@prefix cito: .
@prefix dcterms: .
@prefix foaf: .
@prefix owl: .
@prefix pleiades: .
@prefix prov: .
@prefix rdfs: .
@prefix skos: .
a ;
rdfs:label "Haçilar";
rdfs:comment "An early human settlement located in southwestern Turkey. Human occupation began at the site toward the end of the eighth millennium B.C.";
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf .
a ,
;
dcterms:bibliographicCitation "Bryce 2016 19, 24",
"Mellaart 1961 ",
"Steadman 2011 ",
"Wikipedia (English) Hacilar";
dcterms:contributor ;
dcterms:creator ;
dcterms:description "An early human settlement located in southwestern Turkey. Human occupation began at the site toward the end of the eighth millennium B.C.";
dcterms:modified "2019-02-13T07:47:50-04:00";
dcterms:title "Haçilar";
cito:citesForInformation ,
,
,
;
owl:sameAs ;
skos:inScheme ;
prov:wasDerivedFrom [ rdfs:label "Pleiades" ];
pleiades:hasFeatureType ;
pleiades:hasLocation .
a ;
dcterms:bibliographicCitation "";
dcterms:creator ;
dcterms:description "Coordinates following GeoHack.";
dcterms:modified "2019-02-13T07:47:50-04:00";
dcterms:title "Imagery location of Haçilar";
cito:citesAsDataSource ;
owl:sameAs ;
prov:wasDerivedFrom [ rdfs:label "Pleiades" ];
pleiades:during ;
pleiades:end_date -3300;
pleiades:start_date -10000 .
a ;
owl:sameAs ,
;
skos:inScheme ;
skos:prefLabel "settlement"@en;
skos:scopeNote "Equivalent to \"inhabited place\" as defined by the Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus: General term for places or areas occupied, modified, or planned to be inhabited by communities of human populations and that contain enough societal functions to be relatively self-sufficient. They are characterized by inhabitants living in neighboring sets of living quarters and by the place having a proper name or a locally recognized status."@en .
a ;
owl:sameAs ,
;
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skos:prefLabel "Neolithic Period in the Eastern Mediterranean (ca. 10,000-3,300 BC)"@en;
skos:scopeNote "The so-called \"Neolithic\" or \"New Stone Age\" period as defined in the Eastern portion of the Mediterranean basin, lasting roughly from 10,000 - 3,300 BC. See further: http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/artarchaeologyarchitect/g/neolithic.htm [[-10000, -3300]]"@en .