Standard

Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus. / Trifonov, V. A.; Zaitseva, G. I.; Van der Plicht, J.; Kraineva, A. A.; Sementsov, A. A.; Kazarnitsky, A.; Burova, N. D.; Rishko, S. A.

в: Radiocarbon, Том 56, № 2, 2014, стр. 743-752.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Trifonov, VA, Zaitseva, GI, Van der Plicht, J, Kraineva, AA, Sementsov, AA, Kazarnitsky, A, Burova, ND & Rishko, SA 2014, 'Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus', Radiocarbon, Том. 56, № 2, стр. 743-752. https://doi.org/10.2458/56.16927

APA

Trifonov, V. A., Zaitseva, G. I., Van der Plicht, J., Kraineva, A. A., Sementsov, A. A., Kazarnitsky, A., Burova, N. D., & Rishko, S. A. (2014). Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus. Radiocarbon, 56(2), 743-752. https://doi.org/10.2458/56.16927

Vancouver

Trifonov VA, Zaitseva GI, Van der Plicht J, Kraineva AA, Sementsov AA, Kazarnitsky A и пр. Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus. Radiocarbon. 2014;56(2):743-752. https://doi.org/10.2458/56.16927

Author

Trifonov, V. A. ; Zaitseva, G. I. ; Van der Plicht, J. ; Kraineva, A. A. ; Sementsov, A. A. ; Kazarnitsky, A. ; Burova, N. D. ; Rishko, S. A. / Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus. в: Radiocarbon. 2014 ; Том 56, № 2. стр. 743-752.

BibTeX

@article{244abf7fd4cb43508a66398711316f60,
title = "Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus",
abstract = "The dolmen known as Shepsi was accidentally discovered on the Black Sea coast (Tuapse region, Russia). Radiocarbon dates show that the classic trapezoidal construction of the Caucasian dolmens with a port-hole appeared in the region as early as 3250 BC. The distinctive structural characteristic for dolmens of that time was a foor slab laid between the side slabs, which were embedded in the ground. The material complex and 14C dates show that this type of dolmen coexisted with the Novosvobodnaya-type of the Maikop culture, located on the northern slope of the main Caucasus ridge. This leads to a new hypothesis concerning the regional origin and further development of the megalithic structures in the western Caucasus.",
author = "Trifonov, {V. A.} and Zaitseva, {G. I.} and {Van der Plicht}, J. and Kraineva, {A. A.} and Sementsov, {A. A.} and A. Kazarnitsky and Burova, {N. D.} and Rishko, {S. A.}",
note = "Copyright: Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.2458/56.16927",
language = "English",
volume = "56",
pages = "743--752",
journal = "Radiocarbon",
issn = "0033-8222",
publisher = "University of Arizona",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Shepsi, The oldest dolmen with port-hole slab in the western Caucasus

AU - Trifonov, V. A.

AU - Zaitseva, G. I.

AU - Van der Plicht, J.

AU - Kraineva, A. A.

AU - Sementsov, A. A.

AU - Kazarnitsky, A.

AU - Burova, N. D.

AU - Rishko, S. A.

N1 - Copyright: Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The dolmen known as Shepsi was accidentally discovered on the Black Sea coast (Tuapse region, Russia). Radiocarbon dates show that the classic trapezoidal construction of the Caucasian dolmens with a port-hole appeared in the region as early as 3250 BC. The distinctive structural characteristic for dolmens of that time was a foor slab laid between the side slabs, which were embedded in the ground. The material complex and 14C dates show that this type of dolmen coexisted with the Novosvobodnaya-type of the Maikop culture, located on the northern slope of the main Caucasus ridge. This leads to a new hypothesis concerning the regional origin and further development of the megalithic structures in the western Caucasus.

AB - The dolmen known as Shepsi was accidentally discovered on the Black Sea coast (Tuapse region, Russia). Radiocarbon dates show that the classic trapezoidal construction of the Caucasian dolmens with a port-hole appeared in the region as early as 3250 BC. The distinctive structural characteristic for dolmens of that time was a foor slab laid between the side slabs, which were embedded in the ground. The material complex and 14C dates show that this type of dolmen coexisted with the Novosvobodnaya-type of the Maikop culture, located on the northern slope of the main Caucasus ridge. This leads to a new hypothesis concerning the regional origin and further development of the megalithic structures in the western Caucasus.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84899892439&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2458/56.16927

DO - 10.2458/56.16927

M3 - Article

VL - 56

SP - 743

EP - 752

JO - Radiocarbon

JF - Radiocarbon

SN - 0033-8222

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 5807343