Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 14, Issue 2Department of Archaeology, 1997 - Archaeology |
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Page 25
... buildings as well as their layout were clearly planned beforehand ( Fig . 2 ) . Structural uniformity characterises the excavated settlement area at Halawa . The house structures , buildings with many rooms and predetermined building ...
... buildings as well as their layout were clearly planned beforehand ( Fig . 2 ) . Structural uniformity characterises the excavated settlement area at Halawa . The house structures , buildings with many rooms and predetermined building ...
Page 30
there is evidence of agglutinative buildings , whose building plans do not follow a norm . Buildings are separated from one another , they do not follow the same orientation , and they create an area of low building density . There are ...
there is evidence of agglutinative buildings , whose building plans do not follow a norm . Buildings are separated from one another , they do not follow the same orientation , and they create an area of low building density . There are ...
Page 38
... building density for the variously functioning buildings and is further emphasised by the clear demarcation of the temple building from the housing . The function of buildings and sections in the settlement is designated by analysing ...
... building density for the variously functioning buildings and is further emphasised by the clear demarcation of the temple building from the housing . The function of buildings and sections in the settlement is designated by analysing ...
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academic activities analysis approach Archaeological Review archaeological writing areas argued attempt become boring buildings Cambridge Category centre clearly cognitive concept concerned consider construction context Contributions created critical culture discipline discussion economic effects elements example existence fact Figure function further given groups history of archaeology Hodder houses human ideas important individual influence interest interpretation issues knowledge logic London Marxism material material culture meaning memory mind monuments museum nature objects organisation original Oxford particular past perception perhaps perspective political position possible pottery practice prehistoric present problems production question reader record reference reflect relationships role seen settlement social society space structure suggest theoretical theory thought Tilley tradition types understanding University Press various visitor volume