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Page 34
The intact scatter enabled certain spatial and vertical aspects to be examined .
Surface pottery was collected from each meter square to be excavated ( sample
size = 50 ) , and the ploughsoil subsequently sieved through a 4mm mesh .
The intact scatter enabled certain spatial and vertical aspects to be examined .
Surface pottery was collected from each meter square to be excavated ( sample
size = 50 ) , and the ploughsoil subsequently sieved through a 4mm mesh .
Page 41
Perhaps an even greater challenge though is the presentation to a wider
audience of what should , after all , be one of the easier aspects of prehistory to
comprehend ; people , alive rather than buried or engaged in manifesting their
ideologies ...
Perhaps an even greater challenge though is the presentation to a wider
audience of what should , after all , be one of the easier aspects of prehistory to
comprehend ; people , alive rather than buried or engaged in manifesting their
ideologies ...
Page 121
semi - precious stone , shell , craft study different aspects of industries ,
postulating which kind Harappan / non - Harappan contacts . of activity can be
recognised at a Francfort , for instance looks at site , and to what extent it can be
the ...
semi - precious stone , shell , craft study different aspects of industries ,
postulating which kind Harappan / non - Harappan contacts . of activity can be
recognised at a Francfort , for instance looks at site , and to what extent it can be
the ...
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activity analysis appears approach archaeo archaeology artefacts aspects attempt barrow become British Cambridge carried century ceramic clearly collection concerned conference consider considerable construction context continuity cover cultural defined discussion distribution early effect Environment evidence examination example excavation exist extent field fieldwalking fieldwork Figure finds flint greater grid historical human important individual intensive interest land landscape later least London major maps material means medieval method monuments nature Neolithic noted occupation original particular past patterns period Pleistocene plough possible potential pottery practice prehistoric present Press problems produced question reasons recent record reference region Review road Roman sampling Saxon scatter settlement sherds social society soil spatial specific square Stonehenge structure suggested surface survey techniques tion understand University