Anagrammi & Informazioni su | Parola Inglese CISTS


CISTS

1

Numero di lettere

5

È palindromo

No

9
CI
CIS
IS
IST
ST
STS
TS

319

322

64
CI
CIS
CIT
CS
CSI
CSS
CST
CT
CTI

Esempi di utilizzo di CISTS in una frase

  • In 2004, archaeological work by CFA Archaeology, in advance of the building of the Aberdeen to Lochside Natural Gas Pipeline, found two short cists burials containing cremated remains to the southwest of Stonehaven.
  • Various urns, cists, flint spearheads and other evidence of ancient burials were found near to Amble in the 1880s and 1890s.
  • The decoration occurs as a petroglyph on natural boulders and outcrops and also as an element of megalithic art on purposely worked megaliths such as the slab cists of the Food Vessel culture, some stone circles and passage graves such as the clava tombs and on the capstones at Newgrange.
  • Mycenaean shaft graves originated and evolved from rudimentary Middle Helladic cists, tumuli, and tholos tombs with features derived from Early Bronze Age traditions developed locally in mainland Bronze Age Greece 16th century BCE.
  • The inhumation practice was to lay the remains on its side, with the knees flexed, in pits, stone lined cists or timber-framed graves topped with a kurgan.
  • The two Knossos snake goddess figurines were found by Evans's excavators in one of a group of stone-lined and lidded cists Evans called the "Temple Repositories", since they contained a variety of objects that were presumably no longer required for use, perhaps after a fire.
  • In eastern Bosnia in the cemeteries of Belotić and Bela Crkva, the rites of inhumation and cremation are attested, with skeletons in stone cists and cremations in urns.
  • The results of this excavation found two cists containing cremations and a third cist that contained a burial.
  • Basketmaker sites have grass- or stone-lined storage cists and shallow, partially underground dwellings called pithouses.
  • On the moorland above the village is Walkhampton Common which contains many important archaeological sites including at least eight stone rows, many cairns, cists, hut circles and reaves dating to the Bronze Age.
  • Glina III-Schneckenberg culture develops in Muntenia and extends into Oltenia and south eastern Transylvania; it is characterized by settlements on any terrain, and the practices of inhumation and incinerations in cists.
  • Between 1964 and 1974, Ewald Schuldt in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania excavated over 100 sites of different types: simple dolmens, extended dolmens (also called rectangular dolmens), passage graves, great dolmens, unchambered long barrows, and stone cists.
  • The barrows contained primary and secondary inhumations, and primary and secondary cremations in urns and cists.



Cerca CISTS su:






La preparazione della pagina ha richiesto: 368,51 ms.