Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 2Department of Archaeology, 1983 - Archaeology |
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Page 4
Ethnoarchaeology is at its most productive not in the search for correspondence or analogies , but rather as a means of ... To pursue this analogy further , the effort of interpretation involves much more than a one - to - one ...
Ethnoarchaeology is at its most productive not in the search for correspondence or analogies , but rather as a means of ... To pursue this analogy further , the effort of interpretation involves much more than a one - to - one ...
Page 18
Binford 1981 : ch.2 ) and so this type of analogy is of the ' relational ' rather than the ' formal ' kind ( cf. Hodder 1982 : 16-24 ) . It is also important , of course , to take account of the context within which these analogies ...
Binford 1981 : ch.2 ) and so this type of analogy is of the ' relational ' rather than the ' formal ' kind ( cf. Hodder 1982 : 16-24 ) . It is also important , of course , to take account of the context within which these analogies ...
Page 104
On a more theoretical level , however , the book demonstrates the crucial role of analogy and knowledge of the present ... between the ' accessible ' style of the book and the not SO accessible idea of formal and relational analogies .
On a more theoretical level , however , the book demonstrates the crucial role of analogy and knowledge of the present ... between the ' accessible ' style of the book and the not SO accessible idea of formal and relational analogies .
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Academic activity analogies analysis Anthropology approach archaeological associated attempt behaviour Binford bone by-products Cambridge camps campsites changes classes communities complex context contribution cultural dependent discussion distance distribution domestic early economic edited Ethnoarchaeology ethnographic evidence example excavation fact field Figure function gathering groups hearth Hodder household hunter-gatherer hunting important included increasing individuals interest interpretation issue Kung living London major manufacture material mean Monuments nature nomad observations occur organisation particular past patterns population possible pottery present Press problem processing production questions range record References relationship relevant remains result Review Roman samples season camps seeds settlement sieve similar situation social society space spatial specific stages stone storage stratification structure suggest tent Theft Act 1968 theory tion units University variables village weed York Zardeh