Tracing the Origins of the Ancient Egyptian Cattle Cult (original) (raw)

Linseele, V., Van Neer, W., Willems, H., Vanthuyne, B. (2017), An unusual cattle burial at Dayr al-Barshā (Middle Egypt). In Mashkour, M., Beech, M., Archaeozoology of the Near East 9. Oxbow books, Oxford.

Hendrickx, S.; Riemer, H.; Förster, F. & Darnell, J.C., Late Predynastic / Early Dynastic rock art scenes of Barbary sheep hunting from Egypt’s Western Desert. From capturing wild animals to the women of the ‘Acacia House’ [in:] Riemer, H.; Förster, F.; Herb, M. & Pölath, N. (eds.), Desert animals in the eastern Sahara: Status, economic significance and cultural reflection in antiquity. Proceedings of an interdisciplinary ACACIA workshop held at the University of Cologne December 14-15, 2007. Colloquium Africanum 4. Köln: Heinrich-Barth-Institut, 2009: 189-244

Förster, F., H. Riemer & R. Kuper (2012), The ‘Cave of Beasts’ (Gilf Kebir, SW Egypt) and its Chronological and Cultural Affiliation: Approaches and Preliminary Results of the Wadi Sura Project

In: D. Huyge, F. Van Noten & D. Swinne (eds.), The Signs of Which Times? Chronological and Palaeoenvironmental Issues in the Rock Art of Northern Africa. International Colloquium, Brussels, 3–5 June, 2010, Brussels: Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences, 2012, pp. 197–216

Hendrickx, S., H. Riemer, F. Förster & J.C. Darnell (2009), Late Predynastic/Early Dynastic rock art scenes of Barbary sheep hunting in Egypt's Western Desert. From capturing wild animals to the women of the 'Acacia House'

In: H. Riemer, F. Förster, M. Herb & N. Pöllath (eds.), Desert animals in the eastern Sahara: Status, economic significance, and cultural reflection in antiquity. Colloquium Africanum 4. Köln: Heinrich-Barth-Institut, 2009, pp. 189–244