Anthropologists and cultural geographers have long accepted that animals play an important role in the creation of human cultures. However, such beliefs are yet to be embraced by archaeologists, who seldom give zooarchaeological data much consideration beyond the occasional economic or environmental reconstruction. In an attempt to highlight animal remains as a source of cultural information, this paper examines the evidence for the changing relationship between people and wild animals in Iron Age and Roman southern England. Special attention is given to ‘exotic’ species — in particular fallow deer, domestic fowl and the hare — whose management increased around AD 43. In Iron Age Britain the concept of wild game reserves was seemingly absen...
Concentrating mainly on the zooarchaeological data, this chapter reviews the evidence for the exploi...
This article considers the use of animal bones as an aid to understanding social dynamics in Late An...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
Anthropologists and cultural geographers have long accepted that animals play an important role in t...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
In this paper zooarchaeological evidence from Iron Age and Roman sites in South-East Britain is pres...
The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, te...
The period between the Roman withdrawal from Britain and the beginning of the Anglo-Saxon period is ...
<p>Zooarchaeological evidence is combined with anthropological, artistic and historical sources to i...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
Zooarchaeological enquiry of animals and their products in the post-medieval period has largely been...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
Concentrating mainly on the zooarchaeological data, this chapter reviews the evidence for the exploi...
This article considers the use of animal bones as an aid to understanding social dynamics in Late An...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
Anthropologists and cultural geographers have long accepted that animals play an important role in t...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
In this paper zooarchaeological evidence from Iron Age and Roman sites in South-East Britain is pres...
The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, te...
The period between the Roman withdrawal from Britain and the beginning of the Anglo-Saxon period is ...
<p>Zooarchaeological evidence is combined with anthropological, artistic and historical sources to i...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
Zooarchaeological enquiry of animals and their products in the post-medieval period has largely been...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
Concentrating mainly on the zooarchaeological data, this chapter reviews the evidence for the exploi...
This article considers the use of animal bones as an aid to understanding social dynamics in Late An...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...