Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 2-4Department of Archaeology, 1983 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 76
Page 50
... method : not what we know about another time , but how we know it . So far , the community and its visitors have responded enthusias - tically to this way of returning their past . Our method of reaching the public was chosen in the ...
... method : not what we know about another time , but how we know it . So far , the community and its visitors have responded enthusias - tically to this way of returning their past . Our method of reaching the public was chosen in the ...
Page 165
... methods . Typology and taxonomy divide arbit- rarily , ignoring relations between elements or groups of elements . It does not matter whether the taxonomic method is monothetic ( branching divisions ) or polythetic ( agglomerative ...
... methods . Typology and taxonomy divide arbit- rarily , ignoring relations between elements or groups of elements . It does not matter whether the taxonomic method is monothetic ( branching divisions ) or polythetic ( agglomerative ...
Page 166
... method for interpreting the links between social and material pattern . Each descriptive pattern is a slice in the ... method is limited not only by the data as presented through the descriptive method , but also by the nature of the ...
... method for interpreting the links between social and material pattern . Each descriptive pattern is a slice in the ... method is limited not only by the data as presented through the descriptive method , but also by the nature of the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academic activity analysis Ancient Monuments Anthropology Antiquarianism Antiquity approach archaeo archaeological context archaeological record Archaeological Review artefacts behaviour Binford British Bronze Age camps causewayed enclosure century ceramic Christopher Chippindale complex concern contemporary context decoration Deir el-Medina discussion documents early economic Ethnoarchaeology ethnographic evidence example excavation field fieldwalking fieldwork Figure groups history of archaeology Hodder human hunter-gatherer ideas ideology important individual interest interpretation Iron Age issues Knossos landscape London material culture means Mixtec Mont Bégo museums Mycenaean nature Neolithic organisation paper past patterns Paul Lane period perspective potential pottery prehistoric present problem production Pylos region relationship relevant result Review from Cambridge Roman sample schist schist plaques settlement sherds social society spatial specific Stonehenge structure style stylistic suggest survey tablets Tartessos texts textual theoretical theory tion tradition understanding University Press variables Zapotec