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  1. Inside a Catalhoyuk house [Flash]
    http://www.smm.org/catal/mysteries/first_city/tour_city/catal_house/
    Hive.
  2. MM13 Feature- The Town Plan of Catalhoyuk
    http://www.gisuser.com.au/MM/content/2001/MM13/feature/MM13_feature.html
    "Images of portions of the map of the town with no streets."
  3. Saudi Aramco World- Catalhoyuk and the New Archeology
    http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200205/.atalh.y.k.and.the.new.archeology.htm
    On the excavation and the techniques used to analyse it. "One of the more spectacular pieces is in the Ankara museum today. Mellaart calls it the earliest known landscape painting; others say it is perhaps the oldest known map. Almost three meters (9') long and radio-carbon dated to 6200 BC, plus or minus 97 years, it shows about 80 houses at Catalhoyuk from a vertical perspective, with a volcano, Hasan Dag, erupting in the distance. "
  4. World Prehistory lecture- Jericho and Catalhoyuk
    http://members.aol.com/wprehist/3250s09.htm
    outline detailing the history and sizes of these cities. More detail about Catalhoyuk, which is always good.
  5. The First Villages (part of a human prehistory exhibition)
    http://users.hol.gr/~dilos/prehis/prerm5.htm
    includes an illustration of Catalhoyuk.
  6. Cartographic Images from the Ancient Period- 6200 BC to 400 AD (illustrated!)
    http://www.henry-davis.com/MAPS/AncientWebPages/AncientL.html
    wow! See how ancient people viewed the world.
  7. The History of Maps- covers a lot of ground
    http://geogdata.csun.edu/geogcourses/history_of_maps.html
    they look like links but they're not. Still useful though.
  8. Cognitive Maps in Mice and Men, Edward C. Tolman (1948)
    http://psychclassics.yorku.ca/Tolman/Maps/maps.htm
    "Classics in the History of Psychology". How mice and men wayfind around mazes. Useful for web navigation. A maze is like Catalhoyuk, the city without streets. Or maybe it is just like a city, because there's no hyperspace in a maze. Except there is, because everything in a maze is so short that corridors effectively have no intrinsic distance.
  9. Catalhoyuk entry at Wikipedia
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalhoyuk
  10. Catalhoyuk site excavations homepage
    http://www.catalhoyuk.com/
    official site with reports, researcher diaries and more.

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