Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 9Department of Archaeology, 1990 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 69
Page 65
... seems that the process of stone axe production was characterised by a series of highly structured , recurrent routines , in which the producers monitored and anticipated the conse- quences that particular removals would have for ...
... seems that the process of stone axe production was characterised by a series of highly structured , recurrent routines , in which the producers monitored and anticipated the conse- quences that particular removals would have for ...
Page 71
... seems obvious that they must be separate . The spider can turn around and move about . It is not attached to the web : indeed it can even go somewhere else and make another . Yet despite this , Dawkins would like us to see them as ...
... seems obvious that they must be separate . The spider can turn around and move about . It is not attached to the web : indeed it can even go somewhere else and make another . Yet despite this , Dawkins would like us to see them as ...
Page 302
... seems to have been discarded with the oasis hypothesis . Archaeozoologists have flipped Childe's argument onto its back . For example , Zeuner among others argues that early domesticates would have been mismanaged and neglected and so ...
... seems to have been discarded with the oasis hypothesis . Archaeozoologists have flipped Childe's argument onto its back . For example , Zeuner among others argues that early domesticates would have been mismanaged and neglected and so ...
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