Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 2Department of Archaeology, 1983 - Archaeology |
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Page 27
Similarities in terms of techniques used , pottery decoration , stone tool attributes , economies inferred from the ... to fit archaeological sites into three main economic schemes : huntergatherers , pastoralists and agriculturalists .
Similarities in terms of techniques used , pottery decoration , stone tool attributes , economies inferred from the ... to fit archaeological sites into three main economic schemes : huntergatherers , pastoralists and agriculturalists .
Page 29
These tribes were selected because their activities span the range of possible past economies as evidenced from the remains ... Although economic adaptations are the outcome of tradition , social factors and patterns , demand and so on ...
These tribes were selected because their activities span the range of possible past economies as evidenced from the remains ... Although economic adaptations are the outcome of tradition , social factors and patterns , demand and so on ...
Page 35
Fourthly , if one is to infer more than the economic basis of the prehistoric groups ... still remains the time gap between present and past economies and the fact that little is known of the way in which changes in economic practices ...
Fourthly , if one is to infer more than the economic basis of the prehistoric groups ... still remains the time gap between present and past economies and the fact that little is known of the way in which changes in economic practices ...
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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