PhD ThesisIn this thesis I consider the study of change. I present a critique of existing approaches to the study of change and time in a prehistoric context. I develop an approach that moves beyond explanations of change where change is the result of singular causation located in a single moment of time. I critically consider how change is understood in the work of key relational thinkers such as Latour, Bennett, Ingold and DeLanda, developing an understanding of change which stresses the interplay between continuously fluxing assemblages and episodes of dramatic change (phase transitions). The theoretical position established is applied to interpreting change during the Ronaldsway Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age on the Isle of Man in...
Orkney is internationally recognised for its exceptionally well-preserved Neolithic archaeology. The...
Roundhouses are ubiquitous in prehistoric Britain, yet previous studies of these iconic features hav...
Ph. D. ThesisPrevious understandings have assumed battle-axes were purely ceremonial, while the roug...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
This thesis investigates concepts of marginality and the response of human populations to changing e...
This thesis addresses the question of an impoverished record for the Orcadian Bronze Age. It present...
This thesis explores how focusing on knowledge formation can enable theoretical development beyond r...
This contribution considers some of the many recent advances in our understanding of Chalcolithic an...
The Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age midden sites of Southern Britain are amongst the richest archaeol...
This PhD by publication and production represents some of the published outputs of a research projec...
This thesis explores how focusing on knowledge formation can enable theoretical development beyond r...
Acknowledgements: Special acknowledgements go to Audrey Innes for her laboratory support, to Histori...
This thesis focuses on the use of radiocarbon dating and Bayesian modelling to develop more precise ...
NoThis volume represents the publication of a highly successful conference held in 2003 to celebrate...
The Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age midden sites of Southern Britain are amongst the richest archaeol...
Orkney is internationally recognised for its exceptionally well-preserved Neolithic archaeology. The...
Roundhouses are ubiquitous in prehistoric Britain, yet previous studies of these iconic features hav...
Ph. D. ThesisPrevious understandings have assumed battle-axes were purely ceremonial, while the roug...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
This thesis investigates concepts of marginality and the response of human populations to changing e...
This thesis addresses the question of an impoverished record for the Orcadian Bronze Age. It present...
This thesis explores how focusing on knowledge formation can enable theoretical development beyond r...
This contribution considers some of the many recent advances in our understanding of Chalcolithic an...
The Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age midden sites of Southern Britain are amongst the richest archaeol...
This PhD by publication and production represents some of the published outputs of a research projec...
This thesis explores how focusing on knowledge formation can enable theoretical development beyond r...
Acknowledgements: Special acknowledgements go to Audrey Innes for her laboratory support, to Histori...
This thesis focuses on the use of radiocarbon dating and Bayesian modelling to develop more precise ...
NoThis volume represents the publication of a highly successful conference held in 2003 to celebrate...
The Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age midden sites of Southern Britain are amongst the richest archaeol...
Orkney is internationally recognised for its exceptionally well-preserved Neolithic archaeology. The...
Roundhouses are ubiquitous in prehistoric Britain, yet previous studies of these iconic features hav...
Ph. D. ThesisPrevious understandings have assumed battle-axes were purely ceremonial, while the roug...