Funnelbeaker culture (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Funnelbeaker culture" in English language version.

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academia.edu

  • Bockmeyer, Sarah (2016). "The earliest evidence of wheels and wagons in Neolithic Central Europe and the Early Bronze Age of the northern Pontic areas (3500–2200 BCE)".
  • Hansen, Svend (2014). "Gold and silver in the Maikop Culture". Tagungen des Landesmuseums für Vorgeschichte Halle. 11 (2): 389–410. Bovine figurines that can be dated to the second half of the 4th millennium BCE are found in another, completely different cultural milieu. One well known example is the yoked team of oxen (Fig. 21) found in Bytýn, woj. wielkopolskie, Poland; it is made of arsenical bronze. The figurines were found together with six flat axes near a large stone. The objects can be dated to the second half of the 4th millennium BCE. They thus belong to a time during which a series of hoards containing metal objects are known in the southern and western Baltic sphere (...) These animal figurines were all made using lost-wax casting.

archive.org

  • Childe, Vere Gordon (1925). The Dawn of European Civilization. Kegan Paul. p. 100. The Danubians were a peaceful folk. The only weapons found in their settlements are disc-shaped mace-heads, such as had been used by the predynastic Egyptians, and occasional flint arrow-heads.

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harvard.edu

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natmus.dk

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nih.gov

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semanticscholar.org

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uni-kiel.de

worldcat.org

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