Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 4Department of Archaeology, 1985 - Archaeology |
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Page 22
... sampling procedures which take the cultural item ... as the minimal unit , and ignore traditional sites altogether . ( Thomas 1975 , 62 ) This approach to regional sampling is fundamental to the types of infor- mation which exist in the ...
... sampling procedures which take the cultural item ... as the minimal unit , and ignore traditional sites altogether . ( Thomas 1975 , 62 ) This approach to regional sampling is fundamental to the types of infor- mation which exist in the ...
Page 31
... sampling approach suggested that , even when slowed by intensive recording and finds processing , the project could hope to cover approximately 40 % of the available arable in the survey area over the four projected ( but by no means ...
... sampling approach suggested that , even when slowed by intensive recording and finds processing , the project could hope to cover approximately 40 % of the available arable in the survey area over the four projected ( but by no means ...
Page 35
... sampling strategy , culminating in the excavation itself ( see Figure 5 ) . The excavation must inevitably be carried out within strict limits of time and finance yet there must be an acceptable minimum sample , below which the validity ...
... sampling strategy , culminating in the excavation itself ( see Figure 5 ) . The excavation must inevitably be carried out within strict limits of time and finance yet there must be an acceptable minimum sample , below which the validity ...
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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