The Anglo-Saxon period in Yorkshire - in terms of our knowledge of those questions which bioarchaeological studies are conventionally used to address - remains very much an unknown quantity, We can hardly claim even to know whether these questions are indeed appropriate in the Anglo-Saxon period. To some extent this reflects the nature of the Anglo-Saxon deposits so far encountered, in which preservation of the less durable organic remains has been very limited. The nature of Anglo-Saxon occupation, with a bias towards rural settlements of a kind whicb have generally left only faint traces in the ground, means that there are no deeply stratified richly organic deposits of the kind revealed in some Roman and Viking Age phases in major urban ...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
The Late-Roman/Anglo-Saxon transition has been heavily debated for the last twenty years. A hard and...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...
Rural Anglo-Saxon settlements in the hinterland of York are notoriously invisible. As a result of ma...
This research is united by both geographical area, principally the Vale of York, and methodology, st...
INTRODUCTION: For the past millennium, the inhabitants of the centre of York have, whether hey knew ...
INTRODUCTION: This chapter provides an overview of the current state of knowledge regarding vertebra...
The period following the Roman withdrawal from England in AD 410 has long been considered a time of ...
The bioarchaeological potential of a large number of samples from 1st Millennium deposits excavated ...
The Yorkshire Wolds encompasses a region with a rich and varied history where prehistoric funerary m...
It has been the aim of the present study to analyse and interpret recently collected archaeobotanic...
The aim of the research presented in this thesis is to test the applicability of some of the techniq...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
Palaeoecological and geoarchaeological investigations which cover the Anglo-Saxon period are rare, p...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
The Late-Roman/Anglo-Saxon transition has been heavily debated for the last twenty years. A hard and...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...
Rural Anglo-Saxon settlements in the hinterland of York are notoriously invisible. As a result of ma...
This research is united by both geographical area, principally the Vale of York, and methodology, st...
INTRODUCTION: For the past millennium, the inhabitants of the centre of York have, whether hey knew ...
INTRODUCTION: This chapter provides an overview of the current state of knowledge regarding vertebra...
The period following the Roman withdrawal from England in AD 410 has long been considered a time of ...
The bioarchaeological potential of a large number of samples from 1st Millennium deposits excavated ...
The Yorkshire Wolds encompasses a region with a rich and varied history where prehistoric funerary m...
It has been the aim of the present study to analyse and interpret recently collected archaeobotanic...
The aim of the research presented in this thesis is to test the applicability of some of the techniq...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
Palaeoecological and geoarchaeological investigations which cover the Anglo-Saxon period are rare, p...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
The Late-Roman/Anglo-Saxon transition has been heavily debated for the last twenty years. A hard and...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...