Dear Kevin, 

Following on from Debi’s mail, more reading on the Greek Bronze Age and later practice of burnt bone sacrifices: 


1. Isaakidou, V., Halstead, P., Davis, J., & Stocker, S. (2002). Burnt animal sacrifice at the Mycenaean 'Palace of Nestor, Pylos. Antiquity, 76, 86-92. 

2. Halstead, P., & Isaakidou, V. (2004). Faunal evidence for feasting: burnt offerings from the Palace of Nestor at Pylos. In P. Halstead & J. Barrett (Eds.), Food, Cuisine and Society in Prehistoric Greece (pp. 136-154). Oxford: Oxbow.  

3. Hamilakis, Y., & Konsolaki-Yannopoulou, E. (2004). PIGS FOR THE GODS: BURNT ANIMAL SACRIFICES AS EMBODIED RITUALS AT A MYCENAEAN SANCTUARY. Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 23(2), 135-151. 


 You can find the second publication at my Academia page https://oxford.academia.edu/ValasiaIsaakidou. The other two are accessible online, but if you cannot access them, let me know.


I hope these are of use! 


Best wishes


Valasia




















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