This project, funded by English Heritage, aimed to review the animal bone evidence from Late Bronze Age-Late Iron Age sites from southern England. The Regional Review report (Hambleton 2008), for which this database serves as a feely available online appendix, provides a synthetic review of published faunal assemblages. Key themes include: animal husbandry; diet and economy; agricultural diversification and specialisation; and the nature of 'special deposits'. Assessments of species frequency and relative abundance confirm that domestic mammals predominate. A total of 108 site reports were recorded in the database. These 108 'site' records correspond to reports from excavations at 101 separate monument locations. These sites generated 154 d...
A series of sediment samples and two boxes of hand-col1ected bone, from deposits of 11th to 14th cen...
Animals are an integral part of deposition practices during the Danish Iron Age, and they probably r...
This chapter will review the contribution that commercial zooarchaeology has made in advancing our k...
This project is a review of the animal bone evidence from Neolithic and Early Bronze Age sites in so...
The aim of this project was to produce a review of the animal bone evidence from Central England fro...
Searchable records of the zooarchaeological dataset that forms the basis for 'Southern England: a re...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
overall animal bone record. The assemblage is thought to be largely post medieval, with a small numb...
Analysis and discussion of the faunal assemblage from a multiperiod site, covering Bronze Age settle...
In this book an analysis of over 300 animal bone assemblages from English Saxon and Scandinavian sit...
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7487-2635This book is distributed under the terms of the Creative Common...
The archaeological background to economic archaeology is discussed and the role of faunal analyses i...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:1863.1856(282) / BLDSC - British Libr...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
In recent years, zooarchaeology has started to move beyond purely economic interpretations towards a...
A series of sediment samples and two boxes of hand-col1ected bone, from deposits of 11th to 14th cen...
Animals are an integral part of deposition practices during the Danish Iron Age, and they probably r...
This chapter will review the contribution that commercial zooarchaeology has made in advancing our k...
This project is a review of the animal bone evidence from Neolithic and Early Bronze Age sites in so...
The aim of this project was to produce a review of the animal bone evidence from Central England fro...
Searchable records of the zooarchaeological dataset that forms the basis for 'Southern England: a re...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
overall animal bone record. The assemblage is thought to be largely post medieval, with a small numb...
Analysis and discussion of the faunal assemblage from a multiperiod site, covering Bronze Age settle...
In this book an analysis of over 300 animal bone assemblages from English Saxon and Scandinavian sit...
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7487-2635This book is distributed under the terms of the Creative Common...
The archaeological background to economic archaeology is discussed and the role of faunal analyses i...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:1863.1856(282) / BLDSC - British Libr...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
In recent years, zooarchaeology has started to move beyond purely economic interpretations towards a...
A series of sediment samples and two boxes of hand-col1ected bone, from deposits of 11th to 14th cen...
Animals are an integral part of deposition practices during the Danish Iron Age, and they probably r...
This chapter will review the contribution that commercial zooarchaeology has made in advancing our k...