Mutability—the ability to change form and substance—is a key feature of glass and metals. This quality, however, has proven frustrating for archaeological and archaeometric research. This article assesses the typological, chemical and theoretical elements of material reuse and recycling, reframing these practices as an opportunity to understand past behaviour, rather than as an obstacle to understanding. Using diverse archaeological data, the authors present case studies to illustrate the potential for documenting mutability in the past, and to demonstrate what this can reveal about the movement, social context and meaning of archaeological material culture. They hope that through such examples archaeologists will consider and integrate mut...
Abstract This contribution opens with a brief reflection on theoretical archaeology and practical m...
This chapter is an attempt to explain the ways in which historians can benefit from engaging with ma...
Visually-compelling small finds have traditionally been examined for their appearances. These artefa...
Mutability—the ability to change form and substance—is a key feature of glass and metals. This quali...
Any archaeological artefact made from recyclable material may have been recycled before deposition. ...
Due to the diversity of contemporary archaeology, the aims and approaches of archaeological scientis...
Editorial for the Special Issue of Archaeometry ‘Tackling Recycling in the Past’. The practice of re...
While recycling was an important part of industry during the Roman Period, after the imaginary line ...
The archaeological contribution to materiality has to date been less widely appreciated by practitio...
Humans occupy a material environment that is constantly changing. Yet British archaeologists of the ...
Glass can be considered a locus of meaning, a material which has been the repository of traditional ...
Glass can be considered a locus of meaning, a material which has been the repository of traditional ...
The suitability of glass for re-melting and recycling was widely exploited in the past. This paper r...
This paper considers the contribution of interdisciplinary material culture studies to the study of ...
We take for granted the survival into the present of artifacts from the past. Indeed the discipline ...
Abstract This contribution opens with a brief reflection on theoretical archaeology and practical m...
This chapter is an attempt to explain the ways in which historians can benefit from engaging with ma...
Visually-compelling small finds have traditionally been examined for their appearances. These artefa...
Mutability—the ability to change form and substance—is a key feature of glass and metals. This quali...
Any archaeological artefact made from recyclable material may have been recycled before deposition. ...
Due to the diversity of contemporary archaeology, the aims and approaches of archaeological scientis...
Editorial for the Special Issue of Archaeometry ‘Tackling Recycling in the Past’. The practice of re...
While recycling was an important part of industry during the Roman Period, after the imaginary line ...
The archaeological contribution to materiality has to date been less widely appreciated by practitio...
Humans occupy a material environment that is constantly changing. Yet British archaeologists of the ...
Glass can be considered a locus of meaning, a material which has been the repository of traditional ...
Glass can be considered a locus of meaning, a material which has been the repository of traditional ...
The suitability of glass for re-melting and recycling was widely exploited in the past. This paper r...
This paper considers the contribution of interdisciplinary material culture studies to the study of ...
We take for granted the survival into the present of artifacts from the past. Indeed the discipline ...
Abstract This contribution opens with a brief reflection on theoretical archaeology and practical m...
This chapter is an attempt to explain the ways in which historians can benefit from engaging with ma...
Visually-compelling small finds have traditionally been examined for their appearances. These artefa...