British Archaeological Reports

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

British Archaeological Reports British Archaeological Reports Gordon House, 276 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7ED, England Tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 Fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 [email protected] www.archaeopress.com TITLES IN PRINT JANUARY 2013 – BAR INTERNATIONAL SERIES The BAR series of archaeological monographs were started in 1974 by Anthony Hands and David Walker. From 1991, the publishers have been Tempus Reparatum, Archaeopress and John and Erica Hedges. From 2010 they are published exclusively by Archaeopress. Descriptions of the Archaeopress titles are to be found on www.archaeopress.com Publication proposals to [email protected] Sign up to our ALERTS SERVICE Find us on Facebook www.facebook.com/Archaeopress. and Twitter www.twitter.com/archaeopress BAR –S545, 1989 Ecology, Settlement and History in the Osmore Drainage, Peru edited by Don S. Rice, Charles Stanish and Philip R. Scarr. ISBN 0 86054 692 6. £42.00. BAR –S546, 1989 Formal Variation in Australian Spear and Spearthrower Technology by B. J. Cundy. ISBN 0 86054 693 4. £13.00. BAR –S547, 1989 The Early Roman Frontier in the Upper Rhine Area Assimilation and Acculturation on a Roman Frontier by Marcia L. Okun. ISBN 0 86054 694 2. £25.00. BAR –S548, 1989 Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology 1989 edited by Sebastian Rahtz and Julian Richards. ISBN 0 86054 695 0. £29.00. BAR –S549, 1989 La Colonización Griega en Sicilia Griegos, Indígenas y Púnicos en la Sicilia Arcaica: Interacción por Adopho J. Dominguez. ISBN 0 86054 696 9. £58.00. BAR –S550, 1989 Art, Death and Social Order The Mortuary Arts of Pre-Conquest Central Panama by Peter S. Briggs. ISBN 0 86054 697 7. £20.00. BAR –S552, 1989 Spiral Decoration in Early Bronze Age Scandinavia A technical and qualitative analysis and study of production by Elisabeth Herner. ISBN 0 86054 699 3. £16.00. BAR –S554, 1989 Les timbres amphoriques de I’Apulie républicaine Documents pour une histoire économique et sociale par Philippe Desy. ISBN 0 86054 707 8. £19.00. BAR –S555, 1989 Maritime Trade between China and the West An Archaeological Study of the Ceramics from Siraf (Persian Gulf), 8th to 15th centuries A.D. by Moira Tampoe. ISBN 0 86054 702 7. £33.00. BAR –S556, 1989 Coins and Archaeology edited by H. Clarke and E. Schia. Medieval Archaeology Research Group, Proceedings of the first meeting at Isegran, Norway 1988. ISBN 0 86054 703 5. £13.00. BAR –S557, 1990 Upper Palaeolithic Faunas from South-West France A Zoo-geographic Perspective by Katherine V. Boyle. ISBN 0 86054 704 3. £27.00. BAR –S559, 1990 Enterramientos de Balberta un sitio en la Costa Sur de Guatemala Algunas comparaciones con otros sitios e inferencias sobre su organización social by Barbara Arroyo. ISBN 0 86054 706 X. £14.00. BAR –S560, 1990 Stone Rows and Standing Stones by A. and A. S. Thom, collated, with archaeological notes, by A. Burl. ISBN 0 86054 708 6. £40.00. BAR –S562, 1990 Lithic Analysis of Acheulean Assemblages from the Avivim Sites, Israel by Milla Y. Ohel. ISBN 0 86054 710 8. £15.00. BAR –S563, 1990 Tepe Abdul Hosein A Neolithic Site in Western Iran: Excavations 1978 by Judith Pullar. ISBN 0 86054 711 6. £24.00. BAR –S565, 1991 Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology 1990 edited by K. Lockyear and S. Rahtz. ISBN 0 86054 713 2. £22.00. BAR –S568, 2005 Villas, Farms and the Late Roman Rural Economy (third to fifth Centuries AD) by Tamara Lewit. First published in 1991 as Agricultural Production in the Roman Economy, AD 200-400, now reprinted with an additional introductory chapter and updating bibliography. ISBN 1 84171 689 8. £30.00. BAR –S569, 1991 Red Deer Hunting in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwest France A Study in Seasonalitv by A. TO ORDER: All books may be ordered from: Hadrian Books, 122 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7BP; Fax: + 44 1865 316916 e-mail: [email protected] or online at www.hadrianbooks.co.uk and www.archaeopress.com 1 British Archaeological Reports Gordon House, 276 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7ED, England Tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 Fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 [email protected] www.archaeopress.com TITLES IN PRINT JANUARY 2013 – BAR INTERNATIONAL SERIES The BAR series of archaeological monographs were started in 1974 by Anthony Hands and David Walker. From 1991, the publishers have been Tempus Reparatum, Archaeopress and John and Erica Hedges. From 2010 they are published exclusively by Archaeopress. Descriptions of the Archaeopress titles are to be found on www.archaeopress.com Publication proposals to [email protected] Sign up to our ALERTS SERVICE Find us on Facebook www.facebook.com/Archaeopress. and Twitter www.twitter.com/archaeopress Pike-Tay. ISBN 0 86054 718 3. £31.00. BAR –S571, 1991 Lod (Lydda), Israel From its origins through the Byzantine Period 5600 BCE-640 CE by Joshua J. Schwartz. ISBN 0 86054 721 3. £29.00. BAR –S572, 1991 Animal Production Systems in Neolithic Central Europe by Margaret F. Glass. ISBN 0 86054 722 1. £17.00. BAR –S573, 1991 Recent Developments in Western Mediterranean Prehistory: Archaeological Techniques, Technology and Theory Volume 1: Archaeological Techniques and Theory. Proceedings of the IInd Deya International Conference of Prehistory edited by W. H. Waldren, J. A. Ensenyat and R. C. Kennard. ISBN 0 86054 726 4. £42.00. BAR –S574, 1991 Recent Developments in Western Mediterranean Prehistory: Aracheological Techniques, Technology and Theory Volume 2: Archaeological Technology and Theory. Proceedings of the IInd Deya International Conference of Prehistory edited by W. H. Waldren, J. A. Ensenyat and R. C. Kennard. ISBN 0 86054 727 2. £45.00. BAR –S575, 1992 Current Research on the Romanisation of the Western Provinces edited by Mark Wood and Francisco Queiroga. ISBN 0 86054 728 0. £23.00. BAR –S576, 1992 Figurines et miniatures du Néolithique Récent et du Bronze Ancien en Grèce by Christina Marangou. ISBN 0 86054 729 9. £37.00. BAR –S577, 1992 Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology 1991 edited by Gary Lock and Jonathan Moffett. ISBN 0 86054 730 2. £25.00. BAR –S578, 1992 Piecing Together the Past: Applications of Refitting Studies in Archaeology edited by Jack L. Hofman and James G. Enloe. ISBN 0 86054 733 7. £37.00. BAR –S579, 1992 Domestic Animals and Stability in Pre–State Farming Societies by Carol Raish. ISBN 0 86054 734 5. £18.00. BAR –S580, 1992 Ancient Shipwrecks of the Mediterranean and the Roman Provinces by A. J. Parker. ISBN 0 86054 736 1. £46.00. BAR –S581, 1992 Les outils et les armes en pierre dans le rituel funéraire du Néolithique Danubien by Jean-Paul Farruggia. ISBN 0 86054 737 X. £52.00. BAR –S582, 1993 The Miwa Project Survey, coring and excavation at the Miwa site, Nara, Japan edited by Gina L. Barnes and Masaaki Okita. ISBN 0 86054 740 X. £59.00. BAR –S583, 1993 Die eisernen eisenzeitlichen Erntegeräte im freien Gerrmanien by Jens-Jürgen Penack. ISBN 0 86054 742 6. £28.00. BAR –S584, 1993 Prehistoric Fish Catches in New Zealand by B. F. Leach and A. S. Boocock. ISBN 0 86054 743 4. £27.00. BAR –S585, 1993 Obsidian in nordwestmediterranen Raum Seine Verbreitutig und Nützung im Neolithikum und Äneolithikum by Hans-Otto Pollmann. ISBN 0 86054 744 2. £28.00. BAR –S586, 1993 De la taphonomie pollinique à la reconstitution de l’environnment L’example de la région TO ORDER: All books may be ordered from: Hadrian Books, 122 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7BP; Fax: + 44 1865 316916 e-mail: [email protected] or online at www.hadrianbooks.co.uk and www.archaeopress.com 2 British Archaeological Reports Gordon House, 276 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7ED, England Tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 Fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 [email protected] www.archaeopress.com TITLES IN PRINT JANUARY 2013 – BAR INTERNATIONAL SERIES The BAR series of archaeological monographs were started in 1974 by Anthony Hands and David Walker. From 1991, the publishers have been Tempus Reparatum, Archaeopress and John and Erica Hedges. From 2010 they are published exclusively by Archaeopress. Descriptions of the Archaeopress titles are to be found on www.archaeopress.com Publication proposals to [email protected] Sign up to our ALERTS SERVICE Find us on Facebook www.facebook.com/Archaeopress. and Twitter www.twitter.com/archaeopress cantabrique by María Fernanda Sánchez Goñi. ISBN 0 86054 745 0. £33.00. BAR –S587, 1993 Le Paléolithique de la vallée moyenne de l’Oronte (Syrie) Peuplement et environnement sous la direction de Paul Sanlaville, Jacques Besançon, Lorraine Copeland et Sultan Muhesen. ISBN 0 86054 747 7. £33.00. BAR –S588, 1993 Settlement and Pottery in the Vinalopó Valley (Alicante, Spain) A.D. 400-700 by Paul Reynolds. ISBN 0 86054 749 3. £47.00. BAR –S589, 1993 Settlements and Cult Sites on Mount Hermon, Israel Ituraean culture in the Hellenistic and Roman periods by Shimon Dar. ISBN 0 86054 756 6. £40.00. BAR –S590, 1994 Excavations in Akhmīm, Egypt Continuity and change in city life from late antiquity to the present by Sheila McNally and Ivančica Dvoržak Schrunk. ISBN 0 86054 760 4. £26.00. BAR –S591, Reprinted 2009 Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea International trade and the Late Bronze Age Aegean by Eric H. Cline with updates. ISBN 9781407304175. £53.00 BAR –S592, 1994 La Sociedad de los Campos de Urnas en el nordeste de la Peninsula Iberica La necropolis de El Calvari (El Molar, Priorat, Tarragona) by Pedro V. Castro Martinez. ISBN 0 86054 766 3. £29.00. BAR –S593, 1994 Castillo de Doña Blanca Archeo-environmental investigations in the Bay of Cádiz, Spain (750-500 B.C.) edited by Eufrasia Roselló and Arturo Morales.
Recommended publications
  • The Perils of Periodization: Roman Ceramics in Britain After 400 CE KEITH J
    The Perils of Periodization: Roman Ceramics in Britain after 400 CE KEITH J. FITZPATRICK-MATTHEWS North Hertfordshire Museum [email protected] ROBIN FLEMING Boston College [email protected] Abstract: The post-Roman Britons of the fifth century are a good example of people invisible to archaeologists and historians, who have not recognized a distinctive material culture for them. We propose that this material does indeed exist, but has been wrongly characterized as ‘Late Roman’ or, worse, “Anglo-Saxon.” This pottery copied late-Roman forms, often poorly or in miniature, and these pots became increasingly odd over time; local production took over, often by poorly trained potters. Occasionally, potters made pots of “Anglo-Saxon” form using techniques inherited from Romano-British traditions. It is the effect of labeling the material “Anglo-Saxon” that has rendered it, its makers, and its users invisible. Key words: pottery, Romano-British, early medieval, fifth-century, sub-Roman Archaeologists rely on the well-dated, durable material culture of past populations to “see” them. When a society exists without such a mate- rial culture or when no artifacts are dateable to a period, its population effectively vanishes. This is what happens to the indigenous people of fifth-century, lowland Britain.1 Previously detectable through their build- ings, metalwork, coinage, and especially their ceramics, these people disappear from the archaeological record c. 400 CE. Historians, for their part, depend on texts to see people in the past. Unfortunately, the texts describing Britain in the fifth-century were largely written two, three, or even four hundred years after the fact.
    [Show full text]
  • Oxford School of Archaeology: Annual Report 2012
    OXFORD School of Archaeology Annual Report 2012–2013 THE SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY The School of Archaeology is one of the premier departments in the world for the study and teaching of the human past. Comprised primarily of the Institute of Archaeology and the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art, the School hosts a dynamic faculty, nearly one hundred undergraduates, and a large cohort of outstanding graduate students each year. It is one of the few places in the world where the many facets of archaeology come together to explore themes such as human origins and early hunter-gatherers, the ancient environment, classical and historical archaeology, and chronology. School of Archaeology 36 Beaumont Street, Oxford OX1 2PG www.arch.ox.ac.uk Reception +44(0)1865 278240 Helena Hamerow (Head of School) [email protected] Lidia Lozano (Administrator) [email protected] Barbara Morris (Graduate Administrator) [email protected] Lynda Smithson (Academic Secretary) [email protected] Jeremy Worth (ICT Manager) [email protected] Stephen Hick (Finance Officer) [email protected] Institute of Archaeology 36 Beaumont Street, Oxford OX1 2PG www.arch.ox.ac.uk/institute Reception +44(0)1865 278240 Chris Gosden (Director) [email protected] Lidia Lozano (Administrator) [email protected] Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art Dyson Perrins Building, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY www.rlaha.ox.ac.uk Reception +44(0)1865 285222 Mark Pollard (Director) [email protected] Diane Baker (Administrator) [email protected] Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit Dyson Perrins Building, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY http://c14.arch.ox.ac.uk Reception +44(0)1865 285229 Christopher Ramsey (Director) [email protected] Cover photo: A hand axe found close to Dar es-Soltan, Rabat, Morocco, photographed using RTI imaging for the Morocco Caves Project: http://www.arch.ox.ac.uk/MCP.html Ian R.
    [Show full text]
  • 826 INDEX 1066 Country Walk 195 AA La Ronde
    © Lonely Planet Publications 826 Index 1066 Country Walk 195 animals 85-7, see also birds, individual Cecil Higgins Art Gallery 266 ABBREVIATIONS animals Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museum A ACT Australian Capital books 86 256 A La RondeTerritory 378 internet resources 85 City Museum & Art Gallery 332 abbeys,NSW see New churches South & cathedrals Wales aquariums Dali Universe 127 Abbotsbury,NT Northern 311 Territory Aquarium of the Lakes 709 FACT 680 accommodationQld Queensland 787-90, 791, see Blue Planet Aquarium 674 Ferens Art Gallery 616 alsoSA individualSouth locations Australia Blue Reef Aquarium (Newquay) Graves Gallery 590 activitiesTas 790-2,Tasmania see also individual 401 Guildhall Art Gallery 123 activitiesVic Victoria Blue Reef Aquarium (Portsmouth) Hayward Gallery 127 AintreeWA FestivalWestern 683 Australia INDEX 286 Hereford Museum & Art Gallery 563 air travel Brighton Sea Life Centre 207 Hove Museum & Art Gallery 207 airlines 804 Deep, The 615 Ikon Gallery 534 airports 803-4 London Aquarium 127 Institute of Contemporary Art 118 tickets 804 National Marine Aquarium 384 Keswick Museum & Art Gallery 726 to/from England 803-5 National Sea Life Centre 534 Kettle’s Yard 433 within England 806 Oceanarium 299 Lady Lever Art Gallery 689 Albert Dock 680-1 Sea Life Centre & Marine Laing Art Gallery 749 Aldeburgh 453-5 Sanctuary 638 Leeds Art Gallery 594-5 Alfred the Great 37 archaeological sites, see also Roman Lowry 660 statues 239, 279 sites Manchester Art Gallery 658 All Souls College 228-9 Avebury 326-9, 327, 9 Mercer Art Gallery
    [Show full text]
  • Researching Stonehenge: Theories Past and Present
    Parker Pearson, M 2013 Researching Stonehenge: Theories Past and Present. Archaeology International, No. 16 (2012-2013): 72-83, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/ai.1601 ARTICLE Researching Stonehenge: Theories Past and Present Mike Parker Pearson* Over the years archaeologists connected with the Institute of Archaeology and UCL have made substantial contributions to the study of Stonehenge, the most enigmatic of all the prehistoric stone circles in Britain. Two of the early researchers were Petrie and Childe. More recently, colleagues in UCL’s Anthropology department – Barbara Bender and Chris Tilley – have also studied and written about the monument in its landscape. Mike Parker Pearson, who joined the Institute in 2012, has been leading a 10-year-long research programme on Stonehenge and, in this paper, he outlines the history and cur- rent state of research. Petrie and Childe on Stonehenge William Flinders Petrie (Fig. 1) worked on Stonehenge between 1874 and 1880, publishing the first accurate plan of the famous stones as a young man yet to start his career in Egypt. His numbering system of the monument’s many sarsens and blue- stones is still used to this day, and his slim book, Stonehenge: Plans, Descriptions, and Theories, sets out theories and observations that were innovative and insightful. Denied the opportunity of excavating Stonehenge, Petrie had relatively little to go on in terms of excavated evidence – the previous dig- gings had yielded few prehistoric finds other than antler picks – but he suggested that four theories could be considered indi- vidually or in combination for explaining Stonehenge’s purpose: sepulchral, religious, astronomical and monumental.
    [Show full text]
  • Greece • Crete • Turkey May 28 - June 22, 2021
    GREECE • CRETE • TURKEY MAY 28 - JUNE 22, 2021 Tour Hosts: Dr. Scott Moore Dr. Jason Whitlark organized by GREECE - CRETE - TURKEY / May 28 - June 22, 2021 May 31 Mon ATHENS - CORINTH CANAL - CORINTH – ACROCORINTH - NAFPLION At 8:30a.m. depart from Athens and drive along the coastal highway of Saronic Gulf. Arrive at the Corinth Canal for a brief stop and then continue on to the Acropolis of Corinth. Acro-corinth is the citadel of Corinth. It is situated to the southwest of the ancient city and rises to an elevation of 1883 ft. [574 m.]. Today it is surrounded by walls that are about 1.85 mi. [3 km.] long. The foundations of the fortifications are ancient—going back to the Hellenistic Period. The current walls were built and rebuilt by the Byzantines, Franks, Venetians, and Ottoman Turks. Climb up and visit the fortress. Then proceed to the Ancient city of Corinth. It was to this megalopolis where the apostle Paul came and worked, established a thriving church, subsequently sending two of his epistles now part of the New Testament. Here, we see all of the sites associated with his ministry: the Agora, the Temple of Apollo, the Roman Odeon, the Bema and Gallio’s Seat. The small local archaeological museum here is an absolute must! In Romans 16:23 Paul mentions his friend Erastus and • • we will see an inscription to him at the site. In the afternoon we will drive to GREECE CRETE TURKEY Nafplion for check-in at hotel followed by dinner and overnight. (B,D) MAY 28 - JUNE 22, 2021 June 1 Tue EPIDAURAUS - MYCENAE - NAFPLION Morning visit to Mycenae where we see the remains of the prehistoric citadel Parthenon, fortified with the Cyclopean Walls, the Lionesses’ Gate, the remains of the Athens Mycenaean Palace and the Tomb of King Agamemnon in which we will actually enter.
    [Show full text]
  • The Global History of Paleopathology
    OUP UNCORRECTED PROOF – FIRST-PROOF, 01/31/12, NEWGEN TH E GLOBA L H ISTORY OF PALEOPATHOLOGY 000_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd0_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd i 11/31/2012/31/2012 44:03:58:03:58 PPMM OUP UNCORRECTED PROOF – FIRST-PROOF, 01/31/12, NEWGEN 000_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd0_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd iiii 11/31/2012/31/2012 44:03:59:03:59 PPMM OUP UNCORRECTED PROOF – FIRST-PROOF, 01/31/12, NEWGEN TH E GLOBA L H ISTORY OF PALEOPATHOLOGY Pioneers and Prospects EDITED BY JANE E. BUIKSTRA AND CHARLOTTE A. ROBERTS 3 000_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd0_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd iiiiii 11/31/2012/31/2012 44:03:59:03:59 PPMM OUP UNCORRECTED PROOF – FIRST-PROOF, 01/31/12, NEWGEN 1 Oxford University Press Oxford University Press, Inc., publishes works that further Oxford University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education. Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With o! ces in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland " ailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Copyright © #$%# by Oxford University Press, Inc. Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. %&' Madison Avenue, New York, New York %$$%( www.oup.com Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. CIP to come ISBN-%): ISBN $–%&- % ) * + & ' ( , # Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 000_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd0_JaneBuikstra_FM.indd iivv 11/31/2012/31/2012 44:03:59:03:59 PPMM OUP UNCORRECTED PROOF – FIRST-PROOF, 01/31/12, NEWGEN To J.
    [Show full text]
  • The Last Great Monuments: Ceremonial Complexes of the 3Rd Millennium BC Organisers: Kenny Brophy and Tim Darvill 10.30Am-4.55Pm Monday 4Th November 2013
    Autumn Meeting 2013 The last great monuments: ceremonial complexes of the 3rd millennium BC Organisers: Kenny Brophy and Tim Darvill 10.30am-4.55pm Monday 4th November 2013 The Stevenson Lecture Theatre (lowest level of the Great Court), the British Museum, London NB Please organise your own refreshments on arrival and lunchtime: we only provide afternoon tea! 10.00 Coffee (available for purchase at outlets in the Great Court) 10.30 Welcome / introduction Timothy Darvill 10.40 Renfrew’s monuments and mobilisation 40 years on Josh Pollard 11.00 Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose: Understanding the ceremonial complexes of the 3rd millennium BC in Ireland Neil Carlin 11.20 Irish Late Neolithic enclosures – rounding up the data Steve Davis & Jessica Smyth 11.40 A magical mystery tour: reconsidering the stones of Callanish, Isle of Lewis Angela Gannon & Alison Sheridan 12.00 Supermassive twins: the palisaded enclosures of Strathearn Kenny Brophy, Gordon Noble & Dene Wright 12.20 Evolution of house societies in Orkney: monuments and mythopraxis Colin Richards 12.40 Dunragit . After Durrington Julian Thomas 13.00 Lunch (make your own arrangements) 14.00 Recent work in Wharfedale Alex Gibson & Miles Johnson 14.20 Neolithic ritual in the Baldock Bowl: An unusual formative henge at Norton and its neighbours Keith Fitzpatrick-Matthews 14.40 Knowlton: looking forward, looking back John Gale 15.00 Tea 15.30 The rise and fall of monumentalism in 3rd millennium BC Wessex Dave Field, Jim Leary & Pete Marshall 15.50 Tracing chalk artefact connections
    [Show full text]
  • Castle Studies Group Bibliography No. 23 2010 CASTLE STUDIES: RECENT PUBLICATIONS – 23 (2010)
    Castle Studies Group Bibliography No. 23 2010 CASTLE STUDIES: RECENT PUBLICATIONS – 23 (2010) By John R. Kenyon Introduction This is advance notice that I plan to take the recent publications compilation to a quarter century and then call it a day, as I mentioned at the AGM in Taunton last April. So, two more issues after this one! After that, it may be that I will pass on details of major books and articles for a mention in the Journal or Bulletin, but I think that twenty-five issues is a good milestone to reach, and to draw this service to members to a close, or possibly hand on the reins, if there is anyone out there! No sooner had I sent the corrected proof of last year’s Bibliography to Peter Burton when a number of Irish items appeared in print. These included material in Archaeology Ireland, the visitors’ guide to castles in that country, and then the book on Dublin from Four Court Press, a collection of essays in honour of Howard Clarke, which includes an essay on Dublin Castle. At the same time, I noted that a book on medieval travel had a paper by David Kennett on Caister Castle and the transport of brick, and this in turn led me to a paper, published in 2005, that has gone into Part B, Alasdair Hawkyard’s important piece on Caister. Wayne Cocroft of English Heritage contacted me in July 2009, and I quote: - “I have just received the latest CSG Bibliography, which has prompted me to draw the EH internal report series to your attention.
    [Show full text]
  • Books Added to Benner Library from Estate of Dr. William Foote
    Books added to Benner Library from estate of Dr. William Foote # CALL NUMBER TITLE Scribes and scholars : a guide to the transmission of Greek and Latin literature / by L.D. Reynolds and N.G. 1 001.2 R335s, 1991 Wilson. 2 001.2 Se15e Emerson on the scholar / Merton M. Sealts, Jr. 3 001.3 R921f Future without a past : the humanities in a technological society / John Paul Russo. 4 001.30711 G163a Academic instincts / Marjorie Garber. Book of the book : some works & projections about the book & writing / edited by Jerome Rothenberg and 5 002 B644r Steven Clay. 6 002 OL5s Smithsonian book of books / Michael Olmert. 7 002 T361g Great books and book collectors / Alan G. Thomas. 8 002.075 B29g Gentle madness : bibliophiles, bibliomanes, and the eternal passion for books / Nicholas A. Basbanes. 9 002.09 B29p Patience & fortitude : a roving chronicle of book people, book places, and book culture / Nicholas A. Basbanes. Books of the brave : being an account of books and of men in the Spanish Conquest and settlement of the 10 002.098 L552b sixteenth-century New World / Irving A. Leonard ; with a new introduction by Rolena Adorno. 11 020.973 R824f Foundations of library and information science / Richard E. Rubin. 12 021.009 J631h, 1976 History of libraries in the Western World / by Elmer D. Johnson and Michael H. Harris. 13 025.2832 B175d Double fold : libraries and the assault on paper / Nicholson Baker. London booksellers and American customers : transatlantic literary community and the Charleston Library 14 027.2 R196L Society, 1748-1811 / James Raven.
    [Show full text]
  • COLIN RENFREW PAUL BAHN Theories, Methods, and Practice
    COLIN RENFREW PAUL BAHN Theories, Methods, and Practice COLLEGE EDITION SEVENTH EDITION REVISED & UPDATED ~ Thames & Hudson CONTENTS Preface to the College Edition 9 BOX FEATURES Experimental Archaeology 53 Introduction Wet Preservation: The Ozette Site 60 The Nature and Aims of Archaeology 12 Dry Preservation: The Tomb of Tutankhamun 64 Cold Preservation 1: Mountain "Mummies" 67 Cold Preservation 2: Snow Patch Archaeology 68 PART I Cold Preservation 3: The Iceman 70 The Framework of Archaeology 19 3 Where? 1 The Searchers Survey and Excavation of Sites and Features 73 The History of Archaeology 21 Discovering Archaeological s.ites The Speculative Phase 22 and Features 74 The Beginnings of Modern Archaeology 26 Assessing the Layout of Sites and Features 98 Classification and Consolidation 32 Excavation 110 A Turning Point in Archaeology 40 Summary 130 World Archaeology 41 Further Reading 130 Summary 48 BOX FEATURES Further Reading 48 The Sydney Cyprus Survey Project 76 Sampling Strategies 79 BOX FEATURES Identifying Archaeological Features from Above 82 Digging Pompeii: Past and Present 24 Interpretation and Mapping From Aerial Images 86 Evolution: Darwin's Great Idea 27 Lasers in the Jungle 89 North American Archaeological Pioneers 30 GIS and the Giza Plateau 96 The Development of Field Techniques 33 Tell Ha lula: Multi-period Surface Investigations JOO Pioneering Women in Archaeology 38 Geophysical Survey at Roman Wroxeter 106 Processual Archaeology 41 Measuring Magnetism 108 Interpretive or Postprocessual Archaeologies 44 Underwater
    [Show full text]
  • Durham Research Online
    Durham Research Online Deposited in DRO: 17 January 2014 Version of attached le: Accepted Version Peer-review status of attached le: Peer-reviewed Citation for published item: Towers, J. and Montgomery, J. and Evans, J. and Jay, M. and Pearson, M.P. (2010) 'An investigation of the origins of cattle and aurochs deposited in the Early Bronze Age barrows at Gayhurst and Irthlingborough.', Journal of archaeological science., 37 (3). pp. 508-515. Further information on publisher's website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2009.10.012 Publisher's copyright statement: NOTICE: this is the author's version of a work that was accepted for publication in Journal of archaeological science. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A denitive version was subsequently published in Journal of archaeological science, 37,3, 20 2010, 10.1016/j.jas.2009.10.012 Additional information: Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders.
    [Show full text]
  • Jaffa's Ancient Inland Harbor: Historical, Cartographic, and Geomorphological Data ������������������������� 89 Aaron A
    c hapter 4 Jaffa’s ancient inland harbor: historical,cartographic, and geomorphological data a aron a. burke,1 shelley wachsmann,2 simona avnaim-katav,3 richard k. dunn,4 krister kowalski,5 george a. pierce,6 and martin peilstöcker7 1UniversityofCalifornia,Los Angeles; 2Te xasA&M; 3UniversityofCalifornia, LosAngeles; 4Norwich University; 5Johannes GutenbergUniversity; 6BrighamYoung University; 7Humboldt Universität zu Berlin Thecontext created by recent studies of thegeomorphologyofLevantine harborsand renewedarchaeologicalresearchinthe Late Bronze AgelevelsofTel Yafo (Jaffa) by theJaffa Cultural Heritage Projecthaveled to efforts to identifythe location of apossible inland Bronze andIronAge harbor at Jaffa, Israel.Althoughseveral scholarsduring thetwentieth centuryspeculatedabout theexistenceand location of an ancient inlandharbor, theextent of theproxy data in supportofits identification hasnever been fullyassessed. Nonetheless, a range of historical, cartographic, arthistorical,topographical, andgeomorphologicaldata can be summoned thatpoint to theexistenceofabodyofwater thatlay to theeastofthe settle- ment andmound of ancient Jaffa. This feature is likely avestige of Jaffa’searliestanchorage or harbor andprobablywentout of usebythe startofthe Hellenisticperiod. slongasbiblicalscholars, archaeologists, always directly relatedtoits declineasaport(see historians,and geographershaveconcerned historicaloverviews in Peilstöcker andBurke 2011). athemselves with Jaffa, itsidentityhas revolved Jaffa’seclipse by anotherportisfirstattestedwiththe
    [Show full text]