Is the purchase of the book a prerequisite for being added to the Tabula Gratulatoria? Simone Zitat von Aldona Mueller-Bieniek <[log in to unmask]>: > Dear Mike, > I would liek to have the secret festschrift and add my name (Aldona > Mueller-Bieniek) to the Tabula Gratulatoria. Is it possible to add > also name of Krystyna Wasylikowa without ordering two books? > The payment will be done by VISA card of our institute and there is > different name of the card owner (bookkeeper's name). Is it any > problem? > With best wishes > Aldona > > > 2009/4/26 Mike Allen <[log in to unmask]>: >> SECRET FESTSCHRIFT FOR GORDON HILLMAN >> >> >> From Foragers to Farmers; papers in honour of Gordon C. Hillman, >> edited by Andrew Fairbairn & Ehud Weiss >> >> Attached is a pre-publication offer for a secret festschrift being >> published by Oxbow. Do not mention this to Gordon! You can add your >> name to the Tabula Gratulatoria containing names of those wishing to >> honour Gordon which will be printed in the front of the book, and >> purchase the book containing 28 chapters for just £39.95 (normally >> £55.00). The contents are listed below. >> >> Please pass this on to friends and colleagues who may wish to sign the >> Tabula Gratulatoria honouring Gordon and buy the book at this pre- >> publication price. Please email out via any relevant email lists >> providing of course it does not include, or you have temporarily deleted, >> Gordon!. >> >> >> Mike >> >> PS - Do you know of the new Prehistoric Society Research Papers? A >> forthcoming volume "Land and People; papers in memory of John G. >> Evans" eds M.J Allen, N. Sharples & T. O'Connor, may be of interest to >> you. See the pre-publication and Tabula Commemorativa offer on the >> Prehistoric Society website under "Research papers >> (www.prehistoricsociety.org) >> >> CONTENTS - FROM FORAGERS TO FARMERS >> PERSONAL REFLECTIONS 1. Gordon Hillman and the development of >> archaeobotany at and beyond the London Institute of Archaeology >> (David R. Harris) 2. Gordon Hillman, Abu Hureyra and the development >> of agriculture (Andrew M. T. Moore) 3. Gordon Hillman’s pioneering >> influence on Near Eastern archaeobotany, a personal appraisal (George >> Willcox) >> >> THEORY AND METHOD 4. On the potential for spring sowing in the >> ancient Near East (Mark A. Blumler and Giles J. Waines) 5. >> Domestication and the dialectic: Archaeobotany and the future of the >> Neolithic Revolution in the Near East (Joy McCorriston) 6. Agriculture >> and the development of complex societies: An archaeobotanical agenda >> (Dorian Q Fuller and Chris J Stevens) 7. Dormancy and the plough: >> Weed seed biology as an indicator of agrarian change in the first >> millennium AD (Martin Jones) >> >> ETHNOBOTANY AND EXPERIMENT 8. Wild plant foods: Routine dietary >> supplements or famine foods? (Füsun Ertug) 9. Acorns as food in >> southeast Turkey: Implications for prehistoric subsistence in Southwest >> Asia (Sarah Mason and Mark Nesbitt) 10. Water chestnuts (Trapa >> natans L.) as controversial plants: Botanical, ethno-historical and >> archaeological evidence (Ksenija Borojevic) 11. Evidence of >> domestication in the Old World grain legumes (Ann Butler) 12. Einkorn >> (Triticum monococcum L.) cultivation in mountain communities of the >> western Rif (Morocco): An ethnoarchaeological project (Leonor Pena- >> Chocarro, Lydia Zapata et al.) 13. The importance and antiquity of >> frikkeh: A simple snack or a socio-economic indicator of decline and >> prosperity in the ancient Near East? (Amr Al-Azm) 14. The doum palm >> (Hyphaene thebaica) in South Arabia: Past and present (Dominique de >> Moulins and Carl Phillips) 15. Harvesting experiments on the clonal >> helophyte sea club-rush (Bolboschoenus maritimus (L.) Palla): An >> approach to identifying variables that may have influenced hunter- >> gatherer resource selection in Late Pleistocene Southwest Asia.(Michele >> Wollstonecroft) 16. Aspects of the archaeology of the Irish keyhole- >> shaped corn drying kiln with particular reference to archaeobotanical >> studies and archaeological experiments (Mick Monk and Ellen Kelleher) >> >> ARCHAEOBOTANY 17. Glimpsing into a hut: Economy and Society of >> Ohalo II's inhabitants (Ehud Weiss) 18. Reconstruction of local >> woodland vegetation and use of firewood at two Epipalaeolithic cave >> sites in southwest Anatolia (Turkey) (Daniele Martinoli) 19. Vegetation >> and subsistence of the Epipalaeolithic in Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt: >> Charcoal and macro-remains from Masara sites (Ursula Thanheiser) 20. >> The uses of Eryngium yuccifolium by Native American people (Maria >> Scott Standifer et al.) 21. Bananas: Towards a revised prehistory (Jean >> Kennedy) 22. The advance of agriculture in the coastal zone of East >> Asia (Elena Sergusheva and Yury Vostretsov) 23. Knossos, Crete: >> Invaders, “sea goers”, or previously “invisible”, the Neolithic plant >> economy appears fully-fledged in 9,000 B.P. (Anaya Sarpaki) 24. >> Reconstructing the ear morphology of ancient small-grain wheat >> (Triticum turgidum ssp. parvicoccum) (Mordachi Kislev) 25. The Khalub- >> tree in Mesopotamia: Myth or Reality? (Naomi Miller and Alhena >> Gadotti) 26. The archaeobotany of cotton (Gossypium sp. L) in Egypt >> and Nubia with special reference to Qasr Ibrim, Egyptian Nubia (Alan >> Clapham and Peter Rowly -Conwy) 27. Questions of continuity: Fodder >> and fuel use in Bronze Age Egypt (Mary Anne Murray) 28. Food and >> culture: the plant foods from Roman and Islamic Quseir, Egypt (Marijke >> van der Veen, Jacob Morales, Alison Cox) >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > > -- > dr Aldona Mueller-Bieniek > Institute of Botany PAS > Lubicz 46 > PL31-512 Kraków > -- PD Dr. Simone Riehl Institute for Prehistory and Quaternary Ecology Ruemelinstrasse 23 D-72070 Tuebingen Germany Tel. / Fax +49 (0)7071 2978915 / 295717 http://www.urgeschichte.uni-tuebingen.de/index.php?id=132 http://www.cuminum.de/archaeobotany/