This thesis argues that henges, stone circles and ring cairns form a 'spectrum' of monuments with origins in the earlier Neolithic. In that context it is suggested that some of the structures located beneath long cairns were originally free standing foci. How the monuments might reflect contemporary society is discussed and it is shown that some standing stones might have been the focus for gatherings of people as large as those suggested for henges and stone circles. Evidence is presented showing that there appears to have been a continuity of traditions and world view from the Early Neolithic into the Late Neolithic and beyond. Similarly the distribution of later monuments appears to relate to Early Neolithic core areas which continued to...
This paper considers the impact of landscape and environment upon monuments built during the Neolith...
This thesis centres around a form of early Neolithic architecture described as the causewayed enclos...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...
The thesis considers the role of monuments in neolithic society in relation to Scotland south of th...
Characterised by the often uncompromising landscapes of the northern English Lake District, the perc...
This thesis is a study of the record of the monuments of the Firth of Clyde region in the Neolithic ...
This thesis focuses on the development of ceremonial landscapes of Neolithic and Bronze Age Scotlan...
At the heart of this study are the early Neolithic chambered tombs of the Irish Sea zone, defined as...
Neolithic monument complexes in Britain and Ireland were places where dispersed non-human and human ...
The broad aim of this study is to examine the way in which people build worlds which are liveable an...
This work was funded in part by Historic Environment Scotland.The World Heritage Sites of Orkney, Sc...
This contribution introduces a new initiative, focusing on Neolithic monumentality in Ireland, Scotl...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
The centrepiece of this thesis is a comparative study of the stone rows of Dartmoor and northern Sco...
This paper is concerned with the storied landscapes underlying the megalithic tradition of the Irish...
This paper considers the impact of landscape and environment upon monuments built during the Neolith...
This thesis centres around a form of early Neolithic architecture described as the causewayed enclos...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...
The thesis considers the role of monuments in neolithic society in relation to Scotland south of th...
Characterised by the often uncompromising landscapes of the northern English Lake District, the perc...
This thesis is a study of the record of the monuments of the Firth of Clyde region in the Neolithic ...
This thesis focuses on the development of ceremonial landscapes of Neolithic and Bronze Age Scotlan...
At the heart of this study are the early Neolithic chambered tombs of the Irish Sea zone, defined as...
Neolithic monument complexes in Britain and Ireland were places where dispersed non-human and human ...
The broad aim of this study is to examine the way in which people build worlds which are liveable an...
This work was funded in part by Historic Environment Scotland.The World Heritage Sites of Orkney, Sc...
This contribution introduces a new initiative, focusing on Neolithic monumentality in Ireland, Scotl...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
The centrepiece of this thesis is a comparative study of the stone rows of Dartmoor and northern Sco...
This paper is concerned with the storied landscapes underlying the megalithic tradition of the Irish...
This paper considers the impact of landscape and environment upon monuments built during the Neolith...
This thesis centres around a form of early Neolithic architecture described as the causewayed enclos...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...