This paper explores the way in which tides contribute to the construction of complex cognitive landscapes. Drawing on the notion of assembly and process it emphasises how tidescapes are in a constant state of becoming. The early medieval monastery of Lindisfarne (Holy Island, Northumberland, UK) is used as a case study to explore the manifold ways in which tides might inculcate themselves within the lived experiences of those who lived on the island during the Anglo-Saxon period
This paper examines the role of peat compaction as a driving mechanism behind the widespread inundat...
The Atlantic peninsulas of western Europe present intriguing cultural parallels that reach back into...
The mound as a focus for early medieval assembly is found widely throughout Northern Europe in the f...
Coastal landscapes, past and present, are unique spaces subject to intense evolution and change. At ...
The small Channel Island of Herm combines several distinct habitats ranging from steep rocky coasts ...
Water defined the landscapes of medieval East Anglia. Hitherto scholarly attention has focussed on t...
Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) provides a means of rapid and highly accurate survey of archaeologi...
Anglo-Saxon monastic sites were complex places combining religious and economic functions. They wer...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from ArchaeoPress via the ISB...
The Anglo-Saxon monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow were amongst the most sophisticated centres of l...
The monograph that forms the basis of this PhD by Publication was published by Oxford University Pre...
Coastal distributions such as that of the Neolithic chambered tombs of Brittany raise important ques...
This paper examines flood frequencies in three coastal sectors of Britain and analyses the associate...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
This article explores site-responsiveness in the context of a collaborative work, Tide Times, by Lau...
This paper examines the role of peat compaction as a driving mechanism behind the widespread inundat...
The Atlantic peninsulas of western Europe present intriguing cultural parallels that reach back into...
The mound as a focus for early medieval assembly is found widely throughout Northern Europe in the f...
Coastal landscapes, past and present, are unique spaces subject to intense evolution and change. At ...
The small Channel Island of Herm combines several distinct habitats ranging from steep rocky coasts ...
Water defined the landscapes of medieval East Anglia. Hitherto scholarly attention has focussed on t...
Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) provides a means of rapid and highly accurate survey of archaeologi...
Anglo-Saxon monastic sites were complex places combining religious and economic functions. They wer...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from ArchaeoPress via the ISB...
The Anglo-Saxon monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow were amongst the most sophisticated centres of l...
The monograph that forms the basis of this PhD by Publication was published by Oxford University Pre...
Coastal distributions such as that of the Neolithic chambered tombs of Brittany raise important ques...
This paper examines flood frequencies in three coastal sectors of Britain and analyses the associate...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
This article explores site-responsiveness in the context of a collaborative work, Tide Times, by Lau...
This paper examines the role of peat compaction as a driving mechanism behind the widespread inundat...
The Atlantic peninsulas of western Europe present intriguing cultural parallels that reach back into...
The mound as a focus for early medieval assembly is found widely throughout Northern Europe in the f...