International audienceRefitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess the consistency of discrete spatial units, such as layers, and to evaluate disturbance and post-depositional processes. The majority of current methods, despite their differences, rely on the count and proportion of refits within and between spatial units. Little attention is paid to the distribution and topology of the relationships between fragments, although this is now known to have significant effects on archaeological interpretation. This paper presents a new methodological approach for refitting studies. The TSAR approach (Topological Study of Archaeological Refitting) draws on concepts and methods from graph theory to model the networ...
Reconstructing ties between archaeological contexts may contribute to explain and describe a variety...
The study of past societies requires describing and explaining patterns and their dynamics (diffusio...
Model-based reconstruction is an approach to infer network structures where they cannot be observed....
International audienceRefitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess ...
Refitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess the consistency of dis...
Refitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess the consistency of dis...
International audienceConsidered at a fundamental level of analysis, the time dimension in archaeolo...
Methods to analyse fragmented objects in archaeology using refitting relationships between fragments...
Methods to analyse fragmented objects in archaeology using refitting relationships between fragments...
<p>After two decades of research there has been renewed interest in the refitting analysis of archae...
Methods for the stratigraphic analysis of fragmented objects in archeology using "refitting" relatio...
Quantitative archaeological spatial analysis today is radically different from that introduced more ...
Network theory can be employed in two ways in archaeology: it can be used to analyse archaeological ...
This review aims to expose the potential of formal network methods for archaeology by tracing the or...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Anthropology...
Reconstructing ties between archaeological contexts may contribute to explain and describe a variety...
The study of past societies requires describing and explaining patterns and their dynamics (diffusio...
Model-based reconstruction is an approach to infer network structures where they cannot be observed....
International audienceRefitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess ...
Refitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess the consistency of dis...
Refitting and conjoinable pieces have long been used in archaeology to assess the consistency of dis...
International audienceConsidered at a fundamental level of analysis, the time dimension in archaeolo...
Methods to analyse fragmented objects in archaeology using refitting relationships between fragments...
Methods to analyse fragmented objects in archaeology using refitting relationships between fragments...
<p>After two decades of research there has been renewed interest in the refitting analysis of archae...
Methods for the stratigraphic analysis of fragmented objects in archeology using "refitting" relatio...
Quantitative archaeological spatial analysis today is radically different from that introduced more ...
Network theory can be employed in two ways in archaeology: it can be used to analyse archaeological ...
This review aims to expose the potential of formal network methods for archaeology by tracing the or...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Anthropology...
Reconstructing ties between archaeological contexts may contribute to explain and describe a variety...
The study of past societies requires describing and explaining patterns and their dynamics (diffusio...
Model-based reconstruction is an approach to infer network structures where they cannot be observed....