Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 4Department of Archaeology, 1985 - Archaeology |
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Page 160
... patterns in the material record . Stylistic pat- terns are the observable transformations of form whose systematics act to both conventionalise and distinguish . Since it is the stylistic patterns that distinguish and conventionalise ...
... patterns in the material record . Stylistic pat- terns are the observable transformations of form whose systematics act to both conventionalise and distinguish . Since it is the stylistic patterns that distinguish and conventionalise ...
Page 161
... pattern to the associated material culture . This leaves us with patterns of style . By style I mean observable patterns of culturally imposed form within the media and technology that create a distinctive character for a group of ...
... pattern to the associated material culture . This leaves us with patterns of style . By style I mean observable patterns of culturally imposed form within the media and technology that create a distinctive character for a group of ...
Page 166
... patterns of design sytematics were to be accurately described . This is a level of resolution well below that which Clarke uses . Second , rather than simply dividing elements into so many ambiguous types based on untraceable patterns ...
... patterns of design sytematics were to be accurately described . This is a level of resolution well below that which Clarke uses . Second , rather than simply dividing elements into so many ambiguous types based on untraceable patterns ...
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activity aesthetic analysis approach archaeo archaeological record Archaeological Review archaeology artefacts aspects barrow British Cambridge University Press causewayed enclosure century ceramic Christopher Chippindale context Cotte decoration defined discussion distribution dyke dykeside early English Heritage excavation field fieldwalking fieldwork Figure flint Francis Pryor Gombrich grid square Hodder human individual interpretation Iron Age Julian Richards land landscape Late Bronze Age logical London maps material culture means medieval Mehrgarh Mesolithic method Mont Bégo monuments Museum nature Neolithic organisation Oughterby Palaeolithic papers past patterns Paul Lane period perspective plough ploughsoil Pontnewydd potential pottery problems produced Pryor recognise region relationship Review from Cambridge Roman Romano-British sampling Schadla-Hall schist schist plaques Shahr-i Sokhta Shennan sherds social soil spatial Stonehenge structure style stylistic suggest surface collection survey techniques tion