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Dive into the research topics where Lamya Khalidi is active.

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Featured researches published by Lamya Khalidi.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Middle Palaeolithic and Neolithic Occupations around Mundafan Palaeolake, Saudi Arabia: Implications for Climate Change and Human Dispersals

Rémy Crassard; Michael D. Petraglia; Nicholas Drake; Paul S. Breeze; Bernard Gratuze; Abdullah Alsharekh; Mounir Arbach; Huw S. Groucutt; Lamya Khalidi; Nils Michelsen; Christian Julien Robin; Jérémie Schiettecatte

The Arabian Peninsula is a key region for understanding climate change and human occupation history in a marginal environment. The Mundafan palaeolake is situated in southern Saudi Arabia, in the Rub’ al-Khali (the ‘Empty Quarter’), the world’s largest sand desert. Here we report the first discoveries of Middle Palaeolithic and Neolithic archaeological sites in association with the palaeolake. We associate the human occupations with new geochronological data, and suggest the archaeological sites date to the wet periods of Marine Isotope Stage 5 and the Early Holocene. The archaeological sites indicate that humans repeatedly penetrated the ameliorated environments of the Rub’ al-Khali. The sites probably represent short-term occupations, with the Neolithic sites focused on hunting, as indicated by points and weaponry. Middle Palaeolithic assemblages at Mundafan support a lacustrine adaptive focus in Arabia. Provenancing of obsidian artifacts indicates that Neolithic groups at Mundafan had a wide wandering range, with transport of artifacts from distant sources.


IRAQ | 2007

Excavations at Tell Brak 2006-2007

Augusta McMahon; Joan Oates; S. Al-Quntar; Michael Charles; C. Colantoni; Mette Marie Hald; Philip Karsgaard; Lamya Khalidi; Arkadiusz Sołtysiak; A. Stone; Jill Weber

Excavations at Tell Brak in 2006–7 explored two key episodes in Mesopotamian political and social history, developing early social complexity in the fifth to fourth millennia BC and the shift from territorial state to early empire in the second millennium BC. Late Chalcolithic complexity is represented in Area TW on the main mound and at the outlying sub-mound of Tell Majnuna, while investigation of the Old Babylonian to Mitanni state-to-empire transition involved excavation in Areas HH and HN (Fig. 1). Both sets of excavations tie into our exploration of larger issues of the creation and maturation of past urban landscapes, for which Tell Brak provides a great depth of data. We would like once again to express our warmest gratitude to Dr Bassam Jamous, Director General of Antiquities and Museums, to Dr Michel Al-Maqdissi, Director of Excavations, to all their staff in Damascus, and to Sd Abdul Messih Baghdo, Director of the Antiquities Office in Hasseke, for their constant and friendly support. Financial support for the excavations was generously provided by the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge, the National Geographic Committee for Research and Exploration (2006), the Society of Antiquaries of London (2007), Newnham College, Cambridge and the University of Cambridge. We are extremely grateful to all those who have made this research possible.


System | 2016

Systems of Interaction between the First Sedentary Villages in the Near East Exposed Using Agent-Based Modelling of Obsidian Exchange

David Ortega; Juan José Ibáñez; Daniel Campos; Lamya Khalidi; Vicenç Méndez; Luis Teira

In the Near East, nomadic hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary farmers for the first time during the transition into the Neolithic. Sedentary life presented a risk of isolation for Neolithic groups. As fluid intergroup interactions are crucial for the sharing of information, resources and genes, Neolithic villages developed a network of contacts. In this paper we study obsidian exchange between Neolithic villages in order to characterize this network of interaction. Using agent-based modelling and elements taken from complex network theory, we model obsidian exchange and compare results with archaeological data. We demonstrate that complex networks of interaction were established at the outset of the Neolithic and hypothesize that the existence of these complex networks was a necessary condition for the success and spread of a new way of living.


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2014

Towards a Multi-Agent-Based Modelling of Obsidian Exchange in the Neolithic Near East

David Ortega; Juan José Ibáñez; Lamya Khalidi; Vicenç Méndez; Daniel Campos; Luis Teira


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

The growth of early social networks: New geochemical results of obsidian from the Ubaid to Chalcolithic Period in Syria, Iraq and the Gulf

Lamya Khalidi; Bernard Gratuze; Gil Stein; Augusta McMahon; Salam Al-Quntar; Robert Carter; Richard Cuttler; Philipp Drechsler; Elizabeth Healey; Marie-Louise Inizan; Damase Mouralis; Ernst Pernicka; Anne-Kyria Robin


Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy | 2013

Considering the Arabian Neolithic through a reconstitution of interregional obsidian distribution patterns in the region

Lamya Khalidi; Marie-Louise Inizan; Bernard Gratuze; Rémy Crassard


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Identification and characterization of two new obsidian sub-sources in the Nemrut volcano (Eastern Anatolia, Turkey): The Sıcaksu and Kayacık obsidian

A.K. Robin; Damase Mouralis; E. Akköprü; Bernard Gratuze; Catherine Kuzucuoğlu; Sébastien Nomade; Alison Pereira; Ali Fuat Dogu; K. Erturaç; Lamya Khalidi


Archive | 2016

Developing a complex network model of obsidian exchange in the Neolithic Near East: Linear regressions, ethnographic models and archaeological data

Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; David Ortega i Cobos; Daniel Campos; Lamya Khalidi; Vicenç Méndez; Luis Teira


Archive | 2013

Results of geochemical analyses of obsidian artefacts from the Neolithic site of Tell Labwe South, Lebanon

Lamya Khalidi; Bernard Gratuze; Maya Haïdar-Boustani; Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Luis Teira


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2016

Lithic traditions in the Horn of Africa from MIS 3 onwards: views from the Main Ethiopian Rift

Clément Ménard; François Bon; Lamya Khalidi

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Luis Teira

University of Cantabria

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Daniel Campos

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Vicenç Méndez

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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David Ortega

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan José Ibáñez

Spanish National Research Council

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Rémy Crassard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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