Landscape studies offer the archaeologist a way to move towards the holistic integration of disparate aspects of research, such as excavation, survey, and specialist analysis. Because landscape perception is socially constructed, like other forms of material culture, it is possible to approach social behaviour in a way in which previously was only argued for portable artefacts. Memory studies have allowed historians, anthropologists, and archaeologists to link observable human behaviour with long-term human thought. Memory is also being used as a way of linking the otherwise invisible mind with the material by-products of society, such as monumental architecture. This paper will investigate how two contemporaneous settlements of Late Iron A...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
In recent years British Iron Age studies have focused on regionality whilst critiquing the hierarchi...
The discipline of archaeology studies the nature, meanings and effects of past human behaviour over ...
The central theme of this study is an examination of the processes of change in Iron Age social orga...
Four decades of meticulous collection of metal detected finds data in Norfolk by the Norfolk Histori...
Debate on the Cumbrian Mountains has centred on the widely distributed Group VI polished stone axes ...
This slightly modified PhD thesis is an interpretative study of the rural landscapes and communities...
The approach to the perception of landscape and settlement adopted by medieval archaeologists has be...
With the beginning of Roman influence over Britain in the late Iron Age, and direct political and ad...
This thesis investigates the interrelationship between the later prehistoric inhabitants of Cheshire...
The Kullen district has a striking geographical scenery and a multitude of cultural settings and loc...
This thesis characterizes and interprets the nature of Exmoor’s late 3rd and early 2nd millennium BC...
Characterised by the often uncompromising landscapes of the northern English Lake District, the perc...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
In recent years British Iron Age studies have focused on regionality whilst critiquing the hierarchi...
The discipline of archaeology studies the nature, meanings and effects of past human behaviour over ...
The central theme of this study is an examination of the processes of change in Iron Age social orga...
Four decades of meticulous collection of metal detected finds data in Norfolk by the Norfolk Histori...
Debate on the Cumbrian Mountains has centred on the widely distributed Group VI polished stone axes ...
This slightly modified PhD thesis is an interpretative study of the rural landscapes and communities...
The approach to the perception of landscape and settlement adopted by medieval archaeologists has be...
With the beginning of Roman influence over Britain in the late Iron Age, and direct political and ad...
This thesis investigates the interrelationship between the later prehistoric inhabitants of Cheshire...
The Kullen district has a striking geographical scenery and a multitude of cultural settings and loc...
This thesis characterizes and interprets the nature of Exmoor’s late 3rd and early 2nd millennium BC...
Characterised by the often uncompromising landscapes of the northern English Lake District, the perc...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
It is suggested that previous interpretations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages of Aberdeenshire have...