Anthropozoologica
This page lists the articles of the journal Anthropozoologica ; you can filter the content (multiple choices) using the form below.
2019
The wonder whale: a commodity, a monster, a show and an icon
Cristina BRITO et al.
13-27, Published on 01 March 2019, art. 54 (3)The equids represented in cave art and current horses: a proposal to determine morphological differences and similarities
Eloísa BERNÁLDEZ-SÁNCHEZ & Esteban GARCÍA-VIÑAS
1-12, Published on 18 January 2019, art. 54 (1)2018
Feasting among Venda-speakers of South Africa: the Late Iron Age fauna from Mutokolwe
Munyadziwa MAGOMA et al.
195-205, Published on 07 December 2018, art. 53 (17)Cheval ou baleine ? Les noms du morse dans les mondes septentrionaux (IXe-milieu du XVIe siècle)
Maxime DELLIAUX & Alban GAUTIER
175-183, Published on 26 October 2018, art. 53 (15)This article is a part of the thematic issue Animaux aquatiques et monstres des mers septentrionales (imaginer, connaître, exploiter, de l’Antiquité à 1600) edited by Catherine JACQUEMARD et al.
When ivory came from the seas. On some traits of the trade of raw and carved sea-mammal ivories in the Middle Ages
159-174, Published on 05 October 2018, art. 53 (14)This article is a part of the thematic issue Animaux aquatiques et monstres des mers septentrionales (imaginer, connaître, exploiter, de l’Antiquité à 1600) edited by Catherine JACQUEMARD et al.
L'exploitation des animaux marins de la côte picarde du XIIe au XVIe siècle
149-157, Published on 14 September 2018, art. 53 (13)This article is a part of the thematic issue Animaux aquatiques et monstres des mers septentrionales (imaginer, connaître, exploiter, de l’Antiquité à 1600) edited by Catherine JACQUEMARD et al.
Poisson et pêche dans la littérature irlandaise et galloise : le bétail de la mer
139-146, Published on 24 August 2018, art. 53 (12)This article is a part of the thematic issue Animaux aquatiques et monstres des mers septentrionales (imaginer, connaître, exploiter, de l’Antiquité à 1600) edited by Catherine JACQUEMARD et al.