Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 8-9Department of Archaeology, 1989 - Archaeology |
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Page 66
... axes in different regions do provide us with elements of the broader conditions under which production was carried out . At this rather more general level , the changes at the source can be partly understood when they are considered in ...
... axes in different regions do provide us with elements of the broader conditions under which production was carried out . At this rather more general level , the changes at the source can be partly understood when they are considered in ...
Page 68
... axes of this stone occur widely within the region , it is also clear that the raw material was worked in different ways and used for a variety of purposes . By contrast , the range of tool forms other than axes is far more restricted ...
... axes of this stone occur widely within the region , it is also clear that the raw material was worked in different ways and used for a variety of purposes . By contrast , the range of tool forms other than axes is far more restricted ...
Page 76
... axes in one context and ground stone axes in another . On the basis of a number of ethnographic accounts , chipped stone axes are relatively cheap ( quick ) to make but their use - life is short whilst ground stone axes take a long time ...
... axes in one context and ground stone axes in another . On the basis of a number of ethnographic accounts , chipped stone axes are relatively cheap ( quick ) to make but their use - life is short whilst ground stone axes take a long time ...
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academic action activity analysis anthropology appears approach Archaeological Review archaeology argued argument artefacts aspects attempt become Cambridge century China Chinese concept concerned considered context critical culture discussion early East effect emotional evidence example excavation existence experience fact given groups human ideas important individual interest interpretation involved iron issues Japan Japanese knowledge language London Marxism material meaning Museum nature object observed organisation original particular past period perspective political possible practice prehistoric present Press problems production question reason recent References reflect regional relations relationship remains represent result Review Review from Cambridge role seems seen sense social society specific stone structure suggest technical techniques theoretical theory things tion tombs traditional types understanding University volume Western writing