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lake dwelling |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.02 sec. |
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lake dwelling, prehistoric habitation built over the shallow waters of a lake shore or a marsh, usually erected on pile-supported platforms, but sometimes on artificial mounds. Such a site afforded easy access to a varied food supply by the availability of fish, marsh fowl, and good crop lands. Africa, Asia, and South America have had lake-dwelling peoples; pile dwellings were also found in the lagoons of Pacific islands. In Europe, remains of Bronze Age lake dwellings were discovered in Britain, Ireland (where they are called crannogs), and central Europe. The lake dwellings of Neolithic Switzerland have been reinterpreted as lakeside villages constructed during periods of low water level; sometimes houses were built even on dry lake beds. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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They hook up with more agreeable guardians - Billy Connolly's Uncle Monty, whose home is filled with interesting reptiles, and Streep's Josephine, a dithering paranoid who, despite worrying about everything, lives in a stilt house that juts over storm-ravaged Lake Lachrymose. As well as uncovering a cornucopia of Lapita artifacts, the investigators came upon the remnants of a stilt house that once stood in the shallow water of a lagoon, reports Kirch in the summer JOURNAL OF FIELD ARCHAEOLOGY. Five-year-old Amy Vigil-Tyere died when her parents' Sherman Oaks stilt house home crashed down a hillside. |
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