weiss Ehud
Welton Lynn
Winter Rachel
Z
Zaven Tania
Zink Albert
Ζacharias Νikolaos
Živković Jelena
2nd International Congress on Archaeological Sciences in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
Nicosia, 12-14 November 2019, Cyprus
140