Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 9Department of Archaeology, 1990 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 47
Page 73
... raw material use by prehistoric hunter - gather- ers ' ) applies general cost - benefit calculations to a single example . Jeske argues that the costs of tools are a product of the raw material costs ( RM ) , the manufacturing costs ( M ) ...
... raw material use by prehistoric hunter - gather- ers ' ) applies general cost - benefit calculations to a single example . Jeske argues that the costs of tools are a product of the raw material costs ( RM ) , the manufacturing costs ( M ) ...
Page 75
... raw material proc- essed and the use - life of an artefact . As the requirements for tools became greater and the quantity of raw material used increased , there was a need to conserve raw materials and one way of doing this was to ...
... raw material proc- essed and the use - life of an artefact . As the requirements for tools became greater and the quantity of raw material used increased , there was a need to conserve raw materials and one way of doing this was to ...
Page 106
... raw material have considerable consequences . As Wynn further remarks ; " Recently , Jones ( 1981 ) and Toth ( 1985 ) have made convincing arguments that raw material did , in fact , restrict the possible refinement of stone tools ...
... raw material have considerable consequences . As Wynn further remarks ; " Recently , Jones ( 1981 ) and Toth ( 1985 ) have made convincing arguments that raw material did , in fact , restrict the possible refinement of stone tools ...
Contents
TECHNOLOGY IN THE HUMANITIES | 3 |
Nathan Schlanger | 18 |
Robert Cresswell | 39 |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acheulean action aesthetic African archaeology analysis anthropology apprenticeship approach Archaeological Review argued artefacts aspects Barquisimeto behaviour bifaces blade Cambridge 9:2 chaîne opératoire complex concept concerned context core craft debitage display domestication Eastern economic editors emotional Etiolles Europe evidence evolution example excavation existence flakes flintknapping gesture groups Hodder hominids human hunter-gatherers individual Ingold interpretation issue John Carman Journal Kathryn Roberts knapping know-how knowledge Leroi-Gourhan lithic Magdalenian Marxism material culture Mauss meaning Mesolithic modern museum nature non-sexist language object Oldowan organisation Palaeolithic paper Paris particular past Pelegrin perspective Pierre Lemonnier Pigeot practical prehistoric present problems production raw material recognised References relationship Review from Cambridge role rubbish Sevso Treasure sexist language skills social relations society Sotheby's specialisation specific stone tools striking platform structure symbolic technical activities techniques theoretical theory tion understanding Upper Palaeolithic