In Australia, geomorphological change since the late nineteenth century ensures surface artifact visibility but the contribution of full coverage regional survey to an understanding of past landscape use is limited by the lack of easily datable artifacts. Here, we describe a multi-stage survey strategy based around intensive archaeological, geomorphological and chronological studies as an alternative to traditional site-based approaches. We view the formation of the archaeological record as a sedimentary process and use a geomorphological approach to understand the history of landscape use from surface artifact scatters. We pay particular attention to recording datasets with reference to the timescales over which they have accumulated, and ...
Recent research conducted on the stone artefacts from the Tasmanian Pleistocene site of Bone Cave co...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1999American archaeologists have been interested in chang...
Forty years after the beginning of the ‘new wave’ of intensive survey in the Mediterranean, it has b...
The conventional approach to assessing the archaeological record in most parts of the world involves...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of th...
We present data from Australian study areas that support episodic nonequilibrium as a suitable model...
Geomorphic processes that affect the archaeological record – by exposing it, destroying it or coveri...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
We match stone artefact distributions and assemblage compositions at the local geographical scale to...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in...
For our understanding of the past, archaeological field survey is an essential fieldwork method. It ...
Landscape archaeology is a recent approach employed in historical and indigenous archaeology that ad...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
Recent research conducted on the stone artefacts from the Tasmanian Pleistocene site of Bone Cave co...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1999American archaeologists have been interested in chang...
Forty years after the beginning of the ‘new wave’ of intensive survey in the Mediterranean, it has b...
The conventional approach to assessing the archaeological record in most parts of the world involves...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of th...
We present data from Australian study areas that support episodic nonequilibrium as a suitable model...
Geomorphic processes that affect the archaeological record – by exposing it, destroying it or coveri...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
We match stone artefact distributions and assemblage compositions at the local geographical scale to...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in...
For our understanding of the past, archaeological field survey is an essential fieldwork method. It ...
Landscape archaeology is a recent approach employed in historical and indigenous archaeology that ad...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
Recent research conducted on the stone artefacts from the Tasmanian Pleistocene site of Bone Cave co...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1999American archaeologists have been interested in chang...
Forty years after the beginning of the ‘new wave’ of intensive survey in the Mediterranean, it has b...