Articles by Yves Auda
Un usage des tests non-paramétriques en archéologie: l'étude d'un dépôt d'archives à Délos
Yves Auda, Marie-Françoise Boussac
Abstract
Non-parametrical tests have been used to check the validity of some hypothesis made of archaeological material (sealings on papyri kept in a Delian archive destroyed by a fire in 69 BC). Although these tests deal only with a part of the corpus, the validity of the results should not be questioned.
«Archeologia e Calcolatori» 1997, 8, 119-128; doi: 10.19282/ac.8.1997.08
Nécropoles de Sicile: étude de l'utilisation des espaces funéraires dans le temps (du IXe au Ie s. av. J.C.)
Abstract
The aim of the study is to observe space and time variations in the occupation of Sicilian funerary settlements from the 9th to the 1st century BC The data have been extracted from a complete examination of archaeological reports. They define geographical and archaeological characteristics of 240 settlements. From archaeological to statistical data there is an alteration of variable status which represents a new field for archaeologists. The matrix summarises the settlements’ occupation in 50 year periods by presence-absence; this gave rise to a Correspondence Analysis. The time of occupation has been preferred to a relative chronology based on cultural facies. One additional variable distinguishes the cemeteries where the graves with several burials dominate over those having individual burials. The results of the analysis prove that the space and time variations in the two types of funerary settlements described oddly follow the outline of historical events in relation to autochthonous and colonial spheres. In particular it shows the alterations of autochthonous funerary customs owing to more archaic cemeteries which were to be reused later on. In the historical sphere, the analysis leads us to question the acculturation phenomena. What was happening in Sicily towards the beginnings of 5th BC? Did autochthonous funerary customs disappear because of the adoption of Greek culture, or is it getting more difficult to establish a difference from the ancient colonial culture?
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