Dinç, Onur

Loading...
Profile Picture
Name Variants
Dinc, Onur
Job Title
Öğr. Gör.
Email Address
Main Affiliation
SEYAHAT-TURİZM VE EĞLENCE HİZMETLERİ
Status
Current Staff
Website
ORCID ID
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data is not available
This researcher does not have a Scopus ID.
This researcher does not have a WoS ID.
Scholarly Output

4

Articles

4

Views / Downloads

1/0

Supervised MSc Theses

0

Supervised PhD Theses

0

WoS Citation Count

0

Scopus Citation Count

0

WoS h-index

0

Scopus h-index

0

Patents

0

Projects

0

WoS Citations per Publication

0.00

Scopus Citations per Publication

0.00

Open Access Source

4

Supervised Theses

0

JournalCount
Arkeoloji ve Sanat2
Anadolu1
Anadolu Arastirmalari-Anatolian Research1
Current Page: 1 / 1

Scopus Quartile Distribution

Competency Cloud

GCRIS Competency Cloud

Scholarly Output Search Results

Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Article
    Kün Aftare Settlements: First Reports on the Neolithization Process in the Northern Habur Valley
    (Istanbul Univ, 2024) Kodas, Ergul; Ciftci, Yunus; Ipek, Bahattin; San, Mehmet; Dinc, Onur; Mentese, Devrim Hasan
    The Neolithization process in southeastern Anatolia has been the subject of many studies over the years. However, these have primarily been concentrated & Scedil;anl & imath;urfa region provide important information on the Neolithization process in the mountainous region between these two rivers. The 2023 Archaeological Survey of the Pleistocene and Early Holocene Period in the Artuklu, K & imath;z & imath;ltepe, Ye & scedil;illi, and Neolithic Period in the Northern Habur Valley. In this context, the settlements the unique Neolithization process of the Northeastern Habur Valley, a key area to both southeastern Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia.
  • Article
    Yontmataş Bulgular Işığında Güneydoğu Anadolu Bölgesi'nde Yeni Bir Çanak-çömleksiz Neolitik Dönem Yerleşim Yeri: Tarin Mağarası
    (2021) Abakay, Ayda; İpek, Bahattin; Genç, Bülent; Dinç, Onur; Çiftçi, Yunus; Tümer, Hale; Kodaş, Ergül
    Yukarı Dicle Vadisi ile Yukarı Habur Bölgesi arasında bulunan Tur Abdin dağ sırası üzerinde bulunan Tarin Mağarası yontmataş buluntuları Çanak-Çömleksiz Neolitik Dönem’in erken evrelerine ve Paleolitik Çağ’a tarihlenmektedir. Bir mağara ve terası üzerinde bulunan yerleşim yerinde yontmataş aletler dışında başka bir buluntuya rastlanmamıştır. Söz konusu mağaranın çevresinde ele geçen Çanak-Çömleksiz Neolitik Dönem yontmataş aletler Güneydoğu Anadolu’da daha çok höyükleşme konteksti üzerinden tanımlanan bu dönemin bölgede daha dağlık alanlarında bulunan mağaralarda veya mağara teraslarında da farklı bir model olarak yaşanmış olabileceğini düşündürmektedir. Ayrıca aynı bölgede bulunan derin vadiler içerisinde veya mağara teraslarında tespit edilen diğer yontmataş buluntu alanları Geç Epipaleolitik ve Neolitik Çağ’da söz konusu dağlık bölgede düşünüldüğünden daha yoğun bir yerleşmenin söz konusu olduğunu destekler niteliktedir.
  • Article
    Boncuklu Tarla Güneydoğu Alanı Kazıları: GD 4 Yapısı
    (2022) Kodas, Ergul; Çiftçi, Yunus; Erdem, Çağdaş; Özkan, Kazım; Dinç, Onur
    Boncuklu Tarla is located within the borders of Ilısu village of Dargeçit district of Mardin province, 3 km southwest of the Ilısu Dam cover and approximately 2 km west of the Tigris River and south of the Nevala Maherk. The main purpose of the excavations carried out in the site in 2021 is to unearth the architectural remains in the central area, which were identified in previous excavation seasons and dated to the Late Epipaleolithic, PPNA and Middle PPNB Periods. In order to provide a more accurate interpretation of to the these finds, studies were especially concentrated in the Southeast Area. In this context, architectural remains, chipped stone and ornaments from all the periods mentioned above, skeletal remains dating to the PPNB Period were also unearthed. A special building dating to the PPNA period were also unearthed in the Southeast Area. Although typologically similar to the structures unearthed in Gre Fılla, Gusir Höyük and Nemrik 9 sites, the building, which has distinctive architectural features, shows that there are some similarities between these special structures in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic Period, but also there are different architectural traditions from each other. In this context, it is important in terms of providing new information on the construction models of these public or special structures in the PPNA. Excavation planned to be carried out in this area in the next years will enable the emergence of new problematics, especially the re-examination of the technical, architectural and social structure of the region in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A.
  • Article
    Uluköy Mağarası Kazıları, Mardin/Türkiye: İlk Rapor
    (2024) Kodas, Ergul; Çiftçi, Yunus; Dinç, Onur; Erdem, Çağdaş; İpek, Bahattin; Kodas, Charlotte Labedan; Ayazgün, Şinda
    Although research on the Palaeolithic Age in Anatolia is limited, it has gradually increased and started to yield clearer results. Most of the research on the Palaeolithic Age in the region consists of surveys, with archaeological excavations being quite limited. Our knowledge about this period is primarily based on information obtained from surveys, with only a small contribution from the few archaeological excavations conducted. As a result of the research carried out in Anatolia, the existence of almost all phases of the Palaeolithic Age is known. However, in Southeastern Anatolia, which is also an important part of Northern Mesopotamia, much less research has been conducted. The Uluköy Cave (Şıkefta Elobrahimo) in the Uluköy neighborhood of the Kızıltepe district of Mardin province provides important information on the Palaeolithic Age. The archaeological layers found in this settlement add a new dynamic to Palaeolithic research in the region and reveal the existence of chipped stone industries, such as Yabrudiyan, Hummaliyan, and Emireh, which are mostly defined in the Syria-Levant area, in Southeastern Anatolia (Northern Mesopotamia).