Archaeology: Theories, Methods and PracticeThames & Hudson, 2008 - 656 pages This best-selling textbook on what archaeologists do and how they do it has now been completely revised. Structured according to the key questions that archaeologists ask themselves, it provides coverage of all the major developments in methods, science, technology, and theory.For the fifth edition, the voices of indigenous archaeologists have been included, and there is updated coverage of archaeological ethics and Cultural Resource Management. Recent findings are discussed, and there is expanded coverage of topics such as bioarchaeology and geoarchaeology. |
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Page 18
... questions goes on , and after these general questions there are more specific ones . We wish to know why a particular culture took the form it did : how its particularities emerged , and how they influenced developments . This book does ...
... questions goes on , and after these general questions there are more specific ones . We wish to know why a particular culture took the form it did : how its particularities emerged , and how they influenced developments . This book does ...
Page 177
... questions we can ask about early societies are social . They are about people and about relations between people , about the exercise of power and about the nature and scale of organization . As is generally the case in archaeology ...
... questions we can ask about early societies are social . They are about people and about relations between people , about the exercise of power and about the nature and scale of organization . As is generally the case in archaeology ...
Page 545
... questions we can ask and our means of answering them . But the time has come to address much wider questions : Why , beyond reasons of scientific curiosity , do we want to know about the past ? What does the past mean to us ? What does ...
... questions we can ask and our means of answering them . But the time has come to address much wider questions : Why , beyond reasons of scientific curiosity , do we want to know about the past ? What does the past mean to us ? What does ...
Table des matières
Introduction | 9 |
How Did They Make and Use Tools? | 10 |
BOX FEATURES | 11 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
absolute dating activity Africa American analysis ancient animals Antiquity archae archaeological record archaeological sites archaeology artifacts bones Bronze Age burial buried calibration Calusa Çatalhöyük cave century Chapter chronology climate cognitive cognitive archaeology context copper cores culture deposits early environment environmental Europe evidence example excavation groups hominin human hunter-gatherer Ice Age identified important indicate individual interpretation isotope Kent Flannery landscape layers Lewis Binford London material Maya Mesoamerica modern monuments mounds Museum Neanderthal Neolithic objects obsidian Optical Dating organic Paleolithic past pattern percent period phytoliths plant Pleistocene pollen population pottery prehistoric preserved Press processual archaeology produced radiocarbon dates recent reconstruction region remains revealed Roman sample sediments sequence settlement social societies soil species stone tools stratigraphic structures surface survey symbolic techniques Teotihuacán tomb tree-ring Univ Upper Paleolithic York