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Silvia Albizuri

Researcher at University of Barcelona

Publications -  14
Citations -  254

Silvia Albizuri is an academic researcher from University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Zooarchaeology & Bronze Age. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 12 publications receiving 165 citations.

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Tracking Five Millennia of Horse Management with Extensive Ancient Genome Time Series

Antoine Fages, +135 more
- 30 May 2019 - 
TL;DR: This extensive dataset allows us to assess the modern legacy of past equestrian civilizations and finds that two extinct horse lineages existed during early domestication, and the development of modern breeding impacted genetic diversity more dramatically than the previous millennia of human management.
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Dogs and foxes in Early-Middle Bronze Age funerary structures in the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula: human control of canid diet at the sites of Can Roqueta (Barcelona) and Minferri (Lleida)

TL;DR: This work has made an approximation of the relationship between humans and canids through the study of their diet by analysis of stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen in bone collagen, complemented by archaeozoological, anthropological and archaeobotanical studies.
Journal Article

Evidencias sobre el uso del perro en la carga durante el Bronce Inicial en la Península Ibérica: el caso de Can Roqueta II (Sabadell, Barcelona)

TL;DR: In this paper, pathologies on the spinal column of two dogs retrieved in ritual pits from the Early Bronze Age (2.300-1.300 cal BC) at the site of Can Roqueta II (Sabadell, Barcelona).
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Dogs in funerary contexts during the Middle Neolithic in the northeastern Iberian Peninsula (5th–early 4th millennium BCE)

TL;DR: In this article, a zooarchaeological and isotopic analysis is presented for 26 dog exemplars (Canis familiaris) which were deposited in burial and ceremonial structures in the northeastern Iberian Peninsula during the Middle Neolithic, within the Pit Grave cultural horizon.
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Offerings, feasting, and psychopomps in the north-east of the Iberian Peninsula: the role of animals in the Bòbila Madurell (Sant Quirze del Vallès, Barcelona) funerary ritual (late fifth millennium–early fourth millennium cal BC)

TL;DR: In this article, the role of faunal remains in funerary rituals in the Middle Neolithic necropolis of Bobila Madurell (Sant Quirze del Valles, Barcelona) (Madurell Sur) and “Madures Ferrocarril” sectors was investigated.