Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 14Department of Archaeology, 1995 - Archaeology |
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Page 161
have become quite sophisticated through archaeobotany , faunal analysis , residue analysis , and stable isotope studies , the development of a theoretical framework within which to move from scientific data to an understanding of the ...
have become quite sophisticated through archaeobotany , faunal analysis , residue analysis , and stable isotope studies , the development of a theoretical framework within which to move from scientific data to an understanding of the ...
Page 122
... become familiar through his or her own peculiar , individual course through the literature than to attempt the difficult task of explaining those terms to the uninitiated . It will not be easy to write a new , more accessible and more ...
... become familiar through his or her own peculiar , individual course through the literature than to attempt the difficult task of explaining those terms to the uninitiated . It will not be easy to write a new , more accessible and more ...
Page 153
... become our Three Age System were produced , we project back in time that which we know the Three Age System was to become . One result of this tendency is to reduce the history of archaeology to a history of ideas , rather than the ...
... become our Three Age System were produced , we project back in time that which we know the Three Age System was to become . One result of this tendency is to reduce the history of archaeology to a history of ideas , rather than the ...
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academic analysis ancient anthropology approach archaeological data archaeological evidence archaeological record Archaeological Review archaeological writing areas argued Arminna artefacts Assmann Beowulf Binford Blemmyes Bronze Age buildings burials Category centre century cognitive cognitive archaeology concept context Contributions cultural history discipline discourse discussion economic emphasise ethnicity Etruscan example excavation Gamla Uppsala groups Habuba historians historical archaeology historiographical history and archaeology history of archaeology Hodder human important inscriptions interest Interpreting Archaeology Iron Age Kalabsha land Lombard London Lower Nubia material culture meaning Medieval megaliths Meroitic monuments Museum myths organisation paper past perception period perspective political post-processual pottery prehistoric present problems processual archaeology production prospective memory Qasr Ibrim relationship retrospective memory Review from Cambridge Routledge Scandinavia Scythians settlement Shanks social society structure style Style-II animals suggest texts textual theoretical theory Three Age System Tilley Török traditional Trigger understanding Viking volume